When Bad Things Happen. The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring Eden United Church of Christ Hayward, California

Similar documents
Attempting to Answer Life s Toughest Questions

First Presbyterian Church of Kissimmee, Florida Dr. Frank Allen, Pastor 3/30/08

WHEN IT S DARK A LIFE NIGHT ADDRESSING CRISIS

Peace Through Christ

Alongside Babylon s River, We Cried and Cried. Psalm 137

Three Perspectives. System: Building a Justice System Rooted in Healing By Shari Silberstein

Today s sermon is about the Ten Commandments. Biblical historians date the Israelite s embrace of the Ten Commandments at approximately 1250 BCE.

Preternatural now there s a term we don t use every day. What does that mean?

Can These Bones Live? Faith & Mental Health, Part 4 Ezekiel 37:1 14 Rev. Abigail Henderson November 22, 2015

Roger Aylard Inanda teacher, ; principal, Interviewed via phone from California, 30 June 2009.

After a brief pause, she said, Dennis (that s my brother-in-law) wants to know what you ve been teaching our children.

THE SILENCE OF GOD Job 23:1-9, October 11 th, 2015 As I was working on this sermon, I came across a meditation in a book titled A Season of

Communities of Practice: Life Together A. Stephen Van Kuiken Community Congregational U.C.C. Pullman, WA January 7, 2018

The Universal Prayer Sunday 25 th January 2015 Third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Reading Cry Out In Your Weakness

God s Favorites. The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring Eden United Church of Christ Hayward, California. April 5, 2015 Acts 10:34-43 (NRSV)

How to Bid a Healthy Farewell

Grace, Mercy & Peace from God our Father & our Lord, Jesus Christ. Amen. got this warm glowing feeling. As the pregnancy progressed, Sara

The previous chapter outlined a biblical basis for a new paradigm of

Pastoral Leadership in Conflicted Congregations MARY MILLER BRUEGGEMANN United Church of Christ, Decatur, Georgia

SHARING CHRIST S SUFFERING Sermon preached at South Church, New Britain September 24, 2017 Jane H. Rowe Today I begin a brief series of sermons on

SERMON. Rattle and Rush. May 20, The Reverend Dr. Eric C. Smith

PENTECOST 19B 9/30/18 The Church as a Healing Community (James 5:13-20)

But of course art allows for this, and perhaps that is why Van Gogh used it as a means of getting past the disappointments he knew in life.

WHY DO GOOD PEOPLE SUFFER? Habakkuk 1:2-4; 2:4; 3:17-19 Chapel Message, September 12, 2001, Dr. E. LeBron Fairbanks INTRODUCTION:

Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People? First Church ( )

Teacher of the Year. The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring Eden United Church of Christ Hayward, California

Are We Silent, Too? Mark 9: The gospel of Mark will never win a prize for its literary style. It is jerky, each section seemingly

The Compassionate Friends, National Gathering 'Loss and a journey of the heart by David Mosse

The Christian Arsenal

A Grief Like No Other

Today we join Christians around the world in celebrating Christ the King Sunday.

Cindy Worthington-Berry UCC Boxborough October 18, 2015 Trust In the Promise. Let us pray

Walk a Mile in His Shoes by Rev. Kathy Sides (Preached at Fort Des Moines UMC )

BILL ZECHMANN. The Perseverance of LOVE

Lighten Up (or Not) Seasonal Affective Disorder/Spiritual Affective Disorder 101 Pastor Marianne Cotter January 8, 2017 Psalm 139:1-12, John 1:1-5

The Importance of Spirituality in Healing Returning Warriors/Veterans Caring for Our Returning Combat Veterans

The Walk of Love. Sermon by Pastor Patricia Geiseman The Festival of All Saints Ruth 1:1-18 November 3-4, 2018

Sermon for Pentecost September 2015 Rev. Lorne Manweiler James 3:1-12

Sermon For New Year s Day. God with Us in 2011

SERMON. Unclean Lips. May 27, The Reverend Dr. Eric C. Smith

4 Lessons Learned: 20 Years After My Affair

Keeping Faith in Tough Times

The Origins of American Incivility and Fear

Marriage and Family Diocese-Based Leadership Training Program

Spatium LIST OF PRICES - EDUCATION WHERE TO FIND US OPENING HOURS. Mon. Tue. Wed. - Fri. 10 am to 6 pm. Thursday 10 am to 8 pm. Sat.

Contact for further information about this collection

Sermon: "A Word for Anxious People" First Presbyterian Church of Kissimmee, Florida Dr. Frank Allen, Pastor 10/13/02 AN ANXIOUS DAY

Christ Presbyterian Church Edina, Minnesota May 23 & 24, 2015 John Crosby Why Does God Allow Pain and Evil? I Peter 1:3-12

Journal of Professional Exercise Physiology

When I was a little girl, I had big plans. I wanted to be President of the United States.

daughter of marriageable age who became pregnant by her secret boyfriend. When her parents found out,

You Want Us To Do What?!? I. Forgive

BIBLE RADIO PRODUCTIONS INC.

Inventory Worksheet Guide (Lesson 9)

Back Roads of the Bible: Job, Part III First Baptist Richmond, October 21, 2018 The Twenty-First Sunday after Pentecost Job 38:1-7

Anybody else ever had this experience? This phenomenon of suddenly becoming aware of something that has actually been there all along has a name.

124 Prayers for Caregivers

Midweek Experience Curriculum NAC-USA DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE. The Book of Isaiah. The Suffering Servant MIDWEEK SCRIPT. The Victorious Servant.

whatever they can to hold onto identities that will never fulfill them. And Jesus says that their end will be the same as Herod s: destruction.

HOPE CHURCH 18 TH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST October 8, 2017 ~ 11:00 AM Rivalry Week Pastor Gordon Wiersma Philippians 3:3-14 & Exodus 20

Sermon for Easter II Year A 2017 Locked In; Locked Out

The Real. Jesus. A study through the Gospel of Luke. BOOK 5: His resurrection

PENTECOST 7 (B14) 8 July Weakness and Strength

LFS CAROLINAS HISTORY

THAT WE ALL MAY BE ONE Sermon delivered to St. Paul s Church 7 Easter, John 17:20-26, Year C May 12, 2013 Thack Dyson

regular basis. I recognize the car by its bumper sticker that says, Freedom isn t free. Most of us get

Blurred by Tears (Part 2) 28 th Sunday in Ordinary Time Job 23: 1-9, Hebrews 4: Oct. 14, 2018 Rev. Rob Carter.

Restoration: Facing our Disappointments Ezra 3

New Year s Message 2016

Is There a Balm in Gilead? September 18, 2016 Dr. Frank Allen, Jr., Pastor First Presbyterian Church of Kissimmee Florida

Between Faith and Fear

LECTIONARY COMMENTARY

Midway Presbyterian Church March 24, Repent and Bear Fruit. Introduction to the Old Testament Lesson

Interview with Peggy Schwemin. No Date Given. Location: Marquette, Michigan. Women s Center in Marquette START OF INTERVIEW

Hallie s Heart. Chapter One: Let s Talk About It:

Long Unexpected Jesus Page 1 of 8

For Many Returning Vets, 'Moral Injury' Just As Difficult By Rachel Martin (Host) 2013

Reclaiming my wounded soul

by Holly Wagner STUDY GUIDE Riverside Drive Suite 200, Valley, Village, CA telephone:

UNDERSTANDING. Suicide WARNING SIGNS AND PREVENTION

Weekly Bible Study January 17, Scott L. Engle

CANCER AS UNEXPRESSED OR UNRESOLVED COMPLAINT More on the Primary Mission Theory

Where Is God In The Midst of Suffering? Romans 5:1-5 Douglas Scalise, Brewster Baptist Church In talking about suffering, I will tell you

The World Church Strategic Plan

The Story of 1 Samuel

Zombie: Dying to Be Loved Genesis 3: 6-13

Principle One. Accountability Begins with Brokenness, Confession, and Repentance. The Story of Nehemiah

The Lord in All Circumstances

SPIRITUAL GIFTS ASSESSMENT DISCOVER YOUR SPIRITUAL GIFTS

Lessons: EXODUS 35:30-36:7 HEBREWS 9:1-5

OK. So, now what? Dan Yuen West Valley Presbyterian Church

scoffed; but others said, We will hear you again about this.

Pentecost: Spirit of Direction and Disruption

Rev. Daniel Mackey The Resurrection of Our Lord April 20, 2014 Mark 16:1-8 Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church in Muncie, Ind.

We re in the midst of a

WRONG THINKING WRONG SPEAKING

I. The Pharisees took a self-righteous approach.

Lesson 11: God s Promise& Curse

their moral character but the quality of their music. It was good music. It was music they could be proud of and the name stuck. 1

Transcription:

When Bad Things Happen The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring Eden United Church of Christ Hayward, California Nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost October 4, 2015 Job 1:1, 2:1-10 (NRSV) The origin of World Communion Sunday, which we celebrate today, is grounded in the deep desire of some of our mainline Protestant church leaders to pray and witness to a common vision of world peace with justice. Presbyterian leaders initiated the first observance of what was then known as World Wide Communion Sunday, in 1936. Participation in this observance spread to numerous other denominations, in 1940 and the years that followed. The growth in participation of this observance was fostered out of deep ecumenical commitment to pray and work for an end to the root causes of war. 1 I admire the leaders who forged our observance of today s World Communion Sunday and the vision that inspired it, and even though wars and injustices persist in our time, I prefer to light a candle for peace and justice rather than curse the darkness of war, or to refrain from addressing the root causes of war. II War and its causes have left deep scars in the lives of individuals, families, and whole nations in our global village. The most recent horrible examples of war and its victims come to us from Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan. Ingrid Moeller, president of the Cherryland Community Association and a native of Germany, has been back in Europe for the past 30 days, and has gotten an upclose and personal view of how these three nations wars are affecting Germany alone. In her October president s column in the association s newsletter, Ingrid explained: [Germany is] now expecting about 800,000 refugees this year, mostly from Syria, but also from Iraq and Afghanistan etc. The weekend we stayed in Munich with friends and were about to leave from the main railroad station 50,000 refugees were expected to arrive there...as we arrived in Northern Germany our friends [there] drove 1 http://www.ministrymatters.com/all/entry/3201/world-communion-sunday-why-we-do-it-and-how

us by a refugee camp [with] about 400 [tents] erected [on] a [school campus.] Every city has to take its share of asylum seekers. Conferences are being held [about] how many refugees will be taken by each German state. Other European countries have not been [as willing ] to share the burden. Angela Merkel said in Obama fashion: Wir schaffen das! We can do it! As each of us knows on an intellectual level, and as some of us know from personal experience, war has led to a phenomenal amount of suffering. Perhaps the most difficult suffering to accept is the suffering borne by the innocent, who have been caught in the crossfires of war that they did not create and who are not inclined to take up arms. III The problem of suffering particularly the suffering of the innocent is the topic of the book of Job. Some scholars speculate that Job was inspired by the suffering of the Ancient Israelites, who were defeated by the Babylonians in 587 BC and exiled in Babylon for the following two generations. Regardless of whether we have, ourselves, seen war-related suffering up close and personal or not, I suspect that most of us can name examples of undeserved suffering in our own lives or the lives of others undeserved suffering that has confounded us. The problem of undeserved suffering is described by theologians as theodicy and has preoccupied human beings since the dawn of creation. How human beings have answered theodicy questions has varied, but the fact that we humans have been preoccupied with theodicy questions has not. So, why do the innocent suffer? Whether we re talking about the suffering of innocents in the Ancient Near East, or the suffering of innocents in the modern Near East, like the refugees from Syria; or the shooting victims in Roseburg, Oregon; or a loved one s life-threatening health diagnosis, the answers to the why of innocent suffering is rarely clear. What is clear, however, is that suffering does happen, and that it happens in greater and lesser degrees to everyone, including the innocent. That suffering happens to the innocent is a forgone conclusion, according to Rabbi Harold Kushner, author of the bestselling book When Bad Things Happen to Good People. As a colleague of mine once pointed out, Kusher s book is not titled If Bad Things Happen to Good People. It s titled When Bad Things Happen to Good People. When Bad Things Happen, The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring, 10/4/2015, 2 of 5.

There is no question in Kushner s mind whether the innocent suffer. The only question is, when they will suffer? When the innocent suffer, even when the not-so-innocent suffer, it is normal and healthy for us to object, to protest, even to rant and rave and direct it at God. IV The best example I can recall of a person protesting innocent suffering is a man I became acquainted with when I was a student pastor back in the early 1980s. (Yes, Pastor Arlene was once an MIT.) The assignment I was given by my supervising pastor, Pastor Marge, was to call on one man on a bi-monthly basis, for the entire semester. Sometimes I would sit with this man while Pastor Marge took the man s wife out for coffee or a walk and a private conversation. The man who I was assigned to call on wasn t just anyone. He was a retired pastor from the congregation who had remained in the community after he was diagnosed with ALS (Louis Gehrig s disease), and after he was retired. This retired pastor was the angriest man I have ever met. His anger was stressful for his wife, which is why Pastor Marge and I visited as frequently as we could. But more than that, his anger was stressful for our church members, who were deeply saddened by his diagnosis, and deeply troubled that there were only a limited number of things that they or anyone could do for the pastor or his family. One day about halfway into my internship, Pastor Marge shared with me that the retired pastor had announced to her that week (and to several others in the congregation who had come calling) that he had lost his faith. A number of the parishioners were in great distress about this situation and hoped even expected that Pastor Marge would swoop in with a remedy that would resolve the retired pastor s faith crisis, and these same parishioners were very disappointed when she wouldn t or couldn t do so. Instead of rushing in with magic words to make all of the bad better or trying to counsel (or shame) the retired pastor back into the fold so that the congregation would feel more comfortable, Pastor Marge simply met the man where he was spiritually and she listened to him. She listened to his anger, which was a form of grief. She supported his wife when others drifted from the scene. And she challenged the congregation to do their own grief work, and their own theological and spiritual exploration and growth rather than expecting either of the pastors to do that work for them. I don t know how this story ends. I don t know if the retired pastor ever found peace or a renewed sense of faith. I don t know how his wife coped with his diagnosis, or the evolution of his disease process, or his death, or her journey through widow- When Bad Things Happen, The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring, 10/4/2015, 3 of 5.

hood. I don t know, because my internship only lasted one semester. But here s what I do know, and what I am sure of: I am absolutely sure that God didn t cause the pastor s illness. I m absolutely sure that the pastor s loss of faith was not the reason the disease progressed. I am absolutely sure that God can hear and hold the retired pastor s grief, his family s grief, and our grief regardless of what form or twists and turns that it may take be it from denial and anger, to bargaining and depression, and to acceptance. 2 How is it that I m so sure? V I m sure about God s ability to hear and hold our grief, because that s what I have found to be true in my own spiritual life, and because that s what the book of Job (when understood in its entirety) is all about. The book of Job illustrates that faithful people in ancient times protested the injustices of innocent people s suffering, and affirms the validity of the whole range of grief response in modern times. Some notable biblical examples from Job follow. Job s wife protested Job s suffering. She protested God s lack of intervention, and Job s initial acceptance of his fate. Job protested when his friends blamed him for his suffering. Job eventually protested his own suffering, and God s lack of response in the wake of it. Perhaps the most important thing that we can learn from Job is the validity of our protests in the midst of suffering, and the biblical view that none of us is expected to accept anyone s suffering as God s will. Many of us have erroneously been taught that God engineers the hardships and tragedies in our lives to teach us a lesson or to work out some unknown good. Many of us were also taught that Job was patient and passively accepting of his suffering, so that we should passively accept our own suffering or the suffering of others. Many believe these erroneous interpretations of Job, because they haven t yet read the book for themselves, because they have developed a learned helplessness 2 http://www.businessballs.com/elisabeth_kubler_ross_five_stages_of_grief.htm#elisabeth_kublerross_five_stages_of_grief When Bad Things Happen, The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring, 10/4/2015, 4 of 5.

about their predicament, 3 or because they have embraced the idea that suffering is a virtue. But I disagree with each and every one of these theological propositions. By contrast, here s what I believe: I believe that expressing our grief to God can be a helpful step in healing our personal and corporate hurts. I believe that accompanying others through the grief process is one of the greatest gifts we can give another person. And hear me on this: accompanying someone through grief is far less about doing for, and far more about being with. Why do I hold these beliefs, instead of the beliefs espoused that I discount? I hold these beliefs, because I have read the book of Job many times and I have studied it carefully. I have also read the works of biblical and literary scholars who have far more knowledge of this ancient literature than I do. And I, like you, have suffered and seen the suffering of others, up close and personal, and I have learned from these experiences. I have learned that God can hear, and God can hold us in and in spite of dreadful circumstances and ultimately that this hearing and holding can heal us, even when it may not cure us from all that harms us. So I offer this wisdom that I have discerned for myself and pray that it will help you experience hope and healing in the midst of your suffering and the suffering of those who are dear to you. Amen. 3 http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/learned+helplessness When Bad Things Happen, The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring, 10/4/2015, 5 of 5.