Monday, April 22, 2019

April 21, 2019 Easter Sunday Luke 24:1-12


            I confess that I am disappointed with the gospel reading of the resurrection.  Why am I disappointed?  Because Jesus, the main character, doesn’t ever appear!  This story is about him, after all, and we’re at the climax of it – but no Jesus!  Several women who followed Jesus are in the story.  These two mysterious men in the tomb are in the story.  Peter gets a shout out, and the disciples are in the story too.  The closest thing we get to having Jesus is an empty tomb.
            Of course I can’t change the past, and I didn’t get to do things my way, but if I did get to do things my way I’d have Jesus’ resurrection be something like those old TV commercials for Snickers candy bars.  Picture this:  The women are hurrying to the tomb on a bright and sunny Sunday morning.  They’re carrying all the spices they planned to use to anoint Jesus.  And since it’s a commercial, let’s have Jesus and the women all be portrayed by supermodels.  As the women approach the tomb, which is in a perfectly manicured garden, we see the confusion and surprise on their faces as they see the stone rolled back.  There is a pause.  Then as they tentatively enter the tomb we don’t have two unnamed men in there, we have Jesus himself.  He’s dressed in a perfect white robe.  He’s standing and casually leaning back against the stone shelf on which his body was laid.  He has a smile on his face, and in one hand he’s holding up a partially unwrapped Snickers candy bar; with one bite taken out of it.  Keeping the smile on his face he says, “Being resurrected sure works up an appetite.  Packed with peanuts, Snickers really satisfies!”
            My version is stupid, I know that, but keep that stupid image in mind and consider what has really happened in Luke’s gospel. 
If you’ve been worshipping with us since we began reading Luke last December you’ll know that in Chapter 1 Luke give us the back story of several of the characters.  Then in Chapter 2 Jesus is born!  From there on it’s pretty much all about him.  We get to see his parents take him to the temple when he is eight days old.  Luke tells the story of his childhood when his parents accidentally leave him behind on a trip to Jerusalem.  The beginning of the scene of Jesus’ baptism is all about John the Baptist but that’s still pointing to Jesus.  Then Jesus’ public ministry begins and he not only present but front and center in absolutely every scene. 
Matthew and Mark, the other two gospels who tell the story of Jesus from the same point of view as Luke (John’s gospel takes a totally different approach) both have asides along the way or scenes where Jesus isn’t present.  The most notable scene is the execution of John the Baptist.  Luke, however, never takes the camera off Jesus.  Even in the scene where Peter denies Jesus three times Jesus is present and sees Peter!
Again, after Jesus is baptized there is not one single scene in Luke’s entire gospel where Jesus is not front and center.
And then there’s the resurrection.  We’re at the triumphal climax of the story and the main character isn’t anywhere to be found!
If we read on we have the famous Road to Emmaus story.  That takes place Easter evening.  Jesus is in that.  And he’s also in every story to the end of the gospel; but not here.
In my fictitious version of the resurrection Jesus would be front and center.  I’d even make it a multi-sponsor commercial.  I’d make sure the camera caught a glimpse of the Nike swoosh on his sandals, and after the women greet Jesus they’d all pull out their iphones and snap selfies, which they’d immediately post to Instagram with the caption, “Look who’s been resurrected!” 
But none of that is possible with an empty tomb.
My version of the resurrection would indeed be a happy one, but it would be a limiting one.  It would be holding Jesus back into what I want him to be, someone to suit my needs.  He’d really be no different than a product sponsor who could be used to make money.  He be a famous person I could take a selfie with and proudly show to all my friends that I had met Jesus.  Jesus at the tomb would be all about me.
But the empty tomb is a totally different story.  It is a story with no limits, no boundaries.  There are no controls.  It is a scene of limitless possibilities; and absolutely no possibility of being about me – my wants, my needs, my desires.
And let’s make sure we notice one very important detail.  Why was the stone rolled back?  Was it rolled back to let Jesus out, or to let the women in?  It was rolled back to let the women -and us- in.
As the story goes on we discover that the resurrected Jesus is no ghost.  He’s solid.  He’s real flesh and blood.  He meets people.  He talks to them.  He shows the disciples the wounds in his body.  He eats with them.  His presence is no dream or illusion.  Yet at the same time he comes and goes without any regard for the laws of physics.  There’s something about his resurrected reality that just isn’t bound by limits and rules.
Jesus did not need that stone to be rolled back in order to get out of the tomb.  The stone needed to be rolled back so the women could get inside it; inside it and find it empty – so the story could reach its climax and have no Jesus!
Jesus is present among us.  He does meet us in our needs and troubles.  But Jesus’ resurrection does not mean the story continues as it did before.  Jesus’ resurrection is not about helping us to live our own lives in our own ways and on our old trajectories.  Jesus’ resurrection is about opening us to new possibilities.  In fact, opening us to the impossible!
On Friday, with the crucifixion, the religious establishment in Jerusalem thought they had done away with this troublesome Jesus fellow who’d come from the rural north with a rag tag bunch of disciples, and the charisma to whip up a crowd.  For the religious leaders now the threat was dealt with.  Problem solved!  It was time to go back to religion as usual:
services,
sacrifices,
debates over the law,
alms for the poor. 
This was all the stuff that had been doing for ages and knew how to do well.
But the tomb was empty!  Jesus will not be confined.  He will not be confined to:
the traditional,
the safe,
and the predictable. 
There is no knowing where this story is going to go when we have an empty tomb!
For many Easter is a lot like the religious leaders that Passover so many years ago.  It is a holiday time.  It’s school break week so many people have gone on vacations or visited family.  There are traditions to uphold.  Even now all over this nation there are hams in ovens, and scalloped potatoes too, cooking in preparation for Easter dinner.  Perhaps you are looking at your watch and hoping the service will end on time.  Perhaps you are anxious that something in Easter dinner will not be fully cooked, or perhaps overcooked.  Or if you’re eating in a restaurant you hope the wait won’t be too long or that the reservation is set.
And with Easter there are decorations, and flowers, and Easter egg hunts.  Perhaps there aren’t Snickers candy bars as a part of your Easter but there may be Easter baskets with chocolate rabbits, peanut butter eggs -my favorite-, and jelly beans.
In time it will all be eaten.  The dirty dishes will be washed.  The visits and vacations will end.  The decorations will be put away.  The blooms on the Easter flowers will wilt.  And like the religious leaders, it will be time to get back to the usual: work,
school,
paying bills,
running the kids and grandkids to all their activities,
mowing the lawn…
and on and on goes the list.
But the tomb was empty.  The anointing the women expected to do never ever happened.  The Easter story leaves us with possibilities; and no way to create limits. 
Easter is about God doing something new; forever something new.  So let us not return to the “normal” and expect to find Jesus there.  The two mysterious men at the tomb told the women, “Why do you look for the living among the dead?  He is not here, but has been raised.  Remember… he is going ahead of you…”

Monday, April 15, 2019

April 14, 2019 Palm Sunday Luke 29:28-48


Every time I read of Jesus riding into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday I get an image of cowboy Jesus in my head.  He’s wearing jeans and a flannel shirt.  He has on a cowboy hat, cowboy boots with spurs, and a rope in his hand.
It’s a silly image, but the Bible makes it clear that no one’s ever ridden this colt.  Now Jesus plans to not only break it in but even ride it in a parade!
This whole Palm Sunday text shows us just how completely Jesus is in control of things.  Obviously he can break-in and control a never before ridden colt.  But we also see just how complete Jesus’ knowledge is.  When he’s getting close to Jerusalem he tells two of his disciples to go ahead into a village.  He gives them details about finding a colt, and what to do if someone asks why they’re taking it.  Then it all comes to pass just as Jesus describes.
I often wonder what those two unnamed disciples thought about being sent off to effectively steal someone’s colt.  Presumably Jesus returned it, so it wasn’t exactly stealing, but did the owner of the colt know that?  Just imagine Jesus is coming to Rochester from Syracuse.  He sends you ahead and says, “Go into Victor and stop at VanBortel Subaru on Route 96 and pick up a brand new red Subaru Outback for me.  Don’t worry about keys.  They’ll be in the ignition.  Just hop in and drive it back here.  If anyone at the dealership asks you what you’re doing just say, “The Lord has need of it.”
Ah… yeah… right… Jesus.  That would be a felony level theft.  I’m not going to jail just so you can have a new ride!
Who knows what all really happened, but just as Jesus predicted: the colt was there, the owners asked what the disciples were doing with it, and then they let it go!
Yes, we see here that Jesus knows everything and can control everything.  An irony begins to develop in the story.
Crowds of disciples await his arrival.  These crowds are probably rural people from the north who had seen Jesus or heard about him.  They were in Jerusalem for the Passover holiday.  They spread their cloaks on the rode as a royal welcome to him.  They don’t really get it.  They don’t really understand who he is, but they love him and expect great things as their hometown hero makes his way into Jerusalem.  They praise him calling him king and the one who comes in the name of the Lord.  They say, “Peace in heaven and glory in the highest heaven!”  If those words sound familiar it is because they are.  It is exactly what the angels said to the shepherds when Jesus was born.  Now these words are in the mouths of the crowds.
Think about it.  The angels have praised Jesus.  The shepherds, notorious for being petty crooks and criminals recognized Jesus.  The animals submit to Jesus.  The crowds are praising Jesus.  Who is not praising Jesus?  The people we would most expect to praise Jesus – the Jewish religious experts.  These are the people who know the scriptures.  These are the people who should know how God acts.  These are the people entrusted with the task of making sure the commoners know how to live.  What do they say about Jesus?
Pharisees in the crowd say, “Teacher, order your disciples to stop.”  They, in their educated wisdom, see Jesus as a charismatic teacher from the rural outskirts of society.  They expect him to know, as they know, that he is not real and that the devotion of the crowds is misplaced.  They see it as his duty to inform his followers where their loyalty should lie, and where their praises should be directed – to the city of Jerusalem, to the temple, and to the priestly leaders whose holiness is the model that all should aspire to.
What does Jesus reply?  His reply is very interesting, especially in light of the angels, shepherds, crowds, and animals all recognizing who he is.  He says, “I tell you, if these were silent, the stones would shout out!”
Even the elements of the universe, things as basic as rocks, recognize God’s presence among them.
Yes, this truly means that the religious leaders are dumb as rocks.
We aren’t done with the stones yet.  They get a second mention in what we read.  Jerusalem, the city that should so clearly understand what God is up to is completely blind.  You can feel God’s lament over this in Jesus’ words, “If you, even you, had only recognized on this day the things that make for peace!  But now they are hidden from your eyes.  Indeed, the days will come upon you, when your enemies,” and notice that Jesus is not one of those enemies, “…your enemies will set up ramparts around you and surround you, and hem you in on every side.”
If the religious leaders want the crowds to be silent over Jesus because it may cause a riot and thus danger to the city, they are so totally wrong.  No harm will come to Jerusalem because of Jesus’ presence.  Jesus continues, “They will crush you to the ground, you and your children within you…”  Who is the “they”?  The Romans, those whom the religious leaders are working so hard to keep happy.
And here we have the stones again, these mute stones that would cry out if the crowds were silent, “… and they will not leave within you one stone upon another; because you did not recognize the time of your visitation from God.”
            As Christians we look back on this and see both a blessing and a warning.  It is a blessing because God, in his eternal mercy, will forgive even these stubborn religious leaders who are less informed than the rocks.  These religious leaders will insist that there is no way on earth that God could act the very way God will be acting in the days to come.
            We see a warning, because like the religious leaders of that day, we too are the religious people today.  We are the ones who should be expected to recognize the actions of God, and not get in the way.
            I don’t think we’d describe those religious leaders as bad people.  Surely there were some rotten apples among them, but for the most part we’d call them good upstanding citizens.  They were people of respect.  They knew their duty.  They knew what was expected of them.  They knew how to be models of righteousness.  I think we’d like most of them.  But they had misplaced loyalties and commitments.
            Sure, we do things that are wrong and sinful and indulgent sometimes, but for the most part we want to do what is good and right.  Let us be careful that doing what we think is right does not get in the way of God’s work.  The religious leaders thought they were preserving the faith and protecting Jerusalem.  But they missed it.
            Even when we mess up – mess up as bad as they did in Jerusalem that day – God’s plans continue.  I invite you to read in your Bibles at home all week what happens with Jesus day to day during Holy Week.  We’ll certainly be doing that on Thursday and Friday when we are here in worship.  And notice what happens.  Even though humans are so committed to undermining God’s plans they are ironically carrying it out. 
            Jesus has displayed throughout the gospel that he is on his way – which is God’s way.  He is carrying out God’s plans and nothing will deter him from it.  Now on Palm Sunday we see how Jesus is in charge of everything, from the rocks to the beasts to the crowds.  Even those who reject him are carrying out his plans.  And let there be no doubt as the week goes on, that while Jesus appears to be losing more and more control with each passing day, everything is actually happening according to his design.
            You know well I don’t like to say that God micromanages our lives, with specific plans for each of us for each and every moment of every day.  However, God does have a cosmic plan that is moving forward.  Whenever we live and act and move we are participating in God’s great work.  Let us rejoice to have such a role.  And let us be smarter than the religious leaders, smarter than the rocks even, and like the crowds have eyes open to see God at work.

April 7, 2019 Zacchaeus and the Ruler Luke 18:18-19:10


            If you are my age or older and you grew up going to Sunday school you surely know the song about Zacchaeus.  I’d sing it to you, but you don’t want me to do that:
Zacchaeus was a wee little man, a wee little man was he.
He sat up in a sycamore tree, the Lord he wanted to see.
And when the Savior passed that way he looked up in the tree.
And said, “Zacchaeus, you come down! 
For I’m coming to your house today.
For I’m coming to your house today.
Zacchaeus was a wee little man, but a happy man was he.
For he had seen the Lord that day
And a happy man was he.
And a very happy man was he.
            It’s a cute song and it helps us remember something about this short man in the Bible and something about how Jesus calls people.
            The song, however, is only the second half the story.  Today we want to look at both halves.  The first half is the beginning of our gospel reading.  There we meet, “a certain ruler.”
            And if it helps us understand that we’re to interpret these two stories in parallel, notice the same word is used of Zacchaeus, though our English translations miss it.  In Greek Zacchaeus is not called a “chief” tax collector, but a “ruling” tax collector – just like the “certain ruler” of the previous chapter.  The “certain ruler” is not given a name.  Zacchaeus, of course, is named.
            The certain ruler approaches Jesus and asks him, “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”
            How about Zacchaeus?  He doesn’t approach Jesus at all.  He knows he can’t even see Jesus so he does a very unmanly thing – he climbs a tree.  And from up there Jesus calls out to him.
            The stature of Zacchaeus is more than just a bit of trivia about him.  It also carries symbolic significance.  He was short, not very manly, and not very well received in polite society.  The “certain ruler” was surely a highly desired guest in one’s home.
            The “certain ruler” approaches Jesus with what seems like a genuine question at first, but we pretty quickly realize it’s more of a business calculation; and it drips with arrogance.  “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”
            This man’s heart is not in it.  He’s asking for a strategy.  He’s asking Jesus about eternal life with the same calculations I use when I have to buy a car.  Car salesmen don’t particularly like selling to me.  Oh, I’m hardly a tough negotiator, I’m just a boring customer.  I know what I need from a vehicle and I do research ahead of time.  I research makes and models, read reviews, compare gas mileage and overall ownership costs.  I put almost no emotion into car buying at all.  Then, based on my research I look for what I think will suit me best.  I never walk into a dealership and say, “Show me what you have.”  More often than not I search a dealer’s inventory, select the exact car I want to look out, and then make an appointment to take a look at it.  If I like it I buy it.  If not, I’m not interested in looking around.  Again, I’m a boring customer.
            The ruler knows his assets and his needs.  He’s done his research.  He’s followed the commandments to the letter.  He knows how to be righteous and he lives that way.  He knows how to be on God’s good side.  And obviously he is on God’s good side because his life is good.  He’s rich, he’s prominent, he has it good.  Everyone looks to him as a model of life.  You can just imagine a crowd around listening with anticipation as to what advice the “good teacher” will give to this fine, upstanding citizen.
            Then there’s Zacchaeus, a grown man up in a tree.  And why is he a grown man up in a tree?  Because a famous man is going to walk by and he wants to get a peek at him.  But no one respects Zacchaeus enough to give him a space in the front of the crowd. 
You know how at parades little kids are often allowed to sit or stand up front because they can’t see over the adults.  No one complains if a little kid wants to see.  They surely don’t get shouldered out of the way.  But Zacchaeus was not a cute little kid.  He was a grown man.  He was a scoundrel, a traitor.  He was not only a tax collector, but he was a ruling tax collector.  And while we don’t like the IRS in this nation it is nothing to what they thought of tax agents in those days.  At least the IRS is of our own government.  How would it feel, however, if Mexico conquered the United States, and then they hired some disloyal American citizens to be tax collectors?  The taxes were then used to pay for the armies that continued to occupy us.
When the Romans conquered and then occupied a nation they would use the earnings of that nation to pay for the armies that perpetuated the occupation.
Zacchaeus was in no position to go to Jesus and say, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”  He knew he was the filth of the earth, a traitor to his own people.  He was hated and had no place in polite society.
Jesus gives the “certain ruler” some advice, “Sell all that you own and distribute the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me.”
The ruler asked for the terms of a business deal to get into heaven.  Jesus gave it to him – sell your stuff and give the money to the poor.
This is way more than a call for charity.  If this ruler gave what he had to his wealthy friends they would feel indebted to him.  It would still be a business transaction and while he might be considered an odd ball he would still live in successful society.  But if he gave his money to the poor – well, what’s the advantage to that.  There is none!
The ruler would be powerless, friendless; and most importantly, helpless.
Heaven is not accomplished through a business deal.  Heaven is gifted through a relationship of trust with God.
Now look carefully at the Zacchaeus story.  Does Jesus anywhere criticize Zacchaeus?  Nope.  He just says that he wants to stay at his house.  Does Jesus tell Zacchaeus, “Now you know most of what you have you have acquired by exploiting the taxation system of the Romans.  You need to stop being a disgrace to you own people and you need to stop exploiting others”?  Nope. 
Without Jesus saying another word Zacchaeus volunteers, “Look, half of my possessions, Lord, I will give to the poor; and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I will pay back four times as much.”
Look also at how Zacchaeus addresses Jesus.  Does he call him, “Good Teacher”?  Is Zacchaeus approaching Jesus as if he intends to begin a formal student/teacher relationship?  No.  He calls Jesus “Lord” right off the bat. 
Jesus then says, “Today salvation has come to this house, because he too is a son of Abraham.”
The “certain ruler” wanted a business partnership for his own gain.  Zacchaeus wanted a relationship, he wanted to be seen, he wanted to be valued.
Jesus commends Zacchaeus.  Of the ruler he says, “How hard it is for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God!”  Wealth is the mistaken belief that you can take care of yourself.  Wealth is the lie of safety.  Wealth is the lie that you can create your own value.
Two rich men: one tall, proud, and prestigious, one infamous and short.  We leave one delighted.  We leave one heartbroken.
Let’s learn from both that the key is relationship with God, not strategies and business transactions.  Strategies and business transactions are fine for buying a car or leveraging in a corporate buyout, but they have little in the way of relationship with God.  And whether we are short or tall, let us be delighted when we see our Lord at work, knowing that he is the key to salvation.

Monday, April 1, 2019

March 31, 2019 Jesus and Herod Luke 13:31-35


     What frightens you?  Everyone has fears of some sort.  Many people won’t admit it, but they are afraid of the dark.  Perhaps that’s not a well-founded fear, but it is real nonetheless.  Many people fear pain, and for good reason.  The fear of rejection runs deep and it makes people of all ages susceptible to peer pressure. 
     Of course there is the fear of dying.  That’s a good one – it is something we all must face sooner or later, but it is the ultimate unknown.  I like the way the Rev. John Walker, pastor of Willowbrook Christian Church says that studies show that people are more afraid of public speaking than they are of dying; which means that at a funeral they’d rather be the corpse than the pastor!
     In today’s gospel Jesus is confronted with something that should give him fear.  Some Pharisees came to him and said, “Get away from here, for Herod wants to kill you.”  I don’t think they’re trying to scare him.  They’re just giving him some good advice.  The situation is dangerous.  The powers that be want to do away with him.  And there’s good reason to be afraid.  You’ll remember what Herod did to Jesus’ cousin John the Baptist!
     Let me translate their warning from Greek a bit more literally, and also Jesus’ response.  The English isn’t as smooth, but it’s closer to Greek to say, “Go, journey from here, for Herod wills to kill you.”  He said to them, “Journey and tell that weasel, ‘Listen, I am casting out demons and performing cures today and tomorrow, and on the third day I finish my work.  Yet today, tomorrow, and the next day I must journey on my way…” 
     We’ll return to that again, but let’s notice what happens here.  Is Jesus afraid of Herod?  He should be!  But he’s not, not at all.  And I think it’s good to hear the bold defiance in his voice, “Journey and tell that weasel…”
     That’s not the kind of language you use against a tyrant who’d just as soon kill you as look at you.  But it goes on.  What does Jesus really mean when he says, “I am casting out demons and performing cures today and tomorrow, and on the third day I finish my work”?  He certainly referring to his public earthly ministry, but he’s mixing in another dimension – the three days in the tomb…
     He’s casting out demons… three days dead…
     Here’s the message he’s sending to back Herod:  I’m not afraid of you!  I’m gonna die and go to hell.  And while I’m there I’m kicking the devil out; out of his own home!
     Indeed in the creeds when we talk about him descending to the dead, or descending into hell, that’s exactly what he’s doing.  He’s taking God’s grace right to the very stronghold of evil.  He’s crashing down the gates and letting everyone go free.
     Talk about fearless!  No earthly power frightens Jesus.  Death doesn’t scare him.  Hell doesn’t scare him! 
     The Bible has no concise definition of evil.  It’s a hodge-podge of images and personifications.  We get the point though. 
     The Pharisees tell Jesus to journey away from there.  Jesus tells them to journey to Herod.  But as for Jesus he says, “I must journey on my way…”  Nothing is going to deter him.
     Look at the whole trajectory of the gospel.  Early on we have the devil testing Jesus in the wilderness.  There the devil came to Jesus and on Jesus’ turf had a battle and lost.  Throughout the gospel Jesus encounters evil spirits and demons and he casts them out every time.  Then we get to the end of the gospel and Jesus dies.  Now it’s his turn to go into the devil’s territory.  Though he’s just died because of the will of humans he’s on the offensive taking the fight right to the gates of hell.  There too he is victorious.  In a way Jesus is the ultimate tough guy.  Not even evil is safe when Jesus is around.
     There’s a conflict of journeys in the passage but there’s also a conflict of wills.  With a more literal translation from Greek we learn that Herod “wills” to kill Jesus.  The Greek word is qelw.  But that’s not the only time qelw appears in this passage.  We see it again in verse 34 when we learn Jesus “will”.  Of Jerusalem Jesus says, “How often have I willed to gather your children together as a hen gather her brood under her wings…”
     Jesus might be the ultimate tough guy.  Herod’s will doesn’t scare him.  Hell doesn’t scare him.  But Jesus’ will is not mean.  His will is to gather a troubled city together and keep it safe like a hen gathers her chicks under her wings.  That’s an impressive image.  I imagine a huge and totally ripped biker dude heavily tattooed in a t-shirt.  He has hair cut short, scars various placed.  He’s got a hard chiseled jaw and fists like iron.  There’s a scowl on his face.  Everything about him says, “Don’t mess with me!”  And cradled in his arm, safely protected there, is Jerusalem like a helpless little baby.  Such was Jesus’ will.
     But we’re not done with wills.  Jesus may be triumphing over evil left right and center, but how is he doing with humans, especially the will of humans?  Jesus says, “How often have I willed to gather your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you did not will it.”
     Interesting.  The demons get it.  Evil knows the battle is lost.  Humans though, us creatures created in the image of God and so capable of thought and creativity and beauty and amazing things – we don’t get it.  Our stubborn wills just won’t bend.
     Jesus says of Jerusalem, “See, your house is forsaken.  And I tell you, you will not see me until the time comes when you say, ‘Blessed is the one who comes in the name of he Lord.’” 
     Jesus, unafraid of Herod, soon to be kicking the devil out of his own home, the ultimate tough guy is not angry with Jerusalem.  He’s not angry with us humans for our stubborn wills.  The text does not say, “I’m going to come with my fists of iron and bash you into oblivion.”  He has no desire to punish.  He just seems resigned.  It is as if that baby safely cradled in his arm is spitting and kicking and biting for all its worth against him.  And so, reluctantly, he puts it down and lets it go off to its own destruction.
     There are lots of things in this world that frighten us.  Fear can be a good thing because it keeps us safe in dangerous situations.  To have no fear is to be stupid.  But we have to remember that we can truly live without fear.
     God wins.  Period.  Not even hell is a safe place to hide from God’s power, because God won’t quit until it’s all his.
     You may remember me saying before.  The opposite of faith is not doubt.  The Bible makes it abundantly clear that faith and doubt go hand in hand.  No, the opposite of faith is fear. 
     So much of the stubbornness of the human will is based in fear: fear that we’ll be embarrassed, fear that we’ll fail, fear that we’ll lose our value; and maybe most of all – fear that our self-worth does not reside within ourselves.  For our self-worth is rooted in who God created us to be.  But we’ll fight kicking and screaming demanding that our self-worth is something of our own creation.
     Perhaps the deepest expression of faith includes the awareness that your worth resides in God.
     Our mighty Savior is afraid of nothing.  Nothing scares Jesus!  Tough warrior that he is, he is gentle with us.  He won’t hurt us.  His will is to protect us.  He is sad when our wills demand that we do things our own destructive ways.  And he is forgiving when we finally realize we’ve been wrong all along.  Sometimes we have to fall flat on our faces to realize it, but I guess at least we’ve learned.
     May we trust in Jesus – not Jesus as a nice sweet guy who’s too meek to be taken serious – but Jesus as a tough fighter who will defend us.  And may that trust free us from our fear and bring us into ever closeness to our Savior.