Saturday, March 5, 2016

Worried Minds Think Alike

I've always known that my four year old has some of my traits, but our recent move across the country really put it in plain view.  Before the move we would talk about it as I tucked him in.  Tears would roll down his cheek as he said "I'm not going to make any friends there."  I would tell him that he is wonderful and of course he will make friends.  I would tell him that we could make friends together, but he insisted "I will never make friends!"  I would be thinking how I wished he would be more rational about it and see how silly it is to worry.  Then I would hear those same words coming from my own mouth.  My friend was planning a trip  to come see us and asked me if a certain weekend would work.  I said, "Of course it will work.  I have literally nothing on my calendar after the move.  I will just be sitting around lonely and friendless."  Then she played the part of the rational reassuring one telling me that of course I would make friends and look at all the friends I made in Toledo.  I heard her but I still had my doubts.  And now here we are; loving our new home and already making wonderful lifelong friends.

When it was time to drive away from our home of seven years I said "woo-hoo road trip!"  and turned around to see my four year old's chin quivering as he wiped a tear from his eye and said, "Mommy, I'm sad."  I told him I was sad too and we held hands and let tears fall as we drove out of our beloved city.  It was hard, but by Indiana we had joined the other two in singing along to the music.

Yesterday was his first day at his new preschool on his own.  Before school was an epic meltdown.  He was nervous and did not want to go.  I reassured him, told him things he could do there, told him how much he liked it when we went together, and stayed firm that he was going.  But inside I felt awful because I totally got it.  I was nervous too.  We have been spending so much time together, I was sad to be away from him all morning.  Besides that, I had been there.  I freaked when I had to go to preschool ... and first grade ... and youth club at church.  I remembered how that felt.  But I also know the rewards of doing things that are difficult.  I don't know how I learned it but somewhere along the way I decided that I would force myself to do things that were hard.  I remember clearly that moment as a 14 year old when I walked to the front of the room at my first speech tournament.  All I could think was "why am I doing this?"  After four years of speech team, two years of coaching and ten years of preaching I sure am glad I did it anyway.  I hope my son learns that same thing.  In the meantime I guess I have to keep compassionately pushing him but also keep knowing when not to push.  

I struggle with that for myself.   I love my current situation.  I love being home with the boys, I love being involved at my husband's church and my son's school.  I love volunteering and exploring.  But I also wonder if I should be pushing myself more.  Every time I did supply work (when you fill in for a pastor on a Sunday morning) I was like that 14 year old speech competitor.  As I packed the kids up, took them to a sitter, programmed the church address in my phone and drove to a place where I did not know anyone and was completely unfamiliar with their usual worship routines, I thought "why am I doing this?"  But every single time I was glad I did it.  I felt renewed spiritually, emotionally, physically and mentally.  I connected with people and kept working on the things I love like preaching and leading worship.  

 So what now?  I don't know.  Moving here was right for my husband's career and a great place for all of us to live, but what do I do next?  I have no idea.  And this is coming from someone who decided her career at age 13.  I have always mapped out my life and followed it completely.  Now I have no plan.  Maybe that's ok?  Maybe after years of pushing past the worry I am ready to live in a way that is less planned and more spontaneous? ... sounds too uncertain.  A wise friend told me that God's calling is less of a direct road map and more like the next stone across a foggy lake.  Sounds great, but hard for a person who over prepares and thinks everything out to the point of worry and reluctance.  Maybe I just keep hopping and surround myself with people who will push me to the next rock ... and keep holding my son's hand as we jump together. 
 

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

A Beautiful New Reality (Article for St Andrew's Episcopal Newsletter December 2015)

 Every year many of us Christians struggle to find a way to be in a state of “not yet” while the world seems to be in a state of “now.” During a time of celebrations, feasts, gifts and extravagance, Advent calls us to be patient, still and reflective. Many of us cling to the image of Mary during this time of waiting. She had no choice but to wait. Her wait was physical, emotional and visible as her belly expanded with the days. Baby kicks and stretch marks were the words of prophecy and promise for her. Pregnancy is a waiting game. On the good days you embrace and enjoy the moment you are in- cherishing every feeling and the anticipation. On harder days you wince as you look at a calendar, wondering “how many more days of discomfort, worry, stretching and back pain?” The wait is physical, emotional and visible to everyone (and they like to comment on it). Waiting, preparing, making more and more room for new life. The interesting thing about counting down the days of pregnancy is that you are actually anxiously awaiting something incredibly difficult and painful. When I went to the hospital having contractions with my second son Isaiah, I was hoping that the nurse would tell me it was indeed time. Even though he was a bit early, I felt ready. I did not want to be pregnant anymore and I wanted to meet my little man. I insisted on no drugs of any kind and no epidural. I calmly watched the clock tick through the night and the snow fall outside the hospital window. I helped Jeremiah figure out who would lead worship since it was a Sunday morning. I took deep breaths and repeated things like “faith over fear, mind over matter.” And then it got real. The nurse came in and looked shocked, she remarked on my change in demeanor. My calm, cool and collected face was replaced with discomfort, fear and dread. I remembered what it was like as the contractions got closer and closer together. I forgot about my mantras as my body contorted. The peace and calm was pushed out by a writhing pain that took over my entire body. Doubt replaced confidence. And then just when I announced to the doctor that she would need to do a c-section because I could not do it any longer, just when I had completely given up … new life. And within minutes I was blissfully holding a tiny baby with a perfect round face and asking my husband to please get me another Rice Krispie treat.

I found myself thinking about that memory in an unlikely place. I was sitting there in a dimly lit hospice room holding the hand of my dear friend. I was whispering encouragement in her ear and watching her husband encourage her by her bedside. There were so many physical reminders of childbirth. She was laying on her back as the painful cancer took over her body. Up to this point, during the months since she found out the cancer was back and it was terminal, she had prepared. She prepared her young children, her friends and family. She wrote letters, bought gifts, said what needed to be said. And I watched as the time came. It was hard. And then just when we started to settle in for the night, just after the hospice nurse left talking about increasing dosages … her last breath. I went home in a daze. I collected my kids from our neighbor and put them to bed very late. Jeremiah was at General Convention in Utah. I was worn out, hanging on the edge, about to fall into the depths of despair and just when I thought I could not do it, that I could not handle it, that the darkness would overcome … I laid down next to my then three year old and he asked me where I had been. I told him my friend died, he smiled and said “that’s good mommy because now she is with Jesus.”

Yes, new life. We wait with hope, we prepare, we make room, we count down, we try to say “not yet” to everything around us that says “now.” We look for hope and peace in a chaotic world that is full of fear and pain. Just when we think we can’t wait anymore, when this world needs a savior, needs hope … new life. A new life that changes everything, a new life that challenges us, that challenges the world we live in, that challenges our wish lists and plans and agendas and desires and relationships. It can be painful … but it is new life. A beautiful new reality ushered in with a tiny body. And just like my baby boys, just like resurrection … it is worth waiting for.

Love Letter to Toledo

http://loveletterstotoledo.com/jennifer-williamson/

Sermon from St Andrew’s 1/10/16


Luke 3:15-17, 21-22
Seven years ago I was a name to many of you.  A name as part of a paragraph, a paragraph as part of an introduction that probably went something like this, “The Vestry and the Search Committee are happy  to announce that Jeremiah Williamson will be our new rector beginning in April.  He comes with his wife, Jennifer who is a United Methodist pastor.”  For many you I stayed a name for a while since I was busy being the pastor of Woodville United Methodist until 2013 when I became a stay at home mom and started coming here.  But now … well I’d like to think I’m more than a name, or maybe my name means something more, more fully a name.  Now that we have celebrated the birth of children together, we have mourned together, laughed together and prayed together week after week.  Now we are more.  But at first we were names to each other.

Names carry so much weight.  When we named our children we took it very seriously.  We read and researched and reflected.  In the end we cheated, we went with names that had already become great.  We took two amazing stories, Oscar Romero and the prophet Isaiah and attached them to our children in the hopes of bringing them roots and inspiration.  Names are a big deal, the first thing we learn to write, the first question we are asked, the word we sometimes dread and sometimes long to hear from others.
In the Gospel reading today Jesus is identified.  Sure, we already knew what  he would be called, but it’s here in this scene on the beach that Jesus is identified: God’s son, the Beloved.  This is who Jesus is, without this, before this he may have been a name as part of an introduction, Jesus of Nazareth, another name in the pages of history.  But now he is God’s Son, the Beloved.  This is who he is, identified by the voice of God after he emerges from the waters of baptism.  Now it can begin, now his work of saving and preaching and restoring can begin.

But more than just Jesus is identified in this passage.  This simple story of a group of people by the river is an amazing revelation of who God is.  It is a complete understanding of the Trinity in one moment, one sentence, one action.  It’s not very often that we get a mention of all three members of the Trinity in the same instance.  But here we do.  Jesus is praying, the Holy Spirit comes down like a dove and God speaks.  All three, right there.  What a sight.

This depiction might resonate perfectly with your understanding of the Trinity.  Jesus down here on the ground, God way up there with a booming voice bestowing things upon the earth and the Holy Spirit coming down.  Like a divine hierarchy.  But let’s open up the picture for a minute, see if maybe there is something more going on here.

Every now and then one is fortunate enough to read a book that speaks directly to one’s soul and revolutionizes one’s worldview.  For me, that happened my first year of seminary when I had to read a book called “She Who Is” by a Roman Catholic nun named Elizabeth Johnson.  The way she talked about the power of symbols for God, God’s relationship to humanity and the Trinity blew my mind, even in and maybe for it’s simplicity.  She suggests that the Trinity is more than a hierarchy or God looking down and giving gifts to Jesus and the Holy Spirit running around doing the work.  Instead she sees the Trinity as active, alive, moving, circular.  Less about the parts and more about the connections, the relationships.  God the Creator giving God’s self to Jesus the Son, loving and moving in him, all three bound together by love, equality and divinity.  Elizabeth Johnson explains what is sometimes referred to as a “social trinity” as she says:
“At its most basic the symbol of the Trinity evokes a livingness in God, a dynamic coming and going with the world that points to an inner divine circling around an unimaginable relation … Not an isolated, static ruling monarch, but a relational, dynamic, tripersonal mystery of love.”  “The threes keep circling round.  Whatever the categories used, there is reflected a livingness in God; a beyond, a within, and a within to the world and its history; a sense of God as from whom, by whom, and in whom all things exist, thrive, struggle toward freedom, and are gathered in.  To use one more model, this time from the eleventh-century theologian Hildegard of Bingen, there is a brightness, a flashing forth, and a fire, and these three are one, connecting all creation together in compassion.  All these metaphors express the Trinitarian structure of Christian belief in God.”

What I believe Elizabeth is saying is that the Trinity is about relationship, and we are invited to be part of that relationship.  God as Father, Son and Holy Ghost, all parts engaged in self-giving.  God says “this is my Son, the Beloved.” It is about the relationship.  The Holy Spirit comes down and then Jesus goes about his work in the love and embrace of the Creator and Sustainer.  They are more than motionless figures, names in a book, images to be worshiped.  They are not three isolated separate Gods, but rather a relationship.
And so here we are gathering together, experiencing God through relationship.  We come face to face, we join our voices in prayer because we are more than just names, we are relationship.  We are God’s beloved, saved by Christ, experiencing the presence of the Holy Spirit and holding one another’s hands.

We are invited to be part of this dynamic relationship between God and creation.  God gives God’s self to us in love, mercy and compassion and we are called to give ourselves to God and one another, keeping the relationship active.

When we baptize we enter into this act of self-giving.  The Holy Spirit is alive and moving in the water, God is calling the baptized, and then the newest Christian is sealed with the sign of the cross.  In baptism we do not use last names because we are part of this family, this relationship where those distinctions do not matter because we are called beloved.

But here’s the down side of relationships.  They can hurt.  I take that back.  They will hurt.  We don’t get to stay in this moment forever.  We have to say good-bye at some point.  Whether it’s relocation or death or rejection or any kind of change … and it hurts.   When we open our hearts and give of ourselves to another, through shared faith or shared pain or shared experience or compassion or love or friendship, we open ourselves to immeasurable joy and deep pain.  Sometimes isolation is tempting, it  might seem less risky, more reasonable.  But God calls us to love.  Love God and love neighbor.  Give of yourself.  This is our calling.  This is what we are baptized into, a relationship with a God who gives.  So we keep at it, cherishing the rewards and weathering the losses.   We keep our place in the divine dance, in our relationship with a living and moving God.

Seven years ago I packed up our stuff and headed west from Youngstown to Toledo.  I cried the whole way as I thought of all the wonderful people I loved and that loved me that I was leaving.  You were names to me and I was a name to you.  And then we knelt and took bread and wine together.   We said goodbye to beloved members and friends, we ate donuts and chili, we sang Bible School songs, taught Sunday School, did Bible study together.  We sang and worshiped, we cried and prayed.  We grew, we welcomed more people into this place.  And now our names mean so much more to each other.

In a few weeks I will once again pack up our stuff (a lot more stuff this time and twice as many people) and head west, very west from Toledo to Colorado Springs.  I will cry as I think of all of the wonderful people I love and have loved me.  I will cry when I think of your names and what they mean … the relationships.  And then I will go to a place where I am right now just a name, a name as part of an introduction that goes something like, “The Vestry and the Search Committee are happy  to announce that Jeremiah Williamson will be our new rector beginning in February.  He comes with his wife, Jennifer who is a United Methodist pastor and their two children.”  And you will become a name and accept names as you look for your next rector.
And then something will happen.  God alive and active, the names will become more.  Relationships will blossom, holy moments emerge, bonds form and the names will mean so much more.  This is life.  A circle, a dance, always moving.  This is how we be the people God is calling us to be, engaging in loving relationship, opening our hearts and experiencing Christ in one another.

I will never forget watching my children get baptized here in this place.  Their wet baby heads and wide eyes as they watched the candle.  I’ll never forget the loving faces that greeted them as they were brought down the aisle with the other newly baptized.  I’ll never forget because the Holy Spirit was in this place, making it more than a simple group of people in a building, making it holy.  Today Oliver will have this experience.  His wet head and wide eyes will be welcomed with love and joy by people who will be so much more than names to him.  The Holy Spirit is moving in this place today.  Father, Son and Holy Ghost, active, alive, giving, receiving, loving.  Right here.  And we are a part of it.  Each of us with our own identities, stories and names, each of us together, called Beloved.

Smashing Pumpkins (December 2015)


As I stood there in the preschool pick-up line I watched as the teachers carefully checked the names on the little paper plates under the Play-Doh pumpkins and then handed them to each child as they were dismissed.  I stepped up to get my four-year-old and the teacher said “We know which one is Oscar’s.”  She then selected a flat pumpkin sitting next to all of the nice round ones.  He smiled as he took it and proudly showed me what he made.  I asked him why his was flat and I have to confess my unspoken thoughts were “he didn’t follow directions or he smashed it because he was being aggressive or he lacked some sort of fine motor skill needed to make a round Play-Doh pumpkin.”  It’s not that I don’t think he is wonderful, I do, but I was just doing what so many of us parents do and putting my own criticisms and insecurities on my child.  In a very matter of fact way he answered, “I didn’t want it to look like all the other ones.  I wanted mine to be different.”  I was embarrassed of my first assumptions and proud of him.  A  few days later when he came home with a sparkly pumpkin with eyes spread as far apart as possible I immediately congratulated him for his originality.

The world in which  my son will grow will only become more and more populated with people more and more connected and also more and more aware of standards, norms and “shoulds.”  So, I’m happy that he can see the value in being different.  After all, you don’t name your child after a Salvadoran Archbishop made famous by a radio broadcast that boldly preached against violence and stood with the severely oppressed poor people, a man who stood against what his religious authorities, friends and government demanded, unless you are prepared for a child who can go against the grain.

I thought about this as my mom and I were having a conversation later.  I was explaining to her that I wanted to turn our basement into a play room because right now the play room is the first room people walk into.  I told her, “it looks crazy and cluttered walking into a room of toys.”  She looked at me with surprise and said, “you’ve never cared about that.”  It’s true.  We have a purple living room, a “Florida mango” nursery, a bright red living room with a chalk board wall and a bright blue fireplace.  Our house is decorated with bright colors and things that we have picked up on our travels or been gifted, things that have meaning for us.  Lately though as I found myself in other people’s homes for parties and play dates I have looked at their carefully coordinated walls, uncluttered and impossibly clean surfaces and found myself rethinking our decorating strategy.  But my mom is right … that’s not me.

I remember nine years ago when I began my first appointment in ministry trying to figure out who I was as a pastor.  I worked with a wonderful senior pastor who had his own way of doing things but never pushed that on me, he encouraged and supported his associates as they expressed their own pastoral voice.  That was great, but I needed to find that voice.  There are so many decisions to  make in ministry.  I would find myself wondering how other pastors I knew would respond to situations.  It was stressful and uncomfortable.  Eventually, I gained confidence and began to find my own way.  It became a balance of learning from others while also being the unique person God called.

All these years later and I’m still in that process.  Figuring out how to be who I am as a mom, spouse, friend, preacher, someone who can learn from others without losing my unique voice.  Lately I especially find myself wondering what is next for me in life.  How do I balance the strong sense of calling I feel for ministry with the rhythms we have established as a family.  As I look for models to follow or expectations from others, I have to remind myself to be who I am and find my own way.

So I have decided to embrace the chaos a bit.  Yesterday we decorated the outside of our house for Christmas and I decided to bring up all the decorations, even the weird light up snowman we bought years ago and never figured out what to do with.  I even brought up the wooden Mr. and Mrs. Claus figures that were left in our house by the previous owners.  I knew my one year old would love that they were the same size as him.  I hung up the snowman, stuck the wooden figures in the ground and put every working string of lights on our bushes.  I laughed when I looked at it and told my husband to feel free to edit.  He did.  He went into the house and came out with a big plastic candy cane stick and stuck it right between the yellowed wooden Santa Claus and the Mrs. Claus who for some reason  has aged much better.  It was finished.  The kids loved it.

I remember as a kid being completely baffled by plain white lights, it seemed like a wasted opportunity.  Now I think white lights are very pretty and look lovely, but it’s not me.  I’m the house with the lights with big bulbs because they remind me of the house I grew up in.  The one with the bright blue fireplace that matches the knickknacks from Mexico and India we got during our travels.  The one with the gel clings on the front window that don’t make any sense because I promised the kids I would let them be in charge of that part of the decorating.  I’m the house with the flattened Play-Doh pumpkin inside, where we are all trying to figure out what it means to live in community, build relationships, learn from others and still use our unique voices.

Sermon from 10/4/15


Preached at Bethlehem in Pemberville Exodus 1:8-2:15, 3:1-15 (Narrative Lectionary)
The days of Joseph were over … a distant memory.  The days of feasting upon the stored up grain in a time of famine were nothing but a passed down story.  The days of Joseph’s heroics, the people of Israel’s favor with Pharaoh were no more.  Maybe a story they told over campfires as they bandaged their wounds and rested their worn down bones.  Maybe a song sung softly to mothers as they watched their babies taken from them and thrown into the river.  Maybe a dream imagined before the breaking of dawn and the breaking of backs.  As they laid the bricks for structures that were not theirs, carried out orders for a people not their own, cried out in agony from a foreign land, maybe it was somewhere stored in their collective memory.  A story of identity, a glimmer of hope, a possibility of a different life.  Maybe they told each other the story so that their spirit would not be crushed along with their will.  Somehow, somewhere, some way they had hope enough to cry out.  Under the weight of Pharaoh’s oppression- the people of Israel, enslaved, unheard by all earthly powers, cried out to their God.  The God of their ancestors, the God of the stories they told to one another, the stories that lived on in their collective memory.  The God of Abraham and Sarah, Jacob … Joseph.  They cried out for the next chapter of their story.  The story of God and God’s people.  Come now, save us, help us, continue in your relationship with us.

And God hears them.  It may not have looked like it at first.  When Pharaoh ordered all of the male babies born of Hebrew women to be thrown into the river.  God’s will may not have been clear when the midwives protected new lives, or when a baby was rescued from a basket and given a chance at life.  Fear and confusion may have blurred out hope and direction when the bush was in flames.  But God hears them.
This story is so epic, so well-known, so true to human experience and played out over and over again in human history.  The Exodus was as real for the slaves fleeing to the north in our own country as it was for the slaves fleeing from Pharaoh in Egypt.  A fight for freedom, a fight for survival, a plea to God … the Exodus has happened many times in our history.

As I watch the images of Syrian refuges fleeing war I think of the Exodus.  As I saw that image of a small boy washed up on the beach, drowned when his family attempted to leave the fighting in Syria, I thought of the Exodus.  The baby boys thrown into the river.  The cruelty of oppression, the violence of the world, the human cost of power games.  I wonder what it looks like as those many, many Syrian refugees desperately look for safety.  As they leave their land and hope to find impassible barriers parted for their safe passage.  The story of the Exodus did not end when the people of Israel left Egypt.

It is a story that we cling to any time we find ourselves up against something that is just too big to change.  When we find ourselves without a way forward, desperate, beat down, afraid, unsure of where to go.  When the task ahead is impossible, too painful, too difficult, too unjust.  When we are up against a force much bigger than ourselves.  Like when someone in a position of authority makes decisions that hurt us and there is nothing we can do about it.  Or when we are the victims of an injustice.

Maybe we find ourselves clinging to the story of the Exodus when we feel crushed and all we can do is cry out to our God.  A close friend of mine recently went through a really difficult time, a painful, impossible, devastating experience.  She was a church member in Woodville when I was the pastor there and some of you know her.  She was diagnosed with breast cancer and then after treatment it quickly spread across her body.  She was very beloved, especially by her husband and three young children.  She was a wonderful writer and so many many people felt like they were part of her journey with her.  When she was waiting for test results or receiving news or having to tell her children bad news she would put out a request for big, loud, noisy prayers.  And people prayed them.  We prayed those big, loud, noisy prayers.  Prayers from a place of desperation and pain.  Prayers from broken hearts unable to see a way out.  Prayers that sounded like those desperate cries to God from the people of Israel.  The ones from their broken hearts.  The ones they were praying when Moses was picked up from that basket, when the bush was on fire.  The ones they prayed that God heard.

The story of the Exodus- the suffering, the crying out, the response by God.  It is epic.  It is pivotal to the Bible.  Over and over again throughout the Bible it is referred to.  It is taught, told, celebrated, sung, prayed and remembered over and over again.  Over and over again the Bible says “this is who we are.  Do not forget.  We were oppressed, we suffered, we were foreigners.  We cried out to God.  God heard us and delivered us.  Teach this to your children, write it down, never forget.”  This story is a story of survival, relationship, hope and triumph.

This story is about the people and God.  They both act.  And that is important.  First the people cry out.  They ask for help.  When we ask for help we admit that we are dependent.  We can not do it on our own, we are in desperate need of God’s grace and mercy.  We accept our humanness, our brokenness.  In acknowledging that we are not God we can reach out to God, open our hearts to God.  We can fall on our knees before God and take comfort in knowing that we are not alone.  It is ok if we can not carry the weight of the world on our shoulders.  We are weak, we suffer, we hurt, we fail, we are human.  We are on our knees crying out to God.

And God acts.  God hears and when the people call out, God calls back.  “Moses, Moses …”  In the middle of the ordinary, in the leaves of a bush, God becomes known.  The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.  God reveals Gods self right here in human existence, and calls out.  This is an amazing thing about the God we pray to- God works with us.  God calls back, invites us to be part of God’s saving work, to journey with God.

Moses is the connection between God and the people.  The way in which God responds to their cries.  That baby floating down the river becomes a bridge between heaven and earth.  In his address to Congress last week, Pope Francis said this about Moses:
“On the one hand, the patriarch and lawgiver of the people of Israel symbolizes the need of peoples to keep alive their sense of unity by means of just legislation. On the other, the figure of Moses leads us directly to God and thus to the transcendent dignity of the human being. Moses provides us with a good synthesis of your work: you are asked to protect, by means of the law, the image and likeness fashioned by God on every human face.”

A powerful way of understanding the work of Moses- leading us directly to God.  Witnessing to the transcendent dignity of the human being, the human ability to transcend our earthly existence, our mortal bodies and communicate with God.  In the flames of a bush, Moses transcends the God/ human divide,  he communicates directly with God.  And over time is given the task of protecting the image stamped by God onto every human.  Moses becomes the connection between a desperate people and their God.  The path between their struggles and the God who journeyed with their ancestors, who made them who they are, who created the world.

Their broken backs, tired hearts and desperate pleas are met with a baby thrown into a river and a bush on fire.  God hears their cries, God is at work, calling out.  Even when the task ahead is as insurmountable as mighty Pharaoh, God is at work.  There is a way forward.

Sometimes it’s hard to believe.  I know that on that journey with Moses sometimes the people had a hard time believing.  As mothers feared for their babies lives, wept for the ones not plucked from the river, the way forward must have been hard to see.  It can be hard to see anything when your eyes are swollen from tears.  For the Syrian refugees the way forward is unknown, invisible and far off.

This week as I heard the news of another school shooting, saw pictures of another group of students huddled together, shaking, crying in front of police vans-it felt like too much.  It felt like too much some years ago when the students huddled together were five years old.  Too many shootings, too much violence, too much pain, too many children killed, too much politics, too much disagreement, fighting, hatred, no way forward.  No exit from our current situation.  No balm for the broken hearts.  Insurmountable.

Don’t forget.  Our story.  What God did.  The God we believe in.  Write it down, sing it, say it, teach it to the children.  The people cried out and God heard their cries.  Moses lead the people out.  A way forward, a land of promise and hope.  God walked with them.

And what about my friend I mentioned who asked for the big, noisy prayers during her cancer treatment?  There were times and are times when the way forward is hard to see.  The night she died it was hard to see much with swollen eyes from crying.  We fell on our knees, we prayed, loud, hard, passionately.  Where is the way forward?  Don’t forget.  Our story.  What God did.  The God we believe in.  Write it down, sing it, say it, teach it to the children.  God does not abandon us, God hears our cry.  I tell myself that when I learn from her memory, when I see her children smile, when I see the difference she made on so many lives, when I think of her faith, when I believe in hope beyond the grave.  A way forward, somehow.  A path for the refugees, a hope for the hopeless, a possibility for the peace of the world, the peace of the children in our schools, healing for grieving hearts.  Remember our story, hold on to it and keep walking forward, but don’t forget to remove your sandals.  

Singing Her Song ... As Best I Can (September 2015)


It’s been over two months now since Laura died.  Her name is no longer on my “recently messaged” for text messages.  I no longer instinctively pick up my phone to text her after I put the boys to bed to tell her something funny or see about getting together or ask how she is or vent about something.  I’ve started referring to her house as Aaron’s house now.  And yet in many ways it still feels like it just happened.

I knew the funeral would be hard, but I also knew it was something we had together.  We worked on it together and I felt her presence so strongly.  I got to meet all these people I had heard about or had seen on facebook.  I got to see pictures of her and hear stories about her, stories from long before our five years of friendship.  I knew the hard part would be when it ended.  As I walked down that long aisle when the service ended I looked straight ahead and there was that picture of her, like she was looking right at me.  I went in the sacristy and cried the tears I almost kept back during the funeral.

I miss her.  I feel like I can barely breathe when Sarah comes on the radio.  I wish her supportive and attentive eyes were still in the congregations I preach to.  I wish she was still one of the first “likes” when I share pictures of my babies on facebook.  I miss the way she understood me.  Whether it was deep talks about belief and theology or figuring out parenting, I miss the nods.  The nods that said “yes, I get you.”
I sent her this text eight days before she died:
“You sang my song.  Do you remember when you sang the song I wrote in church?  I was nervous and felt really vulnerable sharing words I wrote like that, but you sang it with confidence and love.  And in so many other ways you sang my song, supported me, talked me up to people, got on board with projects, Bible studies, etc.  And you sang my song and still sing my song because you get me.  You get my sermons, you connect with the deepest sharing of my heart and that gives me courage to dig deeper.   When I was having a hard time figuring out how to preach at all these strange churches  with people I don’t know, I figured out that if I pretended you were in the congregation it was so much easier and I did much better.  Thank you for singing my song.  I will try my best to sing yours.”
She texted back “I have no doubt you will sing my song beautifully Jen.  I love you and trust you.”

I’ve been debating with myself what I should share about that night that Laura died.  Even though she shared so openly through her blog and facebook posts, there were many things she kept private.  Plus, her final moments were such a profound gift to me that I want to hold them close and keep them for myself and forever have that intimate moment in my heart.  Yet I also know that Laura shared this journey and she did not hold back whether it was about foobs or her anger at cancer or grieving her loved ones.  She even shared with us that moment that I know many of us will never forget reading- when she told her children she would soon die.

And I know that she wanted good to come from this.  As Tammy and I talked outside the Hospice room she told me that Laura told her to make sure that good came from this.  She wanted others to be strengthened in their faith through her sharing.  She wanted to bring others closer to God and help people find joy and peace in what she called a “brutiful” world.

So in an effort to keep singing her song, I want to share the way she courageously and with faith and love left this world.

When I got there the room was full of people.  I just started talking in her ear because … it was a hard situation.  Aaron was always by her side, encouraging her, telling her he loved her, holding her hand.  She just got there around 12:30pm, it was only around 7pm when I got there but the end was very close.  She was still talking and in many ways herself the day before.  It all just seemed to happen so quickly.  She didn’t want to linger in a way that would prolong the pain for her family.  Her closest friends and family bravely and sincerely said goodbye with open hearts and deep love.  The crowd grew much smaller and the Hospice nurse said they would clean her and make her more comfortable.   We went in the hallway.  Who knows what we talked about, it was a strange blur.  It was getting late and I knew that her brother and Aaron were staying by her side through the night.  I saw that the nurses were finished and I asked Aaron if I could go in and say goodbye.  I held her hand and talked to her.  I told the Hospice Nurse about her, how we actually met there at that same Hospice when I was visiting her father.  I told her all the many, many people who love Laura, all the lives she touched.  I noticed that Laura’s eyes were open, they had been closed since I arrived hours before.  I commented on this to the nurse and she told me that when the nurses were cleaning her they saw the picture of her children and told her how beautiful her children were and they saw tears come down Laura’s cheek.  I immediately started telling Laura about how well her kids did when they said goodbye.  I told her everything Aaron told me about their strength, resilience and understanding.  Laura’s eyes were looking around the room but not at anything I could see.  Her breathing slowed and that’s when the nurse ran to get Aaron.  In that time of just the two of us I sang in her ear “I believe in the sun, I believe in the sun, even when, even when it’s not shining …”  Her brother and her husband quickly came and each held a hand.  I sat at her feet and smiled through my tears.  She looked around, her breathing slow, calm and steady and she took two last breaths and then was gone.

This is what I mean when I say she went peacefully.  The scars on her body, the swollen liver, the pain in her bones was not peaceful.  The agony she felt in saying goodbye to her children was not peaceful.  The tear-stained faces on her best friends as they could barely breathe their goodbyes were not peaceful.  But somehow, by what I believe to be the power of the Holy Spirit the end was.  She  never wavered in her faith.  She knew she would be ok.  So she did it bravely, she faced it, she fought as hard as she could for every day she could watch her children grow but when it was time she faced it with honesty, courage and faith.  I know that for me, it has and will always have a big impact on my faith.  I will hold on to the memory of that forever and it will fight against all of my fears of death.  The peace in that room, the courage in her soul, the faith in her words throughout her final days.  I will never forget.

When I was ordained my husband invited my friends and family to contribute to a custom made journey stole.  A stole is the scarf that ordained clergy wear when they lead worship and a woman in New Jersey (Colleen Hintz, Fruit of the Vine Vestments) hand makes custom stoles that tell a story about the person.  So she incorporates symbols and images from your journey onto the stole.  My stole has an image of the woman at the well because it is my favorite scripture.  It was Laura’s favorite too and the one she chose for me to preach on at her funeral.  Six years ago when I was given the stole I would have never imagined how powerful that symbol would become.  Now she represents Laura.  A part of my journey, a part of my soul, a part of my voice as I preach.  And in all the congregations I preach to, in all of the new places, those times when I need to prove myself, or help people understand what I am saying or bare my soul to pews full of people … she will be there.

“If I know only one thing, it’s that everything that I see
Of the world outside is so inconceivable often I barely can speak
Yeah I’m tongue-tied and dizzy and I can’t keep it to myself
What good is it to sing helplessness blues, why should I wait for anyone else?

-Fleet Foxes

Preached at Metamora UMC 9/6/15

“Let’s Talk” Mark 7:24-37

I realize this may sound weird for a preacher to say, but sometimes I find words really boring.  I know, here I am bombarding you with an onslaught of words and I am confessing that I sometimes get bored with words.  The emphasis on sometimes, hopefully you won’t this time.  But so many times words are empty or people talk just to talk.  So many times people just want you to buy something or think like them and the words are not sincere.  They are slanted, empty, repetitive and … boring.

Perhaps no more so than during the political season.  People hire speech writers and those who are trained in how to use words to persuade people.  Most politicians, not all, are quite careful with their words knowing the things that will get people to trust them and believe them.  And so we hear debates, speeches, commercials, interviews, attacks … all words.

Whether it’s a politician, a teacher, a preacher or even a friend, when I feel like it is insincere, like the words are empty, the motives are slanted, the message overly repetitive, I get bored.  Blah, blah, blah.  No thank you.  In an age where we have millions of things to entertain us right in the palm of our hand, I’ll skip the empty words and scan my twitter feed for something amusing instead … like a baby Panda climbing out of a crib.

But then, there are times when words are precious.  When they are valuable, life-changing, and powerful.  And sometimes we miss them because we are too quick to tune out.  Sometimes in the midst of empty speeches, advertisements and blah blah blah there is something precious.  Sometimes words can change everything.  In the Gospel reading today Jesus shows us that words can change everything.

This story about the Syrophoenician woman is a tricky one.  You see the problem is, what Jesus says is very upsetting.  Jesus is in foreign territory, among people that are historically enemies of the Jews.  So in this conversation with the woman there are a lot of reasons for separation between the two: Jesus is Jewish, she is Gentile, Jesus is an itinerant preacher she is a Greek land owner, and she is a female and he is a male at a time when men are to be dominant and women submissive.  But here they are talking, maybe even debating in this foreign land, alone.  She wants healing for her daughter.  Jesus makes reference to a meal to say that healing is for the Jews first and then compares her daughter to a dog.  Here’s the problem, to call someone a dog is a big insult.  It sounds mean, harsh, racist and upsetting.  So how do we make sense of this coming from Jesus?

I  have heard preachers tackle it from a variety of different angles.  Some will say that what Jesus says is wrong and the woman beats him in the argument, he learns and is changed.  Some will say Jesus says this to test her.  Others might say Jesus is flawed here and shows that he is fully human.  Still others might find ways to show that what he says isn’t all that bad.  Either way, what Jesus says is what we have to work with.  And it’s what she had to work with.  Her daughter needed healing, she is a woman, a Gentile, asking this Jewish preacher for help and being called a dog.  So … what now?

Well, she speaks.  She uses what she has- her words.  She challenges what Jesus says and asks for even the crumbs.  And Jesus says “because of what you said, go home; the demon has already left your daughter.”  The message is clear, what Jesus brings is not just for the Jews, it is even for this woman, this foreigner, formerly thought of as an enemy.  This takes place just after Jesus flips over the understanding of what is clean and unclean and before he feeds 4,000 people (including Gentiles).  So whatever the reason for how Jesus does it, what he says and why he says it- the message is clear, he is here for everyone.  There is enough to eat for everyone no matter what label others may put on you.  The woman receives what she came for, her daughter is healed because of her words.  She came to understand what Jesus offers, who he is through her words.  And Jesus heals her daughter not by touching her or visiting her or offering her anything, just words.  Sometimes words are life-changing.

Then we go from that place to another foreign place where he meets a suffering man.  A man who is deaf and can barely speak and the people beg for him to be healed.  The way in which Jesus heals this man is dramatically different from the way he just healed the Syrophoenician woman’s daughter.  Then he simply said, “go home, she’s healed.”  But now it is much more dramatic.  Jesus takes the man in private, sticks his fingers in his ears, spits, touches his tongue, looks up, sighs and says “be opened.”  Perhaps as strange for our modern day ears as the last story but for different reasons.  It crosses many boundaries most of us like to maintain- spit, ear touching, shouting, all a little uncomfortable.  But even with all of the differences between this healing story and the story before it of the Syrophoenician woman, there is something that is the same.  Jesus announces healing with his words.  Imagine how powerful it was for that deaf man to hear the words “be opened.”  Two words, life-changing and forever kept in time by this book we read from and proclaim.

This book of words that bring us these stories of healing, new life, salvation.

The Bible is after all just words.  More words in a sea of speeches, advertisements, jingles, shouting and blah blah blah.  Words in a world of endless chatter.  But, the truth is, words are all we have.    We don’t get to run up to Jesus walking through our town and beg for  healing.  We don’t get to feel his fingers open our ears and loosen our tongues.  But we have these words.  Life-changing words.   After Jesus heals that deaf man one of the translations I read says that the people say, “he even has made the deaf to hear and given a voice to the voiceless.”  These words can help us to hear and give us a voice, even all these years later.

I have a one and a half year old son who right now is trying to learn words.  Even though his 4 year old brother has taught him the words that he feels are important like “blast” “roar” “poop” and “hot dog”  my youngest often gets frustrated because it’s hard to communicate when you don’t have the right words.  I’ve read a lot of articles about temper tantrums over the last four years and many people believe they come from an inability to communicate one’s needs.  So, the child wants something but can’t get that message across and so he gets frustrated and again not having the right words to say how he feels, he short-circuits which looks like a screaming, crying, flailing mess.  With my youngest this often happens when I won’t give him something he wants like a snack or his pacifier or a tiny object he could choke on.  I explain this to him in my most rational way, but not having the words to argue back or state his case, he freaks instead.  Usually it doesn’t work unless of course it’s in a public place like church in the middle of the sermon and I just want him to be quiet.

I feel for him.  Words are important.  I get frustrated when I can’t find the right words.  Maybe because I can’t remember something or I’m too upset or surprised or just don’t know what to say.  So I try to be mindful of that as I undergo this crazy parenting task of equipping my children with the right words.  I try to teach them how to use words to say how they feel.  I try to teach them how to use words to build other people up and stay away from words that hurt others.  I try to teach them words for praying, worship and faith.  I try to teach them the words they will need for their lives, give them the proper equipment for their journey.

Throughout their lives they will encounter so many things, probably things I can’t even imagine.  They will learn new information,  meet new people and have adventures.   They will get their hearts broken, contemplate the pain of life, make important decisions and maybe even raise their own children.  As a parent you just want them to do all of this the best they can, be as prepared as they can be and every second remember that they are loved.  So we teach them.  We start with nursery rhymes and “mama” “dada.”  Then we move to colors, numbers and animal sounds.  Eventually we teach them words like internet and technology and math.  And eventually we teach them words like peace, hope, life, death, future and faith.  All the while hoping the right ones stick.

Here we are, a people who carry around this book we call the Bible.  Full of words.  Words of healing, words of peace, prophecy, love, hope, faith, resurrection.  We study it, reflect on it and pray from it using the best words we can find.  Then we pass it on to the next generation.  This is what God has given us.  Life-changing words.  Leaving us as prepared as we can be and teaching us that every second we are loved.

The people said that Jesus “makes the deaf to hear and the mute to speak” or gives a “voice to the voiceless.”  We are invited to open our hearts to these words, unclog our ears to what Jesus teaches and use our words, our voices for God’s purposes.  How will we use our words?  Will we bring about healing? Will we cross boundaries and dare to proclaim God’s love to all? Even those who live in foreign places?  Those that may be called names or rejected or live on the fringes of society or have nowhere else to go?  Will we use our voice, our words to bring peace and comfort to those who suffer, to share life-changing words about hope and resurrection?

You and I are here because we believe in words.  We have felt the power of Christ’s words.  I know that next week you are beginning a preaching series on the Ten Commandments called “The Words of God.”  Words have power, they can be life-changing.  How can we tune out the empty words, the noise, the shouting, the blah blah blah and open our ears to these life-changing words?  How can we stop the chatter, the words of judgment, the words of anger, the words of self doubt, the empty words coming from our own mouths and speak from the voice Christ has brought us?  Maybe we can start by hearing those life-changing words Christ utters with his finger on the deaf man’s tongue, “be opened.”  And be opened to the one who “makes the deaf to hear and the mute to speak.”

Sermon from Bethlehem ELCA Pemberville 8/16/15

“Anger” Matthew 5:17-24

So when I emailed Pastor Matt asking for the scriptures I was to preach on today I did not expect him to reply with “the hard sayings of Jesus.”  Something more along the lines of “peace, love, butterflies and joy” would have sounded easier than “anger.”  But, here I am, on the first Sunday of a new preaching series tackling a “hard saying of Jesus” and the topic of anger.  And the truth is, diving into this difficult topic, digging into this seemingly harsh passage has been a gift for me this week and I hope that as you reflect, meditate and think on this passage you too will find it a gift … an insight into your soul … a way forward in a precarious situation.

So before this passage Jesus delivers the Beatitudes or the “blessed are the poor in spirit, those who mourn, the pure in heart, etc.”  A very popular, powerful and beautiful sermon from Jesus.  And then he talks about salt and light, how his followers are the salt of the earth and light of the world … important and needed.  So you get the sense that what Jesus is saying is pivotal, meaningful.  He really wants people to pay attention, understand and truly live out his words.  I would imagine him impassioned, pouring his heart into each word.
So it may not be a surprise then that the passage we read from today is so strongly worded.  From what he says, it sounds like there were people who thought he had come to do away with the law, erase everything the Old Testament teaches and lay out a new, maybe even easier plan.  But he explains that this is not the case.  He has come “not to abolish but to fulfill.”  And he is calling on his followers to carry out the law too.  To be devoted, righteous, even more righteous than the scribes and Pharisees he says.
I think that all of this is important for us to understand what Jesus says next about anger.  It sounds as though he is trying to really convey the seriousness of his message, the commitment required and the higher calling it entails.

And that’s when he brings up the commandment “You shall not murder.”  Jesus basically says “let’s take this a step further.”  It’s not just about murder, it’s about anger.  He says anger, insults, name-calling are all included in this- even someone having something against you.  He explains that if you “remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother or sister, and then come and offer your gift.”  Basically, go and make it right, and then make your offering.

Does this make you cringe a little?  Maybe you notice yourself slumping down in your seat a little lower?  Perhaps it makes your stomach hurt or brings out a nervous tic?  If it does, you aren’t alone because … we all get angry.  Whether it’s a long-lasting family feud that consumes you or frustration at the guy who took your parking spot, we have all felt anger.  And I’m going to go ahead and guess that many, maybe all of us have someone out there who has something against us.  People we have made angry, people that have made us angry, people we avoid, or get upset when we think about.  I’m also going to go ahead and guess that we have all insulted another, I think it would be generous to say we have called someone a “fool” and probably more realistic to use much harsher and less appropriate words.  We have all been there, we have all done it.  This passage is talking to us, to our hearts.  It hits home.

Anger is natural, it is human, it’s part of the fight or flight instinct, right?  Part of my training to become a pastor was to learn how to let people feel.  Help people identify and express their feelings, talk through their hurts and feel safe and loved.  So I have said to people “it’s ok to be angry.”  It is a feeling.  My 3 year old son has said to me “I’m angry mommy!” And I say “well that’s ok, I understand that you are angry.”
But something about anger also feels scary, painful and dark.  Maybe it’s because we have all seen anger manifest itself in ways that are unhealthy, violent, dark and hurtful.  Anyone who has ever been on the receiving end of an insult can tell you it does not feel good.  Being called a fool hurts.  And those aren’t the worst ways we have felt anger.  Everyday we see anger turn into terrible acts on the news.  Sometimes we are around people who are hurting and use their anger to make others hurt.  Some people will say the meanest thing they can, try to cut deep, leave a scar … with words.  And some people get stuck in the anger.  It consumes them.  Anger clouds their vision so that the world looks like an angry and hostile place.  Every interaction just brings out more anger, and the person sinks deeper into the darkness of despair, loneliness and pain.  Anger can hurt.

Jesus addresses this.  This feeling that is common to us all, this emotion that can lead to so much more.  Jesus explains that it’s not about a checklist of actions.  It’s not about avoiding the really bad behaviors or doing a, b and c.  Rather, it’s deeper.  The way of Christ is deeper, soul deep.  It’s about the roots.  Jesus cares not just about our avoidance of crime, but he cares about what is in our hearts.  He is calling us to follow a God who cares deeply, so deeply that God wants us to be in right relationship with one another.  God wants us to go and make it right with our brothers and sisters.  To purify our hearts and our world.  And so Jesus explains that yes we are not to murder one another, but there is more to it than that.  We need to be in relationship.  We need to love one another.  We need to check that anger, before it leads to the dark places.
Anger has a way of leading us to do things we might not normally do.  We might say awful things or put ourselves into dangerous situations or burn bridges.  We might really hurt people.  And I’m sure we all have.  Jesus believes in our ability to be more.  To control our emotions rather than letting them control us.  Jesus teaches us that relationships are serious, the way we treat one another is serious, and it is important to  God.
Just recently I had an interaction that made me really angry.  A conversation in which someone said things that were meant to hurt me and insult me.  I felt my blood boil after.  I thought of all of the mean and nasty and hurtful things I could have said.  It felt awful to be in that place.  The anger stayed with me for a while and even though I prayed about it and looked for answers, it just felt like I couldn’t shake it.  And then I was reminded of the pain this other person is going through, the situations they are dealing with that caused the emotions I bore the brunt of.  And I felt compassion and it was a relief.  Compassion is a much easier place to live in than anger.

But I get it.  I get the struggle.  And Jesus does too.  Jesus overturned tables and was disappointed by people again and again.   The pharisees and scribes tried again and again to provoke him.  The Bible tells us that God expresses anger with God’s people several times in the Old Testament.  Anger is real.  It is something we all experience.  But it’s not stronger than the peace of God.  In fact, when we let the Holy Spirit in on our anger then it can become a force for good.  A force for justice, peace and love in the world.  A voice for the voiceless, a heart for the oppressed, courage for the vulnerable.

On October 10, 2013 Malala Yousafzai was interviewed by Jon Stewart of the Daily Show.  The Daily Show is typically a satirical, comedy show, but her interview was powerful and she said some very serious things.  Malala is Pakistani teenager.  At the time of the interview she was 16.  She had been hunted and shot by the Taliban because she was fighting for education.  She was watching as the Taliban closed down her school and many other schools, as she and others like her were told that education was wrong and that it was no longer a possibility for them.  And she knew in her heart that education was important and so she fought for it.  Imagine that, a teenager fighting to be able to go to school.  When she found out that the Taliban wanted to kill her she thought about what she would do if they came for her.  She said at first she thought “I’ll throw a shoe at them” and then she realized that would make her like them.  Lashing out and hurting another in anger.  She would have been acting out of hatred just as they were.  So she decided that she would tell them the importance of education and that it is something she wants for herself and even for the children of her attackers as well.  That she wanted something good, even for them.  She would repay anger with goodness.  And then she would say “now do what you want.”

It was powerful to hear a young girl who had been shot, who was simply fighting for the right to go to school, speak about overcoming hate with love, violence with peace, uncontrolled anger with intelligence and a call for justice.

Life is unfair and there is much to anger us.  I get angry when I see terrorists doing the unthinkable to innocent people in Syria and Iraq.  I get angry when I hear of the injustices in our own country against those who are poor or black or labeled as different.  I get angry when I see people hurting each other.  I get angry when people try to hurt me.  I get angry when life seems unfair.  When good people are hurting.  When people I care about are struggling.  I felt angry when my close friend lost her life to cancer.  And sometimes it feels good to go with the anger, to brew, to go to the dark place, to say the nasty thing we think of, to bully or lash out.  But Jesus cares about what is in our hearts.  Jesus is calling is to something more, something deeper.  Jesus is telling us to go and make it right.  Love one another, make our relationships a priority.  Don’t let the anger push out the love in our hearts.

In the end, I’m glad that Pastor Matt entrusted me with this passage and this topic.  I would say it took me on somewhat of a journey.  When I first read the passage I thought “come on!  Don’t even be angry??  this is a little much.”  I felt defensive and called out for the feelings of anger in my own  heart.  And then I started digging, into the passage, into my heart, into the world around me and it didn’t seem so difficult.  It actually seemed incredibly gracious and hopeful.  We serve a God who loves us so deeply and cares for us so intimately that God looks into our hearts.  That God offers a better way than life with darkness, bitterness and isolation.  Our God calls us to love one another with the kind of love that is so pure and so powerful that even our deepest darkest anger can not drive it out.

Sermon from St Stephen’s ELCA in Sylvania 7/19/15

Mark 6:30-34, 53-56
What does desperation look like?  Perhaps a mob of hopeful deal-seekers running through the Walmart doors at 6am on Black Friday, desperately grabbing toasters and tablets?  Or maybe that doesn’t sound like true desperation to you, but when I see the footage of black Friday mobs on the news, their faces look desperate.  But maybe we can be more sympathetic to the times we have seen desperation in more dire situations.  Like after the Haiti earthquake when people who had just lost everything crowded around distribution trucks desperately hoping for something that would quench their thirst and fill their bellies just to get through another day.  Or after the earthquake in Nepal as rescuers desperately sorted through rubble hoping to make it to survivors in time.

While most of us have probably never been in an earthquake like that or pushed and shoved our way toward a black Friday discount, we still can probably think of times we have witnessed desperation.  Times when we have seen a loved one in pain, or maybe watched someone give an apology with true regret and shame.
The scenes described in the Gospel reading for today sound desperate.  People running by foot from distant towns.  And in the section not read today, 5,000 hungry people with only five loaves and two fish.  People carrying the sick on mats …begging to touch the cloak of Jesus.  Sheep without a shepherd.  When I picture these scenes I see that desperation, the look of despair I have seen on the faces of those in pain- in need … teetering on the edge of hopelessness.

When we see that hopelessness and despair in another we have to make a decision about what we will do.  We may chose to ignore it, which might sound callous and cold but sometimes it’s also just reality.  If we agonize over every desperate situation we see on the news or our hearts break over every person who asks us for help then we will live in a constant state of sadness and pain.  So sometimes we change the channel, continue on to check our email or politely nod and carry on.  Some days we go through life as survivors, putting one foot in front of the other, carrying on, trudging through even when those around us are falling.  So yeah, we might ignore the desperation of others from time to time, but we are human, we can only take so much.  Maybe we’ve become desensitized, overwhelmed or too blinded by our own hurts, whatever the reason, I just don’t think we can be everything that everyone needs.

There are other times though when the hopelessness of others causes us to feel guilty, or maybe even angry.  How can there be hungry people in the world while we throw away leftovers?  How does the way we live contribute to the hunger of others?  Maybe we think of all the things we should do, or the things others should do.  How can the world be so unjust?  So painful?

And then there are times when we join in.  When our hearts break with the brokenhearted, when our resources or talents can help relieve the pain of others.  When we can be helpful and maybe even change a situation.  Those are the times we remember, when we feel like a hero, when we feel useful and needed.
It is hard to figure out what to do when others are in pain or desperate.  And unfortunately we will see so much of it in our lives.  Sometimes we make the right decision, sometimes we make the wrong one and sometimes we just keep surviving.  But we do know how Jesus reacted when he saw those scenes of desperation.  We know that when he sees the weary and hungry disciples he invites them to take a break, come and rest.  When he sees the hungry crowds he breaks the bread and feeds them.  When he sees people carrying the sick on mats, begging to touch his cloak he heals them.  And when he sees the people on the shore like “sheep without a shepherd” he has compassion for them.  Jesus acts with compassion.

This is a model that we can follow.  When I think of my best moments in parenting, pastoring, being a friend and being a spouse, they are all motivated by compassion.  When my three year old is refusing to listen, freaking out over what I say, pushing the limits or just being difficult- if I can have compassion for him I know our day will go much better.  When I let frustration get the best of me then I yell or become mean or spend my day exhausted and disconnected.  When I look at him and see the tiny, helpless person he is with a great heart, a desire to please me and the best hugs in the world I can act with compassion.  Which doesn’t mean letting him get his way or never disciplining, but rather doing so with love and compassion rather than frustration and anger.  It always goes much better that way.  We spend the day more in tune with each other, more connected and happier.

The same was true when I was pastoring a church.  People can be difficult.  When someone’s harsh words, resistance to change or unwillingness to grow made me angry I tried my best to look at them with compassion.  Remember they are loved by God, I am called to love them, they are hurting, they want to feel loved …  Otherwise I would act too quickly, too harshly and spend my day feeling frustrated, exhausted and quickly burn out.

I believe that compassion is a huge part of any successful relationship.  When we lose it we turn the other person into an enemy, an emotionless opponent or a frustrating obstacle.  When we are compassionate we can see God at work in them, find ways they are calling us to growth and love and allow our hearts to be widened.

Jesus has compassion and that is a model for us to live by, something for us to strive for.  If we can reflect back compassion when we see desperation in the faces of others then we can minister to them, be the face of Christ for them and live our lives with more love, more peace and feeling more connected to others.
But beyond a model for us to follow, the fact that Jesus has compassion for the people tells us something about God that I think is really important.  Jesus is compassionate and God revealed to us in Jesus Christ is compassionate.  This is who God is.  No matter what others try to tell us about God, no matter the state of the world or the state of the hearts around us … God is compassionate.  And  that is something we can hold on to.

I’ve got to tell you, it’s been a rough summer for me.  A couple of weeks ago a close friend of mine died from cancer.  She was my age, had three wonderful little children and a loving husband.  She was an amazing person, incredibly well-loved, popular and I loved her.  I met her when I was the pastor of Woodville United Methodist Church.  She was diagnosed with breast cancer right before I left to go on family leave.  We stayed in touch and became friends, had play dates and continued to deepen our bond.  We connected spiritually and always seemed to understand each other.  After treatment and surgeries ended and all seemed to be well again … the cancer came back.  She knew it was terminal.  Our visits changed in tone a bit.  We planned her funeral together, cried together, talked about death.  About a month ago her liver died from the chemo.  The end was near.

The journey over the past month was hard.  Somehow her faith was rock solid which somehow kept mine rock solid.  On June 29 she took a turn.  She was moved  to Hospice and I got there as fast as I could.  I held her hand as she breathed her last breath.  I went home, put the kids to bed and sat in the dark …my head spinning.  Emotions, questions, images running through me.  I felt mad, I felt alone, I felt incredibly sad.  I didn’t want to pray.  I didn’t want to attempt sleep.  A friend offered comforting words … “lean into God” she said.  I didn’t want to, but I also didn’t feel like I had a choice.  Where was  God?  Who was God?  Why did this happen?  What next?  And I remembered… God is compassionate.  I would never understand the rest.  I would never figure out the meaning of life.  I would never fully know what happens after this life, but I could wrap my mind around compassion.  Because that is what I felt when I looked at her friends and family as they grieved.  That is what God was feeling.  That brought me comfort.  It made sense to me.  It brought me rest.

A week later I stood in front of 600 plus people at her funeral and proclaimed the Gospel.  I said the familiar words of the funeral liturgy announcing resurrection, hope and peace.  Words of comfort, words of promise.  I fought the lump in my throat and warm tears behind my eyes and preached my heart out.  Because as I stood there in front of that big crowd of people, I saw desperation in their faces.  There was pain, there was hurt, some teetering on the edge of hopelessness.  And I had compassion for them.  We could have been like sheep without a shepherd, but as our quivering voices sang together the words of the hymns Laura chose for us, we proclaimed things like amazing grace, resurrection joy and hope into eternity.  We proclaimed a God who is present even in the darkness.

What got me through and what continues to get me through …and what will get me through this crazy life we lead, this life of ups and downs, joy and despair …is knowing that God is compassionate.  God has compassion for us.  That is a truth that I will proclaim and that I will hold onto with a clenched fist until I too enter into the big compassionate heart of God for all of eternity.  

Remember, Celebrate, Believe . . .sermon from Laura’s Memorial Service (July 2015)


It was about two and a half years ago, a cold January morning …a Sunday morning.  I was the pastor of Woodville United Methodist Church and invited the congregation to share any joys or concerns before the time of prayer.  After some people shared health concerns or milestone joys I saw Laura’s hand go up and she had that little smile on her face.  She stood up and said, “You better be good today because we have new visitors and I told them you were good!”  With her usual sass, wit and honesty Laura actually paid me a very nice compliment, but being right before the sermon she put the pressure on.  As I prepared this sermon I found myself remembering that day and today can hear Laura saying “this better be good!”  It’s a lot of pressure to try to find the words for this occasion, to try to find the words for a woman who was so good with words, who had so many words and who was able to share so beautifully, profoundly and deeply with so many people.  So, yeah it better be good, especially since I am the only person speaking, not because no one else here can, but because so many of you can.  Laura knew that so many of you could share so beautifully your personal stories and memories, perhaps too many.  But she also wanted this service to be about hope, joy and resurrection.  And so I too will share my personal stories of her friendship another time and instead point to where God is …where hope remains and where joy might be found …eventually.

Laura knew exactly which Gospel reading she wanted for this service.  When she told me my face lit up.  It’s my favorite Bible story and her’s too- the woman at the well.  I know, I know, it’s a bit of an odd favorite passage.  It’s not as poetic or quotable as the beautiful Psalms, it’s perhaps not as memorable as the advice Paul gives in his letters or the amazing accounts of an empty tomb.  It’s an interesting story about a woman going to get water and meeting Jesus.  We know that it takes place at noon, the middle of the day.  The only people who went to the well at noon were the ones who probably weren’t welcome to hang with the big crowds in the cooler parts of the day.  Going to the well at noon, alone, this woman stood out, and from what Jesus says about her, it sounds like she may have been living in a questionable situation and perhaps had a checkered past.  So she walks to the well, bearing it all- her past, her situation, all out in the open.
And she meets Jesus.  He asks for a drink and this Samaritan woman questions him, challenges him, she demonstrates deep knowledge and quick wit … maybe even sass.  She basically says “don’t you see we are different?  Where is your bucket if you want water? Who do you think you are?”  Jesus took a chance on this interaction, his disciples were not happy about it.  It was not socially acceptable to chat with a woman alone out in front of everyone, a Samaritan woman never the less.  He took a chance on her and it paid off.  She asks for the water he speaks of the water that will become a “spring of water gushing up to eternal life.”  And after they talk the woman drops her jar and goes and tells others.  She is filled with the living water and goes to share it with others.  Later in the passage it says “Many Samaritans from that city believed in him because of the woman’s testimony.”

Do you see now why it was her favorite?  A sassy, clever, quick-witted woman, not afraid to bear it all in public,  not intimidated, intelligent, questioning, pushing, seeking.  And the moment she finds something good, when she learns of life-giving waters, she goes out to tell others, she shares it.
I don’t need to tell you that Laura shared what she had, that she loved so many, so deeply.  I’ve heard many of you say “she made everyone feel like they were the most important person.”  Her sharing, her words, her way was so authentic, so honest that it drew others in.  On one of my recent visits with Laura I told her that she had a way of making people honest and authentic and then when they were, she still loved them.  People never forget that …I know I never will.

I don’t need to tell you a lot of things about Laura because you already know.  She reached out to so many people, did so many generous things for others, shared openly about her faith, her wisdom and her heart.  And yet there was also a part of her that was very private.  She held her children and Aaron close, cherished the time they had together and thought the world of them.  Even when she joked about “the bearded man” as she referred to him on social media, it was always with such love and respect.  She told me that she knew he would be great taking care of the kids because when she was so sick and tired after the intense chemo, she witnessed it.  She saw him taking care of the kids, doing all of it and being great at it.

And so much of who Laura was and what her legacy is, is her three monsters.  She reminded all of us to squeeze our monsters every chance we get.  Camille said her favorite thing to do with mommy was cuddles.  They all said that she cared for them even when she was sick.  And that love and care will be a part of who they are forever.  Even though she was tired and in pain, Laura wanted to do what she could to care for her children during the important moments of their lives.  Aaron shared with me a letter that she wrote for their first day of school.  It is neatly written in crayon, each line a different color, with a peace sign, heart and star on the side.  It says, “We hope you are having a great first day!  We wanted to remind you of a couple things … 1.  We love you!  Even if you don’t get all A’s.  Even if you forget your homework.  Even if you aren’t picked first in gym.  ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS!  2.  Listen to your heart.  If you notice someone sitting by themselves- go sit with them.  If people are picking on someone- stand up for them.  God speaks to your heart- LISTEN TO YOUR HEART.  3. Listen to your teachers.  Respect them always … Love, Mom and Dad”

Even when she breathed her last, her children were her biggest concern.  It was that love for them that fueled her strength through this disease and treatment.  It was her love and devotion for them that kept her from falling into despair or hopelessness.  That moved her to stay strong throughout it all.

God it’s hard.  This life we live, it requires strength.  I’m not going to stand here and give you some reason why all of this happened.  I’m not going to say it’s because she loved so much or God needed her or that there is some purpose to this.  There are a lot of really great reasons and purposes for her to still be here.  And Laura and I talked about this stuff and I gotta tell you the God I love and know and worship and see in the faces of her loved ones did not want this to happen.  God suffers with us, grieves with us, holds us compassionately in our darkest moments.  As Christians we are never told that life will be easy.  Christianity is not a get out of pain free pass.  Look what happened to Jesus, look what  happened to the apostles.  Pain, loss, suffering is part of what it means to be human.  If we are honest and bold then we can find our hope beyond it and beyond false explanations or fear or hiding or trying to control it.  We can find our hope in this beautiful, earth-shattering, eternally powerful thing we call resurrection.

In Jesus Christ God conquers death, God shows us that death is not the end, that nothing can separate us from the love of God, that hope, peace and joy live on into eternity.  The resurrection is our hope even in the depth of sadness.  Out of the pains of birth comes new life and out of the pain of death comes new life that we can not now understand but are called to embrace with faith.

Laura’s faith was so strong.  We had some deep, long talks these past few weeks and I can tell you 100 percent that she was unwavering in her faith.  I will forever be influenced and inspired by her faith.  She never believed that faith meant she would never suffer.  And so when the suffering came, her faith never left.  She knew she would be at peace, she knew she would be ok- she just wanted to make sure everyone else was.  Always taking care of others.  She worried about her friends, her family, her mom, her husband and kids.  She loved so deeply.  I remember that Christmas Eve service, the first one after her dad died.  With tear-soaked cheeks she walked out of church with a smile on her face and a shirt that her mom got her that brightly said “Love” across it.  Love in pain, faith over fear, hope in the darkness, faith is greater than worry …these are the things I believe she would say to us today.

A couple of years ago a well-known musician in The United Methodist Church from my seminary in New Jersey came to Woodville and put on a workshop.  Laura wrote in her blog:  “I enjoyed the music, the wisdom, the honesty, the fellowship…everything.  Yet, I can also state without hesitation, that this song was the most powerful part of the weekend for me.
 Believing even during the “why’s”. Believing when it would be easier to turn away. Believing in the sun even when it’s not shining.  Believing in love even when there’s no one there.  Believing in God even when he’s silent.
Can you imagine being a prisoner at a concentration camp and still believing; witnessing and suffering and fighting to stay alive and still believing?
Even when.
Believe.”
And then she quoted the original poem the song is based on , “written during World War II, on the wall of a cellar, by a Jew scratched on a wall in a concentration camp
“I believe in the sun
even when it is not shining
And I believe in love,
even when there’s no one there.
And I believe in God,
even when he is silent.
I believe through any trial,
there is always a way
But sometimes in this suffering
and hopeless despair
My heart cries for shelter,
to know someone’s there
But a voice rises within me, saying hold on
my child, I’ll give you strength,
I’ll give you hope. Just stay a little while.
I believe in the sun
even when it is not shining
And I believe in love
even when there’s no one there
But I believe in God
even when he is silent
I believe through any trial
there is always a way.
May there someday be sunshine
May there someday be happiness
May there someday be love
May there someday be peace….”
- Unknown

And this is the song that Laura wanted sung today.  She planned it all out, invited people to sing and assigned solos.  For a while the verses were her cover photo on facebook.  It speaks of her unwavering faith, her ability to see good, to see hope and give love even in the pain, even when her body was shutting down.
And so as I stood next to Laura, holding her warm hand as she lay in the Hospice bed, I saw that her breathing dramatically slowed and as the nurse ran to get Aaron who had only momentarily left her side and was right there again, I searched for the right words for someone who gave so many of us the right words.  I could hear Laura saying “this better be good”  and I leaned down and with my voice quivering I softly sang in her ear, “I believe in the sun, I believe in the sun, even when, even when it’s not shining…”

John 3:1-17 “Saving the World” Sermon from Monroe Street UMC 5/31/15


I’m not what you might call a “huge sports fan” but any time a Cleveland team makes the playoffs I suddenly become very into sports.  I watch the games, I sit in suspense, cheer like crazy, talk about it the next day and even start paying a little bit of attention when my husband has Sports Center on tv.  If you know much about Cleveland sports, then you know this doesn’t happen too often, but it is happening right now.  The Cleveland Cavaliers basketball team just made it into the NBA finals.  So after the kids go to bed my husband and I have been marveling at Lebron James, hoping Kyrie can stay healthy enough to play and celebrating at the unexpected success of Dellavedova.

I enjoy watching the game and seeing the incredible talent and skill of the players, but I also realize that we are merely talking about guys playing a game, bouncing a ball and throwing it into a basket… seems pretty simple.  So why do I get emotional, hopeful and excited?  Why does that commercial with the entire city putting their hands in with Lebron move so many people?  Why do I feel like so much is riding on this simple game of catch and shoot?  Because it is about more.

I grew up in a working-class suburb of Youngstown, Ohio.  Perhaps you don’t know much about Youngstown, but I think you may find some similarities between Youngstown and Toledo.  It is a great place with great people where things like family, hard work and faith are valued.  But it’s economically depressed and has been since the steel mills shut down.  It’s a place that has lost a lot of people.  A “shrinking city” as they call it, where people leave to find jobs.  It’s a place that for a long time was considered the “murder capital of the world” and always is at the top of the “worst place to live” lists.  The winters are hard, the houses are cheap and the sports teams don’t win.  Being so close to Cleveland, many of us consider Cleveland teams to be our teams and they don’t win.  The last time Cleveland won a championship was with the Cleveland Browns in the 60s, before they had superbowls.  The Cavs have never won.

It feels like the land of the underdogs, a place others mock.  A place where some believe in new life and possibility, but many are hardened and pessimistic about the future.  A place where many are searching for hope.  So when Lebron James returned to Cleveland after playing for the Miami Heat it was exciting.  Someone was choosing this place.  Someone believed in the possibilities, was investing in the rust belt and the nation was watching with excitement rather than pity.

So when the men in Cavs uniforms take the court in the NBA finals there is this whole other level besides just guys bouncing a ball back and forth.  It feels like there is pride, hope, renewal and new life on the line.  Sure, it’s just a game, but some of us see something more going on.

In the Gospel reading today Nicodemus would be like the people who only see a simple game, who miss the other level happening.  Nicodemus is a bit literal-minded.  He sees Jesus as the man in front of him.  He sees a guy who can do great things.  He uses his logic- Jesus is doing things other people can’t do so he must come from God.  But when Jesus tries to take things beyond logic, to show him a whole other level, he gets lost.  Jesus explains that one must be born from above to experience the Kingdom of God, and Nicodemus can’t get past a literal understanding of birth.  Of course it is ridiculous to think that someone can go back in the womb and be born again …but Jesus is talking on a different level, he is talking Spirit stuff.  To some he may just seem like a man with a magic touch, a nice guy who can do good things but talks about strange things.  But there is this whole other level happening, the Holy Spirit at work.

One time when I was teaching a confirmation class one of the young women who had been wrestling with some faith questions excitedly came to tell me about a break through she had.  She said she was watching a ballet and she was moved by the talent, the music, and the beautiful movements.  Then something in her connected the beauty she saw with the work of the Holy Spirit.  She saw God at work on earth through beauty and it moved her very deeply.  She felt that she was now able to understand where God is in the world.  The things she  had previously experienced at face-value, now seemed like something more, a different level.  What seemed simple and matter of fact suddenly had much more meaning for her.

Perhaps this is a way of understanding that elusive, mysterious concept of the Holy Spirit.  That part of the Holy Trinity that is hard to explain because we do not see it with our eyes.  As Jesus says, it is like the wind, it blows where it chooses.  We don’t know where it comes from or where it goes.  It is unpredictable, unable to be pinned down and yet somehow all around us.

In the Church we have a lot of words for talking about this Spirit stuff.  We have the Holy Trinity, Holy Mystery, 3 in 1 and 1 in 3.  In the Church we use words all the time that require us to look past what is merely around us and explore a deeper level.  Words like grace, mercy, sacrament, conversion, faith and belief.  Words that to others may sound strange or lacking in logic, but to many of us speak to a different kind of reality that while not as visible as the person next to you, is just as real and felt.

The Holy Spirit moves us, compels us, challenges us, comforts us, names us and yet it is not something I can define.  It’s more than what we see around us.  And this is what Jesus is talking to Nicodemus about.  Where he sees acts and physical birth, Jesus sees the work of God and spiritual birth.
At the end of the passage today we come to that very famous verse “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.  Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”  So maybe this is why Jesus is trying to help Nicodemus understand this Spirit stuff.  Maybe this is why the Church uses such mysterious Spirit language.  Maybe this is why the Holy Spirit moves and works among us … to save the world.

The doors of our churches, the language we use, the beliefs we hold, the Scriptures we attest to are not so that we can sit in comfort and condemn others around us, but rather to save the world.  “God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”  Perhaps this is why the Spirit does not merely comfort and console us but also inspires and stirs us, compels us to action.  Shows us this whole other level.

When we are born of the Spirit we have eyes to see the Spirit at work all around us.  We see and are moved by the pains of the world.  We see war, drought, flooding, tragedy, illness and despair.  We hear about ISIS and children starving in Africa and we also see the pain on the faces of those around us.  We watch loved ones decay and see children cry.  But at the same time we know of this other work happening.  We know there is more to it than just what we can see or explain with logic.  The Spirit is at work.  We know about hope, beauty, resurrection, eternal life, peace and unconditional love.  That God our Creator does not leave us alone but moves in our lives, in our hearts and in our world.

We see and are moved by the joy of the world.  We see peaceful reconciliations, rainbows, sunny days, babies born, healing and love expressed.  We close our eyes to try to take in all the joy around us- the laughter of children, the sound of the birds, the goodness of those near.  And we know that there is something going on here besides just the earth spinning, there is Spirit stuff.

You know when I was young I used to say that I wanted to save the world.  People would laugh and remark on the innocence of youth or say things about how they felt the same way until they aged and became more aware of reality.  It just made me feel more strongly.  I wanted to make a difference, to make things better, to bring light to dark places and hope to desperation.  I wanted to do things bigger than the economically depressed area I was in, be more than I was.  And while I still desperately want to make a positive impact on the world and hope that my life is lived for good, my understanding of saving the world has changed.
I have realized that I don’t need to save the world because God already is.  Spirit stuff is happening all around us, ushering in the Kingdom of God, on earth as it is in heaven. There is more happening beyond what we can see.  In all of the places of the world, even the cities that top the lists of worst places to live … and maybe even in Cleveland sports teams.

So let us be compelled by the Spirit, moved to join in God’s saving work in the world. Let use see beyond what is around us, let us see the mysterious, unpredictable and beautiful work of the Holy Spirit.