Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Soccer in the rain and the Gospel

Exodus 25:1-9

Exodus 25:1-9 
  I have always said that if I lived in downtown Cincinnati, I wouldn't be able to stop buying Reds season tickets so that I could drop in to baseball games whenever they were home.  If I were in walking distance, how could I not go to a game when they were right there?  They're so close... I would have to go.  I'd want to be in the stadium to experience the game.
  Scripture paints a picture of intimacy between God and the Israelites.  One of the first instructions that Moses receives is for an offering, all for the purpose of building a sanctuary, that God may dwell in their midst.  God wants to be near them.  God loves the people and wants there to be a place set aside to spend time with them.  And wouldn't it be even better if it were built out of a freewill offering, motivated by gratitude, given in thanks by the people?
  It makes me ask myself... how do I make time for God?  Where in my life am I creating space to spend time with the God who loves me, whom I love?  Where does that exist, and why do I let so many other things compete for space?  They are louder, but none are lovelier.  So many cause stress and heartache, and yet because they are more demanding, more pressing, I turn to them.  
  May we all pray for wisdom to discern, wisdom to discipline ourselves, that there may be a communion in our lives between us and God, that we may be enriched by God in our midst.

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Exodus 24:15-18

Exodus 24:15-18 

  All of Scripture is pointing back to the creation story, and all of Scripture is pointing ahead to Christ.  In creation, God works for 6 days, and all things are done, so God rests and enjoys communion with God's creation.  Things are complete.  In the same way, the Lord's glory covers the mountain for 6 days, creating the atmosphere where God can then commune with Moses on the mountain, so that the people of God can be re-created here at Mt. Sinai.  
  This process takes forty days, the same number of days that Christ goes into the wilderness to prepare for his public ministry, the same number of years the Israelites will dwell in the wilderness before they enter the Promised Land.  
  Scripture is a spiral, returning to the same point over and over, and yet the people are different, having grown, having learned about God, traveling forward, ever closer to the fullness of the Kingdom of God.
  We are the same way -- we grow every year as we return to the same points -- to Lent, to Advent, to Easter, to Christmas, to Pentecost.  We change, we grow, and so we are not the same, and every year, we are closer to the fullness of the Kingdom of God.  The more we learn about our past, about our history, the better we understand the future, and the people we are called to be.  We don't leave the past behind, but grow out of it, into a future where the past is redeemed and we are restored to right relationship with God and one another.