“Try the other side!”

May 18, 2022

John 21:6

Seven disciples have fished all night and caught nothing.  Jesus is quietly standing  on the shore – watching, not absent.  The disciples are so focused on the fishing that they don’t recognize him.  Finally Jesus calls to the exhausted men. “Friends, haven’t you any fish!”  They are called into voice to admit they caught nothing.  Jesus continues, “Throw your net on the right side of the boat and you will find some.”  I think we see a common cycle here.  It is so easy to be so focused on what we are attempting to do that we do not even realize Jesus is close by, letting us do things “our way.”  Then we are finally able to admit that we have failed, need help and remember to pray, Jesus is then able to speak into our lives about how to make it successful.

     What might be an example as most of us are not fishermen?  Movies love to portray this kind of reversal.  I think of Lion King.  Simba, the son, is told not to go into the land of the hyenas but disobeys and has to be rescued by his father.  After his father’s death, he runs away in failure.  Nula confronts him with the need to think differently, to return and rescue the kingdom.  He has to confront his failure.  Another example is when we read motives and feelings into another’s actions that offend us but when we sit down and talk, we discover they are having a hard day about something entirely different and you just got in the way.  You can then shake hands and be friends again.

     Christianity challenges us to try God’s way and to not demand on our way.  We are called to forgive, to share, and to go the extra mile.  We are to pray for our enemies and share our resources.  As you sit today and focus on faith, listen for God’s voice saying, “Throw your net on the other side!”  His way will always work out for the best in the long run.  It may not mean health, wealth, and prosperity for there are many martyrs but being at peace with a God who is risen and watching and guiding is always a good choice.  Blessings.


“Empty hands…”

May 17, 2022

John 21: 3

“Let’s go fishing,” was Peter’s strategy for waiting for Jesus to appear again.  He and six others spent the night fishing.  Many times we slog along in life doing what we know how to do until our next “insight” comes.  The disciples were used to being with Jesus, following him around, helping him with his ministry, soaking in his presence.  But Easter meant Jesus was alive but they did not seem to have his everyday presence.  Something had changed.  Reality had changed in more than one way.  Jesus was resurrected and so his presence had changed.  But the disciples had changed too.  The story we ponder this week speaks to those times when we are in the midst of reorientation to a new norm.  The disciples went back to fishing, something they knew how to do, but… “but that night they caught nothing.”

     John does not write cause-and-effect into these first three verses.  He does not insinuate that the disciples were running away or being lazy, but what he does do is set the scene that replicates a similar encounter with Jesus when the disciples had fished all night and caught nothing.  We the reader see the similarity.  Have you had one of those times when you felt like, “been there and done that” … and it still doesn’t work!  After a second disastrous engagement, I had to start asking myself what I was doing wrong that I came up with same heartbreak.  My failure led me to reflect and evaluate how I was facing into the future.  “ Einstein once said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.”

         So reflect, where have you come up empty handed recently?  Perhaps it was not that you did anything wrong but that God is seeking to interact with you.  Where might God’s hand be in the situation?  Is there something that needs to be tweaked?  A good prayer is to ask the Holy Spirit to open your eyes, open your ears, and open your heart to see Jesus acting in your situation that is challenging you.  Blessings as you look for Him.


“Unwinding…”

May 16, 2022

John 21:1-3

After the high of any exciting event comes the low of reality.  A proposal comes but then you have to choose china.  He thought I’d like big red flowers like my mother’s but I wanted small, delicate blue flowers!  Easter was a day full of intense spiritual experiences.  The tomb was empty, women encountered Jesus, two on the road to Emmaus walked and talked with him, and then he appears in the room where they huddled in fear behind locked doors trying to figure themselves out.  That was a lot for them to take in.  A spiritual experience, as wonderful as it may have been, then has to be incorporated into everyday life.  Jesus is alive and people have experienced that reality but now what?  The followers were told to return to Galilee and wait.  Ordinary days follow special days.

         “’I’m going out to fish,” Simon Peter told them, and they said, ‘We’ll go with you.’”  Seven disciples led by Peter decide to go fishing.  That is logical as they had been fishermen.  We all have activities that help us unwind and help us wait while dinner cooks, till the kids come home, till the disease runs its course, till peace is achieved.  We wait for others to do their thing and for events to unfold.  It is easy to fill a void with noise, with activity or with anything that preoccupies our minds from events.

         So what do you like to do?  Watch TV, knit, cook, shop, fish, walk, hunt, chat on the phone?  None of these are bad.  I suppose the question is whether the activity is helping us to detox, to unwind, to think or is it just filling time?  One of the complaints about quiet times and prayers is that it is hard to stay focused because our minds wander to things that need to be done or to rehashing experiences we are dealing with.  One device to help focus is a labyrinth.  Tracing a finger through the maze seems to help focus the mind.  Another trick is to keep a pad of paper and write down distracting thoughts so they can be dealt with later.  Sometimes as we do something we love to do like fishing, our mind is freed up to ponder our situation.  I don’t know what helps you but making space for the Holy Spirit to speak into your life, is always good.  Blessings as you go to your favorite unwind place or activity!


“It is Well with My Soul”

May 14, 2022

John 20:26

“Peace be with you.”

When Jesus appeared to his followers that first Easter evening and then the following Sunday again, the first thing he said was, “Peace be with you.”  That phrase has kept coming back to me this week as I have faced various challenges.  As I listen to the news, I certainly don’t hear words of  peace.  A friend had a long operation for a large heart aneurism near an aorta.  I was anxious so I can only imagine how her husband felt having lost his first wife to illness.  The author of this hymn wrote it after the death of his four children in a ship catastrophe crossing the Atlantic.  The mother lived.  The next born son died of scarlet fever!  The man who wrote the music for the hymn went on a train ride with his wife.  A bridge collapsed and he crawled back to die with his wife trapped in the wreckage.  So much tragedy.  And we have not mentioned Ukraine!  What is this “peace” that Jesus breathed on his followers?

         Peace cannot be the absence of conflict or tragedy or sorrow!  Jesus said in John 14:27, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid.”  If I had to rewrite Jesus’ words into words that would comfort me, I would write, “It’s OK.  I’m right here with you.  Take my hand.  I’m with you and you don’t need to be afraid!”  It’s OK, I’m with you.  He doesn’t erase me by doing for me but he honors me by walking with me.  What words would you like Jesus to say to you today?  Blessings.  It’s OK!


“My Lord and My God”

May 13, 2022

John 20: 28-29

28 Thomas answered him, ‘My Lord and my God!’ 

29 Jesus said to him, ‘Have you believed because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.’

Judas doubted, betrayed Jesus and committed suicide.  Thomas doubted, demanded proof, touched and felt, and bowed in faith.  Faith is a journey.  Some paint that journey as an in-out decision made in a spiritual moment.  You believe or you don’t.  For many, though, it is a process.  Are we moving towards God, asking our questions as we seek a relationship to which we bow and build a life around?  The question is whether we are moving toward God, seeking him, or running from him, denying the truth of Jesus’ identity.  Another way I’ve heard it explained is faith by “management” or “mystery.”  Management keeps track of our sins and the facts of Jesus where as mystery enjoys an unfolding journey of a deepening relationship that gets “sweet.”  Each person in that room at Easter had to deal with fear, with doubt and with the realities of life on the other side of the locked door.

     We all have a locked door to keep our fears out.  Some of us will see Jesus clearly and be blessed.  Jesus says, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”  Some of us will have visions, speak in tongues and touch the divine but many days we plod along clinging to our faith, believing because we know he is real in the midst of the chaos of the world.  May we not be guilty of doubting in the night what was revealed in the day!

         Let us use our devotional time this morning to thank God for the ways he has blessed our lives and shown himself real.  Focus on the words, “Lord” and “God.”  What does that mean to you?  Thank you Lord for appearing and inviting me to touch and feel as you speak into my reality, today!


“Peace”

May 12, 2022

John 20:26-27

26 A week later his disciples were again in the house, and Thomas was with them.

Although the doors were shut, Jesus came and stood among them and said,

‘Peace be with you.’ 

27 Then he said to Thomas, ‘Put your finger here and see my hands.

Reach out your hand and put it in my side.

Do not doubt but believe.’

Wish granted!  Thomas has waited.  Thomas has witnessed the risen Christ.  A week later, still behind locked doors, the followers gather but this time Thomas is present.  Jesus came.  This time Thomas is the focus.  Very much like the first visit, Jesus first tells everyone to calm down.  He breathes peace.  For Thomas that means that all the doubt and regret, all the rebellion against his friends and saying he would not believe “until,” disappears. Perhaps it was like that breathing exercise to deal with stress. We are told  to sit in a chair, hands on knees, relax and… “breath out” whatever stresses and “breath in” peace, or love, or calm.  It is scientifically shown that doing this breathing exercise is good for our health.  Jesus first has his followers relax.

         Again they are told to touch and feel.  As we relax we can more accurately enter the experience that has us stressed out.  Touch and feel is like focusing on the details.  But interestingly Jesus continues on to say, “do not doubt but believe.”  Jesus juxtaposes doubt with belief or faith.  So my question today is to ponder what Jesus wanted Thomas and us to believe.  What doubts are we to release to Jesus and what are we called to believe about our challenges today?

      Most obviously I am called to believe that Jesus is alive and working in the circumstances that confront me.  I may not be in Ukraine, in the hospital, at the bank but I believe Jesus is.  In the midst of whatever trauma is facing me, Jesus is alive and actually present whether I see him or not.  I do not see that Thomas was commanded to believe that Jesus would eliminate the challenge, the potential danger, or the implications for the future.

         As we sit this morning let us practice our breathing.  Breath out the concerns of your heart and breathe in…Thank you Lord, for your presence.  Thank you Lord, for your love.  Thank you Lord, that you are working for good for me and my loved ones.  I believe, help my unbelief!  Blessings.


“A week later…”

May 11, 2022

John 20: 26

December was a rough time for our family years ago.  Our second son was born Dec. 12.  Christmas was Dec. 25.  Our twins were born January 1.  A week was a long time to wait for a birthday…and who’s birthday?  And we tried to treat each twin as an individual.  Sigh.  Apostle Thomas was not with his friends on Easter evening when Jesus appeared as they huddled behind locked doors in fear.  For one week Thomas has felt on the outside of an experience that his good friends had.  I’m sure he wondered if he would meet Jesus and “how much longer” must he wait.

         Waiting is hard.  Thomas did not know for sure he would meet Jesus alive but he must have wanted to.  As much as we hope to meet that baby when it is born, we know there is always the possibility of drama.  We have dreams about what marriage will mean but we don’t know because we have never been there.  So how do we wait for Christmas, for birthdays, for holidays, for bonus checks, for the end of the war, for the mail to come, for the death of a loved one, for…..fill in the blank.  How do you wait?  What fills your mind and your thoughts.  Waiting is hard.

         I do not know what Thomas did while he was waiting but we do know a whole week went by.  A week can feel like eternity.  I’m sure he too wanted to see Jesus alive.  But, he had to wait for God’s time. 

         While waiting, some of us spin stories about the excitement of an encounter.  Some of us try to ignore the anxiety in the pit of our stomach. We eat.  We shop.  We do crafts.  Others cook to prepare for a celebration.  Keeping a positive attitude is important.  Prayer focuses our thoughts on God as our good shepherd who is working for good and who knows the right time and context for our dream to unfold.  Prayer  turns anxiety over to God. That is helpful.  Scripture memorization helps me.  Music that focuses me on God lifts my spirits.  Think of ways you help your soul when you must wait.  We all wait to meet Jesus.   Blessings as you wait on the issues in front of you.


“Unless”

May 10, 2022

John 20: 25

25 So the other disciples told him, ‘We have seen the Lord.’

But he said to them,

‘Unless

I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side,

I will not believe.’

Yesterday we pondered how Thomas must have felt as the only missing apostle when Jesus visited the others huddled behind locked doors, in fear.  Thomas was absent for an unknown reason.  The others told him they had seen the risen Jesus.  Jesus is alive!  Thomas refuses to believe, “unless…”  But in fact, none of the apostles had believed that the tomb was empty nor that Jesus was living when the women reported that first Easter morning.  There seems to be a plague of doubt but then many of us still doubt today.  Many are willing to be healed, willing to go to heaven, willing to call Jesus a great prophet, willing to share a portion of their profits with the church, but often there is still an “unless…” in our commitment to our faith.  We are not that different from Thomas.

            Often Jesus’ words of wisdom are so counter intuitive.  Forgive our enemies.  Surely Jesus does not understand the insult or humiliation we experienced at the other’s hands … or mouth.  Stop gossip and sharing info about another.  Sharing so easily slips into gossip because we convince ourselves our motives are pure.  Slander is what the news does or how the other side spreads misinformation, not what I say.  A subtle “unless” slips into our thinking and like Thomas a wall goes up between us and God.

            Thomas has become known as “doubting Thomas” because he wanted to be able to touch and feel the risen Christ.  He is open and honest about the questions swirling in his soul.  As we spend a few minutes today quietly pondering our faith and how the Easter story impacts our lives, may we be still and let the Holy Spirit reveal to us if there is some way we too are saying “unless” in our faith journey. Jesus spoke into those honest doubts. Pretty special.   Blessings as you pray.


“Sorry Charlie”

May 9, 2022

John 20:24

Remember that commercial, “Sorry Charlie, only the best for Star-Kist Tuna!”  Many of us can identify with that feeling of not being quite good enough, not the best.  We have scars from not having a date for the prom, being that nerd that was chosen last for the baseball team, or not chosen for the drill team in high school.  Being on the outside of the inside group is an isolating, lonely, very vulnerable place to be.  Thomas was one of the original 12 disciples or apostles but he was not with the others that first Easter night.  Perhaps grief kept him away or perhaps the weight of his failure at deserting Jesus at the Garden of Gethsemane or maybe he chose to go home.  Perhaps he didn’t get the memo.  For whatever reason Thomas was not present that first Easter night when Jesus appeared.

         I find it very touching that John cared enough about this moment to report that Jesus noticed and sought out absent Thomas.  Jesus could have depended on the others to tell Thomas the good news but he didn’t.  Jesus returns a week later when the followers are gathered again.  Thomas is present.  Thomas’ absence was important – to Jesus.  Often we convince ourselves that it doesn’t matter if we miss church or a meeting.  Nobody will notice and possibly nobody will care.  Perhaps, but your presence and your faith is important to Jesus and important enough for him to seek you out.

         We talk about the church as the body of Christ and a body without a hand or an organ or any part is just not whole.  Each person is important and contributes something to the whole.  “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts!” is a quote attributed to Aristotle and used in modern Gestalt Psychology.  I think we see the dynamic as the small countries of Europe plus, support Ukraine.  A group has more “voice” than an individual.  The followers sought out Thomas and told him their experience because Thomas was an important part to them.  Thomas did not believe but he was informed and was there the second Sunday.  AND Jesus sought him out! 

         You are important and have a gift to contribute.  Jesus knows when you’re absent.  Let’s show up so we can be part of a team, a team that will go on to change the course of history.  Blessings as you play your part.


4th Sunday in Easter

May 8, 2022

First Reading:  Acts 9:36-43  

36 Now in Joppa there was a disciple whose name was Tabitha, which in Greek is Dorcas. She was devoted to good works and acts of charity. 37 At that time she became ill and died. When they had washed her, they laid her in a room upstairs. 38 Since Lydda was near Joppa, the disciples, who heard that Peter was there, sent two men to him with the request, “Please come to us without delay.” 39 So Peter got up and went with them; and when he arrived, they took him to the room upstairs. All the widows stood beside him, weeping and showing tunics and other clothing that Dorcas had made while she was with them. 40 Peter put all of them outside, and then he knelt down and prayed. He turned to the body and said, “Tabitha, get up.” Then she opened her eyes, and seeing Peter, she sat up. 41 He gave her his hand and helped her up. Then calling the saints and widows, he showed her to be alive. 42 This became known throughout Joppa, and many believed in the Lord. 43 Meanwhile he stayed in Joppa for some time with a certain Simon, a tanner.

Psalm 23

The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.
    He makes me lie down in green pastures; he leads me beside still     waters;
    he restores my soul.  He leads me in right paths for his name’s sake.

Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I fear no evil;  for you    are with me; your rod and your staff— they comfort me.

You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies;
         you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life,
         and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord my whole life long.

Second Reading:  Revelation 7:9-17

After this I looked, and there was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, robed in white, with palm branches in their hands. 10 They cried out in a loud voice, saying,

“Salvation belongs to our God who is seated on the throne, and to the Lamb!”

11 And all the angels stood around the throne and around the elders and the four living creatures, and they fell on their faces before the throne and worshiped God, 12 singing,

“Amen! Blessing and glory and wisdom
and thanksgiving and honor
and power and might
be to our God forever and ever! Amen.”

13 Then one of the elders addressed me, saying, “Who are these, robed in white, and where have they come from?” 14 I said to him, “Sir, you are the one that knows.” Then he said to me, “These are they who have come out of the great ordeal; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.

15 For this reason they are before the throne of God,
    and worship him day and night within his temple,
    and the one who is seated on the throne will shelter them.
16 They will hunger no more, and thirst no more;
    the sun will not strike them,
    nor any scorching heat;
17 for the Lamb at the center of the throne will be their shepherd,
    and he will guide them to springs of the water of life,
   and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.”


GOSPEL:  John 10:22-30

22 At that time the festival of the Dedication took place in Jerusalem. It was winter, 23 and Jesus was walking in the temple, in the portico of Solomon. 24 So the Jews gathered around him and said to him, “How long will you keep us in suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly.” 25 Jesus answered, “I have told you, and you do not believe. The works that I do in my Father’s name testify to me; 26 but you do not believe, because you do not belong to my sheep. 27 My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me. 28 I give them eternal life, and they will never perish. No one will snatch them out of my hand. 29 What my Father has given me is greater than all else, and no one can snatch it out of the Father’s hand. 30 The Father and I are one.”

CHILDREN’S SERMON:  Share with the person next to you your favorite promise from the 23rd Psalm.

Lord, may the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart be acceptable in your sight, my Rock and my Redeemer.

SERMON

I read today’s texts and wondered how people in Ukraine hear Psalm 23.  As I watch my spouse struggle with Parkinson’s Disease, I ponder the implications of resurrection.  My grandson was just diagnosed with Autism and I grieve for the journey his parents are facing.  How do they hear these verses?  What does the Easter season and resurrection mean in our suffering world? It is during this Easter season when we delve into the truth that Jesus is alive. But like the Jews in the Gospel who gathered around Jesus at the Temple before all the events of Easter, a question jumped to their lips and possibly sometimes to ours, “How long will you keep us in suspense?”  If Jesus is the Messiah and if he is risen then how much longer must we suffer with evil?  We long for “happy ever after” but is that what resurrection means?  Some days the suspense is overwhelming!  The burdens are heavy.  The texts today remind us that resurrection is true not just because people at the time encountered Jesus but also because we see Jesus alive today.  We are his sheep!  If he is not alive, we have no shepherd!

“Jesus answered, ‘I have told you and you did not believe.’”

We do not grasp resurrection with our brain and reason but with our heart.  We must believe to understand Jesus is alive and with us today.  Resurrection is not a universal reality that is apparent to all like the sunrise.  We may disagree about the timing of the sunrise but we all look forward to a sunrise, even in the midst of the shortest days of winter in the North.  We know some day the light will creep over the horizon.  As Americans, though, we live in a world that worships diversity and tolerance.  “You drink your kool-aide, and I’ll drink mine.”  For many, being a good person is enough to merit acceptance by a distant God.  Of course, “good enough” is measured by that person’s standards.  It often means being nice to those whom I like or giving to a charity or to the beggar on the off-ramp.  Then for others there is the “circle of life” and the thought of dying, being buried and nourishing the budding of a flower – a fun thought.  How does Jesus speak into this common acceptance of tolerance?

         Jesus answered, “I have told you but you didn’t believe.” We hear his words but the choice to believe is ours.  Not all people believe.  G. K. Chesterton famously said,  “The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried.”  So perhaps our first reflection today is to ask ourselves this morning, “Whose voice comes to my ears as I listen to this sermon?”  Do I look out on our world looking for a resurrected savior who is working things out or do I look out asking how much longer God is going to be defeated by evil?  Also, am I familiar enough with Jesus that I recognize his voice speaking to me?  Jesus says, “I have told you.” Are we listening?

          Jesus gives a second criteria for the resurrection.  Not only will we hear the truth of his words, we will see him working.

The works that I do in my Father’s name testify to me; 

26 but you do not believe,

         If we listen we will hear Jesus speak and if we look, we can see the works of Jesus.  BUT… Events can always be debated.  For sure we hear the debates about reality as we listen to the news dissect January 6.  If we don’t like a diagnosis, we seek a second opinion.  Republicans and Democrats can’t agree and neither could Pharisees and Sadducees, nor the common person.  Jesus spoke the truth but we must believe.  Jesus’ works declared his identity but we have to believe.  He healed, he cast out demons, he calmed the storms, and he spoke life but people still debated and cried for his crucifixion.   The words and works of Jesus spoke truth but still doubts plagued those Jews who debated through the Gospels and doubt plague our world today as we cope with the evil that would defeat us.

Jesus went to the core of problem.  People are sheep.  He says, he has spoken and he has done works but we have not believed

 “…because you do not belong to my sheep.”

Those Jews heard his words and they saw his works but they were not his sheep.  Back in the day, I took a minibus from my town to Nairobi, the capital of Kenya.  We were speeding through a village and I saw three sheep on the side of the road that were headed across the road right in-front of the bus.  I braced myself for a swerve and slam on the brakes.  The driver was going so fast he could not avoid a collision. He aimed the bus so that the sheep went under the bus between the wheels. I heard and felt the thunk, thunk, thunk and smelled their demise all the way to Nairobi.  He did not hesitate nor did he stop!!  I was shocked.  Those sheep did not have a shepherd!  Resurrection may mean we get to go to heaven because Jesus has paid for our sins, has opened the gates of mercy or led the way – however we understand the crucifixion – but it also means we have a shepherd NOW so we are not randomly struck by a speeding bus!  Resurrection is not just a promise about the future. It is a certainty about the present.

27 My sheep hear my voice.

Jesus is with his people in Ukraine, in the Middle East, in Asia and Africa and here in the ole USA.  He is with the doctors, the soldiers and generals.  He is with my husband and my son’s family.  He is active with you.  He knows about the stock market.  He cares about Biden and Trump!  He speaks to you and me and we must listen.  Yes he speaks through churches and radios and podcasts but he also speaks through friends, through nature and so many other ways.  Just like we can tune in to AM or FM, we can tune in to God 24-7.  He does not force us to listen, though.  The choice is ours.  The Holy Spirit does not work only on Sundays!  God does not change reality to make my life wonderful, he speaks to me to make my life bless others.  It is not just about me but also about me listening to him to bless others.

         Our text continues and is our focus today because it speaks to the meaning of the Easter season.

27 My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me.

A friend brought over the DVD, “Iron Will,” about the dog sled race from Canada to Minneapolis.  We enjoyed snow vicariously!  The dogs responded to a whistle, the tune, the boy played on his father’s whistle.  He lost the whistle and the dogs wouldn’t move.  Then he puckered up and  whistled the tune himself.  The dogs jump into action.  We are like those dogs.  We are like sheep that have learned to know the voice, the tune, of our master.  Words of hatred, vengeance, and jealousy don’t sound right to us.  We must learn to listen to his voice and not the voice of the evil one on our shoulder or the voice of our own selfish heart.  “My sheep hear my voice.”

         Jesus continues, “I know them.”  We are known, not known about.  We are not a name on a voter’s registration list.  We don’t have to pull out our identity documents before we pray.  He knows us, warts and all.  He knows our past with its failures cause he was there.  He loves us as we are.  Unimaginable.  He did not appear to his followers after the resurrection because the followers had their act together.  They were huddled behind locked doors in fear.  He did not appear to the two on the road to Emmaus because they really understood all that had happened.  They had to have the Scriptures explained to them.  He knew those people at Easter time and knew they needed him and like a good Shepherd, he went to them.  He is our good shepherd today and walks with us in our weaknesses.  The Psalmist writes, “Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I fear no evil; for you are with me; your rod and your staff— they comfort me.”

         Jesus further explains, “they (his sheep) follow me.”  Houston we may have a problem.  The first two descriptions point to God’s initiative, he speaks and he knows, but this one challenges us because we know how often we disobey or fail to obey.  Spiritual truth is not like scientific truth. Even in my imperfection, though, Jesus walks with me because I am his sheep and he is my shepherd.

         The kingdom of God does not work like the kingdom of this world.  I suspect that the rubbing point of the resurrection is right here.  People talk the talk but walking the walk is a much more challenging task.  We will sign up for “shall not want,” “green pastures,” “still waters,” and “restoring our soul,” and we even want “tables prepared for us.”  But, the Psalmist says, “You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies.”  How did the enemies get into this picture? 

         Resurrection life grows in the presence of enemies, not just because God zaps and eliminates them.  We choose to listen.  We choose to look.  And we choose to believe in the midst of the chaos of evil in this world, not because we are living our happy-ever-after dream but because we trust our Shepherd.  Christianity is not about health, wealth and prosperity.  It is about following a Shepherd that leads us through the tough places of life.  We follow a risen savior who speaks and we learn to hear his voice.  He acts and we learn to recognize his presence.  He knows us and loves us even when we stray and misbehave. We can turn to him and are forgiven.  We use the word “faith” to describe being the sheep of his pasture.      Jesus goes on to say in the Gospel, “ 28 I give them eternal life, and they will never perish. No one will snatch them out of my hand.”  The Shepherd leads us to eternal life.  He guards us from the enemies that would destroy us.  “Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord my whole life long.”

         The resurrection means that Jesus is alive and speaking today – are we listening?  The resurrection means that Jesus is acting today – are we watching? The resurrection means that we are known inside and out, past and present – can we embrace that?  The resurrection challenges us to follow a living Shepard.  Why you might still ask.  Because, “30 The Father and I are one.”  Nothing can snatch us out of his hands.

Let the people of God say, “AMEN!”