Plotting. Hearing God where you live (and other surprising places). T H E S T I L L S P E A K I N G W R I T E R S G R O U P

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Transcription:

Plotting

The Stillspeaking Writers Group is composed of United Church of Christ ministers and authors who collaborate on a variety of resources for people in the church, outside the church, and not so sure about the church. Their motto: Hearing God where you live (and other surprising places). Read more about the writers of Calmly Plotting on the last page and the inside back cover. Stillspeaking. It s the shorter form of God is still speaking, a campaign by the United Church of Christ (UCC) to simply remind us that God still has a lot more to say. Since 2004, Stillspeaking has worked with thousands of UCC churches and individuals across the country to make religion relevant again and to extend an extravagant welcome to all because no matter who you are, or where you are on life s journey, you re welcome here. Here at the United Church of Christ. The Stillspeaking Writers Group c/o Christina Villa, Director of Publishing 700 Prospect Ave. Cleveland, OH 44115 Plotting 2 0 1 4 L E N T D E V O T I O N A L S About the cover: New growth out of the old earth is a well-worn theme for Lent. This year, we put a different slant on it with the words Calmly Plotting as our title. They come from the phrase,... calmly plotting the resurrection, which writer E.B. White used to describe his wife Katherine s autumn bulb-planting. Read the full story in the devotional for Ash Wednesday, March 5. T H E S T I L L S P E A K I N G W R I T E R S G R O U P Hearing God where you live (and other surprising places).

C O N T E N T S Introduction Calmly Plotting the Resurrection Donna Schaper 1 Our Sin Debbie Blue 2 The Temptation to Judge Lillian Daniel 3 Broken Stuff Anthony B. Robinson 4 The Tempter Quinn G. Caldwell 5 Out of Hiding Mary Luti 7 The One Who Stands By Our Side Martin B. Copenhaver 8 We re No Angels Lillian Daniel 9 Stirring Things Up! Kenneth L. Samuel 10 Touch Donna Schaper 12 Outsider Faith Anthony B. Robinson 13 Questions Shaundra Cunningham 14 Heaven Matt Fitzgerald 15 The Purple Loosestrife Donna Schaper 16 Fingers Matt Laney 17 The Hard Work of Hope Elissa Johnk 19 Our Daily, Not Day-Old, Bread Richard L. Floyd 20 Baptize Quinn G. Caldwell 21 Precious Ron Buford 22 Hunger and Love Debbie Blue 23 The Ever-Present God Martin B. Copenhaver 25 Moving Past the Past Kenneth L. Samuel 26 Dayenu Mary Luti 27 Bold Anthony B. Robinson 28 No Way Out Molly Baskette 30 In Praise of Guilt and Shame Quinn G. Caldwell 31 Another Resurrection Donna Schaper 32 Atheist s Holiday? Matt Laney 33 Don t be Afraid to Love Again Lillian Daniel 34 Please Hear Me! Richard L. Floyd 35 Treehugger God Quinn G. Caldwell 37 Five Intentional Minutes with God Ron Buford 38 Thou Art with Me Martin B. Copenhaver 39 Behold the Beauty of the Lord Kenneth L. Samuel 40 But God Mary Luti 42 Suspending Disbelief Anthony B. Robinson 43 Finding the Right Words Ron Buford 44 Worth Donna Schaper 45 Discipline Yourselves or Else Lillian Daniel 46 A Week Under The Microscope Matt Laney 47 Light Quinn G. Caldwell 49 Many Meanings Anthony B. Robinson 50 Not Once-Upon-A-Time, but Once-and-For-All Martin B. Copenhaver 51 Eat and Run Kenneth L. Samuel 52 Broken God Debbie Blue 53 Watching at Graves Mary Luti 54 Resurrection Anthony B. Robinson 56

E. B. White, the famous writer of Charlotte s Web and more, found his wife, Katherine, a brilliant editor at the New Yorker, in the last year of her life, placing daffodil bulbs gently into the Maine ground in October. She was calmly plotting the resurrection, according to White. She knew she was sick, she knew she didn t have long, but she did have hope. Surely she was afraid. But she wasn t afraid enough to resist planting. I N T R O D U C T I O N In her devotional for Ash Wednesday, Donna Schaper tells the story behind the title of these 2014 Lenten devotionals. The fuller story of Katherine White s stubbornly optimistic gardening is found in the word plotting. Before planting those bulbs, she spent weeks, perhaps months, drawing up her plans. Spring may come all by itself; but a garden, like a life well-spent even in the face of death, requires conscious planning. Here is E.B. White, from the introduction to the collection of Katherine White s New Yorker gardening essays,* which he collected and edited after her death: As the years went by and age overtook her, there was something comical yet touching in her bedraggled appearance on this awesome occasion the small, hunched-over figure, her studied absorption in the implausible notion that there would be yet another spring, oblivious to the ending of her own days, which she knew perfectly well was near at hand, sitting there with her detailed chart under those dark skies in the dying October, calmly plotting the resurrection. May your own Lenten days be filled with the knowledge of yet another spring, yet another Easter when even death is conquered. The Stillspeaking Writers Group *Onward and Upward in the Garden. Katherine S. White. Beacon Press, 1979.

A S H W E D N E S D A Y M A R C H 5 Calmly Plotting the Resurrection T H U R S D A Y M A R C H 6 Our Sin D O N N A S C H A P E R D E B B I E B L U E The women ran from the tomb, afraid but filled with joy. Matthew 8:28 EB. White, the famous writer of Charlotte s Web and more,. found his wife, Katherine, a brilliant editor at the New Yorker, in the last year of her life, placing daffodil bulbs gently into the Maine ground in October. She was calmly plotting the resurrection, according to White. She knew she was sick, she knew she didn t have long, but she did have hope. Surely she was afraid. But she wasn t afraid enough to resist planting. She reminds us of those women at first discovery of the empty tomb. They were surely afraid but not afraid enough to preclude their hope or joy. We begin Lent with a destination in mind. We too want to find the tomb empty or at least some tomb empty. We are willing to weep as long as joy comes in the morning, or to the next generation of bulbs or people. Michael Piazza, a new church planter, spends a lot of time asking people to let go of old ways of doing church. Perhaps another time than 11 a.m. on a Sunday, the time the youth we covet like to sleep? Or perhaps, for church meetings, stand up around tables in a café style, so that people can actually talk to each other rather than take minutes? Mediate hard fights that happen without Robert s rules and perhaps instead use Roberta s? Mike says, with feeling, Help me plant a church for your grandchildren. This Lent may we calmly plot the resurrection, one bulb, one congregation and one day at a time. Amen. For I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me. Psalm 51:3 How can we live with our sin ever before us and remain calm? I have spent hours frantically regretting some sentence I spoke or (more generally) my failure as a human being. But I have spent even more time, I m guessing, rehashing my neighbor s or spouse s or the Koch brothers sin. Perhaps because we are born into a world filled with rivalry or because we are afraid of not getting enough love, we learn very early to fight to protect ourselves. This self-protection often involves honing our ability to critique others as if it will help our situation to sort out how we are more righteous. We scapegoat others, believing somehow this will redeem us. This, I believe, is the heart of our sin. Our sin ever before us doesn t look like loathing ourselves because we forgot to bring our reusable bags to the store. It s not loathing our God-given humanness or our personal failings. It s recognizing how we do violence to others trying to protect ourselves. David had the husband of his lover killed to preserve his reputation. Psalm 51 is his lament for his sin. There is a freedom that comes from recognizing ourselves as sinners. Instead of participating in some evaluative frenzy, we can stop being so critical, calm down, love. The Psalm says that the sacrifice acceptable to God is a broken heart. This isn t because God desires to punish us, but because our hearts hardened by self-protection and competition need to be broken open and re-made by God s merciful generosity. God, help me to know my need for mercy, that I might be merciful, kind, and compassionate. Amen. 1 2

F R I D A Y M A R C H 7 S A T U R D A Y M A R C H 8 The Temptation to Judge Broken Stuff L I L L I A N D A N I E L A N T H O N Y B. R O B I N S O N Therefore you have no excuse, whoever you are, when you judge others; for in passing judgment on another you condemn yourself. Romans 2:1-11 In our family we have a rule: Nobody can tell anybody else what they should give up for Lent. You can imagine how we came up with such a rule. So let s all go around the table and talk about what we re thinking about doing for Lent, quickly turned into, I ll tell you what Dad should give up for Lent! Everyone s an expert about other people s spiritual welfare. Cursing doesn t hurt anybody. What about global warming? If you give up shopping and spending, it hurts the economy. You said you were giving up sweets, but I saw you eating ice cream straight out of the container after you thought we were all asleep! By now we are well into Lent and the things you gave up may be tempting you. Perhaps they already have. The good things you decided to do and add to your life may have proven harder to fit in than you thought. But remember, whenever we try to get closer to God, it s only natural for the competition to show up. If Jesus had to fight off the devil s temptation in the desert, you know you ll have to as well. Don t let other people s comments or judgments slow you down or discourage you. You know what you need to do for Lent, and God is still eager to help you do it. Jesus, give me strength when the devil tempts me with ridicule and criticism. I m trying to follow you instead. Amen. The sacrifice acceptable to God is a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise. Psalm 51:17 The Bible s prophets frequently rail against those who present substandard offerings to God broken or blemished stuff like crippled sheep or sick pigeons. Not the first fruits but the last ones, the dregs. There s a modern version of this. People offer up out-of-date canned food or busted boxes of mac and cheese for the local food bank. Or a scratched toy for the toy drive or stained clothing for the clothing bank. Not cool. There is, however, one broken thing that God is glad to receive... a broken heart. A broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise. Why does God especially welcome the broken and contrite heart? Because when we bring this to God we aren t any longer pretending. We aren t pretending to have it all together. We are telling the truth. We need God and we know it. The truth is, our lives are broken in ways too numerous to name. We need help. We need God. We need the company of other people who are also contrite, humbled by personal failure and shortcoming, and seeking God s help and healing. When we bring these things to God our brokenness, our true sorrow for hurt we ve caused, our contrition for our shortcomings and self-deceptions, God doesn t ever reject these broken offerings. Even on those really, really bad days when we may despise ourselves, God does not. A broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise. Grant us, O God, that choicest of gifts a sense of sin. Amen. 3 4

S U N D A Y M A R C H 9 TheTempter Q U I N N G. C A L D W E L L Then the Lord God said to the woman, What is this that you have done? The woman said, The serpent seduced me, and I ate. The Lord God said to the serpent, Because you have done this, cursed are you among all animals. Genesis 3:13-14 Among the best features of our house is the laundry chute. It opens via a pedal that makes the top pop up. It goes from the second floor to the basement, and if the light s on at the bottom, you can watch stuff tumble all the way down. We knew we would be lost along with the cat and a great many other things if our then-two-year-old discovered it. The temptation would just be too much. So we pretended it wasn t there. We banked plants in front of it. We made sure never to use it when he was around. This worked for over a year then his ten-year-old cousin came for a sleepover. And that was the night our son discovered the delights of throwing glow sticks down the chute. Next morning, defeated, we let our son dump a heavy load of wet towels down, followed by a sheet that had come off the bed in the middle of the night after somebody s copious accident. Then we heard a distant Aaaaargh! Heeeeelp! We ran to the basement to discover our nephew in the laundry basket. It seems he had looked up the chute just as the towels came out. They had knocked him into the basket, the pee sheet had come out right on his face, and he d gotten himself all tangled up trying to get free. Not able to decide if he should laugh or be grossed out, he was doing both. I just laughed. Some sins carry their own punishments. God, lead me not into temptation. And don t let me lead anybody else there, either. Amen. 5 5

M O N D A Y M A R C H 1 0 T U E S D A Y Out of Hiding M A R Y L U T I M A R C H 1 1 The One Who Stands by Our Side While I kept silence, my body wasted away, my strength was dried up as by the heat of summer. Then I acknowledged my sin to you; I did not hide my iniquity. Psalm 32:3-4 Someone I love is in rehab, his second try. He s starting over after pretending for years to be sober when he wasn t. I can t begin to describe the mess he s made, the grief he s caused, the emptiness in his voice when he finally emerged from deep cover and confessed his lie. Unlike last time, he s working the program honestly now. It s hard and it s painful, but not as painful as when he was going it alone, when it was just the bottle talking, telling him, You re fine. Now he s in better company a fellowship of the nearly-dead who really want to live. They tell their own stories and listen to each others truth. They know they re not fine, and they tell it like it is. They need each other to make it. I called him the other day. He sounded different. He sounded overjoyed. In such a fellowship, he told me, you can strip naked and not die of exposure. Even the worst thing is redeemable. When I heard his voice I wondered, if the payoff is joy like that, why wouldn t we all want uncompromising light to shine on our deceitful hearts? Maybe we don t think we need it. We re not that far gone. And maybe that s lie number one. But maybe we d be willing to come out of hiding if we had some company, a fellowship in which there are no reprisals for truthtelling. No shock, no shaming. Only healing, only the gift of life. For who can bear to see themselves truly except in the mirror of grace? Maybe we could all emerge from deep cover in the fellowship of church, if church were such a fellowship. I will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever I will not leave you orphaned. John 14:16,18 M A R T I N B. C O P E N H A V E R According to John, after Jesus concludes his public ministry, he spends a considerable amount of time with his disciples preparing them for what lies ahead. As Jesus speaks of his death and resurrection, his disciples have a multitude of questions. They sound like the questions of children just before their parents go out the door: Where are you going? Do you have to go? Can t we go with you? When will you be back? Who will stay with us while you are away? They are plaintive questions, pressing and immediate. Jesus responds that God will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever I will not leave you orphaned (John 14:16,18). He is promising them the presence of the Holy Spirit. The word translated "Advocate" (sometimes translated, Counselor, or Comforter ) means, literally, someone who is called to one s side. The Holy Spirit is the one who stands by the disciples even after Jesus departs. And the Spirit is a constant and comforting presence for all those who follow Jesus, an advocate in times of trial, a counselor in perplexity. The presence of the Holy Spirit, so wonderfully manifest in Jesus, continues to stand by and work through those who continue to follow him after his death and resurrection. Through the gift of the Holy Spirit we have Jesus continued presence at our side always. Light of lights, to you all hearts are open, all desires known, no secrets hidden. Make us mirrors of mercy for each other so that church may be a company of grace where truth can set us free. Amen. Wonderful Counselor, beloved Comforter, I thank you that, even as I call you to my side today, you are already there, granting me the continued presence of Jesus Christ. Amen. 7 8

W E D N E S D A Y M A R C H 1 2 For it is clear that Jesus did not come to help angels, but the descendants of Abraham. Hebrews 2:10-18 We re No Angels L I L L I A N D A N I E L Some people act like Jesus did come just for the angels. They act all prim and proper, and all but wear haloes to church. They act like they already have all divine knowledge ( The Bible says it, that s good enough for me ) and like they re already so good they could float to heaven on a cloud any day now. And heaven forbid you don t live up to their standards and beliefs. Of course, if you were to scratch beneath that surface, as pastors often have the opportunity to do, you would know there are very few angels walking around the earth, clergy included. We ll meet angels down the road. But beware of the person who pretends to be one here on earth. You may think, But I ve met an angel! We use the term to describe people who make a huge difference in our lives, who are blessings to the world. But I ve never met one of those people who actually claimed the title for himself. Angelic people are the first to tell you, I m no angel. They re humble like that, and clear. Jesus came for the descendants of Abraham. When Paul wrote that to the early church, he meant Jesus came for all of us. Apparently, angels don t need saving. But we do. So throw me in with the non-angelic crowd. Besides, they always look like they re having more fun anyway. God, let my spiritual role models inspire me without deflating me. Let their goodness seem attainable. Remind me of all you can do with a little imperfection. Amen. T H U R S D A Y M A R C H 1 3 I want to remind you to stir into flame the strength and boldness that is in you Timothy 1:6 (Living Bible) Stirring Things Up! K E N N E T H L. S A M U E L Worship in many African American contexts is known to be a bit loud. The drums, cymbals, bass guitar, tambourines, Hammond organ and syncopated clapping of the Gospel choir combined with the impassioned proclamations of the preacher can certainly raise a few acoustic decibels. After church one Sunday a five-year-old girl came up to me and said softly: Pastor, you forgot to use your inside voice. I responded: You re right baby. I was just trying to stir up the people, so they wouldn t fall asleep. Lent requires that something in us be stirred up. The orthodox presumptions of our Judeo-Christian doctrine must be re-examined. The assumed affirmations of our hope beyond the grave must be re-awakened. The Christ who refused to be confined to established religion in life and who refused to be confined to finite terminations in death must be re-encountered. The stationary order of our worship and the sedate posture of our devotions must be re-engaged. This is the time for us to re-connect, re-consider and rekindle everything about faith to which we have given passive assent. On the label of liquids you may read these instructions: Shake well before using. It is presumed that everything you need in the liquid is already in the bottle. But without shaking, the ingredients necessary to make the liquid effective will remain at the bottom, thus rendering the liquid at the top ineffective. Stirring up the ingredients at the bottom makes the entire liquid solution effective. This is the season to disturb our sedimentary attitudes, prescribed actions and established assumptions. This is the season to re-evaluate the true consistency between our beliefs and our behaviors. This is the season to stir up the gifts of faith that God has placed inside each of us. This is the season of Lent. Dear God, there is so much in me that needs to be rekindled. Allow me the time and space this season to stir up everything that I already am. Amen. 9 10

F R I D A Y M A R C H 1 4 Touch D O N N A S C H A P E R O God, open our hearts so that when we use our hands, we open our hands, we touch with healing grace. Amen. God did extraordinary miracles through Paul, so that when the handkerchiefs or aprons that had touched his skin were brought to the sick, their diseases left them and the evil spirits came out of them. Acts 19:11 Grueling gardening can become joyful gardening, with the arrival of a cool cloth for a hot forehead. Discouragement can turn to encouragement, if the right person at the right time in the right way gives us a pat on the back. Caressing a child s chin after the tricycle spill can stop the tears and put the kid back on the bike. Hasn t someone told you many times about the importance of a strong handshake? Touch is tremendously important to human beings. It can change the cycle and change the momentum. Ask those who are lonely, they know. Ask those who have been touched in a way they should not have been touched, they also know. Paul apparently had the divine touch. He knew how to fill his aprons and his handkerchiefs with the spirit of God. We can too. The ordinary moves to the extraordinary when we channel the touch of God with our own hands and clothing. Such holy touch has to be careful not to get conceited or formulaic or fraught with its own power or need. Healing happens from the open heart not the selfaggrandizing one. As long as our touches are small, even domestic, as domestic as the laundry, we too can provide extraordinary miracles. 12

S A T U R D A Y M A R C H 1 5 Outsider Faith S U N D A Y M A R C H 1 6 Questions S H A U N D R A C U N N I N G H A M When Jesus was not far from the house, the centurion sent friends to say to him, Lord do not trouble yourself, for I am not worthy to have you come under my roof. Luke 7:6 A N T H O N Y B. R O B I N S O N Over and over again Scripture tells us that some of our very best teachers will be people we don t expect to learn from at all. Some are the least and lost. Others are oddities and outsiders. In this little story (Luke 7:1-10) it is not the religious leaders (aka Pharisees) who get it, but surprise a Roman military officer. The religious leaders appeal to Jesus on the officer s behalf and note this they do so on the basis of merit. He was a big giver to our synagogue building fund he deserves your help, they tell Jesus. The Roman officer, who sought Jesus help for his beloved, ill servant, did not however imagine he deserved anything from Jesus. In fact, he said he was totally unworthy. But what he did understand is what it meant to have authority and to give orders. And he got that Jesus had authority to order the evil spirits to stand down. In other words, this foreigner and outsider, this representative of the Empire, became a teacher of faith to the faithful church-goers who thought God s grace was something you had to earn or deserve. Nope, not how it works. You got the power, speak the word, said the Roman officer to Jesus. And Jesus said, Wow, naked faith! (My paraphrase.) Some of our best teachers and guides will be unexpected. They may be the very old or the very young. They may be addicts struggling to recover, or people of another faith, or someone we truly cannot stand (which proves that God does have a sense of humor). Houdini God, forever slipping the knots and bonds we make for you, revealing yourself in unexpected people and events: Thank you. Amen. Nicodemus said to him, How can anyone be born after having grown old? Can one enter a second time into the mother s womb and be born? John 3:4 Does our law condemn a man without first hearing him to find out what he has been doing? John 7:51 Asking for Trouble is the title of Donald Woods autobiography in which he chronicles his journey as a white South African journalist who used his pen to work against apartheid. Although he and the Prime Minister held staunchly divergent views, they communicated regularly for years. However, one day, Woods asked the Prime Minister a question that changed everything: how do you reconcile your support of apartheid with being a Christian? Immediately, Woods says, he saw a flash of anger on the Prime Minister s face and from that moment on he knew he was asking for trouble. Now what does trouble look like? For Woods, trouble leads to house arrest and eventually being banned from his own country. For Nicodemus, as a religious authority among a hostile cohort of colleagues, his questions risked identifying him with this King of the Jews and enemy of the state. Nicodemus asked Jesus a question in chapter 3 that lingers with him through chapter 7 and in John s account it propels him to help prepare Jesus body after crucifixion. I love John s gospel because he never makes it clear whether a conversion happened with Nicodemus; he renders it a moot point. The wondrous and powerful witness that Nicodemus shares with us is of a man who was irrevocably impacted. Each of us, like Nicodemus, has had encounters, and as James Baldwin declares, Whether we sing, shout, cry, dance, or keep it to ourselves know from whence you ve come. Remember the questions and encounters that shaped you along with the questions that you have yet to ask. Some will get you in trouble, others may lead to ridicule and suspicion but, ultimately, they hold the key that sets you free. Perplexing God, may we recall the tip-toe, egg-shell questions we ve asked along with the disturbing responses that rattle our core. Help us to live in these tensions with courage, grace, and humility. Amen. 13 14