Pastor Mark

Soda Bread Scones from Heaven

John 6:56-69

[Jesus said,] “Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me, and I in them. Just as the living Father sent me, and I live because of the Father, so whoever eats me will live because of me. This is the bread that came down from heaven, not like that which your ancestors ate, and they died. But the one who eats this bread will live forever.” He said these things while he was teaching in the synagogue at Capernaum.

When many of his disciples heard it, they said, “This teaching is difficult; who can accept it?” But Jesus, being aware that his disciples were complaining about it, said to them, “Does this offend you? Then what if you were to see the Son of Man ascending to where he was before? It is the spirit that gives life; the flesh is useless. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life. But among you there are some who do not believe.” For Jesus knew from the first who were the ones that did not believe, and who was the one that would betray him. And he said, “For this reason I have told you that no one can come to me unless it is granted by the Father.”

Because of this, many of his disciples turned back and no longer went about with him. So Jesus asked the twelve, “Do you also wish to go away?” Simon Peter answered him, “Lord, to whom can we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and know that you are the Holy One of God.”


So, this is our last Sunday in the very well-worn series of Gospel readings about bread. I lamented enough about that last week, so I won’t go down that road again. Suffice it to say it’s been 6 weeks of Jesus talking about himself as the Bread of Life, the Bread from Heaven, Bread for the sake of the world, and whatnot. And I’m kind of over it. I was out of gas and out of ideas and on the verge of a nothing-burger of a sermon for this morning when I heard a story about scones – scones! – that felt like bread from heaven in its own way; manna in the wilderness for this preacher, if you will.

And I say “bread from heaven” not just because I needed a sermon and this one landed in my lap – or rather, I heard it on the radio – when I thought I was out of luck. This felt like “manna in the wilderness” because I’m feeling as tired and as sad and as scared and as angry and as out of sorts and as exhausted and all the rest by all the things these days. I don’t mean to dodge the despair in Afghanistan. I’m not pretending away the suffering in Haiti. I can’t avoid the continued concern over COVID in our country. But I just wanted to be fed and to feed you all with some good news and nourishment for the journey of whatever lies ahead for us in the coming days. And it’s a story about some soda bread scones.

But, before the scones, a thing about a guy and a website, a couple of books and a heck of a social media presence. His name is Brandon Stanton and his photography project called “Humans of New York” started back in 2010. He had a pretty simple but ambitious idea to photograph 10,000 random, everyday New Yorkers, going about their daily lives, and compiling an exhaustive photographic catalogue of the inhabitants of one of the largest, greatest, most diverse cities on the planet.

Along the way, his photography shoots turned into conversations – from which stories and quotations would become blog posts, which grew in popularity enough to glean millions of followers on social media, of which my wife has been one for quite some time. Brandon Stanton has since turned it all into a couple of books, too, and branched out to include the same from other cities around the world.

Now, back to the bread – the soda bread scones, to be more specific.

Mary O’Halloran and her husband own an Irish pub in the East Village of New York City that, impacted by the economic mess of a worldwide pandemic, had to shut down in March of 2020. With her husband working as a longshoreman up near Alaska for nine months, Mary was home with six kids to home-school and a bar she couldn’t keep afloat. She moved her kids into the bar and started catering meals to relief workers, which kept her busy and made some money, but not enough to pay the bills.

So a friend – from the band that played in the bar on Thursdays – helped her set up an online store so she could sell these soda bread scones smothered in blackberry jam, which was a simple recipe of her mother’s from back in Ireland. And it was something. Not enough to pay all the bills, or catch up with the rent, but enough to get the attention of a local news outlet who did a story on Mary, the kids, the bar, and all she was doing to survive. And people started ordering her scones.

Which is when Brandon Stanton showed up – the Humans of New York photographer, blogger, social media star. When he heard about Mary and her scones he posted the following to his Facebook page, which I invite you to hear with a healthy dose of snark, sarcasm, and sense of humor:

“I know there’s a volcano of big scone hype that’s about to erupt, so here’s our plan.

Mary normally charges $18 for an order of scones, but as she explained there’s barely any money in it for her.

I do know that there’s a lot of bargain hunting scone fanatics out there.

But I also know that many of you are ‘scone curious,’ and would love to support Mary.

If you fall in the second category, I’ve put together a special offer for you.

For $30 you can get an order of scones, and a limited-edition drawing from Mary’s daughter Erinn. (Depending on the amount of orders, the drawing might not be highly intricate. A lassie’s gotta do her homework.)

Each box will also include an invisible Irish blessing that will be passed down through the generations to all of your descendants until the end of the time. …

Mary started crying when I suggested raising prices, because she says other people are hurting more than her.

So if you are also in a tough spot, but want to try the scones, do not worry.

The $18 non-magical scones are still available through her website.

If you are in the city go visit Mary O’s at 32 Avenue A.

Every Thursday night is Irish Music night.

May the road rise to meet you.”

Twenty-four hours later, Mary had $1,000,000 in soda bread scone orders – something like 25,000 orders for 150,000 scones. She also had no small amount of worry about how, if, and when she would be able to fill those orders all by herself, with only the pub’s kitchen and her staff of six kids and regular patrons from the bar who often stepped up to help. Which is where I found the Gospel in all of this. Because when Mary heard the news about all of those orders, she asked Brandon Stanton, “I can do this, right?” And he promised her she could.

“Because,” he wrote to his followers, “every one of those orders came from people who want the best for her. And I felt confident that we’d all be patient while she figured out a new process for making scones.

Mary has a great team around her. She refers to them as ‘The Regulars’ as if they’re a squad of superheroes, but they’re actually longtime customers who transform into volunteers at a moment’s notice.

Clint was serving food last night. Steve and Shelly were bartending. Liz and Deb were watching the kids.

Alexia … dropped everything to manage Mary’s online ordering.

Caitlin, Rogan, TJ, Sara, Mimi, Bob. The list goes on and on…

With this support group, and her own business experience, Mary has all she needs to deliver 25,000 boxes of delicious, blackberry-jam-smothered, blessing-infused scones. It’s just going to take some planning.

And some time.

Our goal was always to help with Mary’s burdens, not add to them.

She will deliver the scones as fast as she can. And things may fall into place rather quickly.

But if you absolutely need your scones in the coming days, or even weeks, feel free to request a refund.

For everyone else, your scones will drop from the sky like a pleasant Irish rain. (Or like manna from heaven, perhaps.)

And when the box is opened, your descendants will be blessed for a minimum of ninety generations. Thanks to all of you, and may the road rise to meet you.”

Our world – and more of God’s children than not, it seems – are hurting and broken and scared and lost and exhausted and all the rest right now. We are hungry for some measure of hope, some sense of peace, some evidence that there is an end in sight to whatever is scaring or threatening us most right now.

And Jesus showed up to be the promise for us that grace and mercy and peace are worth it, that we can do this, that God’s love wins in the end. That the ones who eat the bread we get in Jesus will live forever, in spite of it all.

And this teaching is difficult. This good news is hard to believe when you see the scope of the suffering that surrounds us these days. Who can accept it? Some don’t. Many cannot. How could you, why would you, why should you, considering…?

I hope it’s because, as believers, we see ourselves and each other as “The Regulars” in Mary’s bar – the children of God and followers of Jesus – who can do no other. “Lord to whom can we go? Where else is there?”

We are called to do justice and love kindness and walk humbly, you and I; called to make, break, be, and share the Bread of Life that comes in Jesus Christ because there is no better way, not greater blessing, no deeper hope, for the sake of the world: for the Humans of New York … Afghanistan … Haiti … and the ones around the corner, too.

Amen


I gleaned the information and inspiration for this sermon from this bit on NPR’s/WFYI’s Weekend Edition and from the following piece in TheIrishPost.com.

You can order your own box of scones and/or support Mary and her family by visiting Mary O’s Irish Soda Bread Shop if you’re so inclined.

Waiting For a Sign

John 6:24-35

So when the crowds saw that neither Jesus nor the disciples were there, they themselves got into the boats and went to Capernaum, looking for Jesus. When they found him on the other side of the lake, they said to him, “Rabbi, when did you come here?” Jesus answered them, “Very truly I tell you, you did not come looking for me because you saw the signs, but because you had your fill of the loaves. Do not work for the bread that perishes, but work for the bread that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give to you. For it is upon him whom God, the Father, has set his seal.”

They said to him, “What must we do to perform the works of God?” He said to them, “This is the work of God: that you believe in him whom he has sent.” They said to him, “Then what sign will you give us so that we might see and believe? What works are you performing? Our ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness, for it is written, ‘he gave them bread from Heaven to eat.’”

Jesus said to them, “It was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven to eat, but my Father who gives the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God comes down from Heaven and gives life to the world.” They said to him, “Sir, give us this bread always.” Jesus said to them, “I am the Bread of Life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry. Whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.”


More than once this week, due to some confusion or miscommunication about who was supposed to be where, when – we had a couple of campers who didn’t get picked up on time after our Camp at Church events. Most kids don’t like to be the last one in the building, of course, killing time with the grown-ups, twiddling their thumbs, waiting, wondering, worrying about where mom and dad might be… what’s taking them so long… how much longer they’ll have to wait, and so on. And the longer the wait, the greater their anxiety and worry grow.

While I was making phone calls and sending texts and starting to wonder and worry a bit, myself in each case, I just kept assuring the kids that someone was coming, that everything was fine, that Mom and Dad were probably just stuck in traffic, or had the time wrong, or got trapped at work. “TRUST ME,” I said. Everything is fine. Someone will be here, soon. (And I prayed to Jesus I was telling the truth.)

Because other than those words and my high hopes, I had nothing else to offer these kids. No proof to show. No evidence to offer. No sign to give that they should, in fact, trust me. And it made me think about the crowds who were following Jesus around – still and again – in this morning’s Gospel, looking for a sign of their own.

See, these crowds following Jesus – listening to him preach and teach and heal, wondering about what he was up to – they wanted to know why they should believe in him; why they should follow him anywhere. And they remembered that event back in the Old Testament, their ancestors were wandering around in the wilderness, hungry and thirsty and lost and not so sure they should be following and believing the leader they had in Moses. So the people around Jesus were saying, “Back in the day, there were signs. There was proof.  There was evidence that Moses was God’s mouthpiece; that God was God, after all.”

“As it is written, ‘Moses gave them bread from heaven to eat,’” they were saying to Jesus.

In other words, “They got a sign. We should get a sign.” “They got bread. We should get bread.” “They got manna in the wilderness. We should get us some manna.”

“How can I know, for sure, that Mommy or Daddy are coming to get me? What sign can you give me?” (Whether it was 15 minutes or 45, the waiting seemed interminable for those kiddos)

And I can’t tell you the number of times people have told me how much they have longed for a sign – how much they have needed a sign – in order to know where God was calling them, for sure; how God was part of their life, for sure; what in the world God was up to or might be trying to teach them.

Should I take that job or quit this one? If God would just give me a sign so I’d know for sure.

Should I get into this relationship or get out of that one? If only God would give me a sign then I’d know for sure.

Should I choose this college or that one? If only God would give me a sign so I’d know for sure.

Where is the sign that I can endure this struggle? Where is the sign that the cancer won’t win? Where is the sign that I can stop worrying? Where is the proof that any of this is worth it? Where is the sign – the thing – I can see and touch and feel – the cold, hard, something I can grasp – to let me know for sure?

And I do it myself, with stuff around here, too. I’d like a sign that this pandemic will be over soon and clearer guidance about how to move forward in the face of it. And where is the sign about how we should proceed with staffing for a band leader or for someone to tend to the youth? And some signs about what to do after we pay off our mortgage would be nice, too. Where is the sign that we’re following the right lead; doing the right thing; investing in the right ministry and programs and people and places?

Don’t we all still feel like a kid, after camp, some days, waiting for proof that someone’s there or on the way to save us?

The thing is, none of us know much of anything for sure these days, do we? We want a sign… some proof… some evidence… whatever. But that’s not really what we need.

So, what Jesus reminded his friends and followers – and all those who were looking for a sign in this Gospel story – was that “the sign” – the manna in the wilderness wasn’t the point for those early ancestors. It could have been bread or water. It could have been pizza or Pepsi. What “the sign” was didn’t matter nearly as much as the source of it all in the first place: God’s love and devotion, God’s commitment to and presence with God’s people.

See, back in the day, people missed the sign – the very presence of God – standing before them in Jesus, himself. “I am the true bread from heaven,” he assured them, broken and poured out, in the flesh, for the sake of the world. What they really missed through it all – and what we miss or forget too much of the time – is that we have all the sign we need right here in front of us.

We gather for worship because, here, we stand in the presence of our baptism’s water. And we will eat bread and we will drink wine, too – all more than just signs, of what matters most, but the very real presence of what matters most – for this life and the next. This water, this bread, this wine – are reminders for us that we have all we need, already, because of God’s very real and present love for us.

Nothing that I could share with the kids who were waiting for their parents after camp mattered until their parents actually walked in the door – not that I’d gotten a text or left a message or even news that Mom was on the way. What really mattered was when they saw Mom pull into the parking lot or walk into my office with a smile on her face.

When the sickness comes; if the cancer wins; when the fear is so great; as the doubts pile up; when the uncertainties overwhelm us; when there are more questions than answers; when the grief is too heavy; when the loneliness is too real; when the end is near, even; we are called back to the water and we are invited back to the table to be received and filled up by the very real presence of God’s love for us in Jesus.

And we are blessed, in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. We are fed with the Bread of Life, who endures all things, hopes all things, believes all things, bears all things. We receive and share the very love, promise, and hope of God – with each other, for the sake of the world – promises like the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and life everlasting, just to name a few.

Amen