For the Journey
We are nourished through Christ to be nourishment for others as we journey together.
Vicar Andrea Bonneville
The Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 19 B
Text: 1 Kings 19:4-8
Beloved in Christ, grace and peace to you in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
Don’t grieve over who the Holy Spirit has created you to be.
Listening to voices that say that you are too young or too old, or don’t have enough skills or experience or training to engage in the tasks ahead. Being so overwhelmed or filled with fear and anxiety that it stuns you. Having a sense that no matter what you do, it is not going to be good enough or have a big enough impact.
Perhaps these are the voices and messages that got into Elijah’s head. The voices that drove him restlessly into the wilderness and that caused him to have no choice but to lay down and rest, suggesting that continuing the journey was going to be too much for him.
Elijah has a justifiable reason for his overwhelming exhaustion and yet it is easy to look at his situation and think that he is just being a little over dramatic.
But Elijah gets to a point in his life that resembles what we call burn out. Feeling so exhausted that he’d rather give up than continue to do what he has been called to do. It’s incredible he went a day’s journey into the wilderness to begin with.
The way I see it is that Elijah had two options. He could run away from the call the Triune God had placed on his life and go live a more comfortable life someplace else or he could run into the wilderness of the sin and suffering of the world and learn how to find rest there.
One instinct is to look at Elijah and just say, come on, get up, we have work to do. That’s what our society would tell us to do. To ignore our need to care for ourselves so we can produce more and do more.
But another instinct is to have compassion and empathy for Elijah and just say, it’s okay to rest, here have some nourishment. The angel in the story today does the opposite of what the pressures of world teach. The angel sees Elijah under the tree and tells him to eat and rest.
The need to rest and find nourishment in the midst of chaos in the middle of the wilderness is what the prophet Elijah teaches us today.
Elijah figures out how to go into the wilderness and find rest, not through what he does, but through what he finds on the journey. Not because he alone has all the strength that he needs but because he realized that he can’t go on the journey alone.
We are the people called by God to go into the wilderness to proclaim a message of hope, a message that Christ is the bread of life and light of the world. A message that we proclaim to each other and to our community. It is a lifelong task and if we don’t find places to rest and nourish ourselves on the journey, we are going to burn out.
So if today you are feeling tired, or overwhelmed, or lonely, or anxious, or afraid. Worn down from the sin and suffering of the world. There is a place for you to rest, even in the midst of chaos, even on this wilderness journey.
Following God’s call will lead us to find places where we can release the burdens the world has forced us to carry. Release the anger, fear, all the things that hold us back.
We may not always know what rest will look like for us and so we are challenged to find places to rest even as the world challenges us to keep moving and to keep doing. Finding a way to even rest in the unknown of what is next.
God isn’t going to lead us to places where we are going to fail. God isn’t going to leave us alone in the wilderness. This is the purpose of the angel and the tree and it is the purpose of each of us.
To be the presence of God, filled with love, forgiveness, and passion for caring for all of God’s creation. Peeling back layers of exhaustion so that the light of Christ continues to shine from our hearts and nourishes all around us.
But we can only be nourishment if we are nourished.
Nourished by being in community with each other and seeing and being with people embodying God’s love and forgiveness.
Nourished from having a sense of routine and enjoying spiritual practices, such as meditation, music, gardening, whatever helps us to express who God calls us to be. Finding ways to use our bodies, our voices, and our minds to care for and advocate for our neighbors and all of God’s creation.
Nourished by being who the Holy Spirit has called us to be. Living out our vocations at work, or in school, or during retirement. Joyfully loving who we love. And finding meaning and happiness in all of the unique things that make each of us who we are as God’s beloved.
Nourished by believing that our worth is not assessed by our performances and our work, but solely for being who we are and trusting that we are worthy of the love and the calling the Holy Spirit has placed in our hearts and sealed on our forehead.
It is simple and profoundly complex at the same time. But the more we know and trust that we are loved and the embodiment of Christ’s love in the world. The more beauty, and life, and love, and nourishment we will give and receive.
When we continually lean into the person the Holy Spirit created us to be, we find rest and find nourishment that can only come from God who truly is our bread of life.
At the very least my hope is that this place, this community is a place where you find rest. Taking what you learn about yourself, about God, about love, grace, and justice here. Taking in the nourishment you receive from Christ’s table and finding places in which this table extends into our daily lives.
Where all can find love and forgiveness.
Where all can find rest and nourishment for the journey
Get up and eat, feast on the bread of life, otherwise the journey will be too much for you.
Amen.
Worship, August 8, 2021
The Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 18 B
God-with-us, Jesus the Christ, whom we worship, offers us and the world food that will always sustain us, drink that will always quench us. In our worship, fed and watered by Christ, we are strengthened to go and share this grace with our neighbors.
Download worship folder for Sunday, August 8, 2021.
Presiding: The Rev. Rob Ruff
Preaching: Vicar Andrea Bonneville DeNaples
Readings and prayers: James Berka, lector; Mark Pipkorn, Assisting Minister
Organist: Cantor David Cherwien
Download next Sunday’s readings for the Tuesday noon Bible study.
Eternal Bread
God-with-us offers eternal life – a meeting and filling of all human needs in this world, an abundant life for you and for all God’s children.
Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Tenth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 18 B
Text: John 6:(15-23) 22-35 (36-40)
Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
My mother taught me the wisdom of trusting my own body.
When we had the stomach flu, at some point we’d begin to be hungry again. My mother believed our body knows what it can handle. So, if we felt hungry for any particular thing, she said we’d likely be able to keep it down. And she was right.
But somehow, in much of our lives, we’ve lost the ability to listen to our body, our spirit, our mind, and know what is needed. We eat things we know aren’t good for us. We do things we know are harmful. We ignore pains and warnings – mental, physical, spiritual – and pretend we’re fine.
So, instead of listening to what we need, we fill the hole inside with other things.
We long for something deep and true, but instead we try to acquire more things, or seek financial security, hoping that will answer. We need wholeness and peace but fall into addictions that promise peace while leading us deeper into suffering. We feel loneliness and ache for connection, but fill our lives with distractions like phones and computers and podcasts and work, even sitting with others we love while remaining inside our own bubbles.
Today Jesus once again offers us the deepest filling of what we need. God-with-us says “I am your eternal bread. I can fill you so you’re never hungry.” But how can we know that kind of satisfaction?
Well, to start with, we do know what the main human needs are.
All human beings have certain physical needs that are basic and critical. We need food, we need shelter, we need clothing appropriate to our climate, we need safety in all its dimensions. Without these, it’s hard to tend to the others.
Beyond such physical needs, to be whole and well, all human beings also need to know we are loved. We need to be able to love. And we need a purpose for our lives.
Today Jesus promises to give God’s children a life that meets those needs.
Jesus calls this gift “eternal life.” Over the centuries Christians mostly have confused this gift with another gift, resurrection life after we die. So we hear Jesus today and think he’s talking about life after death.
But in the few extra verses we read today at the end of our Gospel Jesus says this: God’s will is that “all who see the Son and trust in him may have eternal life; and I will raise them up on the last day.” (John 6:40)
God-with-us offers us eternal life. And a promise that we’ll be raised from our death into the resurrection life. Two gifts. Maybe Christians are so often spiritually starving, struggling with fear and anxiety, chasing addictions, seeking comfort in wealth and distractions because we’re convinced the whole point of God coming in Christ is only to ensure our resurrection life and has little to do with today.
But God-with-us wants you to have eternal life. Abundant life. Life now, where your deep human longings and needs are met. Could you try to learn to trust the second gift – trust you will live after you die – so instead you can focus on this other gift that you and the world need, and God longs to give?
In this eternal life, God’s first desire is to meet the physical needs of God’s children.
From Moses and the prophets to Jesus, the Triune God’s will is that all God’s children are fed, and sheltered, and clothed, and safe. God’s consistent calls for justice and the end to poverty and oppression and violence all show this desire. Jesus fed the crowds before any of his talk of eternal food.
Jesus’ call to his followers to feed his lambs gives this work to those who follow Christ. We experience God’s eternal life when we participate in God’s justice and peace, ensure that all are filled and sheltered, that systems of oppression and injustice are dismantled, and that the society and structures we build protect the physical well-being of all God’s creatures.
In fact, God-with-us reminds us that we can’t be filled or satisfied, if any of our siblings in our city and world aren’t cared for. Our place of privilege means most of us here don’t struggle with most of these physical needs. But abundant, eternal life only happens when all share that privilege.
Once physical needs are met, it’s easier to see the other blessings in God’s eternal life.
God-with-us comes to all God’s children, and offers the life of God for the sake of the world. In Christ, God is clear: you are loved, you are worthy of being loved. Whatever anxiety you have over your brokenness or your sins, whatever grief or shame or fear you have, all are washed away in the self-giving love of God for you in the cross and resurrection. Eternal life with Christ answers your ultimate question: you are God’s beloved, always.
And knowing that love, swimming in it, breathing it, means you become someone who can love. God’s love restores your heart and makes loving relationships with others possible. In Christ’s abundant life, loving relationships grow and thrive, overcoming brokenness with forgiveness, hardships with compassion, distance with embrace.
And eternal life in Christ means you have a purpose in this world, a meaning to your existence. No matter how old or young you are, no matter how competent or useless you feel, every day this is your reason to get up: you are needed. At home alone, or living with family, or at work, or meeting neighbors, God needs you to be God’s love and healing in the world. Even the the systems of oppression and violence we’ve built that separate and divide, that crush millions for arbitrary and cruel reasons while blessing others, can be broken down by your love and mine, by the love of all who follow Christ.
Christ Jesus is the eternal bread that fills you with this eternal life.
In Christ you are loved, and you can love, and you have a purpose in this world, to be a part of God’s eternal life for others.
If you are hungry or naked or oppressed; or . . . if you are anxious, or lonely, or sick, or depressed, or frightened, or ashamed, or lost, or confused, good news: God can fill you up with what will truly answer those pains and sufferings, and give you what you need to find abundant, whole life in whatever circumstance you find yourself.
Whoever comes to me, God-with-us says, will never be hungry. Whoever trusts in me will never be thirsty.
That means you. And we work and pray that soon all God’s children will know it means them, too.
In the name of Jesus. Amen
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