Scripture readings for this week are: Ezekiel 37:1-14; Psalm 130 or UMH 848; Romans 8:6-11; John 11:1-45
You can read these Scriptures here: NIV // NRSV // CEV // The Message
“I came so that everyone would have life, and have it in its fullest” (John 10:10 CEV).
Between 2003 and 2007 I had to drive to Lancaster three or four times a week. On a back road in one of the remote corners of Lancaster County there is an old church building with a big faded sign, “Now Enrolling New Members.” The church building itself is obviously not in use, part of the roof is collapsed, most of the windows are boarded up, the parking lot is covered with weeds in the summer, and is muddy the rest of the year.
I suspect that the little country church simply ran out of members, was unable to sustain itself and had to close its doors sometime in the 1990’s. The only remainder of their final heroic push for life is a faded sigh, “Now Enrolling New Members.”
Have you ever felt depressed and hopeless?
Today’s reading from Ezekiel was addressed to a congregation of Hebrews in exile. They were uprooted from their homes, forced to march to a foreign land and to settle there. Many of them died in transition. And now the survivors who made it were mistreated, felt displaced and treated as inferior. Life seemed bleak and hopeless. Their emotions and pain are expressed in the song that we know today as Psalm 137:1-4.
By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept
when we remembered Zion.
There on the poplar we hung our harps,
for there our captors asked us for songs,
our tormentors demanded songs of joy;
they said, “Sing us one of the songs of Zion!”
How can we sing the songs of the LORD
while in a foreign land?
When was the last time that you felt that there was no song in your heart? When was the last time that you thought about doing something and asked yourselves, “why bother?”
Ezekiel was called to bring the hope of the Lord to the group of people who had no songs left in their hearts. Ezekiel was sent to minister to the remnant who felt hopeless, a congregation that needed to hear that God was with them, and that when they are with God all things are possible…
Ezekiel was called to bring hope to the people whose identity was taken away from them and who did not think that putting up a huge sign “Now Enrolling New Members” made sense anymore, because everything that gave normalcy to their lives was taken away from them or destroyed.
“Ezekiel, can these hopeless remnants, can these dried up bones ever again live an abundant life?” – “I don’t know God, but you do,” was Ezekiel’s reply.
Then we heard another reading about Jesus learning of the death of his friend, His coming to Bethany a few days later and bringing Lazarus back to life. In the last scene of the Gospel reading, we see Lazarus coming out of the grave, wrapped in straps of linen, and Jesus telling the people to give Lazarus different clothes. Lazarus was no longer dead; he needed clothes that identified him as one of the living.
Have you ever wondered what a “valley of dried bones” would look like in our lives? Have you ever wondered what “Lazarus” looks like in 2011? What is OUR hope in all this and what’s in it for us?
How many of us are trapped in the remnants of something that happened in the past? Something that makes us angry or bitter or frustrated. How many of us experience the “strips of cloth” that prevent us from living the abundant life that Jesus brought to us. How many of us are bound by old habits? What are the “strips of cloth” that bind us, that paralyze us with fear and feelings of hopelessness and loss? What are the “strips of cloth” that prevent us from finding newness and joy in our lives? What are the “strips of cloth” that do not allow the fresh air to reach our lungs and warm wind to caress our faces?
An image of that dilapidated church with the faded sign “Now Enrolling New Members” is burned into my memory. At one time that building housed a community of our Christian sisters and brothers who gathered regularly for worship and for fellowship. I cannot help but wonder whether it was grief, anxiety, anger, financial deprivation, hatred, resentment, indifference or a lack of mission that turned that once thriving community into a pile of dried-up lifeless bones.
Twenty five hundred years ago, God asked, “Can these bones live, Ezekiel?” - To which Ezekiel replied, “Lord, only you know! Put your Spirit in us and we will live!” Two thousand years ago Jesus called, "Lazarus, come out!"
God is still calling us today, calling us out from our fears, frustration, despair, denial, and death, to new life where and when we live. God is still gifting us with new life. All we need to do is ask “Lord, put your spirit in us!”
Today’s readings are about allowing the power of God, the life-giving presence of Jesus, and the guidance of the Holy Spirit to transform our individual lives and our life as a community.
As usual I would like to leave you with a couple of questions:
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In what ways do we – the community of Christ United Methodist Church - participate in what God is doing today around us? What are the signs of renewal and regeneration in our community and around us?
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What difference does it make to know that God regards us as partners and co-creators in God's work? What does it mean to us that God is calling us to care for all of God’s creation?
Our Great commission is found in Matthew 28:19-20 and it reads, “…go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.” The reason Jesus gave us this commission is so that we, the church, could better serve God by being instruments of renewal and regeneration to all of God’s creation.
The Great Commission unites us in common mission and challenges us to be bearers of God’s love and hope. The world that we live in does not need to see a church divided by angry rhetoric, bitterness, frustration, anger and fear. What our neighbors crave to see is the church united and energized by the love of Jesus for the purpose of being salt and light in the world we live in.
God rules Christ United Methodist Church! In this season of our lives, at this stage of our journey, God is calling us to re-think and to re-imagine what we will become in the future. God is calling us to use our rich tradition of service and mission to inform and to shape our future.
May the Spirit of our living Lord, fill our community and guide our efforts!
= = = = = = = God is my conscience, Jesus lives in my heart = = = = = = =
Currently Pastor Asher Tunik is serving at Christ United Methodist church located in Chestertown, MD.