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Test Preparation

March 9, 2025 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Christ’s tests face us every day, and with the Spirit’s help, we will pass through and bring life and hope to this world.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The First Sunday in Lent, year C
Texts: Luke 13:31-35 (adding Isaiah 58:1-12 from Ash Wednesday’s lectionary)

Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen

It’s more accurate to call what Jesus experienced in the desert “testing,” not “temptation.”

During and after the forty days he spent in the wilderness following his baptism, Jesus was challenged to decide what the way of Messiah would be. And the way of a true human being in this world.

But this wasn’t a once-off situation. These tests came back to Jesus repeatedly, including during his anguished prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane before his torture and death. What he chooses here at the start of his ministry he faces again and again.

There’s something else, too. All who wish to follow Christ face these same tests. And they’re also not a once-off deal. Individually, collectively, followers of Christ repeatedly face these tests.

The smart play, then, is to cheat off of Jesus’ answer sheet. Learn from his testing how you’ll face yours. How we’ll face ours. And what’s at stake is literally the life of the world.

Here are the three tests.

First, how will you help a world struggling with hunger, poverty, want? It’s not just Jesus considering making a sandwich out of rocks. The question is will the inequality, waste of abundant resources, the split between the few who hoard and the many who suffer, be miraculously fixed? Jesus, with divine power, could instantly make it possible for everyone to have enough food, shelter, clothing, health care. He chooses not to. There’s another way.

Second, how can you get people to obey God and do God’s will? Will you bow to the demonic powers that control and dominate to get what they want? Jesus could use his power to control the whole world, force people into whatever he felt needed to be done. He chooses not to. There’s another way.

And third, do you need God to prove you’ll be safe and protected before you act? Will you sit still and do nothing until you know you can’t be harmed, until you’re assured you’ll have to sacrifice nothing? This is particularly critical for Jesus in Gethsemane, where he could have resisted the cross, but chooses not to. There’s another way.

We face the same question of turning stones into bread, every day.

As we see catastrophic escalation of serious societal problems we’ve already been working on for years, what do we do? Sit back and pray that God take care of all this, miraculously rescue immigrants from deportation, create job opportunities, directly provide food and housing to those who lack? Change stones to bread?

We began this Lenten journey Wednesday with words from Isaiah 58, words worth pondering every day of this season and our lives. And for this test, the prophet is clear. God’s not interested in our prayer and fasting that puts it all on God to do. Isaiah says God needs us to act ourselves to heal what needs healing.

“This is the fast that I want from you,” God says in Isaiah, “that you loose the bonds of injustice, break every yoke. Share your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless poor into your house.” That’s God’s answer to the need for bread: you and I are to take care of this. The way of Messiah invites all people into the abundance of God’s gifts so they’ll share that abundance until all are safe, healthy, fed, sheltered, clothed. That’s how all will be healed.

The second test is far more dangerous to fail.

How do you make this a world in harmony with God? Ever since Constantine the Church has far too often chosen the way of power and domination. And so we’ve led wars and holocausts and inquisitions and heretic burnings, all in the name of God. The Christian right these days is just another manifestation of Christians failing this second test and joining with the demonic powers in the world.

There’s a huge need for God’s way of love and justice, and peace for all, to flourish in these days. We’re seeing the beginning of what’s already a horror show that likely will be a global disaster devastating many, especially the most vulnerable.

But God says through Isaiah,“you will be the repairer of the breach, the restorer of streets to live in.” The answer to this test, as Jesus knew, isn’t to control, be in charge, use power to do what we want. Far too much evil and wickedness happens when Christians do that. The answer is to live as a vibrant minority, like yeast in flour Jesus says, working as hard as we can to make a difference wherever we can. Rebuilding ruins, raising up foundations, as Isaiah says. Even while others are knocking them down. To live as Christ’s love in all we do and trust that even if no one else does, we’re doing what God needs us to do.

The third test preys on our despair and fear.

Christ’s way might cost us. Stretch us in ways we’re not comfortable, ask us to give up and let go of things we’re not ready to get rid of. We’re tempted to sit tight and do nothing, hoping the worst of what’s happening won’t come to our door and haul us out.

But Christ says what happens to our neighbor happens to us. Even if we’re not fired or deported or arrested or vilified or persecuted, if any of God’s children are suffering, we’re suffering. This has been the Christian way from the beginning. Tomorrow, March 10, the church commemorates Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman, both of whom stepped out into the unknown and risked their lives for the sake of God’s children. Friday was the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday, where the peaceful civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery was stopped with brutality on the Edmund Pettis bridge.

The answer to the fear in this test is learning to trust God is with us and will strengthen and bless us in this work, in this caring, in this restoring, in this resistance. There’s no guarantee it won’t cost, or hurt. In fact, it probably will, Jesus always says. But this is the Way. This is who we are. We step forward and act, even if we don’t know what’s going to happen.

It’s not really cheating to crib off of Jesus’ answers.

In fact, the evangelists wrote this down for that very reason. To give you and me hope that there is a way forward. The only way God wants to see, because when people are changed, the healing of the world actually can survive and spread and grow.

But keep your eyes open. Hold each other’s hands. These tests will keep coming. They’ll change their looks, appear like something else to trick you. You’ll face these constantly, with God’s healing at stake.

But be of good courage. God is with you, the Spirit is changing you and giving you strength and hope. Together, we’ll face these tests and keep seeking the life of God for all. And as Isaiah says, when we’re doing this together, our light will break forth like the dawn and healing will spring up quickly. We’ll be like a watered garden, Isaiah says, offering God’s abundant love for the life of all things, even if sometimes all we see around us is desert.

In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, Sunday afternoon, March 9, 2025

March 7, 2025 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Lent Procession liturgy, 4:00 p.m.

Download worship folder for Lent Procession, March 9, 2025, 4:00 p.m.

Leading: Pr. Joseph G. Crippen, Vicar Natalie Wussler

Readings: Cynthia Prosek, Larry Duncan, Adam Krueger, Kat Campbell Johnson, Peggy Hoeft

Choir: Mount Olive Cantorei; Director: Andrew Stoebig

Organist: Robert Buckley Farlee

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

Worship, March 9, 2025

March 7, 2025 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The First Sunday in Lent, year C

Download worship folder for Sunday, March 9, 2025.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: James E. Berka, lector; Paul Odlaug, assisting minister

Organist: Robert Buckley Farlee

Download next Sunday’s readings for this Tuesday’s noon Bible study.

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

Today is the Day

March 5, 2025 By Vicar at Mount Olive

“Today is the day” is a reminder that we have no day to love and serve God and our neighbors but today, no matter what other people might think of us. And for moments we let people’s words get to us, we can turn to God today and pray that we be molded by God alone.

Vicar Natalie Wussler
Ash Wednesday
Texts: Isaiah 58:1-12; Psalm 51:1-17; Psalm 103:8-14; 2 Corinthians 5:20b-6:10; Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21

Beloved in Christ, grace to you and peace in the name of the Father, and of the ☩ Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

“Today is the day.” It’s a phrase I first heard in my high school improv group. A guideline for creating emotionally heightened scenes. It means life is happening today, a wild adventure is starting today, someone’s world is changing today. This simple phrase spices up any scene, it raises the urgency of all the actors, and, in the end, everyone is much more invested because today IS the day. And Paul seems to be getting at a similar idea here in Second Corinthians, as he urges the early church to be reconciled to God and to each other and to work together with God, because today is the day of salvation, of healing, Paul says, and we’ve got no time to waste. 

Today is Ash Wednesday. And “today is the day” seems especially poignant. In a few moments, we will dawn ashes on our forehead. The symbol of our mortality, and the promise that one day, our lives on this earth will be over. Yes, on that day, we will be welcomed to the feast that has no end, but we only have one chance on this earth. One life to live. Every second is one closer to our deaths. We are here on this earth so temporarily, and that’s frightening. Anxiety rises as we ask ourselves, how do I spend what little time I have? How do I know I’m doing it right? How do I know I’m not wasting my life?

Well, Isaiah has a pretty good idea of how to live life well.
To loose the bonds of injustice, Isaiah says,
And to undo the straps of the yoke
To let the oppressed go free
To share bread with the hungry 
and to house the homeless poor, 
To cover the naked

Isaiah says life is best spent in service of God and of our neighbor. We all know this, but when we live as if today is the day to walk this path, we expect that God will work through us for the healing of the world today. We see people who are bound by injustice, today, people who are hungry and homeless today, people who need love today, and we hear God calls us to go into the broken places to stand in solidarity with hurting people today. When we live like this we become hope, relationships are mended, communities are reconciled, and our hurting world experiences healing. This reminder of our death is a call to live everyday as vessels of God’s love and justice. This is the way God calls us to live. The way the spirit is guiding us. And the way our souls yearn to live.

But it’s the way this world just doesn’t understand.

And maybe that’s why Jesus warns us against practicing righteousness in front of other people. Because this cross-shaped path of Christ makes no sense to this world–why spend our lives serving the outcasts and the oppressed, why be on the path toward forgiving and loving those who hurt us and our neighbors, the world says. And some might even hate us or treat us like imposters for the way we embody God’s love. These messages of disapproval and of hate are anxiety-provoking for us. We might doubt if we’re doing this life right. And when we look for the approval of others, we forget who we are and who we are made to be. We open ourselves to be molded by the judgement of others. And then we’re using our precious time trying to gain others’ approval, instead of walking the path God has set for us.

It’s hard to tune out all this noise. It’s hard to stand strong against criticism and hate. And it’s exhausting to realize how much of our lives have been formed by seeking the approval of others and to see the ways that we still stumble into these patterns. Jesus says, our relationship with God is far more important than what other people think about us. But learning that is a lifelong journey.

So maybe today is the day. Today is the day to ask God to help you let go of caring what the crowds think. Today is the day to pray as David did: That God would create in you a clean heart–one that isn’t shaken by what others say. To pray for a steadfast spirit that is focused on God’s love for you and for all people. And then, today is the day to trust that God will change your heart so that your identity and your worth are based solely on God’s love for you and God’s call on your life to do justice by loving your neighbor.

Jesus says “store your treasures in heaven” where your joy can’t be stolen and where words won’t eat away at your confidence in who you are in God. And when you spend your time on earth founded in God’s love for you, God creates resilience in you, so that not even afflictions, hardships, calamities, beatings, imprisonments, riots, labors, or sleepless nights can shake you. When you store up your treasures and your heart in heaven, and let God’s love define you, when you focus on the good work you’re called to do, you are being molded by God, who already loves you and sets you on the right path. And when you and I and millions of faithful people become molded by the Triune God so that we become coworkers with Christ, that’s when our light breaks forth like the dawn, and we become a watered garden, a fountain, Isaiah says, overflowing with healing for our hearts, for our communities, and for our world.

Today is the day. God will change our hearts today and give us the tools we need to be the healing of the world today, because we have no day to love God, each other, and our neighbors but today.

In the name of the Father, and of the ☩ Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

Filed Under: sermon Tagged With: sermon

Worship, Wednesday, March 5, 2025

March 4, 2025 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Ash Wednesday

Download worship folder for Ash Wednesday, March 5, 2025, 7:00 p.m.

Presiding: Pr. Joseph G. Crippen

Preaching: Vicar Natalie Wussler

Readings and prayers: Amy Thompson, lector; Mark Pipkorn, Assisting Minister

Organist: Robert Buckley Farlee

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

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3045 Chicago Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

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