Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Peace, Equity, and Justice for All

 We are nearing the end of Advent 2025.  The Church looks once again to the birth of the most important person ever to step onto our planet. In the Living Christ, hope is restored, healing arises, and grace abounds. The gap between birth and death, dark and light, broken trust and forgiveness, lost and found, is bridged. Jesus takes up the ripped or cut ends of time and pulls them back together, putting us on track - aligning us once more to the Holy Way.  The Christmas call is to take up one's staff and get back on the Good Road from wherever we have been lured, strayed, or fallen off. 

The means to do this is easy. Look into the man this small baby becomes. With him, our calendars and how we mark time changed.  A spiritual awakening saw the worldwide spread of a new religion.  While we, humans, botched it -- as we always have -- mingling in power, greed, fear, and corruption, the steady-handed, non-anxious presence of Jesus' life revealed a life-giving Beatitude that, were it to catch hold in each of us, there truly could be global peace, equity, and justice for all.

So, as we sing in many a candlelight service on Christmas Eve, the familiar strains of Silent Night, or O Come, O Come Emmanuel, or Hark the Herald Angels Sing, let us each recommit a sacred space within our hearts to follow this wee boy in a manager striving to live his message as our own lives.  

Friday, November 21, 2025

Christ the King

This coming Sunday is "Christ the King" Sunday.  It is the last Sunday of the Christian Church year.  The following Sunday is the first Sunday of Advent. The name for this Sunday has some oddities that might rub us the wrong way. As a nation, many participated in protests shouting, "No Kings!" So what does it mean to turn around and envision Jesus as a King? 

The use of the King image has its roots back in the human era, when feudalism was the only economic/political system in operation at the rise of nation-states in Europe. Church doctrine was coming together bit by bit, church council by church council.  It's logical for the Church to look for a unifying image for the "head of the Church."  The position of king was the most powerful figure in people's lives.  They needed an image of Christ that would communicate that he was the leader over people's lives.  

The profound irony, however, is that Jesus explicitly rejected that role in his life.  As he rode into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday on a donkey (or colt), it was purposely not a war stallion.  While there were groups who wanted Jesus to declare himself a king or emperor and overthrow Rome, he forcefully rejected the role. The word he most often referenced for his leadership style was "servant."

So here we are with this archaic doctrinal reference to Jesus to which tradition keeps us melded. I'll not get into the added tangle of patriarchal language. So, is this redeemable?  I think it is. 

All of us who follow Jesus, and hold him as a serious guiding principle in our lives can still see the congruity of using monarch as an image.  It connotes an authority whom we adopt as the moral guide for our lives.  So the redeeming question becomes this: What does Jesus as Monarch mean to my life?  What kind of Monarch is he to me?  For me, he would be:

A powerful presence yet humble.  Instructive but not domineering.  Judge of all good, not petty, unfair, lacking in understanding, or uncaring.  Beloved -- always on the right side of peace, encouraging plenty for all.  Charismatic - luring us to be like him without the force of legalism.  Gentle -- not vengeful or vindictive.

Inviting this very unique monarch into our hearts as the guiding founder of our faith and spiritual life is exactly what we need for our spiritual health, as well as the Vision for our world.  

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Spacious Silliness

 "...there were seven brothers. The first married a woman and then died childless. The second, then the third, married her. Eventually, all seven married her... When all are resurrected, to which one does she belong?  Luke 20:29-33

The legal authorities in Jesus' day spent too much of their privileged time in spacious speculation about unimportant matters.  Rather than feeding the hungry and clothing the naked, they preferred coffee cake and mind-tripping. Perhaps, it was their puffed-up intra-group egoistic contest to outdo one another with clever what-ifs that caused them to cook up a hypothetical of such an unlikely occurrence.  Though it should be noted, their goal was to spring a trap and discredit as a theological scowflaw the far more popular folk hero operating in their ballywick. So much is wrong about this tale from our modern perspective that one might wonder why it isn't lying on the floor of the editors.   And yet...

Inside the tale (and the minds of the debate-ers) is revealed the simplicity humans prefer over cosmic glory. Let's list some of the deeper elements that are passed over in the hypothetical.

1. The inherent sacred value that God places on every person. The wife here is not some inanimate object of inheritance.  Nor is she a hand-me-down future bearer of the family name—though culturally, that was one of the assumed functions for women of that period. If religious minds had been aimed higher than their cultural norms, they might have been advocating for the sacredness in all human nature.

2. Do humans really have ownership over anything?  a) We can't possess another soul.  To share our soul with others creates the weave in the fabric of eternity.  The essence of relationships is the memories and love held in the vault of forever, often passed down from generation to generation. b) In practical purposes, marriage is a social contract for the sake of family stability and child rearing, not a bill of sale. Marriage, in religious contexts, however, is the recognition of and honor shown to the commitment to love.

3. Life on planet Earth appears as a zero-sum game.  One lives.  One dies. End of story.  That would be the tale if life were solely the tangible.   But it is not only tangible flesh & blood.  Even in the legal authorities' hypothetical, they recognize the intangible.  The eternal dimension == Life that is broader, higher, and eternal.  Where exists the energy & essence of life -- grounded in love, mercy, justice, peace...  Co-joined (married?) to God. We come from God.  To God we return. 

We do not worship a God of the dead, but a God of life -- a life that knows no end.