Sunday, March 23, 2008

Resurrection: Does It Matter?

Sermon preached Easter Sunday

March 23, 2008

The Rev. Matthew Lawrence

Good morning and Happy Easter! It’s good to see you again.

In fact, it’s wonderful – every Easter and Christmas is like a family reunion; when all the long-lost nephews and aunts and cousins come home. And we are happy to see you. You are family; this is your home; welcome.

I’ve been thinking back to the Easter we had a year ago – I had that horrible flu and should have stayed in bed. I preached fever-inspired sermon about an Amarylis which I later found out was actually a Kala Lilly... Not my best... In fact, I’m impressed that any of you came back this year!

It feels like a lot has happened since a year ago; and not a lot of it has been good. The slump in the housing market; a possible recession; global warming just getting more worrisome... not to mention the things that were bad last year and are still pretty bad: the war, the budget deficits...

So it’s been a tough year. A lot of us have been struggling with our anxiety; our relationships are strained; we worry a lot.

And my job, this morning, is to tell you not to worry; everything is going to be fine, because it’s Easter, and Christ is risen!

And somehow that’s supposed to make it all better?

Do you ever get this horrible feeling, like, does the resurrection really matter? What’s the point after all? Do you ever wonder how could it possibly be so important whether or not Jesus rose from the dead – how is that going to pay the bills? Do you find it just a little annoying that Christians are so concerned with what you believe anyway? Now, more than probably at any time in history, we live in a world in which I’ve got my beliefs, you’ve got yours... and how is it your problem whether I believe Jesus Christ rose from the dead or Mickey Mouse came from Mars?

Does it really matter?

And so when you think about it, it is pretty amazing how much time and energy and money and blood has been spent trying to get the world to believe this story about the resurrection of Jesus. The Gospel of Luke begins with this commitment; Matthew’s gospel ends with it; John’s Gospel repeats it over and over again – this great mission to convince the world that Christ died and was raised... Paul’s letters are nothing if not an extended argument for the resurrection; he even goes so far as to say that if the resurrection didn’t physically happen, his preaching is empty and our faith is vain. (1 Cor. 15)

This morning I find myself meditating on those disciples; on everything they endured to get this story out there; the beating, imprisonment, shame, torture and death that greeted them – just because they just had to tell this story; and then I think about the giant collective shrug of indifference that greets the gospel today; and I have to ask the question:

Does the resurrection still matter or not?

The greatest theologians disagree on what the resurrection actually was;

The conservatives insist it was an actual “poke your finger in it” physical resurrection, others like Dominic Cross say it was a series of visions that seized the disciples; and still others like Marcus Borg split the difference and say it was definitely a real thing but we can’t really imagine what it was.

Just about all of them say we can never know for sure, which is why we call it faith,

and just about everyone agrees, whether it was a myth, fantasy or the biggest miracle of them all, whatever it was, it had the effect of transforming a terrified and depressed set of former disciples into a fire-breathing band of martyrs for a cause of love.

Does that matter?

Well, I don’t know about you, but I’ve been meeting quite a few people these days who resemble those pre-resurrection disciples; a lot of folks are people feeling pretty frightened and depressed. In fact, the entire world seems pretty frightened and depressed these days, would you not agree?

One other thing all the scholars agree one: it makes no sense to talk about the resurrection without putting it in the context of the crucifixion. The resurrection is not some happy-clappy feel good story in which one day you’re happy and the next day you’re even happier. There’s a cross involved.

And this is why, if you only come to church on Easter and skip Good Friday, the resurrection is likely to seem more like a pleasant myth than like something that rises out of the bowels of the real world. It’s like walking into a movie just at the last 5 minutes of the happy ending. You might feel happy for the characters but you don’t really know the story.

The story of the resurrection only becomes true when seen through the reality of the cross.

The people who risked everything so that we might know this story were not pie-eyed optimists. They were realists; they had been living, generation after generation, under the harshest conditions we can imagine.

They had seen too much to believe in a world where everyone “just gets along.” They could not imagine a world in which our problems would be solved if we all just went shopping. It never could have occurred to them that they could “have it all.” Their world was one in which pain and sacrifice and struggle and even death were required in order to make progress.

Abraham Lincoln would have recognized this world. He knew what a great price in blood had to be paid in order to rid our country of slavery. The members of our own WWII generation would recognize this world -- ask anyone who lived through that horrible time if they think freedom is free. No, freedom has a price. Justice has a price. The resurrection was not possible without a sacrifice; just as our own democracy has not been possible without sacrifice and terrible loss.

This is a world that my current generation is only beginning to recognize. This is the great psychological adjustment that we are witnessing right now in our culture. For over a generation now, we have been living in this fantasyland in which the concepts of sacrifice and pain have been effectively silenced. Families have grown up believing they can have whatever they want, when they want it; and so we have wracked up so much credit card debt that personal bankruptcy is at record levels.

I read in the paper this morning that the city is trying to come up with some strategy for overcoming its massive debt; just as the state government is doing. Meanwhile our military budget is the highest that it’s been since World War II. That’s adjusted for inflation! Now, I wasn’t alive during WW II, but I seem to remember a lot of newsreels talking about all the sacrifice required – all the war bonds that were sold, all the paper drives and rubber drives and food rationing that made that enormous effort possible. But today, we think we can have that same enormous output, without asking for a single bit of sacrifice – except from the men and women who are pouring their blood into the desert sand.

And then there’s our own church. It used to be that churches talked freely of sacrificial giving. When’s the last time you were asked to give sacrificially? And now, like our governments and our households, we are looking at deficits and scratching our heads.

On all these levels – the personal, the church, the city, the state, the federal, even globally – we are waking up to the reality that nothing comes without a price.

The Rolling Stones might have sold a million copies of “You can’t always get what you want,” but no one really listened.

And so we are entering a time when the concept of sacrifice is once again becoming meaningful. For those of us raised in the Baby Boomer generation and later, this is terrifying – terrifying because the one thing that makes sacrifice seem worthwhile is the idea that you are sacrificing for something. But as a culture; as a people; we have lost all sense of what we’re sacrificing for. If we can’t agree on what we are sacrificing for, there’s nothing to be gained.

Which is why we are so desperate to figure out: What is the point? Where is the hope? Teenagers are committing suicide in record numbers because they can’t figure out the answer to that question.

What are we living for?

Well, as for me, I am living for the risen Jesus.

We call Jesus the Paschal Lamb; the sacrificial lamb. The root of the word sacrifice is “to make sacred.”

Imagine the disciples, huddling in the heart of the city of Jerusalem; they have just seen their Master die on a cross; their lives have just collapsed.

And like many people in the midst of grief, they are trying to remember his last words to them, at that last supper. He knew the end was near; he knew he had been betrayed and the guards were on their way. He knew he would soon be hanging on the cross.

And at that moment he had many options. He could have fled; he could have made an angry, militant speech of resistance; he could have slouched in the corner of the room and wept bitterly. All of these options are being actively proposed.

But on that night of death and betrayal, he knelt down in front of his disciples, taking the form of a slave; and washed their feet.

He came to Simon Peter, who said to him, "Lord, are you going to wash my feet? You will never wash my feet." Jesus answered, "Unless I wash you, you have no share with me."

When it came down to his final, last act of freedom, this is what he chose. He chose to move into the deepest level of what it means to be human. He chose love.

And he felt so strongly about this that he told Peter that unless Peter was willing to accept this radical gesture of love, Jesus would have nothing to do with him.

Jesus was clear: we cannot be his disciples unless we are willing to accept the scandal of his love. This is a condition for membership. There are a lot of ways in which Christianity is an inclusive religion but this is not one of them. This is the exclusive obligation: If you want to be a part of this group you have to open your heart. You have to subject yourself to love. You have to let Jesus love you. You cannot enter the Kingdom of God that Jesus is talking about unless you allow yourself to be loved.

This isn’t some kind of arbitrary rule Jesus came up with; this is just the way it is: it’s a law like the law of gravity. You cannot get into my house unless you actually step through the door. You cannot spend your life parked in front of my house, and then say to people you are a part of my household. You cannot claim to be in relationship with Jesus if you reject the terms of that relationship, which by the way are not up to you to determine. Jesus sets the terms of the relationship. And these are his terms: that you open your heart to his love. That you allow him, the Prince of Peace; the Messiah; the one through whom all things were made; the 2nd person of the Trinity; to wash your feet.

This is what his sacrifice was for. It’s almost Zen-like in its simplicity. For love, he sacrificed everything.

“I give you a new commandment: that you love one another as I have loved you.” This was his final teaching. It was not a suggestion. It was not an invitation. He said, this is my commandment.

This is what I live for; and what, I pray, we are all living for. To strive toward this greatest height of what it means to be human. To love without conditions; to love completely; even to love sacrificially.

And so, this is what we do. This is what we are here to practice. This is why this building exists. This is what the martyrs died trying to tell us.

This is not something we do on our own; it takes an entire community to support this great enterprise of love. This is why the church is called The Body of Christ. This is where the risen Christ lives; this is where he is found. Not in this building; but in the hearts and minds of every person in this room, connected, one to the other, through the mystical bonds of love; a powerful, healing, eternal love that transcends every thing that separates us. A love that conquers death. That love is here – to every person willing to open themselves to it.

May this love be yours. May you be lifted by its power. May you be completely and totally blessed by the risen Christ.

AMEN.

Friday, March 21, 2008

The Paradox of the Cross

Good Friday

Sermon preached March 21, 2008

[Editor's note: this isn't a great sermon. The ideas are okay but "it doesn't preach" that well. It might work better as a reading experience but if you want to see an actual sermon look at the previous day's "Scandal of Footwashing" sermon.]

Today we are being led into the great mystery of our religion; one that has at its heart a living paradox, a paradox captured in the name itself: Good Friday.

We’re talking about the paradox of a religion that would have, as its symbol for hope and new life, an instrument of execution. Under different historical circumstances, we could just as easily have a guillotine around our necks; or a gallows; or an electric chair.

This is our symbol for hope.

It is in this symbol of death that we find a reason to live.

This is not a religion for people looking for easy answers. The answer is found in paradox.

And today, we come to the revelation that it is by means of our failures – to use an old fashioned and poorly understood word, our sinfulness -- that we find our greatest joy.

So we ask this question: How have you failed Jesus lately?

One of the wonderful things about our religion is that it is built on the fact that we have all failed Jesus.

This makes us different from a lot of religions these days – especially some of the more recent inventions – the religions of success. There are a lot of religions of success blooming in our world; hundreds of, yes, successful churches that preach nothing but how to be successful: successful in love, in money, in your career, in whatever you desire.

There’s a best-selling book called The Secret that is all about this idea that you can have whatever you want; that your future success is only as limited as your imagination. This book is not just being read by millions of people; it is being followed; it is being breathlessly quoted; it is the object of reading groups and sharing circles and thousand-dollar workshops designed to help you learn the esoteric secret of getting whatever you desire.

But our religion is not about that. It’s not about magically bending the space-time continuum so that you might be successful. Our religion is really about failure. And it all begins here. It begins with the simple fact of our God -- our Lord and Master -- hanging on a cross and dying ...because we failed him.

Some years ago, Ted Turner was vilified in the press because he said Christianity was for losers. Well, he was right. Losers like Jesus . They mocked him on the cross. He was a joke. A failure. That’s our God.

And then there’s Peter, the favored disciple, the rock upon which the church is founded, who in the moment of truth betrayed Jesus.

What does that say about this religion? It says that it’s okay to talk about failure here.

So how have you failed Jesus lately?

Does that question make you uneasy? Do you feel a little resistance bubbling up inside? Is it difficult to look at how you’ve failed?

It’s okay. The beautiful thing about our religion is that we don’t have to get defensive around our failings. We don’t have to pretend. We don’t have to walk around like we’re perfect, like we’re without sin, that we’re oh so successful and we’ve got it oh so together.

We begin with this fact – that we have failed Jesus. We all have. Every one of us.

Our dirty little secret has been revealed; our cover is blown; there is no hiding the fact. We have betrayed him. We have failed.

How have you failed Jesus lately?

Now for a lot of people this is why they are not Christians. Who wants to walk around feeling like a failure all the time? It sounds too much like the old time religion, where the preacher is constantly scolding his congregation and making them feel bad about themselves. Who wants that?

And of course, if the preacher is doing nothing but scolding and pointing fingers, it’s time to find a new preacher. That would be like going to an AA meeting and having the moderator of the meeting say, “I’m the only one in here who isn’t an alcoholic! What’s wrong with you people!?”

No, the point is that we’re all in this boat together. All of our heroes are in this boat. Every one of the saints; every apostle; every guru and yogi and Master – we’re all in this together. It’s called the human condition.


We live in a confused, angry, and violent world. A world that desperately needs to come to terms with its failures. We are armed to the teeth; we are on the brink of global shortages in food and water and oil and we are armed to the teeth.

And when I say these things it’s not because I want you to feel guilty. It’s only because our guilt has been taken away on the cross; it’s only because Christ, on the cross, pronounced his forgiveness, that we are able to remove guilt from the equation. We are forgiven -- get over it! It isn’t about feeling guilty! And if that’s true, we can look at the world with open eyes: we can begin to see the world with compassion instead of debilitating guilt and all its unredeemed attendants: blame; shame; anxiety; the anxious need to change people; the anxious need to fix things -- anything, but ourselves.

It’s only in an unredeemed world that blame gets thrown around.

But in this redeemed world, we can see with eyes of love instead of blame, or guilt, or anger, or self-recrimination.

God is on the cross; all he asks of us is that we regard him.

In the unredeemed world, it’s all up to us; we feel so responsible for it all. Since our only hope is success; since our only moment of self-love is in accomplishment; since every measure of our worth is in terms of what we have done lately; since we can’t accept failure because we equate failure with death -- we have to fix it – all of it. We feel so responsible for everything; so guilty for it all, and so the only way we can get through our day is to put on these enormous opaque blinders to convince us that we are not failing.

We block out the victims of warfare and gun violence ; we block out the starvation caused by drought and global warming; we block out the genocide in Darfur; we block out the presence of homeless men and women and children living right outside these walls. We put on all of these blinders that reduce the world to the narrowest little thread of what we can bear – forgetting that God is bearing it for us; God is on the cross, not us. God is the one saving the world – not us.

In the redeemed world, we come to realize that we cannot fix one another. Only God can fix us. I can love you; I can listen to you; I can spend time with you and care about you. But I cannot fix you. As soon as I start trying I start playing God; I start put my compassion down and pick up my tools so that I can work on you. In the process I forget the most important thing: that it's only by means of a loving relationship that we are transformed and healed. The only hope for changing someone is to stop trying to change him and simply start loving him. God takes care of the rest.

Jesus did not seek to change us by establishing a new form of military rule. He did not seek to change us by fixing us. Instead, He taught us how to fail. And he taught us how to love.

This is the beautiful paradox – that if we want to fix the world, we have to give up on our fixing skills, and let God do the fixing. Anyone who has had tried to fix an alcoholic knows what I'm talking about. The more we try to fix the alcoholic's problem, the worse it gets. If the alcoholic is not ready to be fixed, there's not a lot we can do, except stop enabling. If our efforts are successful at all, it's only when they finally get interpreted as loving rather than fixing.

Only by allowing God to save the world do we stand a chance of making a difference ourselves. In the unredeemed world we are so busy running around trying to change everyone but ourselves; in our desperate need to fix things we run from place to place with our agendas in hand; we join in the blame game; we give voice to our anger; we lob missiles at countries in our desperate efforts to change them; we bombard the world with our success-driven fears and plans and schemes; and somewhere along the line we stop listening; we stop seeing the hurt and the pain; we forget what it means to have simple compassion.

Whether we’re talking about your relationship to your children or your neighbor, or our country’s relationship to the Middle East or Africa, the same principles apply.

Pray, this day, that we might all finally learn the beautiful paradox of failure; pray that we might finally learn the truth of the cross; which is that love trumps success; failure leads to love; and that we are all blessed -- perfectly blessed -- not in our success, but in our brokenness, not in our proximity to God, but in our full humanity; not in our strength but in our weakness. In other words, we are fully blessed -- in our love. It is through God the son that all these things are made possible; a God who is broken on the cross; for love's sake. This we pray; may it be so, in the name of Jesus.

AMEN.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

The Scandal of Foot Washing

Maundy Thursday

March 20, 2008

This service begins and ends with the memory of the Passover. At the beginning we hear the story of the Passover (Exodus 12: 1-14); at the end we shall all go over to the parish hall and eat a modified version of the kind of meal the people of Israel might have on that historic night when they escaped the slavery of Egypt.

First, we hear the ancient story from Exodus; we remember once again how the people of Israel were commanded to sacrifice and eat the Passover lamb; how they were told to spread the blood of the lamb on their doorposts as a sign to the angel of death to pass them over. Thus the term, Passover. In the dead of night, God sweeps over the towns and villages of Egypt and kills every firstborn child, while sparing the Jews.

This is a grisly story; it is a horrifying idea – that God would kill every first-born Egyptian child – so that the people of Israel could be liberated from slavery.

We don’t tend to linger over this image of God as an angel of death. But it’s important to wrestle with this. When images in the Bible are difficult or horrifying it’s important to look at it – we learn about ourselves as well as about the Bible.

This is a terrifying image of God; and we have to say, this is a primitive image of God. What kind of people would tell this story? A people that has lost its innocence; a people who are accustomed to war.

The people who tell this story are not innocent and they know it; they know that their liberation has come at a great cost; they know that innocent children died so that they could escape slavery.

These are not people who believe in a world where everyone “just gets along.” They do not believe that their problems would be over if everyone just went shopping. They do not believe in a world where everyone can have what they want all the time. They believe in a world where pain and sacrifice and struggle are required in order to make progress.

This is the world of Abraham Lincoln, who knew what a great price in blood had to be paid in order to rid our country of slavery. This is the world of our own WWII generation; ask anyone who lived through that horrible war if they think freedom comes cheaply. No, freedom has a price. Justice has a price. The angel of God on Passover meant liberation for some, and it meant death to others; just as our own democracy was not possible without sacrifice and terrible loss.

This is the great psychological adjustment that we are witnessing right now in our culture. For over a generation now, we have been living in this fantasyland in which the concepts of sacrifice and pain have been effectively silenced. Families have grown up believing they can have whatever they want, when they want it; and so we have wracked up so much credit card debt that personal bankruptcy is at record levels.

I read in the paper this morning that the city is trying to come up with some strategy for overcoming its massive debt; just as the state government is doing. Meanwhile our military budget is the highest that it’s been since World War II. That’s adjusted for inflation! Now, I wasn’t alive during WW II, but I seem to remember a lot of newsreels talking about all the sacrifice required – all the war bonds that were sold, all the paper drives and rubber drives and food rationing that made that enormous effort possible. But today, we think we can have that same enormous output, without asking for a single bit of sacrifice – except from the men and women who are fighting and dying and in the desert.

And then there’s our own parish. It used to be that churches talked freely of sacrificial giving. When’s the last time you were asked to give sacrificially? And now, like our governments and our households, we are looking at deficits and scratching our heads.

On all these levels – the personal, the church, the city, the state, the federal, even global markets – we are waking up to the reality that nothing comes without a price. We can only spend so much. We can only do so much. We can only absorb so much information. The ocean can absorb only so much sewage and trash. The atmosphere can absorb only so much carbon dioxide. The earth can sustain only so much human prosperity.

The Rolling Stones might have sold a million copies of “You can’t always get what you want,” but no one really believed it.

And so we are entering a time when the concept of sacrifice once again will become meaningful. For those of us raised in the Baby Boomer generation and later, this is terrifying – terrifying because the one thing that makes sacrifice seem worthwhile is the idea that you are sacrificing for something. But as a culture; as a people; we have lost all sense of what we’re sacrificing for. If we can’t agree on what we are sacrificing for, there’s nothing to be gained.

Which is why we are so desperate to figure out: What is the point? Where is the hope? Teenagers are committing suicide in record numbers because they can’t figure out the answer to that question.

All of which is another way of asking, What are we living for?

As for me, I am living for Jesus.

We call Jesus the Paschal Lamb; the sacrificial lamb. The root of the word sacrifice is “to make sacred.”

Tonight we see Jesus with his disciples, huddling in the heart of the city of Jerusalem, surrounded by danger, fearing death. For them, the Passover angel of death must have felt very close, as Roman guards and collaborators spread out looking to arrest them.

What was the point? What was in their minds? What was that great cause that they were sacrificing everything for?

On this night of death and betrayal, he knelt down in front of his disciples, taking the form of a slave; and washed their feet.

He came to Simon Peter, who said to him, "Lord, are you going to wash my feet? You will never wash my feet." Jesus answered, "Unless I wash you, you have no share with me."

This is what Jesus came to accomplish. He had a lot of options, on that final night of freedom; but this is what he chose. He was not wallowing in self-pity; he was not plotting his escape. He was moving into the deepest level of what it means to be human. He was choosing love.

And he felt so strongly about this that he told Peter that unless he was willing to accept this, he would have nothing to do with him.

Jesus was clear and he is clear: we cannot be his disciples unless we are willing to accept the scandal of his love. This is a condition for membership. There are a lot of ways in which Christianity is an inclusive religion but this is not one of them. This is the exclusive obligation: If you want to be a part of this group you have to open your heart. You have to subject yourself to love. You have to let Jesus love you. You cannot enter the Kingdom of God that Jesus is talking about unless you allow yourself to be loved.

This isn’t some kind of arbitrary rule Jesus came up with; this is just the way it is: it’s a law like the law of gravity. You cannot get into my house unless you actually step through the door. You cannot hold yourself apart from me and claim to be my brother or sister; you cannot spend your life parked in front of my house, and then say to people you are a part of my household. You cannot claim to be in relationship with Jesus if you reject the terms of that relationship, which by the way are not up to you to determine. Jesus sets the terms of the relationship. And these are his terms: that you open your heart to his love. That you allow him, the Prince of Peace; the Messiah; the one through whom all things were made; the 2nd person of the Trinity; to wash your feet.

This is what his sacrifice was for. It’s almost Zen-like in its simplicity. For love, he sacrificed everything.

“I give you a new commandment: that you love one another as I have loved you.” This is not a suggestion. This is not an invitation. This is a commandment. In the Latin, the word is, “Mandatum”. It’s where we get the word “Maundy.”

This is what I live for; and what, I pray, we are all living for. To strive to ward this greatest height of what it means to be human. To love without conditions; to love completely and sacrificially. This is what we are here to practice. In this simple ritual of washing one another’s feet, we are practicing this commandment. We are signaling to one another and to God that we fully intend to strive for this great ideal. It is guaranteed that we will fail – that’s what we’ll talk about tomorrow. But we dedicate ourselves nonetheless to this great goal, knowing that Christ blesses us in this grace.

Thanks be to God. AMEN.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Palm Sunday: Setting the Stage

You are the age you are now, except the year is 30 A.D.

You are a Jewish peasant living in occupied Israel. Your father was basically a sharecropper; he farmed his tiny bit of land and you tried to live off the tiny amount that was left after the Romans and the corrupt tax collectors took almost everything. You have been living a starvation diet most of your life, as has your entire village.

You neither read nor write, but you have sat at the feet of your rabbi all your life, as he tells stories from the days of the Macabees, when heroic, larger than life guerilla warriors fought against the occupiers, and for a time they won. They had God on their side, they had proven what the Scriptures always said: with God on your side, a tiny army against all odds can defeat a huge enemy.

Your rabbi’s father told the same stories to your father; and these things were never questioned.

A few years ago your uncle, who believed these stories completely and desperately wanted to prove himself a man, joined the insurrection. Over a thousand of his friends gathered in the hills, and they marched on Jerusalem -- but they were smart, they waited for Passover; they came into the town during the time of festival; they blended in with the thousands of pilgrims coming to celebrate the great feast and to sacrifice at the Temple. They gained entry into the city by these means, and once inside, they launched a revolt.

They were summarily rounded up and executed. Days later you saw his corpse; it was one of hundreds of crucified rebels lining the road into town. Your father told you not to look, but you did anyway and you’re sorry you did.

But lately there has been a rising sense of hope in the air. Finally, everyone is saying, the time has come. This is the time. I mean, really the time, this is not just our imagining. God has finally heard the groans of his people. Finally, the debt has been paid; finally our sins no longer stand in the way of God and his people. Finally, God will be on our side once again; the long punishment is over; God’s kingdom will once again be established.

There is a great man, they say he is the one. He will deliver Israel. He heals people just by touching them. He even rose a man from the dead! And today – this is the Passover feast; He is marching on Jerusalem with his followers; Today, just as the Holy Scriptures predicted, just as the rabbi has been saying all our lives, today is the day when he will enter the city, and a cloud of witnesses, a host of angels will descend upon the Romans; he will command legions of angels, and the Romans will finally be driven from the Temple; and our long suffering will be over.

They say he is the one. Finally, there is a reason to hope.

Your heart is beating, you can barely contain your excitement. The crowds are gathering; the angels are at the ready; this is the day; this is the time.

Now listen to the story of the Passion: Matthew

(Matthew 26:14-27:66)

What do we do....

when our godly dreams are shattered?

when our righteous prayers go unanswered?

when this God that we have given our lives to turns out to be... all too human?

Pray with me that, as we move through Holy Week, these questions will find an answer.