Tag Archives: gospels

Jesus built tables?

Tonight, as we gathered around a big table, sharing pizza and conversation at our regular pub night, I wondered again how many tables Jesus built in his life. Now I know, it’s never stated explicitly in the Gospel stories that Jesus was a carpenter. We assume so because most kids followed in the footsteps of their parents when choosing a line of work. If Joseph was a carpenter, Jesus at least had some experience and skills by helping his father for a good chunk of his life.

However, even if we talk in a more metaphorical and not literal sense, we recognize that Jesus was all about tables.

Eating with sinners. Engaging in dialogue in public and private places. Celebrating the holy feasts of his tradition.

Tables were a tool for his ministry, a way to share his message, a place to connect with others and extend God’s word of love and redemption.

To be more blunt about it, borrowing the words of a genius Latino pastor who spoke at a General Assembly a few years back (as told by my friend and regional minister of the Rocky Mountain region, Jose Morales), “Our Lord didn’t build walls – our Lord built tables.”

Our little community, the Table, is all about this idea. When we gather around God’s table, we recognize Christ’s presence with us and the boundaries between us becoming a little thinner. Sure, they may remain for quite a long time – boundaries of class, race, culture, finances, and education. But it is something mysterious and beautiful when, as we share the bread and the cup, we are drawn closer together by God’s doing, not by our own. It’s healing – it’s reminding us that, even though we are different, we are one. In that moment, we know that there is a little less brokenness and fragmentation in the world.

The world needs a little more unity right now.

May we all have the courage to follow after Christ, tearing down walls and building tables, casting out fear and living into wholeness, one meal at a time.


Revolutionary Jesus

Here is something I’ve sort of learned about life – the stereotypes that we think and believe in often tell more about us than the people or things we might be describing.

And it can be absolutely infuriating when that person that we stereotype as a Democrat, Republican, snob, hippy, liberal, conservative, or whatever turns out to be just another human being, especially someone that is more like us than we ever dreamed.

Try as we might, Jesus doesn’t fit stereotypes. I have read and heard some attempts by Christian authors to turn Jesus’ ministry and leadership style into the spitting image of a modern, fiscally conservative CEO. I’ve been in groups of young people who feel that Jesus’ message was calling them to forsake the world and go off and live with the poor. People use the words of Jesus to bless their hardline immigration stances or their hardline anti-war stances. In other words, we all tend to see the Jesus we want to see.

It’s much harder to take the gospels and the words of Jesus for what they are – really, really tough. This Sunday, we’ll explore his identity as a leader, one who called people to follow him and sent them out to spread the word that the kingdom of God was near. He had the uncanny ability to get someone to change their life and career from a brief encounter. He also had the guts to send those same disciples, often clueless, out into neighboring villages without an extra change of clothes or hard itinerary. “Stay with those who open their doors to you,” he said. “Be ready, because people might toss you in jail and beat you for what you will proclaim.”

Ouch – not even a 401k for their efforts or a congratulatory parade on the way back?

In my opinion, our challenge is to do our best to take off our own blinders, whether we live in comfortable situations or feel the urge to change the world, and try to see Jesus in all of his complexities. Let his words hang in the air, weigh on us, and challenge us. Chances are we may discover a Jesus who is revolutionary to a lot of our preconceived ideas and biases – a Jesus who each and everyday asks us to follow him out of the comfort and into the challenge of proclaiming a new world breaking in, to move from our preconceived stereotypes and encounter the beautiful world around us with the spirit of a child.

This is why Jesus was so revolutionary – he could take a bunch of ordinary men and women who followed him and envision a new world, a new way of life, emerging from that particular place in human history. May Christ use us like that… today.


Jesus as Mystic; Jesus as Guru

Jesus as Mystic and Guru

Who was Jesus anyway?

It’s a question Christians ask, intentionally or unintentionally, every time we open up the Bible and look at the texts that we call our scriptures. There are a wide variety of stories about Jesus in the Gospels, and they are our primary place to wonder and seek insight. Different theologians, such as Marcus Borg, have attempted to apply a kind of historical criticism, asking about the context and possible authors… or even how the gospels were compiled together. Others look at the gospels through specific lens, for instance, exploring the roles of women, the place of the poor and people on the fringe, or even Jesus in relation to the Roman empire. Still a bunch of Christians look at it spiritually, inviting God to speak through the text as they pray and ponder a particular passage many times in one sitting. All of these methods, each with its strength and weakness, are an attempt to answer the who and what questions about the one we call Savior – who was he, and what was he about?

Marcus Borg, who wrote the great book, Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time, has attempted to answer this question by listing a few sort of broad roles that would have been familiar to the contemporaries and culture of Jesus’ day. One of those is the role of a mystic. A mystic is quickly defined as a spirit person, someone who experiences deep oneness with God or the divine. Wherever Jesus went, he was open and in tune with the moving spirit of God. He saw possibilities where others saw reality. He seemed to hear God speaking to him and directing his actions.

The image above is a depiction of Jesus as a guru from the Hindu faith, a physical embodiment of the divine. While the Hindus respect Jesus, they don’t put him in the same place as the church does, as the sole Son of God. Still, I like the image because it reminds us of Jesus’ Otherness. One who is deeply connected to God does not usually play by the same rules that the rest of us do. I don’t mean like laws of nature, though Jesus certainly did some crazy physics-bending actions (like walking on water, etc.). Think of how Jesus is repeatedly going off to pray, alone and in silence, or how he senses when his spiritual energy leaves him by a touch from a stranger. Sometimes, Jesus does more by saying nothing at all, like when he scribbles on the ground while a crowd waits for the go ahead to stone and adulterer. Or when he leads his disciples into the mountains to a “thin place” where life beyond and this world seem to merge.

Jesus’ mystical quality put him in touch with a different rhythm and set of values than the world around him. This could be infuriating, but it’s also immensely attractive. Why else do so many people go camping or hiking each year but to get away from our normal rhythms of our lives? Why do we seek out spiritual retreats but to retune ourselves into the presence of God at the center of all things? And if Jesus had not had this deep sense of oneness with God, would his ministry have been possible?

Jesus famously said in Matthew 12:50 – “Whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother.”

How else do we hear someone’s will but by listening, paying attention, and communing with them? How then will you use this Lent as a time to restoke that deep sense of attentiveness to God’s call within you? Is Jesus calling each of us to be a mystic of our own?

We’ll be discussing these questions and more this Sunday at the Table as we explore further Jesus as a mystic.


The Urgency of the Season

As I was studying the birth of Christ today, it occurred to me how much we do dress up what little of the story there is.

The Gospel of John and Mark have no birth story at all.

The Gospel of Matthew simply says that Jesus was born in Bethlehem – no mention of a manger.

And Luke’s account (Luke 2:1-7) is fairly to the point as well:

In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus that all the world should be registered. This was the first registration and was taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. All went to their own towns to be registered. Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to the city of David called Bethlehem, because he was descended from the house and family of David. He went to be registered with Mary, to whom he was engaged and who was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for her to deliver her child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn.

Another translation I have suggests “guestroom” in place of “inn” in that last sentence.

We are sort of left to have to read between the lines to fill in a picture of what it was like that day in Bethlehem. The census required that families return to their ancestral home to be accurately counted. This would be the same if I, for whatever reason, had to take my family back to Anadarko, OK. My hometown is small, and most young people leave it to find jobs in cities or other parts of the country. If we all came back at the same time, the hotels, motels, and guestrooms would be packed. The city would have a festive, exciting vibe to it – joyous reunions, gossip, political conversation, lots of food, and family drama.

In to this picture come Mary and Joseph, both likely dreading what will be said when news gets out that Mary is pregnant – and who knows who the father is? You can imagine the furtive glances, the suspicion, the way Mary was given the cold shoulder, and so on. Maybe there was room in the family home, but Mary and Joseph were pushed out into the garage, dirty, uncomfortable, and away from the respectable members of the family.

And there Christ enters into the world.

When I put it together this way, the birth of Christ becomes a little less removed and becomes more like some of the things I have experienced. Life, even for Joseph and Mary, was not serene. Choirs of angels did trumpet the coming of the Christ child, but they did not sing softly in the background or bring feathery pillows for the Holy Family to rest upon. Their lives were just as hurried, tense, and often overwhelming as my own. They probably wondered why it had to be like this but then welcomed the new blessing they cradled in their arms.

This is what it means that Christ is Emmanuel, God With Us – God truly came into the life we all know and experience.

Blessings to you as we journey to meet, once again, Emmanuel in our lives.


Love makes the world go round.

We are smack dab in the middle of a sermon series on love, and specifically, the Five Love Languages, a book written by Dr. Gary Chapman. It’s normally used as marriage help/advice, but we are using it as a lens to understand the different ways Jesus communicated love. For someone who might be on the fence about this whole Christianity thing, it’s pretty intriguing stuff.

Dr. Chapman’s observations and definitions about these different ways of communicating love comes from years of practical, counseling experience of different cultures, couples, and situations. And it does make a lot of sense.

For example, one love language is Words of Affirmation. Like when Jesus tells the story about a master saying to one of his servants – “Well done, good and faithful servant!” Or when he tells Peter, “You are the rock upon which I will build my church.”

Another example might be Quality Time, like the scripture we used on Sunday (Luke 19:1-10), where Jesus spends the day with Zaccheus and transformation comes to his house. Wherever Jesus goes, he knows the power of time and spending time with people to communicate love. Some of the people in the Gospels have never been treated in such a respectable, compassionate way before.

The three languages ahead, Receiving Gifts, Acts of Service, and Physical Touch, continue to flesh out these different ways of speaking love effectively.

What’s the point? Jesus was a master orator of love. And he continues to be. As disciples, we are challenged to live like Christ, and that means speaking love, as best we can, in all we do. The world needs more compassionate people who speak love like no other.

Photo credit: alvimann from morguefile.com


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