Monday, June 28, 2010

Sermon Sunday I return

I found a like soul on my trip to the Holy Land and Egypt. This like soul was just like me – nose in a map all the time to keep up with where we were and where we were going. Everyone else just road along happy as a lark to know nothing of orientation – not us.


And when we went into Egypt and didn’t have a map for the first 3 hours – well, I thought we were both going to have a coronary!

I like this map. So, let’s see just where we thought Jesus was. Understand that when you look at this map, Israel is not the size of the USA – it’s not even the size of Texas. It is more the size of New Jersey. Distances are very small.

For instance, the distance from Samaria to Jerusalem was somewhere around 30 miles. Now Jesus wasn’t going to walk it in a day, but it was not going to take long for him to get where he was going.

If you look at this scripture along with the Elisha scripture, you will see that Jesus demands much more. He isn’t about returning evil for evil, but to move on when rejected, a much harder thing to do. He isn’t about time involved in saying goodbye to family – come now! There is no time and no reason to look back.

The first person says, “I’ll follow you wherever you go.” Really? Really? Do you think he was going to follow Jesus to the cross? Was going to follow him to be beaten and hauled away in humiliation.

I have a friend who owns a restaurant and I have seen him do everything, every job. He seats people at their tables. He cooks in the kitchen. He busses tables and washes dishes. He cashiers. He does everything that needs to be done and his employees know that he will. They know that he has done and will do everything that he asks of them.

This is what following Jesus is.

It is the practice in Israel to first bury the dead in a tomb like Jesus was buried in. For the next year there is mourning, then the son is to take the bones of the dead and put them in the family crypt on the Mount of Olives. That way they are ready for the resurrection at the end of days.

So the second one is not saying – OH, my father just died and I need to bury him. No, he is saying he needs to wait, the time isn’t right for him to follow. Jesus tells him that the tradition is just that, a tradition. And then says that the young man should instead go and proclaim the kingdom of God, something of paramount and everlasting importance.

The last person says that he needs to say farewell to those at his home. Now, let me tell you goodbye means parties, everyone coming from all over the countryside, days and days of relatives asking what you are doing, where are you going, when will you be back, who is this you’re going with, do we know his family, what do you need to take with you, ….

Jesus has no time for that – and neither should you.

So what do we do now?

• We pray, pray frequently and long

• We study the scriptures diligently, we discuss them with one another

• We worship regularly with God’s people

• We invite others often to worship, to get to know God

• We pass on the faith to our children

• We serve for the sake of others

• We give freely of time, talents and resources.

Jesus was indeed radical. He asked that his followers do what no one was willing to do – in their right mind – but he asked that they pledge their all. He asked that they give their best, that they put the best over the worst. He asked that they chose him over not only the devil, but their own families. What a blessing for them! When choosing Jesus, you are freed from the possession of and worshiping of families to instead love them, because God first loved you.

Jesus calls us to radical discipleship. He says to look forward – not backward. Don’t rest on what you have done individually or as a church. Don’t compare now to the past, this church now to another or to this church in the past. Make a decision for Christ.

If you are thinking about joining this church or another – do it.

If you are thinking about starting a new service ministry here – do it.

If you are thinking about joining or starting a Bible study – do it.

If you are thinking about helping in the A/V – do it.

If you are thinking about being an assisting minister – do it.

If you are thinking about helping the altar guild – do it.

If you are thinking about helping to pass on the faith to the children – do it.

If you are thinking about becoming a leader here – do it.

If you are thinking about starting a prayer time in your life – for the sake of your soul and all those who will be blessed by your prayers – do it.

My father used to say, “Put your money where your mouth is.” I tell my children, “Don’t tell me you are going to do something, show me.”

Jesus put everything he had out there for us. Jesus came into this world intending to give his life for you, just for you. So that you could have hope and love, so that you would know that God loves, really loves, you. Jesus didn’t turn around and leave at the sight of trouble because he knew you would need his love, his compassion, and his faith. He knew that only through his death would you receive the gift of grace so that your sins would be forgiven.

Our mission statement says Boldly Sharing God’s Word. It’s time for bold.

Lord, may we find the strength deep inside to follow you and proclaim the kingdom of God. Amen

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Alexandria

First day that we didn't travel around in a big bus. Only 3 of us went to Alexandria today and no we didn't travel in one of the 3 wheeler taxis. We had a van to take the 3 1/2 hour trip up north to the Mediterranean Sea. Saw the countryside along the way (and snatched some zzz's). The coast was beautiful. Alexandria is a more liberal city were the scarves on the heads of the women were in wonderful colors, some even shot with silver threads or sequins.
We visited the new library - the old one, the most famous LIbrary in the world was burned down when the Muslims invaded in 646. This is a resurrection of the library, but very modern. Go to www.bibalex.org to see the library. For free you can read many books, view and download pictures and maps from antiquity and from now, and watch videos. It is fascinating.
Alexandria is where the disciple Mark spread the word of Jesus. He preached in the old library until the Romans killed him in an awful way. He was the one to start the Coptic Christian Church.
The  Israelites lived in the region, in Goshen. It has the most fertile land in the world. As I contemplate this area, I can't help but see why they had such a difficult time leaving that to go to the Sinai and then on to Israel. They left so much behind - and yet gained so much, including a close relationship with God.
Home tomorrow. One more pic.
Prayer: Lord watch over travelers all over the world and help us to see with your eyes. AMen

Monday, June 21, 2010

Floating!!!


Here we are as we are sailing down the Nile River. What a great morning. That's Nassir our captain, first mate, and .... He's it! We even saw the bullrushes that Miriam hid in as Moses floated to the princess. Look at these great date palms. The dates are in big bundles hanging under each      spray of leaves.
Then we entered an unbelievable Coptic church called the Hanging Church because it is actually built without a regular foundation. It is balanced on top of a Roman tower that had been broken down. You can even see through a part of the floor to the bottom - several feet down. The next church we went to you couldn't take pictures in. It was the Coptic Church of the Holy Crypt. This was built over the crypt, or room, that the Holy Family fled to when they left Bethlehem. Jeremiah had started a synagogue in the 6th century BC in the area and there were many Jews in the area of the church. It used to be a synagogue, but the church bought the area from them. No pictures, just postcards.
The history here blends with and spurs stories from the Old Testament and the New. I certainly will be looking with new eyes at the scriptures. And Jesus said, "Come and See." I pray that you are getting a tiny bit each day that helps you to expand your vision with Jesus and deepen your faith.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

HOT! HOT! HOT!



We drove 70 miles south to Fayoum. I know it doesn't sound important, but this is where Joseph was probably keeping the grain. As a matter of fact, in the middle of the desert - well, not quite in the middle - there is an irrigation canal off the NIle that is named Joseph's Canal. The belief is that he had it dug so that this area, which was the capital during his time, could grow soooo much, and it still does. Organically. The animals graze on the stubs of the harvested crops and leave their waste that is then fertilizer.


Then we went to the first stone structure in the world, a step pyramid that was built with mud bricks covered with stone. Incredibly, next to it was a tomb of Princess Idot that the paint was still on the wall. Both were from 2600 BC, 4600 years ago! And the temperature, there in the Sahara by the way, was 120 degrees.


We discussed the different scholar's opinions of what the exodus actually looked like, where they crossed the Reed Sea and why.... More later. It's HOT here. We seem to be having a heat wave. Floating down the Nile tomorrow.
Prayer: Lord, thank you for leaders like Abraham and Joseph and Moses who helped us come to you. Amen

Saturday, June 19, 2010

WOW

We started off the day in Giza. That meant a trip to the pyramids. What a strange feeling to look over the buildings of town and see the pyramids right there. How must that have been for Abraham to come to Egypt - they were 600 years old at that time. How amazing that he was able to keep his faith in the unseen God when so obviously the god of Egypt must be massive because the pyramid was built to be the home of the god who had died in his human form, but was very alive in his god form. And yet Abraham stayed faithful. Not only that, he told of his faith and changed some of the thought in Egypt. King Akenaton in 1351 actually changed Egypt by saying that he was a man, not a god and there was only one god and shut down the various temples except the sun god. He was killed for all that and his son became king, King Tut.

Here we are on camels again! Let me tell you, we are in the Sahara here and in the middle of a heat wave! 112 today. We really felt like the next pic at the end. Things here are soooo ancient. Indeed Joseph came during the middle kingdom - will go see Joseph's place another day - and all theories point to the exodus as during Ramses' reign about 1250. His son even wrote about wanting to follow the Isrealites and wipe them out. Ramses died with an emense amount of salt in his limbs and with his arms looking like they still had the reins of a horse in them. Believed drown!

Friday, June 18, 2010

Exodus revisited

We entered Egypt finally, but the first hotel had no Internet so....
We are now in Cairo and the computer here is soooooo slow I can't down load a picture. sorry.
Our trip through the Sinai was unbelievable. I always pictured the Sinai, and there for the exodus led by Moses to be over a flat desert. That's not at all what it is like. It has extremely high mountains in the interior. The coast of the Gulf of Aquba and the Suez Gulf are flat sand to the sea on one side of the road, but the other is high mountains right up to the edge of the road. That exodus was undoubtedly winding through the mountains from water hole to water hole. It would take forever to walk the peninsula or maybe just 40 years.

St. Catherine's monastery was awesome. We were not able to visit inside the chapels, but walked through the monastery where visitors could go and saw the burning bush. Is it real? Only God knows, but the bush dates back centuries and people have tried to grow parts of it elsewhere and it has not been successful.

Our hotel was right there. Last night we (Jan, Mary and I) went outside the hotel to visit a Bedouin tent. We had chai (hot spiced tea) sitting on carpets on the ground. Jan and I were dressed up as dancers by the Bedouins - much to everyone's amusement!

I looked out my window in the morning to see the sun come up over Mt. Sinai. Right there where Moses met his wife, where Moses talked with God at the burning bush, where Moses went up the ;mountain to bring back the 10 commandments, where he came down to find the golden calf. WOW!

On to Cairo today. We arrived in time for dinner and will go to the pyramids tomorrow.

Pray with me: Lord give us the strength to see the other as your child. Amen

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Last Day in Israel

We started the day at the Garden Tomb. Though this is not where Jesus was buried, it gives a good representation of the tomb. We celebrated communion with the Presbyterian group from South Carolina that we have been traveling with. Rev. Sloan and I shared in the consecration of the elements and then served the group. Wonderful sharing.
We then traveled to the believed site of the birth of St. John the Baptist. Beautiful church built by the Spanish Franciscans. The interior is covered with blue and white tiles. Is this the site of his birth? If not here then somewhere close. This church was built in the 1200's on top of the church built in the 500's.

Later this evening Jan, Mary Lou, and I went into old town Jerusalem by ourselves and found our way to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher by ourselves  and then found that the Lutheran Church of the Redeemer was right across the street! What a find. It was really exciting meandering through the narrow streets to Golgotha on our own. The bazaar that we found was undoubtedly the same in the time of Jesus. People from all over selling their wares. The smells - coriander, cinnamon, rosemary, and ginger - along with the sounds of music and bartering, everyone coming to shop for their daily needs. Can you imagine Jesus walking along these narrow streets talking and eating leading a crowd down the streets. What a commotion it must have caused as his many followers filled the streets, talked with the merchants and their customers, as people were healed on the streets and watched as this man whose reputation had preceded him walked among them. And then he came in on a donkey through the Eastern Gate, Solomon's Portico and rode onto the Temple |Mount.
Now we are off to Egypt in the morning. 5:30 wake up call.
Pray with me: Lord help us to see with your eyes that we might never see an us and them, that we might always be a blessing to those we meet. AMEN

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

By the Sea

We drove through the Judean Wilderness (desert) til we got to Masada.

To get to Masada we had to ride the cable car up! It is at the top of a mountain. Herod built a huge palace and fortress up there that would hold 1000 people. The sad part is the story of the Jewish Zealots - call them terrorists of long ago. They wanted the Romans out of Israel so these men would attack soldiers... and kill them. This started the Jewish War of 66 AD culminating with the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. The leaders ran off to Masada with their families hoping no one would find them, but the Romans did.
They stayed up there quite a while, until the storehouse was empty and the Romans had breached the wall. Faced with sure slavery the next day when the Romans would advance in, the leaders decided that death was better than slavery and killed first their children, then their wives then each other with the last falling on his sword. The Romans came in to find all dead.
View from Masada



Then we were off to the Dead Sea, which you see above from Masada. Here we floated on our backs in the water and then put the black mud on ourselves. What soft skin we got!
Psalm 23 The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside still waters. He restoreth my soul. He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for my name's sake. Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me. Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies. Thou annointest my head with oil. My cup runneth over. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.
On the way home we stopped to see some Bedouins - but also to see the Valley of the Shadow of Death. Unbelievable. This is the valley people walked between Jericho and Jerusalem.

Monday, June 14, 2010

via de la rosa

We started today on Temple Mount. Temple Mount is the size of 12 soccer fields. That is where the temple was before the Romans destroyed it in 70 a.d. but now there is the Dome of the Rock over the threshing floor that David speaks of. That was the foundation of the Temble. The mosque is beautiful from the outside and closed to visitors since 9/11.



We then went to St. Anne's. I do believe I loved this church. It survived all the destruction over the centuries because the accoustics in it are superb. We sang and sang. From there we began our treck along the via de la rosa or stations of the cross which meanders through the narrow streets of Jerusalem. When I say narrow - I mean 3 or 4 people across! Shops and vendors all along the way. We finished at the Church of the Holy Sepelchur which is on Golgatha. There in one church is the rock Jesus was crucified on, the rock he was laid on to wrap, and the tomb he was buried in. On a 1-10 bet of whether this was true, the bet is 10. Amazing to be there, though the church was very different. It is a Greek Orthodox |Church, dark, icons, incense....
We went from there to Jericho - the oldest city in the world for some GREAT fruit and breads. Well, we also saw bedouins along the road, the Judean wilderness where Jesus went after his baptism. Hard to get a picture to really display that. The bedouins had sheep, goats, and camels. We went from there to Qumran. What a desolate place! The Essenes must have really needed to get away from everyone. We were exhausted and HOT!

Prayer: Holy One, we give you thanks for sending your only Son that we might be saved and in your presence. Help us to spread your word. Amen

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Wailing Wall



There I am! On a camel!! That's my friend Jan behind me. What fun! We are on the top of the Mount of Olives. From here we can look across the Valley of Judgement to see the house of the Last Supper, Caiphus' house, and the rest of Jerusalem. It was a big WOW!







Right next door is the Garden of Gethsemane (Gethsemane means olive press). In the church located there called the Church of All Nations or Church of Agony is the rock that Jesus prayed on. The tree you see here is at least 2000 years old. All the trees in the garden are ancient except the one planted in the 1990's by the pope.

This is the Wailing Wall or the West Wall. After all the destruction from various wars, this is the only one still standing. It is unbelievable. The bottom blocks are 300 tons! It is built with one block on top of another - no mortar. The small blocks are 2.5 tons!
It is a sacred wall because directly on the other side of the wall is where the Holy of Holies was. Praying at the wall is as close as you can get to being with God.


I cannot tell you how this day has affected me. To put my hand on the rock Jesus prayed and sweated and bled on as he waited for Judas and the soldiers to come and arrest him, then to put my hand on the West Wall and hold all of you in prayer, my family, my friends, my church and myself. I was drained and at the same time encouraged.
Let us pray - God, creator and almighty, merciful, compassionate Lord, I give you thanks for sending your Son, for walking with me, for always being there. Amen

Saturday, June 12, 2010

O Little Town of Bethlehem


Today was the day for nativity. We went to The House of the Outrageous Caiaphas first, though. The archaeologists are certain that the villa uncovered was his house, found the room he was beaten in while the trial was going on, and found the pit 3 stories down that he was lowered into for the night a pit dug out of the stone that was probably 6 foot across. From there the next morning he was taken to Pilot.


"So Joseph also went up from the town of Nazareth in |Galilee to Judea, to Bethlehem the town of David, because he belonged to the house and line of David....While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born, and she gave birth to her firstborn, a son. She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn." Luke 2: 4-7
From there we went to the Church of the Nativity, yes to the very cave where Mary birthed Jesus. Yes the star is the birthing place. Three churches, the Armenian, the Greek Orthodox, and the Catholic church all take turns 'owning' the birthplace by procession into the cave and literally homesteading for a day. Incredible. So all three have churches on site and little doors leading to the birthplace that they do their procession from. The church of the Nativity is in Bethlehem - across the Wall into the Palestinian occupied territory. That is a discussion we must have sometime.

And low and behold the coffee shop across the street!!!








A prayer: Lord help our hearts to see with eyes only you truly have. Amen

Friday, June 11, 2010

Away from Galilee

We left the beautiful Sea of Galilee and headed east for Cana to see the church which is on top of the original house where Jesus's first miracle of changing water into wine occurred. We have many couples in our group and they renewed their wedding vows today - complete with a certificate from the church!
Next we were off to Megiddo. This is an ancient city. There are 25 cities one built right on top of the other. The last was vacated in the 4th century BCE. You will have heard of Armageddon - that is the final war, a war between good and evil, between all the kings, all the nations found in Rev. 16:16 "Then they gathered the kings together to the place that in Hebrew is called Armageddon." An interesting city on a hill that is at the crossroads of all travel in the middle east.
From there we went to Nazareth, the city where Jesus grew up. There we found the most beautiful Greek Orthodox church with the spring that was the purpose for the town. Nazareth's root word in Hebrew is grandfather - as in the grand fathers of Jesus, those of the past. Wow!


Then we visited the Basilica of St. Mary where countries from around the world have sent their depiction of Mary. Took a picture of the one from the US.Sorry the picture is on its side. Can't fix it on this computer.
Finally, we were on our way to Jerusalem. Staying until the 17th here. Beautiful hotel. OH!! Saw muskrats in the Jordan River yesterday as people affirmed their baptism. Soooo cute.

Blessings. On to Bethlehem tomorrow.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

What a day!!!

John 21:1-16
After these things Jesus showed himself again to the disciples by the Sea of Tiberias; and he showed himself in this way. 2Gathered there together were Simon Peter, Thomas called the Twin, Nathanael of Cana in Galilee, the sons of Zebedee, and two others of his disciples. 3Simon Peter said to them, “I am going fishing.” They said to him, “We will go with you.” They went out and got into the boat, but that night they caught nothing. 4Just after daybreak, Jesus stood on the beach; but the disciples did not know that it was Jesus. 5Jesus said to them, “Children, you have no fish, have you?” They answered him, “No.” 6He said to them, “Cast the net to the right side of the boat, and you will find some.” So they cast it, and now they were not able to haul it in because there were so many fish. 7That disciple whom Jesus loved said to Peter, “It is the Lord!” When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord, he put on some clothes, for he was naked, and jumped into the sea. 8But the other disciples came in the boat, dragging the net full of fish, for they were not far from the land, only about a hundred yards off. 9When they had gone ashore, they saw a charcoal fire there, with fish on it, and bread. 10Jesus said to them, “Bring some of the fish that you have just caught.” 11So Simon Peter went aboard and hauled the net ashore, full of large fish, a hundred fifty-three of them; and though there were so many, the net was not torn. 12Jesus said to them, “Come and have breakfast.” Now none of the disciples dared to ask him, “Who are you?” because they knew it was the Lord. 13Jesus came and took the bread and gave it to them, and did the same with the fish. 14This was now the third time that Jesus appeared to the disciples after he was raised from the dead.



15When they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon son of John, do you love me more than these?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Feed my lambs.” 16A second time he said to him, “Simon son of John, do you love me?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Tend my sheep.” 17He said to him the third time, “Simon son of John, do you love me?” Peter felt hurt because he said to him the third time, “Do you love me?” And he said to him, “Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Feed my sheep.

Today we sailed on the Sea of Gallilee (Tiberias) actually out of Tiberias. What an amazing feeling - to be on the same sea that Jesus walked on, calmed the storm, healed the demoniac, fed the 5000... and said these words to Peter. He ordained his first priest right there as he fed the disciples fish and bread. Amazing and overwhelming. So many times Jesus had said to the crowd and to his disciples, "Come and see." Here in the last chapter of John he is saying , "Go and do." Jesus says tend my sheep - find those who are mine and baptize them, gather them in. Then he says feed my sheep - teach them my Word so that they hear my voice, feed the hungry, heal the sick. I pray that we never just come and see with the same old eyes,, but that we come and see with new eyes each time so that we are more prepared to go and do.

Let us pray. Lord God give us the strength to answer your call to come and see, allowing the changes to come to our hearts so that we can do nothing less than go and do. Amen

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Sermon Sunday before I leave

Luke 7:11-17 Soon afterwards he went to a town called Nain, and his disciples and a large crowd went with him. 12As he approached the gate of the town, a man who had died was being carried out. He was his mother’s only son, and she was a widow; and with her was a large crowd from the town. 13When the Lord saw her, he had compassion for her and said to her, “Do not weep.” 14Then he came forward and touched the bier, and the bearers stood still. And he said, “Young man, I say to you, rise!” 15The dead man sat up and began to speak, and Jesus gave him to his mother. 16Fear seized all of them; and they glorified God, saying, “A great prophet has risen among us!” and “God has looked favorably on his people!” 17This word about him spread throughout Judea and all the surrounding country.

I leave for Israel on Tuesday!! I am so excited. So, why am I going, what is so important about those old places, stones, and buildings?


Let’s look at this gospel and the map I have given you first because this leads to the why of my travels.


You can find the city of Nain on the map I have given you all. This is a fairly inconsequential city, but like so many there was a wall around it and the dead were buried outside the city walls. Jesus wasn’t walking into the city of his birth or the city he grew up in or the grand city of Jerusalem - You might say that Jesus was walking into just a small town, Israel.


What does he see – well, what does he know as only God can, as soon as he sees this procession of people? He sees a dead man carried on a litter – but the focus is the woman, the man’s mom, the widow.


Underline those words of the scripture. She was a widow. A widow has lost her source of security, her husband. Maybe this is something she wasn’t so thankful for in the first place, this man who demanded so much of her and only gave her one son anyway. Did she give thanks to God for her husband while he lived?


When he was gone – that was a different matter. If not missing the man, she surely missed her place in the community, her security, her regular life.


The only security she had then was her son. Did she give thanks to God for him every day? When he died, this woman knew the life that was coming. A life of certain poverty, loneliness, bitterness. The one who was supposed to take care of her was gone. She had no position in the community and would become at best a beggar, reliant on the alms given at the big temple in Jerusalem and trickled to the small town of Nain.


Jesus saw her pain and not only had compassion, but acted on that compassion – doing what only God could do. Does he ask what sins were committed? Does it say this was a righteous man or righteous woman? Does he say go and sin no more? Do we?


Jesus has said to his disciples and the crowd over and over, come and see. They are following him to a small town that isn’t even on my list of towns to see as I tour Israel. He is once more showing people how to see – how to see each other as more than labels, how to see where their hands can help, how to see community needs.


I have heard that come and see many times in my life. When I was in 6th-9th grade I lived in Turkey, on an Air Force base called Cigli Air Force Base outside of Izmir, Turkey. We lived in base housing which was 3 miles from the base itself. Surrounding the housing was an 8 foot cyclone fence with 3 strands of barbed wire slanted out on top, and behind that fence was a grassy hill.


That hill brought all kinds of scenery into view. One day you would see a shepherd, usually a small boy of about 10, with 10 – 12 sheep grazing, then it might be a girl or boy with some very active goats playing and eating in the sun, then maybe a man with 6 or 8 slow moving water buffalo. Sometimes just a farmer or two would walk across.


When I had been there almost our total 3 years I felt the call to come and see. I convinced my best friend Beth to come with me – you know go 2 by 2. Reluctantly, she said yes and we climbed the fence. It really was only designed to keep others out, not us in, I believed.


I told Beth we would just walk over the hill and then circle around and enter through the gate to the housing area. We had our IDs and that’s all we needed. Well, we didn’t ask our parents to be sure, but we ‘knew.’


So we walked over the hill and saw that we were in a farm field. The farmer was growing cotton, so we walked down the field to the road beyond, just a dirt road and started off to the right so we could circle back. On the way the farmer’s wife came out of her hut and greeted us. She said ‘merhaba’ and we did, too. Then she gestured for us to come in. Well, Beth and I had quite a little discussion, she didn’t want to go in, but we went in. The hut was made of mud bricks with a roof of thatch. The floor was dirt, well swept dirt. On it were piles of pillows made of thick tapestry. We sat and she backed out of the room saying ‘chi’ which we knew was tea. You don’t do anything in Turkey without ‘chi.’


She brought in the best tasting spiced chi, piping hot in little demitasse cups. Half the cup was raw sugar. Such a delicacy she was sharing with us! We nodded and drank and tried to communicate for a bit.


As we rose to leave, she showed me some lace that she had made. Beautiful lace and insisted that I take it. I told her “no lira”, (like normal kids we were not prepared for anything really) but she insisted I take it anyway. We said our goodbyes and Beth and I walked on around to the guard shack and our lives inside the fence.

What a lesson for the world in how to treat strangers. Invite them in, sit down for tea or coffee, talk, listen, give a gift as they leave.


Fences are one of our boundaries. Paul Tillich, a contemporary theologian, described the boundaries between people as the frontier, a frontier very like the zone between the fronts of various armies. This is an expanse of land that must be crossed at real or imagined danger, requires a desire to cross the expanse, and then a willingness to listen to the other – the stranger on the other side.


I thought I knew poor because I had seen what I thought was poor in Turkey and in living in the deep south here. Then I heard the come and see of Mexico’s colonias. Sure people were sleeping on the dirt floors, living in cardboard houses, cooking outside in a hole in the ground, no electricity, running water, or sewage. But they also had left their village they had grown up in and now were without community. The people around them had a long time to grow into a real community. Family connections were gone, long time friends were gone and any semblance of safety or security was gone. I listened a lot and change happened inside.


The frontier is a tottering fence. It is one we can see through, but aren’t always ready to climb over, for that could mean change, but the frontiers of the world are changing far too fast with instant communication and the effects of globalization. To actually dialogue with the other would mean an opening of our eyes to reveal who we really are. Dialogue gives us a light into who we are as a Christian.


Going across that frontier requires an openness to change. The encounter with others shows us the journey that Jesus is traveling.


I heard come and see to Israel a few years ago. What new thing is God going to put on my heart – I don’t know. What will some old stones, empty hills, desert spaces, and crowded churches tell me. Somehow, I feel certain God will speak – I pray I can hear and it molds me anew.


When we look out over the frontier, we have the choice of that singleness of mind so popular throughout the world, a singleness that is good versus evil or us versus them - or we have the choice of following the example of Christ. Christ crossed the frontier, he touched the untouchable and he gave of himself. God had listened to humanity and gave of God’s self, sending Jesus across the frontier into the world. God didn’t come to demand change of things but to listen to and be with humanity, and change hearts.


What does your frontier and boundary look like? Is it a fence, a demilitarized zone, a treacherous sea, or a wall? Might it be the fence behind your house, the road between you and neighbors, or the time to speak to someone in your office? What will it take for you to venture out across the frontier in order to meet, to dialogue, and to be changed by the other?


The lace I have on my alb is the same lace given to me over 40 years ago. It not just a decoration but it reminds me to always be willing to come and see, to climb over that fence and listen, to see what God sees in each and every person I meet.


I’ll be putting this sermon on the website and on my new blog. Come with me and see through pictures and reflections what I see in Israel. Follow my blog http://pastorkathryn.blogspot.com/


I pray that you know your frontier, that you find the courage to cross it, and that you are forever changed by the others you find in Jesus Christ.



Friday, June 4, 2010

COME AND SEE THE HOLY LAND WITH PASTOR KATHRYN

Our trip will be June 8-24, 2010.


We leave from Dallas at 2 pm.


What will we see?


Bethlehem and Nazareth- where Jesus was born and grew up.


Capernaum and Galilee- where Jesus taught.


Jerusalem, Bethany, and the Mount of Olives- where Jesus raised Lazarus, taught, was crucified and was raised from the dead.


In Jerusalem we will see the Via Dolorosa (basis for Stations of the Cross), the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (built on where Jesus was buried), and the Pool of Bethesda, as well as the Temple Mount- one of the holiest sights for Jews, Christians, and Muslims.


We'll also see Jericho, the Dead See, Armageddon (Valley of Megiddo)-- things you've heard about and read about all your life.

Then we will travel to Egypt stopping first at the Monastery of Saint Catherine at the base of Mount Sinai, then the Red Sea, Cairo, pyramids...

Go to www.eo.travelwithus.com for more.

I'll be sharing pictures, thoughts, and scripture as I travel.