COVID 19

Thanksgiving Reminders

Matthew 6:25-33

“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air; they neither sow, nor reap, nor gather into barns and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? And can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your span of life? And why do you worry about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they neither toil nor spin and yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you – you of little faith?”

“Therefore, do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ for it is the Gentiles who strive for all these things; and indeed your heavenly Father knows that you need all of these things. But strive first for the kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things will be given to you as well.”


We just need to be reminded, sometimes, right? Reminded to do this, to do that, to say this, NOT to say that. My calendar reminds me 10 minutes before a scheduled meeting is about to begin. I got no less than half-a-dozen reminders that I was supposed to drive my son to a doctor’s appointment this morning. (My family’s faith in me is remarkable.)

Of course, at Thanksgiving I think about how much time we spend reminding kids to say “please” and “thank you,” to send “thank you” notes, to BE grateful, to appreciate what they have, to count their blessings. And none of that changes just because we’re older. We still need reminders and nudges and opportunities to do the same – to count our blessings, to be grateful, and to say so, I mean. Which is what this evening and this week and our lives, really, as followers of Jesus are all about … being reminded about that for which we are grateful, finding ways to share that gratitude, and realizing that it matters, deeply, for us and for the world.

In that first reading in Joel that we just heard, from sometime around 400 BCE (give or take), the prophet could have been talking to you and me, really. The people of Israel had endured a plague – not of COVID-19 – but of locusts that threatened their land, their livelihood, their way of life. And the prophet called the people to hope, called them to patience, called them to a longer view and a greater memory about the power of God’s love for them, in spite of the suffering and struggle they had endured.

I’m not sure what to think about things since last Thanksgiving, where our own “plague” is concerned. Things seem different … better … on-the-mend, in some ways … more hopeful, perhaps. Last year, my family didn’t make our annual pilgrimage to northwest Ohio to be with my in-laws. Instead, we – the Havels on Redbird Trail – stayed in Indiana, and traded food with my parents a mile away. We were still quarantining, so I mean we traded food and went our separate ways. We didn’t actually get to sit down, break bread, pass the food around, or pray together. We’ll do all of that in a couple of days, but we’ll be staying in Indiana, since people are sick with fevers and whatnot over in Ohio.

Still, we have blessings to count. We still have to be careful, but there is science and there are vaccines and boosters, too. We are worshiping this evening, in-person and online, which we couldn’t do last year, and things are better than they were, thanks to all of that. Our God has done great things… Our God has dealt wondrously with us… We shall eat in plenty and be satisfied… the Lord is our God and there is no other.

We need reminders of that from time to time.

And in that bit from First Timothy, the early church was reminded of some things, too. They were called to pray on behalf of – and in gratitude for – all people, all people: leaders and kings, Gentiles and Jesus followers alike, understanding that God is, indeed, the God of all people.

We need reminders of that from time to time, too.

In many of the gatherings I’m a part of lately – especially if they have something to do with racial equity and justice, but not always – it’s becoming a thing to acknowledge the indigenous, native peoples who lived on the land wherever we might be gathering, by naming them.

It’s an effort to honor those people, in spite of how poorly they may have been treated in so many instances. It’s an expression of gratitude, for those who have gone before and for whatever wisdom and relationship may have been shared along the way, or learned about since. And I feel like it’s an act of repentance, too, for whatever hurt and harm was done by one group of people to another over the course of human history, such as it is.

I think it’s something like the “supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings to be made for everyone,” which God’s people were asked to do in that reading from First Timothy.

So, because our national Thanksgiving holiday is so often wrapped up in fictional, warm and fuzzy fairy tales about the early days of our history with the indigenous peoples who lived on this land long before the Europeans showed up, I thought it would be meaningful to acknowledge and give thanks for and name the Lenape tribe of Indians. Indiana means “the land of the Indians,” after all, and the Lenape lived in east central Indiana, in this neck of the woods, from the 1790s into the early 1820s when, under the Treaty of St. Mary’s, they gave up their land and were forced to migrate west to Kansas, and then Oklahoma.

So cheers, gratitude, prayers and supplications to the Lenape – and to the Shawnee and the Miami and the Potawatomi, too – for those who have gone before us; who tended to and cared for and lived on this holy ground; who were and who are Children of God, just like you and me, wherever they find themselves, and wherever they are found by their creator … these days and into eternity.

It’s good to be reminded from time to time.

Which brings us to the Gospel for this evening. In Matthew 6 – with all those reminders about how and why we shouldn’t worry – Jesus is speaking as someone who loves his people – his friends, his family, his followers, and all of creation – and as someone who wants the best for them, for it, for us.

So the thanksgiving we’re called to as followers of Jesus is meant to be more than just a discipline or a chore – certainly not just an annual extravaganza around a table overflowing with our favorite food and crowded with some of our favorite people – or not-so favorite people, if that’s a pickle for you on Thursday.

The thanksgiving Jesus calls us to is meant to be a daily blessing for our lives – one that does a good work through us and for us, by putting our struggles into perspective; by putting our lives into balance; by helping us to see what is good and righteous in our midst, even if we are surrounded by so much to the contrary, too.

Because our thanksgiving, in Jesus, reminds us that we are blessed in spite of what can be so hard in this world. We are made strong through our weakness. We are rich when we are poor. We receive when we give. We are promised new life, even in the face of death. We just need to be reminded of that from time to time – and remember that we are changed for the better, by the thanks we give, when we do.

Amen. Happy Thanksgiving.

Worship and What Matters

John 2:13-22

The Passover of the Jews was near, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem.  In the temple he found people selling cattle, sheep and doves, and the money changers seated at their tables. Making a whip of cords, he drove all them out of the temple, both the sheep and the cattle. He also poured out the coins of the money changers and overturned their tables. He told those who were selling the doves, “Take these things out of here! Stop making my Father’s house a marketplace!” His disciples remembered that it was written, “Zeal for your house will consume me.”

The Jews then said to him, “What sign can you show us for doing this?” Jesus answered them, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” The Jews then said, “This temple has been under construction for forty-six years, and will you raise it up in three days?” But he was speaking of the temple of his body.  After he was raised from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this; and they believed the scripture and the word that Jesus had spoken.


I used the phrase “upset the apple cart” in last week’s sermon, in reference to all Jesus was about to say and do that would get him crucified and killed by the powers and principalities of the world around him. And today, we get the evidence of that, in what has euphemistically, kindly been called Jesus’ “cleansing of the temple.” Which sounds nicer, tidier than I think it actually was. This morning we are reminded that Jesus wasn’t all talk, as we hear about his most well-known public display of protest and disruption and righteous anger – flipping tables, brandishing whips, and making harsh proclamations and bold, brave promises about his own destruction.

And, the backstory of Jesus’ protest in the Temple is that the celebration of Passover was right around the corner and Jews from all over were traveling to Jerusalem to celebrate the holiday. Since animal sacrifice was such a crucial part of Jewish worship, and since it was really difficult to travel with animals, those who came – from out in the countryside into the big city had to buy the animals they were expected to sacrifice, once they got into Jerusalem. (It was difficult to get all of your luggage, all of the kids and your cattle, sheep, and doves, into a First Century mini-van.)

So, some like to point out that there is all kind of reason to believe the merchants in the temple were ripping off those who came to buy their animals, because it’s believed they made people use special currency, that they exchanged it unfairly, and that the animals were probably being sold for huge amounts of money, way above market value. (If you can remember the last time you bought a beer at a Major League Baseball game or an ice cream sandwich at Disney World, this sort of price-gouging is easy to imagine.) Still, it’s likely that none of this is the main thing Jesus was actually protesting that day in the Temple. It’s not nearly that complicated, really.

Jesus was protesting the very nature and practice of animal sacrifice in the first place, plain and simple.

Jesus was protesting the Jewish understanding that these practices of sacrifice – all of this keeping with the old ways and the old laws wasn’t the way to worship anymore. He was saying… proclaiming… promising that the kingdom of God had showed up in a new way – in Jesus, himself – and that the Son of God was what worship was all about, all of a sudden. Cattle, sheep and doves weren’t necessary and wouldn’t cut it anymore as far as sacrifices were concerned.

The short of the long is that Jesus is turning over tables and brandishing a whip and screaming at the top of his lungs – trying to make the point that God’s people needed to change the way they were doing things; change the way they were worshiping; change their focus on what matters in life as followers of the most-high God.

Does any of this ring a bell? Has any of this hit home yet as we gather in-person, in our proverbial Temple, for the first time in almost exactly one year? Has any of this hit home yet, as those of you out there, livestreaming our online worship from your couch or at your kitchen table with your coffee in-hand?

As we reflect on the last year of our lives – together, separately as a worshiping community – can we imagine that the ranting and raving and righteous anger of Jesus in the Temple might have something to say to us as God’s people, still – not just at Cross of Grace, but as God’s people, generally, all around the world?

Now, I don’t believe God, in Jesus, upset the apple cart of our life together as a worshiping community by way of the COVID-19 pandemic. But I do believe God wouldn’t mind if we learned a thing or two about the power and purpose and the practice of our life together because of what we’ve been trying to figure out since last March, and for the sake of whatever we have to learn going forward.

What I mean is, I wonder how much we are being called to prepare ourselves for things to be different going forward – and how and why we might be able to do that most faithfully.

I know that those of us here, wish we didn’t have to make reservations online, wish we didn’t have to limit our numbers, wish we could sing out-loud, wish we could share communion the old fashioned way.

Those of us online – as comfortable and cozy as it is to be at home – miss the power of being in our sacred space, miss the presence of our Partners in Mission, miss the sights and sounds and smells and spirit of gathering like we always have.

I, personally, loathe the notion that, since November, I haven’t been able to see who’s worshiping with us on the other side of the camera that’s now mounted on the back wall of our sanctuary. I find it equally frustrating that I can’t see the faces, the frowns, the smiles, or the expressions of those who are here, because all of that is safely concealed by these darn masks!

And I know there are Christians all over the place – and I imagine some in our own fellowship – who are as frustrated and even as angry as Jesus in the Temple over all of it.

But I think we get frustrated and angry about it – myself included – when we forget that, as much as we love it and as good as we are at it, worship isn’t the only, or even the most important thing about following Jesus. If we’re not loving each other, forgiving our enemies, giving our money, serving the world, and more, none of what we do on Sunday morning – in-person or online – means much. (God hates our solemn assemblies, after all, if they’re not accompanied by the work of justice. We heard that from the prophet Amos, once.)

So I think – as we reflect on the last year and even as we begin to see the proverbial light at the end of this pandemic tunnel – we might be hearing a call from Jesus today to shift our perspective some; to change our focus; to wonder just what will be different for God’s people going forward as we worship, learn, and serve the God who has sustained us until now.

And I always try to begin with gratitude. And I’m grateful that Cross of Gracers have been patient and kind and gracious about understanding that we’ve tried to be safe and faithful in all of this – and that loving our neighbors and caring for the most vulnerable among us has been the impetus behind the outdoor worship, the online worship, the masks, the physical distancing, and the other decisions we have and will continue to make, going forward.

I’m grateful that, because of all of the technology we’ve acquired or learned to use differently, we have connected and re-connected with handfuls of people online who would, otherwise, be strangers to the ministry of grace and good news we share. (I’m not sure we’ll ever do another wedding or funeral that doesn’t allow family and friends and loved-ones from around the country – from around the world, even – to participate online.)

And, of course, I’m grateful for the science and the vaccine and all the learning we’ve done this past year, which makes our gathering safer and possible and more likely as we keep moving forward with it all.

See, we have a beautiful place to call home at Cross of Grace. We’ve tried to refer to our temple as a “Center for Mission” since the day we first broke ground to build it. It is home for us. And it is a beautiful, safe, refuge in a million different ways. But we worship, first and foremost – and we are grounded by, first and foremost – and we are gifted with grace, first, foremost, and always – thanks to the temple that is Jesus Christ, the One who teaches us to love one another – and our enemies, too – to such an extent that we sacrifice some things every once in a while to make room for him in our lives and for the sake of the world. We don’t sacrifice cattle, sheep, and doves, anymore, thanks be to God...

But we have been – and will continue to be – called to sacrifice what is comfortable for us, so that others might be safe. (I have some ideas about that where our Food Pantry ministry is concerned. And it will require more than just donations and contributions on our part.)

We have been – and will continue to be – called to sacrifice what is familiar as we navigate some new territory where our life together is concerned. (I have some ideas about that, which will expand even our small groups and Bible Study ministries into online platforms and practices, even once we’re hosting them in-person.)

And we have been – and will continue to be – called to sacrifice our limited expectations of what God can do through us, in spite of our hardships, and in favor of a bigger, broader vision of what God’s church might look like going forward. (God’s vision has always been bigger and broader than what I can see or predict or plan for.)

So I confess, I’m not sure what all of this could mean, just yet, or exactly how we might be called to different ways of being God’s Church in the world. But we will do it well and faithfully and in service to God’s Kingdom, only when we remember that we do it with gratitude – first and foremost – for the sacrifice made by God, in Jesus Christ, who was destroyed and raised again, for our sake … and when our lives, as individuals and as a community, reflect that kind of selfless generosity, always for the sake of the world.

Amen