Silence of THE Lamb

Saturday, February 27, 2010

 All of us, like sheep, have strayed away.
      We have left God’s paths to follow our own.
   Yet the Lord laid on him
      the sins of us all.
 He was oppressed and treated harshly,
      yet he never said a word.
   He was led like a lamb to the slaughter.
      And as a sheep is silent before the shearers,
      he did not open his mouth
.  Isaiah 53:6-7 (NLT)

It is the silence involved with the whole thing I find most unsettling...

When he was accused by the chief priests and the elders, he gave no answer. When Pilate asked him, "Don't you hear the testimony they are bringing against you?" Jesus didn’t reply, even to a single charge.  Even when he faced Herod, the guy that murdered his cousin…Jesus said nothing. 

Silence in trial, long silences on the cross.  Silent in defiance of noise and words, silent and vulnerable, defiantly silent refusing to justify, refusing to explain, just bearing witness in silence, raising questions but offering no answers.

There’s an old hymn that says He could have called 10, 000 angels…silence.

You know those times when you’ve wronged someone, and instead of yelling at you…they just look at you?  That is a truly deafening silence.  When I read the story of the passion tonight, that’s what happened.  I sat here and noticed, nay – heard the silence of the Christ. What didn't he say?  Words of pain or fear?  Disgust?  I want to open my Bible and read that Jesus said…what?  SOMETHING!  God once said that his spirit would not always strive with man...Yell at me!  Tell me the wicked man I am!  But no.  I am left to pronounce that judgment on myself.  Left to meditate, or wrestle...squirm?  

Yes, yes, words will come. Some from the Cross - 'Forgive' and after more silence - words from the Tomb - 'He has Risen' - but not yet, please not yet... This is the first time I have observed Lent and already it has been a long season…but hold it still...keep the words at bay...let the silence be heavy with anticipation, painful, just a bit longer...so that when words are spoken they come finally with the power of a whisper to deafen, and ring like an incredible announcement of good news. 

It's Not (all) About Me

Saturday, February 20, 2010

When Pharaoh’s horses, chariots, and charioteers rushed into the sea, the Lord brought the water crashing down on them. But the people of Israel had walked through the middle of the sea on dry ground!

Then Miriam the prophet, Aaron’s sister, took a tambourine and led all the women as they played their tambourines and danced.  And Miriam sang this song:
   “Sing to the Lord,
      for he has triumphed gloriously;
   he has hurled both horse and rider
      into the sea.”
   Exodus 15:19-21 (NLT)


In this passage Miriam sings praises to God for delivering the people of Israel from the pursuing Egyptians at the Red Sea.  The song cheers the sight of Pharaoh’s army being hurled into the sea, drowned in the Red Sea, overwhelmed by the fathomless deep, sunk like stones, swallowed up, and all because of God’s love.  Most sermons I’ve heard about this passage depict this event as a celebration of deliverance from evil, metaphorically represented by Pharaoh’s army, and it doesn't trouble them.  

So this is what’s happening right now – I am a selfish person.  Now, before you start to judge too harshly – so are you.  I mean really…we all have a tendency to be selfish.  But, at least for this post, I’m talking about me (ugh!  Once again being selfish!).  Unfortunately though, it’s true.  I look out for people, I try to be a good guy, help others when I can, but really I’m quite self-centered.  This blog is about my journey into faith, it’s an honest attempt to be…well – honest.  I am exploring faith, theology, church, Jesus, God, Jesus as God and so on.  But I begin to think these exercises, these contemplations are all well-and-good, but it’s not all about me. 

It’s tough to think about sometimes.  Those really true honest looks.  It’s a difficult thing to look at one’s life and see how my own sin has affected others, and it’s usually not in a positive way.  I was reading Miriam’s Song this evening and I thought the same things I’ve always heard in the sermons:  Isn’t the love of God a beautiful thing!  And it is  - I most assuredly don’t dispute that.  But I also thought, that maybe Miriam and Moses and the Children of Israel might have done well if, in the midst of their celebration, they had thought, even if for just a moment, that it wasn’t all about them.

How many “innocent” men died in the Red Sea that day?  How many soldiers were merely doing as they were told…as is a soldier’s wont.  How much pain, agony, suffering…because of God’s love?  No, not entirely.  This tragedy happened because Israel had been taken into slavery – because of their sin!  So maybe on the eastern side of the Red Sea there should have been some introspection mingled in with the celebration. 

The Gospel was not all about them, God delivered for Israel, but others suffered because of them.  In the same way, because of my sin, God delivered and Jesus suffered on the cross, and my fellow man has often suffered because of me.  Sometimes I get so focused on my relationship with God, so focused on what God has done for us and the Body of Christ, that I forget that Christ died because of sin...my sin.  I see preachers on TV who talk about the love of God and how God wants his children to prosper, have joyful, fulfilling lives. But I often forget that He died for ALL.  That God does not rejoice in the suffering of any of his children.  
I once read a rabbinic story told in some Passover Haggadahs.  An angel standing next to God urges him to celebrate the great victory of deliverance as the sea washes over the army.  God hushes him saying: “Be quiet, my children are dying.”  

Répondez s'il vous plaît

Jesus entered Jericho and made his way through the town. There was a man there named Zacchaeus. He was the chief tax collector in the region, and he had become very rich.  He tried to get a look at Jesus, but he was too short to see over the crowd. So he ran ahead and climbed a sycamore-fig tree beside the road, for Jesus was going to pass that way.  When Jesus came by, he looked up at Zacchaeus and called him by name.  “Zacchaeus!” he said. “Quick, come down! I must be a guest in your home today.”  Zacchaeus quickly climbed down and took Jesus to his house in great excitement and joy.  But the people were displeased. “He has gone to be the guest of a notorious sinner,” they grumbled.  Meanwhile, Zacchaeus stood before the Lord and said, “I will give half my wealth to the poor, Lord, and if I have cheated people on their taxes, I will give them back four times as much!”  Jesus responded, “Salvation has come to this home today, for this man has shown himself to be a true son of Abraham.  For the Son of Man came to seek and save those who are lost.”  Luke 19:1-10  (NLT)

How lucky am I!  I’m rich!  No, I haven’t won the lottery, and with the exception of a portion of the Super Bowl pool, I haven’t come into any extra money as of late.  No, the fact is this – 53%, that’s 53 out of every 100 people on the face of the earth…53% earn and live on $2.00 a day.  You read it right…two dollars.  Per day.  I am a rich man.  As far as material things go, I want for nothing.  Maybe that's why I so often find it easy to live without God.  I'm not relying on him for the very basics of life.  But, every now-and-then, a rich person responds.

Just a couple chapters earlier in the book of Luke, Jesus despaired over how hard it is for the wealthy to enter the kingdom of heaven.  But in chapter 19 we read about a rich man who did!  I’ve heard dozens of sermons on this passage over my lifetime, but today it struck me at a more oblique angle. 

What caught my eye was this:  Jesus noticed this man in the tree, invited himself to dinner, and “Zacchaeus quickly climbed down and took Jesus to his house in great excitement and joy.”   The money was an afterthought.  Zacchaeus’ stuff, those things of his life came after.  Jesus wanted to have dinner with him, and he got excited about it!  Money be damned – what mattered was spending face time with the Messiah!  That’s so cool!  Zacchaeus got it.  He understood what was really important, in spite of the relative ease with which he lived his life.  

In Revelation 3:20 Jesus says, “Look! I stand at the door and knock. If you hear my voice and open the door, I will come in, and we will share a meal together as friends.”  Jesus wants to have dinner with this rich man!  Over the last few months and especially in the last several weeks, I have heard this rapping at my door.  In the beginning it seemed a little tapping, I wasn’t even sure I heard it; I had to keep peeping through the peephole.  Then it grew ‘til it has become this pounding!  I know we always picture Jesus as this kind and considerate guy, as he politely knocks on the door of our hearts.  (Gotta love the metaphors).  But I don’t feel like He’s being particularly meek or gentle in this case at all.  It seems as though he’s pounding with both fists, kicking at the bottom of the door, rattling the handle and yelling!  How cool is that!  Dinner with the Messiah!  Maybe hope for a rich man!  But I fear…

How far does it go?  How far do I go?  Rich young ruler?  Zacchaeus?  I know opening that door is gonna cost me, one way or another.  But I get excited at the thought of being able to say – “whatever, I want to sup with the King.”    

Help My Unbelief

Sunday, February 14, 2010



And straightway the father of the child cried out, and said with tears, Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief.  Mark 9:24


I missed church today.  I hate missing church, but sometimes it can't be helped.  I missed church today because of my Uncle Harold (insists on Chinese restaurants), but as luck would have it, same Uncle Harold had sent me a recording of a sermon he had preached some time ago.  So my sermon part of Sunday was in some way fulfilled, and it's kinda funny - the sermon was timely, although I must say, I found it moving, and in some ways infuriating.  But then, that's the problem isn't it...

Here's the deal:  Today is Valentine's Day, so I spent a little time thinking about love today.  I thought about familial love, romantic love, the love of my friends and the love of God.  To be sure God's love kinda outweighs all the other loves for many and various reasons.  I guess in this forum we can simply stipulate that.  Love is nice isn't it?  I mean, even an old ogre like me gets a little love.  BUT...(you had to know that was coming)

When I saw my daughter the other day, I couldn't help but wonder...where is the love of God in this?  Ashley's one of those people who love God.  She was not one to sit around wondering about His existence, there was never that whining about what is real, what is truth - none of that.  But yet...there she is struggling with the simplest thought.  And you know what sucks?  I do.

If you look back in this blog, even just a few weeks ago, you'll see that I prayed (along with hundreds of others) that Ashley would live.  I wrote about how science and medicine were at an end, and only God remained.  And God delivered.  Ashley is alive, her body strengthens by the day, and hope remains for her mind.  But what is my first inclination?  To question God.

I still don't totally buy into that whole 'God is in control' and 'all things work together for good...' stuff, but for crying out loud!  I was shown a glimpse of faith.  I was given an opportunity to sense even a mere essence of the Christ; then the first thing I do, when I see the suffering of one so dear to me - I wonder where is God's love.  And this is not new to me.  I thought the same thing when I saw that guy sleeping on the bench down at the Corning Preserve again just last week.  I see struggling and hurt and sorrow and my first inclination is to blame God.  Can you imagine the nerve of me, to blame God?

But I do like what Uncle Harold had to say in his sermon.  After some pretty good exegesis, Harold closed his sermon with, to me, a very profound and honest statement...we may not know why bad things happen to good people, whatever the reason it's okay, it'll all make sense over there..."

To be honest, the "why" of suffering has never troubled me all that much.  The fact of suffering wounds me to the core.   Whatever the reason for Ashley's suffering, whatever the reason for the suffering of that guy at the Corning Preserve, whatever the reason for the suffering of countless millions around the world, my prayer right now is two-fold:

"Lord, may Harold be right, over there may it all be okay and in the meantime...please help my unbelief."

Attendance

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Then the devil left him, and angels came and attended him.  Matthew 4:11 (NLT)

You wouldn’t believe what I just saw.  I was taking that shortcut that you showed me the other day.  It was weird man.  At first I thought I was seeing things, but I swear it was real.

Yeah, you’re right, I’ll sit over here in the shade.  No, no…it’s definitely not the heat!  Just give me a drink and shut up and I’ll tell ya.

Okay, okay, let me see.  So I left the house a couple hours ago.  I found the spot where you showed me the shortcut so I headed out, I figured I could remember the way.  So just as I was walking between those two trees, this guy came brushing by me.  I mean, he had what…15 feet that he could have gone around me but he bumped into me like he didn’t even see me.  It pissed me off a little so I grabbed his shirt.  Dude, when he spun around…when he spun around…gimme a second.  When he looked at me this chill went up my spine.  I don’t know why!  I don’t know.  I mean this guy was furious!  Man, he looked at me like he just wanted to tear me to pieces!  I know!  I don’t know…it sure wasn’t anything I did!  Anyway…no!  I’ve never seen him before and I don’t want to see him again.  Hell no!  I think I’d just cross the road or something.

Listen, listen…that guy isn’t even what this is about.  Well, give me a second.  Can I have another drink?  Whew, thanks.  Okay, so I’m walking along just thinking about work tonight and what might be for dinner, and about ten minutes later I see this guy laying there.  I don’t know!  I was about 30 feet away.  What was he wearing??  Just let me tell the story will ya!  So I see this guy.  I could tell he was alive because he was moving you know.  No, not a lot, but enough that I could tell he wasn’t dead or anything.  Look, do you want me to tell the story or not?  Then stop asking questions.  Yeah maybe some bread.  You got any meat?  Cool.

So I wasn’t sure what I was getting myself into, but after that guy I saw a few minutes before and now this…I figured maybe I oughtta check this guy out.  So I go up to him and what a mess!  No there wasn’t any blood, but this guy looked like five miles of bad road.  He was sunburned so bad he had blisters all over his face and hands.  His lips were cracked, yeah I guess there was some dried blood around his mouth.  He was shaking and looked like he was wasting away to nothing.  Yeah, you know what I mean…his eyes were all sunken in and his face had that look like he had too much skin. 

Oh man!  And did he stink!  No tellin when the last time he took a bath or shaved.  I don’t know.  He didn’t seem drunk.  As a matter-of-fact, when I asked him if he was okay…I know, I know, but what else was I supposed to say?  Well, if you ever come across someone like that – you say that.  Anyway, so I asked him and in this dry, raspy voice he says that I should probably just keep moving.  I tell him that I could help him, but he just shook his head, I think he said something about tired, or tried or something.  I had to put my ear next to his mouth to hear him, but all he kept saying was “go”, “hurry”.

I don’t know!  I don’t know!  So now I’m totally creeped out right?  So I think well okay.  Dude’s gonna die out here like this, but he doesn’t want my help.  Then I think of that guy that I passed and think maybe, if he did this to this guy, maybe he’s comin’ back to finish the job.  I know!  I don’t want no trouble.  I mean, I feel bad about this guy and all, I don’t really wanna leave him, but dude, by now I’m freakin’ out!  So I figure I can send some help once I get here.  So I start heading out.  Yeah I know.  But I didn’t know what else to do.  Yeah I know where he is.  No no no.  Just wait.  I haven’t even told you the creepy part yet.

I swear!  Yes I’m telling you the truth!  I couldn’t make this up!  Okay, if you’re not gonna believe me…okay then.  So I just decided to be on my way and send help when I hear this noise.  I don’t know.  I don’t know!  I never heard a sound like this before.  Look.  I start to walk away, I hear this noise and I turn and look.  Dude.  There were these three guys sitting around this guy.  Wuddaya mean?  I’m tellin’ you!  Three.  One was sitting there and had that guy's head resting in his lap and he was wiping his face with a wet cloth.  C’mon!  Why would I make this up?  Three.  Yes, a noise and they’re there.  So one of the…I don’t know, well dressed.  Okay – very well dressed.  So one of the other guys is putting some kind of cream or medicine or something on the guy’s hands and feet, and kind of gently massaging him. 

No!  That’s just it – where we were there was no way they could have just walked up on us.  I didn’t particularly look, but I didn’t notice any, just mine coming along that shortcut.  I know!  I’m tellin’ ya’ – I’m starting to shake again just thinking about it.  So the third guy seems like he’s putting together some food.  I don’t know, I didn’t look that closely, it was food.  No, not a meal, maybe some fruit and bread, I don’t know.  Anyway he’s cutting up the food into small pieces and all three of them are praying.  Yes praying.  I don’t know, they didn’t sound local.  He seemed to.  They’d say something and he would nod and whisper something back, so I guess so. 

Here’s the weird part though.  The guy on the ground?  Well, these three guys are fixing him all up and stuff…this guy on the ground…and…I don’t know, I don’t know.  This guy on the ground looked like he was about dead, these guys come out of nowhere, and get this – they had wings or something.  Okay, okay okay.  I know it sounds crazy, but when they moved…I don’t know, they had wings or something.  They really didn’t walk and they weren’t really flying…I don’t know, but this much I do know…when the one cutting up the food walked or flew or floated or whatever he did, when he went to give it to the guy on the ground – he didn’t leave any footprints!  What?  What do you think I did?  I ran man!  I know.  I know.  It’s crazy I know.  But you shoulda seen the dude on the ground.  Man, he looked bad.  

Full of Dead Men's Bones

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

“Thou blind Pharisee, cleanse first that which is within the cup and platter, that the outside of them may be clean also.  Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like unto whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's bones, and of all uncleanness…”  Matthew 23:26-28 (KJV).

Do you ever walk around with that empty feeling?  I do.  Sometimes it’s because I’m hungry…need a pizza.  Sometimes it’s because work has drained me, or I haven’t slept enough.  The last few days it’s because I’ve had that sense of being hounded.  No blood hounds, no posse.  My boss isn’t on my back, and the tax man remains at bay.  No…this time it’s different.  Scripture is bugging me.  You know how you come across something and it just sticks with you?  Wake up – it’s there.  Go to work – it’s there.  No matter what you’re doing or where you go – there it is.

Ultimately it’s a good thing, but when you’re in the midst of this kind of thing it’s rather troublesome.  Maybe I’m just one of those over-sensitive guys.  I think too much, feel too much, worry too much.  Well, for the last several days…

Here’s the problem:  I struggle sometimes with knowledge of things about Christ and knowing Jesus.  I know a bit about religion and the Bible.  I have studied philosophy, theology and even learned a little bit about house repair.  But, of late, and certainly after reading this verse the other day, I just feel like one of those big concrete sepulchers you see in pictures of a creepy looking cemetery in New Orleans.  Full of dead men’s bones.  It’s an empty feeling.

I have ventured into a life of faith (more like stuck my toe into the ocean), and it’s knocked me for a loop.  I am quickly coming to realize that I know about Jesus but I really don’t know Him.  I want to know Jesus.  I have no desire for that Joel Osteen, kind of Christianity.  I don’t want to sing hymns and spiritual songs…expressing my desire to know some sanitized, shallow, Sunday morning glad-handing Jesus.  At the same time I have absolutely no desire for a spiritual maturity measured by the number of consecutive Sundays of church attendance I can tick off the calendar, or the number of fellow-Christians I can alienate simply because they don’t match up to my understanding of theology.  I simply want to work out my own salvation, to know what it means to know Jesus. 

I want to be more than a white sepulcher, no more dead men’s bones.

Wishing I Could Just Stay Right Here

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Six days later Jesus took Peter, James, and John, and led them up a high mountain to be alone. As the men watched, Jesus’ appearance was transformed, and his clothes became dazzling white, far whiter than any earthly bleach could ever make them. Then Elijah and Moses appeared and began talking with Jesus.

Peter exclaimed, “Rabbi, it’s wonderful for us to be here! Let’s make three shelters as memorials—one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” He said this because he didn’t really know what else to say, for they were all terrified.

Then a cloud overshadowed them, and a voice from the cloud said, “This is my dearly loved Son. Listen to him.” Suddenly, when they looked around, Moses and Elijah were gone, and they saw only Jesus with them.  Mark 9:2-8 (NLT)

I’ve had a couple conversations lately about the Transfiguration.  In a passage like this there are probably hundreds of lessons, sermons…theologies.  But reading this passage again tonight, I kinda get what Peter might have been saying.  One way of reading Peter’s reaction is to see him scared and just blurting out the first thing that came to mind.  It’s almost comical to think of it (if it weren’t such a serious and treasured moment I suppose).  I mean really!  At least he didn’t say some of the things I probably would have – Oh &%#$! 

But I think I can relate to Peter in another way here.  Peter was really the first of the disciples to truly understand that Jesus was the long-waited-for Messiah.  Yeah, he was a hot-head and always getting scolded by Jesus, but He was starting to get it.  But in the back of his mind must always have been Jesus’ veiled references to His coming death.

Then, here they were on a mountain and they see these incredible things.  All the old stuff, the Law, history, Peter’s life as a fisherman, struggling to barely provide for his family, his waiting and searching for the Messiah as he had been taught in synagogue – all of this comes to an end at this moment.  Maybe he really wanted to build tabernacles right then and there as a marker, a monument if you will, to all that went before and to remember this most precious of moments.  The future was unknown, even scary.  Maybe he just wanted to stay in the world of the transfiguration instead of going back to a world of pain, sickness and death.

I think I feel a bit of the same thing.  My own transfiguration has been a precious moment.  A part of me just wants to sit here and savor the feeling of genuine closeness to Jesus.  To move forward is scary…will I always feel this way?  Will Jesus always seem so near?  Oh, I know I can’t stay here, but there’s a part of me that, like Peter, James and John, just wants to stay right here where I can “see” what I believe.  

Jesus Sighed

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

When the Pharisees heard that Jesus had arrived, they came and started to argue with him. Testing him, they demanded that he show them a miraculous sign from heaven to prove his authority.  When he heard this, he sighed deeply in his spirit and said, “Why do these people keep demanding a miraculous sign? I tell you the truth, I will not give this generation any such sign.”  Mark 8:11, 12 (NLT)

Now, I’m not a big one for miracles.  In my mind the vast majority of things that people today ascribe to miracles are merely and easily explained through coincidence and/or science.  Sorry, but there it is.  That’s not to say that I don’t think that Jesus performed miracles…I believe he did.  I just think that we bandy about the word miracle so often – but it just ain’t so.

But. That’s right, there’s a “but” here.  I do believe that miracles happen.  Oh we can wax romantic and get all poetic about how just the fact that we’re breathing is a miracle.  Okay, stipulated.  I’m talking about those extraordinary, unexpected-against nature type of miracles.  They happen…just not as often as we’d like to think.

But number two, and here’s the funny part – this post really isn’t about miracles.  It’s about sighing.  I remember when I was a kid we’d take a long drink of Pepsi and when we were done we’d let out this long, satisfied sigh.  I’ve heard people sigh at a puppy, a sunset or kind words spoken.  And I’ve heard people sigh in exasperation.

By the time the Pharisees came to see Jesus and bug him about doing a miracle, Jesus had already (just in the book of Mark):  cleansed a leper, healed the centurion’s servant, Peter’s mother-in-law, a paralytic, a hemorrhagic woman, a man’s withered hand, and a deaf mute.  He had raised a ruler’s daughter from the dead, sent a hundred or so demons into a herd of pigs, walked on water and calmed a storm.  On one occasion he fed about 5,000 people with some bread and a couple of fish; then did the same for 4,000 more people. 

So here in Mark chapter 8, the Pharisees approach Jesus and try to goad Him into performing a miracle to prove He was who He said He was.  You can almost sense the sarcasm, judgement and intimidation.  Then Jesus sighed.

When I read this I thought…oh the nerve of these guys!  Treating the Christ like He was some kind of phony; demanding parlor tricks!  Ahh, but then my finger (figuratively mind you) turned back to me.  How many times in my life have I called Christ a phony?  For how many years did I look at Jesus and say that yeah, he was a good guy, an interesting historical figure…but God?  Ehh – I don’t think so. 

And I wonder how often I still do that.  When I pray empty prayers.  When I think flippantly about faith.  I’m not looking at myself with loathing eyes here.  I am simply wondering how many times I have made Christ sigh.