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Wednesday, May 28, 2014

May 25, 2014, John 14:15-21



John 14:15-21
“If you love me, you will keep my commandments. And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever. This is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him, because he abides with you, and he will be in you.
“I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you. In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me; because I live, you also will live. On that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you.  They who have my commandments and keep them are those who love me; and those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will love them and reveal myself to them.”

***
We don’t get to see Jesus. We don’t get to arrive at the the tomb and mistake him for the gardener. We don’t get to race beating the other disciple. We don’t get to meet him on the road and see him in the breaking of bread. We don’t get to sit with him on the beach and notice his face in the sharing of fish, that communion meal. We don’t get to see Jesus, but I wouldn’t trade it. That earthly Jesus is fleeting, but we are given something that hovered over the the waters before creation was, and will outlast the stars when they are no more. Yet, despite it’s reign in that infinite space, that eternal gift abides here, and it is the Holy Spirit. This, this I would not trade for the world itself. I wouldn’t trade the shape of the squirrel circled up arched back meeting rounded tail perched on the skinniest of branches in my view. I wouldn’t trade the way sweet pea vines up the handle of a hanging basket. I wouldn’t trade that tuft of down floating singularly on the breeze. We don’t get to see Jesus, but the Spirit is everywhere. Have you looked to the hills in this Sound of Music Season, or smiled at the calves in Cute Season, or yet smelled the summer rain? This is the Spirit.
Jesus, as a man aware of his mortality, knew that he too would not walk the earth for eternity, but he wanted to give us something that would last. Something for those who would never see his face, and something for those who would see his face no more. This chapter of John is in what is called the, ‘Farewell Discourse.’ Like an elder on their deathbed, Jesus is trying to impart all his wisdom and truth. He is also trying to reassure those who will be left behind and shore up his loose ends. He is with the disciples before his death, resurrection and assention, and knows, in his humanity, he cannot last forever. He told them, “I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever…the Spirit of Truth.” 
Isn’t it true that when we are gone, we hope the things for which we stood, carry on. This is what Jesus sends, an Advocate, a Spirit of Truth. We did not get to see Jesus withhold from throwing the first stone. We did not get to witness Jesus befriended the tax collector and the leper. We did not get to watch Jesus welcome the children. But when we see other’s failings in light of our own, or when we have a dozen youth signed up to study and serve the impoverished in L.A., or when we remember to that it is okay for children to leap from these stairs, Jesus lives on. It is in these moments we see the Spirit of Truth. It is in these moments, the life of Jesus speaks through the Advocate. When have you known the truth to prevail? When is the last time you saw truth reign supreme, even in the tiniest of ways? When have you seen it here in this place, in the communion and in all the created world. There Jesus is. You know him, because he abides with you, and he will be in you.” 
That Spirit is in you, and alive in the world, and I wouldn’t trade it for the world, or even to see Jesus’ face. I have seen more than anyone could ever ask. I see the Spirit, in the way despite the smashing of ballot boxes and attempting to disrupt elections, voters in Ukraine are turning out in droves for the election. I see the Spirit, in the way the world is outraged that young girls were stolen for seeking an education. I see the Spirit in the way the Pope sought to create peace talks for Israel and Palestine. The Spirit of truth is still speaking, and Jesus is alive in its the words of a ballot, in the Spirit shepherd seeking out the lost girls, and in the Spirit of Peace at the Vatican. This is Jesus’ final gift to us. This is what he is trying to tell the disciples. This is the promise that still remains. This I would not trade for the world, or even to live in the world which got to witness the face of our Lord, because there is a holy witness in the living of this life right now. 
Jesus says, “I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you. In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me; because I live, you also will live. On that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you. They who have my commandments and keep them are those who love me; and those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will love them and reveal myself to them.” 
Brothers and sisters in Christ, we are already at the tomb, we have seen the stone rolled away, and found our Lord speaking to us, in the mystery of a floating feather of down, and in the mystery reveled in the breaking of bread. In the mystery that through this Spirit this ancient text still speaks and will never fall silent. In the mystery that Christ was not a man who once was, but who overcame death, by sending us a Spirit, who was then, and now and ever shall be, who is Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, and with us now.  Have you seen it, have you heard it, have you felt it blowing through the wilderness, calling and free. It is here. Alleluia, Amen. 

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

May 18, 2014, Matthew 5:1-10



Called to Bless
by Luke Rembold

I’ve spent a great deal of time thinking about the best way to share and reflect on my trip to Israel and Palestine this last January. What can I say to bring light to this burden I now feel on my heart? How do you take an emotional, visceral, personal experience and communicate it in a clear, passionate way?

To say there are a lot of politics involved in this conversation would be an understatement.  I’m aware of the context that we come from, or at least that I have come from as a middle-class American. But to be honest, I left on this trip mostly ignorant. I’m sure some of you come into this topic with a great deal more knowledge than I had before I left, and some of you probably still have more knowledge than I have now. I’ll try not to get political. Operative word here being “try.” Honestly, the intersections of politics and religion here are so tightly wound together that trying to detangle them is to drastically oversimplify the complexity of what we’re talking about.

I shared before church some of the economic, social, and environmental struggles taking place in this region, in terms of crops, water rights, housing rights, and residency. What I want to share with you now, and try to bare of bit of myself for you now, is my own spiritual journey as the trip progressed.  I’ve come to realize that in a region full of various narratives and stories, some differing greatly based on perspective, all I can speak to is my own story, my own experience.  I can’t hit every note of journey, but I’ll try to strike the major chords to help bring you along, and I hope that some aspect of the journey connects with you.

I went to the Holy Land searching for the holy. Simple enough, right? Now, I might have tried to tell myself that my delegation was based on becoming more aware of the struggles that are taking place, that I was going to educate myself as a peacemaker, but really, I was seeking the divine. I was looking for where God was in this holy mess, searching for God in the deserts of the Holy Land, seeking guidance both for my own life and for the lives of everyone in this region.

My trip began in Jerusalem, the city of Kings, the central municipality for all three Abrahamic traditions. Our first night some of us explored Old Jerusalem, fighting off jetlag with a circuitous walk to the Western Wall, a pilgrimage and holy site for the Jewish tradition. The peace of the square at night, just a few pilgrims praying quietly, was a warm welcome to our pilgrim hearts.

Our next morning brought the Call to Prayer, the mezzinas awakening us around 5 am with Arabic songs praising God. I’d experienced this before in Turkey, and I love it. While people of the Muslim faith gather in mosques for this time of prayer, I’ve always enjoyed the opportunity to wake up, lie in bed in prayer, and then go back to sleep after it is over. That opening day, the call to prayer brought me peace.

Our first presenter and conversation that day, however, brought with it the stark realities of inequality in the region. Ruth, an Israeli activist working with the Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions, took us to a point overlooking the city where we could understand border lines, “settlements,” and the wall. In the interest of education, let’s take a brief moment to break each of those down.

Much of the conflict in the area comes from the lack of clear and understood borders. In 1948, when Israel declared independence, here are the political lines of the new country. In 1967, Israel expanded, capturing Jerusalem in addition to this additional land. When we talk about “settlements,” we are almost exclusively referring to Israeli citizens, protected by the Israeli Defense Force, moving onto what is internationally recognized as Palestinian land, as a means of pushing Israel’s political boundaries.

I’ll discuss the wall separately. I want to do that because my first exposure to this wall came when I went to Triennium in 2004 as a high school junior. In my small group at Triennium was a young man by the name of Jiries.  Jiries was and is an incredible pianist, but his first-hand account of the wall being built at that time forever changed my view of the Holy Land. And so seeing this wall, spoken of to me 10 years before as it was still in construction, was hard for me. From our viewpoint just outside Jerusalem that first day, I could see it winding and snaking its way through the Holy City, dividing relatives from one another and people from their crops. It should also be noted that this wall follows neither the political lines of 1948 nor 1967, but instead encroaches with impunity on Palestinian lands wherever it likes, further reducing the amount of land available to Palestinian farmers and families.

Our tour with Ruth finished with a visit to a home demolition site, where a Palestinian building was destroyed by contractors working for the Israeli government (I want to note that I will try to be very careful in my language as I define Israeli, referring to the political governmental body, and those of the Jewish faith. While Israel’s desire is to be the homeland of the Jewish people, there are many Israeli citizens that claim other faith traditions).  Our workshop before church discussed this topic, as while West Jerusalem has a huge construction economy and constant building taking place, no building or expansion permits are issued in East Jerusalem, and therefore entire neighborhoods of Palestinian housing are falling apart, or are not big enough to support the families living there. Since 1967, over 28,000 homes in the Palestinian territories have been destroyed, thousands in East Jerusalem, with reasons for destruction being cited as everything from a threat to public safety, or that building took place without proper permits. That’s almost three times Baker’s population losing their homes over the course of the last 47 years.

My heart was heavy after our tour with Ruth. She took us through some checkpoints, as we watched Palestinian people (typically darker in skin color than their Israeli counterparts) wait in chutes uncannily similar to cattle chutes wait to be allowed through, usually for the purpose of work. We visited an Israeli settlement just outside Jerusalem, perfect landscaping and grass in the desert, complete with olive trees transplanted in roundabouts to create an image of permanence.  My heart was angry. This was injustice, blatant injustice taking place, mostly through military force.

At the risk of the longest sermon ever, I can’t reflect on every speaker we met and talked to, whether Israeli, Palestinian, Zionist or not, Muslim, Jew, or Christian. I have to flash forward a little bit now, to a young man we met in Bethlehem by the name of Muhammad.  Muhammad has spent his whole life in the AIDA refugee camp, one of the refugee camps set up after the 1948 war that led to the displacement of over 700,000 Palestinians. That is more people than the entire city of Portland evicted and displaced. Aida doesn’t look like a refugee camp as I at least, picture it. It is not tents and temporary structures. This is a community that has existed since 1948, and the camp now consists of many permanent buildings, all built right within the shadow of the wall. That wall keeps a constant eye on the refugee camp…the day we were there we had to hurriedly leave because soldiers were getting ready to come in for a sweep (they use it - the AIDA refugee camp- for training new soldiers). As we left Bethlehem later that day, we saw the smoke from tear gas billowing up into the air from the wall near the refugee camp where we had enjoyed tea, hospitality, and a tour just hours earlier.

Muhammad now serves as the director of youth activities at the local community center. Muhammad said something I’ll never forget: He said, “You, as Americans, have more rights in my homeland than I do. You can come here, then go to Jerusalem. Another day you might go to the sea. Most of the youth who live here will never see Jerusalem, will never see the sea. We are prisoners inside these walls.”  As two friends and I walked the 7 miles from Bethlehem to Jerusalem later that day, we passed through the checkpoint that essentially keeps Bethlehem a completely walled-in city. When we needed to produce our passports to gain entry into Israel, the guard took one look at us and waved us through without even glancing at our papers. Indeed, we had more freedom in Muhammad’s land than he did.

3 weeks after we left, Muhammad was struck in the head by a rubber bullet during an IDF sweep of the camp. He was leaning out the window of the community center, urging youth to empty the streets, when an IDF soldier shot him in the head.  When his cohorts in the community center tried to rush him to the hospital, IDF forces in the streets prevented them from leaving, citing safety concerns. Thankfully, Muhammad lived to tell the story.  And Muhammad’s message for us made me brutally aware of the privilege I carry as an American strutting through the Holy Land.

I don’t want to only speak of those things that made me angry. There were lots, to be fair. Injustice does that. Inequality does that. Grappling with your own privilege and complicity in an illegal occupation is difficult….no one likes to look in a mirror and see themselves as an oppressor, but if we are serious about ending injustice we must examine our own participation in it. So the final image I want to share with you is one of courage, of nonviolence, and of hope.

We were lucky enough to spend one night in a small village named Bi’lin, north of Ramallah and in a crucial location in the Palestinian Territories. 10 years ago, the wall was built through the olive orchards of many Bil’in residents, literally cutting them off from the fields their families had worked for generations. The wall wasn’t running along political lines or international lines…it was serving as a tool to seize land where it could. And the residents of Bil’in decided to do something about it. Every Friday, for the last 10 years, they have organized a nonviolent protest that walks to the wall and demands justice. Sometimes they dress up as characters from the movie Avatar. Last Christmas they went one time dressed as a hundred Santa Clauses. Their creativity in protest gives spirit and life to their movement, and rather than being confrontational, aspires to draw
people into the conversation.

These villagers have been tear-gassed too many times to count, shot with rubber bullets, and imprisoned. One leader of the movement has been killed by a tear gas canister shot directly into his chest instead of into the air. Yet this community continues to believe in the nonviolent resolution, earning international support and belief through their dedication to nonviolence. About a year ago, the wall was moved back about a half mile. The villagers still don’t have their full orchards back, but they’ve been able to once again work in the fields they have so long cultivated.

I bring this message of hope before I come back to stark realities. One of our final days in Jerusalem we went to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Museum. It was absolutely heartbreaking. Reading, learning about the atrocities of the Shoa (the Jewish name for the Holocaust), it gave me a broader understanding of the historical narrative that led to the creation of Israel. And I realized that in my anger, in my frustration, and my sadness, I was at risk of blaming too heavily, of drawing too hard a line in my heart. I sat down in the coffee shop of the Yad Vashem and pulled out my Bible, thumbing to Matthew’s Beatitudes. I’ve never liked Matthew’s Beatitudes as much. I’m pragmatic. I’m action based. Luke’s Beatitudes deal with physical, real-life issues. Luke says “Blessed are the poor.” Matthew’s are more difficult. I’ll stop after just that first one: “Blessed are the poor in spirit.”

There is some graffiti on the separation wall that reads, “One Wall, Two Jails.” In the Holy Land, for one of these oppressed people, that jail is that of poverty, of inequality, of injustice, and of occupation. It's easy. "Blessed are the poor."

There are other people that are oppressed by fear. They have been hurt. They have been killed in horrific ways that make your heart break. They are a people who have felt the terror of occupation. But now they live in a jail of fear. They've locked themselves in without a way to get out. "Blessed are the poor in spirit."

Genesis speaks of the chosen people as those blessed. And then there’s that tricky little line at the end that states “in you all the families of the world shall be blessed.” For the entirety of my time in Israel and Palestine, I was asking myself, “if we use this Biblical text to justify the creation of this country, how can we so quickly look past this “blessing the rest of the world” in a land of occupation and inequality?

I don’t like a sermon without a call to action. It’s just not in my DNA. And while this is my journey, I recognize that it might not be your own. Your story, your understanding, your narrative is going to look different than mine. That’s great. I’ll willingly admit I bring more questions than answers, and I invite and implore you to explore your own understanding. Go read on these issues. Try to find viewpoints from all over the spectrum.  Pray for wisdom. Pray for peace. I hope we can be a church that despite differing views, can pray for peace in the midst of turmoil.

For me, I know these are all God’s children. Every person caught in the middle of this conflict is a precious child that God loves, and it breaks my heart to see those oppressed, whether by physical walls or by paralyzing fear, that makes us forget that “those people” are in fact those same brothers and sisters descended from Abraham that Genesis speaks about?

And if I am willing to look in a mirror, I have to recognize these faults in my own life. I have walls, both literal and imaginary, that prevent me from knowing, understanding, and loving my neighbors. At times, I go out of my way to avoid former high school classmates I see around town. I’ll see them in an aisle at Albertsons and go down the next one. Sometimes at Open Door, I have such a desire to correct behavior and protect church property that I forget to encourage the space to be shared.  I allow that political sign in someone’s front yard to wall me off from even approaching them to discuss the issues. I had to go around the world to see the walls in my own context, and let me tell you, walls abound.

The good news? Friends, we are followers of a God of resurrection. We believe in a redeemer that can take what is broken and flawed and make it whole. So today, I pray for peace in Israel and Palestine. I pray for Ruth and the other activists we met. I pray for Muhammad and the refugees of the AIDA refugee camp. I pray for the people of Bil’in. And I also pray for the legislators and lawmakers of the Israeli government. I pray for the members of the Israeli Defense Force that are compelled by law to take up arms against their neighbors. Prayers for peace, and prayers for courage to fight injustice when we see it.

Now we can’t just pray for peace somewhere else without thinking of our own walls. So I pray for peace in the divisions in our own community and country. Let us pray to the God that tears down walls, that we might each be freed from our own prisons, that we might courageously love freely and abundantly, and share that love in a real, tangible blessing to others.  Amen.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

May 11, 2014 Luke 24:13-35





Now on that same day two of them were going to a village called Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem, and talking with each other about all these things that had happened. While they were talking and discussing, Jesus himself came near and went with them, but their eyes were kept from recognizing him. 

And he said to them, "What are you discussing with each other while you walk along?" They stood still, looking sad. Then one of them, whose name was Cleopas, answered him, 

"Are you the only stranger in Jerusalem who does not know the things that have taken place there in these days?" He asked them, "What things?" They replied, 

"The things about Jesus of Nazareth, who was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people, and how our chief priests and leaders handed him over to be condemned to death and crucified him. But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. Yes, and besides all this, it is now the third day since these things took place. Moreover, some women of our group astounded us. They were at the tomb early this morning, and when they did not find his body there, they came back and told us that they had indeed seen a vision of angels who said that he was alive. Some of those who were with us went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said; but they did not see him." 

Then he said to them, "Oh, how foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have declared! Was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer these things and then enter into his glory?" Then beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them the things about himself in all the scriptures.

As they came near the village to which they were going, Jesus walked ahead as if he were going on. But they urged him strongly, saying, "Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over." So he went in to stay with them. When he was at the table with them, he took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized him; and he vanished from their sight. 

They said to each other, "Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?" That same hour they got up and returned to Jerusalem; and they found the eleven and their companions gathered together. They were saying, "The Lord has risen indeed, and he has appeared to Simon!" Then they told what had happened on the road, and how he had been made known to them in the breaking of the bread.

***

Ocean Drive in Miami feels like a runway during fashion week. Art Deco buildings dressed in flamboyant colors glow and beckon like neon signs; their reflection is mirrored in the shine and wax of Rolls and Lamborghinis cruising below at a stalking pace. Beats bounce from clubs, waiters heckle from restaurants, and beautiful people strut like salsa, tango and meringue. Somehow in the midst of this deliciously gluttonous vibe, I find a rock wall on which to perch and archaically write postcards, as if I am, ‘summering,’ as a verb. Beside me, beach volleyball players compete for more than points and in the middle of my moment of tourist-reverie, a svelte woman, with frizzy-hair hidden under a Nike visor, asks me in Spanglish, if I want to play. I follow her assumption, as I too remember, that waiting at the edge of a field, is kid-code for wanting to join in but not wanting to ask. I assure her of my non-interest and my non-ability, as strongly as she assures me of the players’ welcome and their varying skills. The whole exchange is as if the childhood decorum of, ‘wanna play?’ is being executed to Emily Post standards without superficiality and only grace, this stranger’s welcoming grace, to me, a stranger on the street. 

Though, I doubt the road to Emmaus holds Ocean Drive’s swagger of dollars, palm trees, and bare skin, I know on that third day, despite Emmaus’ natural setting of ochre dirt, sedimentary rock, and olive trees, Emmaus, likewise, holds an abundance of chaos. It is a metaphysical chaos, of death, drama, and the divine. The disciples are in trauma, where all they can do is speak about what is happening. They are trying to process their own personal grief and the distortion of the world they knew. To them on that road, it is as if, they are in LaGaurdia on September 14, 2001 and their best friend might still be caught in the tower. Moreover, this friend, is a presidential candidate, a religious leader, and prophet, the one whom they call, the Messiah. The disciples are hurrying toward Emmaus with the realization that if Jerusalem could crucify Jesus, it certainly will crucify them, Jesus’ followers. Emmaus is the road to safety, and the disciples’ conversation was a wrestling with grief and for clarity. 

It is in this cacoughany, the disciples hurry along in their frantic conversation, and a stranger stops them to ask, "What are you discussing with each other while you walk along?” Jesus Christ is in LaGaurdia on 9/14 and has no idea about 9/11. Jesus Christ, the stranger, was asking the disciples to not only explain the geography, and the politics of this messiah’s death, but also, to explain it all when that dead messiah is their loved one. I remember waking up right before class freshman year, at St. Lawrence, in Upstate New York, and all my classmates are saying is, “one of the towers has been hit.” Now, at that point, I have been to New York on family vacation, but I don’t know know New York like my classmates know New York. I don’t have a dozen people to call to see if they are okay. I don’t know what the World Trade Center is. I don’t know how many people are affected. I have not lived through war in our country or terrorism from another. I don’t ask. I just sit there in our first period class watching the news and the plane hit over and over and then then next plane hit, and I remember the phones are tied up with students calling home to see if everyone is okay, and I am comforted that my family has the rule, “You call if somethings wrong, otherwise everything’s okay.” No one in that class is explaining to me anything, and I am not asking. Jesus has the audacity to ask and I can’t believe how much time and care Cleopas takes to explain. Perhaps Cleopas needs to talk, to tell the story from beginning to end. Perhaps Cleopas says it all very sarcastically, but Cleopas answers thoroughly. He says

"Jesus of Nazareth, was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people, and our chief priests and leaders handed him over to be condemned to death and crucified him. But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. Yes, and besides all this, it is now the third day since these things took place. Moreover, some women of our group astounded us. They were at the tomb early this morning, and when they did not find his body there, they came back and told us that they had indeed seen a vision of angels who said that he was alive. Some of those who were with us went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said; but they did not see him."

This is no shorthand answer. This is no, ‘One of the towers has been hit.” It is instead, ‘You see, mam’, One of the towers of the World Trade Center, which is comprised of two enormous buildings in New York City, where hundreds of people direct much of the financial trade around the world, has collapsed after a highjacked passenger plane ran into the middle of it. This also means that the people on the plane have surely died and that this is a terrorist attack, the likes of which have never happened on US soil. We cannot foresee the political and social ramifications that will take place in even the few days to come, much less the months, and perhaps years, of history this attack will change. In LaGaudaria airport, so close to the city, many travelers have family members and close friends who could have been in those towers. One of my own close friends may have died in those towers, and I am in shock with much grief to come. Furthermore, sitting here in LaGuardia airport, we also, could have easily been on that plane.’ 

This is the type of answer Cleopas gives. It is an answer of someone who wants the stranger to know the meaning of Jesus’ life and death, an answer which is trying to convey the loss both personally, but also globally. It is answer that recognizes the world will forever be changed. Cleopas wants the stranger to understand, to know the story so deeply that her heart burns inside her, that she is there in LaGuardia, at a loss for words, and perhaps in tears, and seeing anew.

Instead, Jesus Christ, the stranger responds, "Oh, how foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have declared! Was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer these things and then enter into his glory?" This stranger has just told Cleopas that his friend is going to die anyway and that this death brings glory. When people try to tell me these omniscient things, I put on my fighting gloves. Just try to tell me, ‘Everything happens for a reason.’ I try to refrain from arguing when people use this as a platitude, but when they believe it, oh boy, they’ve got another thing coming. But what did Cleopas do? He let the clueless stranger continue with the stranger’s own history lesson. “Then beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them the things about himself in all the scriptures.”

At this point, the difference between Cleopas and I really begins to shake out something strong, and I can tell he is a disciple of Jesus Christ because I don’t do what Cleopas does. Cleopas listens to the stranger on the road. This stranger, who knows nothing, is allowed to speak, to extort, to extoll, on the trauma Cleopas is experiencing and Cleopas listens. I can’t imagine having this much grace. What if after 9/11, I had taken the time to listen to Jesus Christ in the strangers on the street? What if we as country listened to Jesus Christ in strangers, rather than putting on our xenophobic fighting gloves? I am equally culpable as the lies of weapons of mass destruction, because I can not even listen on the playground of Ocean Drive. Looking back, I wish I played volleyball, not because I really wanted to, or because I am any good, because I didn’t and I’m not, but because months later, I can picture that woman as clear as day, and I know my heart was burning within me, Jesus Christ was speaking to me face to face, and Cleopas does something I do not. 

This stranger on the road to Emmaus does another one of those kid-code things. “As they came near the village to which they were going, he walked ahead as if he were going on. But they urged him strongly, saying, "Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over." So he went in to stay with them.” I imagine where the roads diverge and one goes on and one turns toward Emmaus, and the stranger kind of shuffles and hangs back a little at that fulcrum. I imagine it kind of like a stranger sitting on a stone wall beside a beach volleyball court. Cleopas, like the volleyball woman, reads the kid clues, and he, and she, know that Jesus Christ can be felt in the inviting. What Cleopas finds out, that I missed out, is that after an invitation of grace, Jesus can been seen in the game, and in the breaking of bread. 

“When Jesus Christ was at the table with them, he took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized him; and he vanished from their sight.”

The woman on Ocean Drive explains to me that she came by the court a few months ago when she first came to America, knowing nothing of volleyball and little of English. She sat down simply to watch, and was invited and after some length of convincing assurance and language transference, she joined in. Despite her lack of skills in the beginning, she was encouraged, and taught. I listen to her and I know it is really a witness she is telling me, a witness of the grace given to strangers even in the bacchanal of this Ocean Drive, even in the foreign strangeness of volleyball.  

“They said to each other, "Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?" That same hour they got up and returned to Jerusalem; and they found the eleven and their companions gathered together. They were saying, "The Lord has risen indeed, and he has appeared to Simon!" Then they told what had happened on the road, and how he had been made known to them in the breaking of the bread.”


I think of our youth group playing volleyball about a year ago at the Lehmans’. We have bunch of volleyball players in our youth group and they are good, and I, their dorky, uncoordinated, comparatively-old, pastor showed up in jeans and a nice top, never dreaming of joining in. Soon, I found myself in a pink Baker Bulldog t-shirt, out in the sand court looking up from the valley to our mountains in their splendor. With like majesty and grace score was not kept, failings held no comments, mistakes were fine, and the rare good play was met with exuberant encouragement. I had never had fun playing a ball sport in my life. I saw Jesus there, and was encouraged to take a new look at this strange thing called sports. Now, relatedly, I am taking tennis lessons from Luke. Apologies are not allowed, and the pavlovian voice in my head that remembers, “Watch the ball, Kate!” is being retrained to hear, “Your getting to the ball early because your body anticipates where it will be.” Jesus was there also, because Jesus can be felt in the welcome of strangers, and is made known in the game.

He is made known to us in the breaking of bread, in the welcome of strangers, in the simplicity of kid-code and challenge of long answers and deep listening. He is risen on a volleyball court here in Baker and a similar one on Ocean Drive. May we have the grace to find him risen not only in the beauty of our games, but in the midst of the trauma of our world. The Lord is Risen.