Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Be Here Now

 

BE HERE NOW

A morning prayer (for Advent, Thanksgiving or whenever...)

 

Be here now, O my soul.

Be here now, O my God.

 

May I be. 

Just as I am without pretense or fear. 

 

May I be here. 

No other place my mind wants to take me. 

 

Not work or the worries of family or friends, 

not what I have to do or where I need to go. 

Just here. Right here.

 

May I be here now.  

No other time my mind wants to take me. 

Not past for regrets or nostalgia, 

and not future, for worry or planning or dreaming. 

Just now. Right now.

 

I trust you with this world and all those in it.

(specific prayers may be lifted up…)

Thank you God.

 

I trust you with those I love and all they are going through.

(specific prayers may be lifted up…)

Thank you God.

 

I trust you with my own soul, all that I carry and all that I am.

(specific prayers may be lifted up…)

Thank you God.

 

Of all life and being, you are God.

In every place, you are God.

In every moment, you are God.

You are here now, God.

I am here now.


Kara K Root, from Receiving This Life

Sunday, November 16, 2025

The Zacchaeus in us all

 

Luke 19:1-10

There’s a little bit of Zacchaeus in all of us, and definitely Zacchaeuses we can point our fingers at in the world. At first this might not sound like a compliment.

 (So, keeping in mind that while the version of the story we just read made it sound like after Jesus invited himself over to Zacchaeus’ house the whole conversation between Jesus and Zacchaeus happened right there on the street in front of everyone, by the grammar of the text, it’s more likely that the rest of the story happened inside Zacchaeus’ house, away from the listening ears of the crowd).

Imagine ten years after the moment we just read and sang about. Imagine trying to explain to someone new to town what went down that day with Jesus and Zacchaeus and the rest of them.

It might sound something like this:

Jesus of Nazareth was coming to our town! It was the most exciting thing to happen in years. Famous for lifting up the poor, healing the sick, scandalizing the powers with his talk of God’s kingdom. Everyone turned out for a glimpse, to see him for themselves, to hear him speak hope and promise. Nobody wanted to miss it.

But that little rat, Zacchaeus, that traitor to his people, arrogant and conniving, who hid behind his high walls and his piles of money, he wasn’t in the crowd. Then I saw him, down the road, racing ahead of the celebration. I watched him scurry over to a tree, and then, actually climb up it! Like a little kid! Ha!
Looking over his shoulder, left and right, he thought nobody was looking, then hiking up his robes and grabbing a tree limb, he pulled himself into the branches, his feet scrambling to catch hold, and finally settled into the rustling canopy, then he held still half hidden in the branches.  How humiliating for him if anyone were to see him there! Lucky me, I did! I could barely contain my glee. He could never live this down. I would see to that. 


Jesus and the crowd had just about arrived right under where he was balancing like a buffoon, but before I could nudge a friend and point up at Zacchaeus, Jesus stopped walking. Everyone grew silent. Then Jesus shouted up into the tree, “Hey Zacchaeus! Hurry up and come down from there! Today I am coming to stay in your home.”

Well, if Zacchaeus didn’t drop right out of those branches, the little rat. The look on his face was astonished, ecstatic. He bowed to Jesus and stammered out that he would be most welcome, then ran off home to prepare. 

We were dumbfounded; what in the world? The crowd started muttering in surprise and horror. Hadn’t Jesus been invited to stay in the homes of our most respectable people? Did he not know what Zacchaeus was? And yet, he called him by name! What did this mean?  Was Jesus even who he said he was? 

Well, he went. He went to the home of Zaccheaus, the filthy tax collector. The whole household had rushed around, and rumor had it they had whipped up a feast lickety-split. No big feat though, while the rest of us might have struggled to pull off a last-minute dinner party for a visiting celebrity—would have spent weeks preparing and days making things ready—Zacchaeus always had more than enough food on hand, and more than enough servants to help prepare it. While they carried on into the night behind those high walls, the whole town was on fire with the gossip.

Of all the places he could’ve stayed, why did Jesus choose the home of a despicable sinner? A bad person, who had turned his back on his own people, who lied and cheated every day? What was Jesus up to?


Can you believe that? It wasn’t easy to tell you this story because to tell you the truth, I can barely remember what it was like then, what he was like before.  It must be hard for you to hear too, because you do not know Zacchaeus in this way.  You know him as Zach! 

Yes! This is the same Zach!

The Zach who invites all who are hungry, or down on their luck, to dine with him every night, who sees those in need helps us see them too. The Zach who uses his station to look after our village, to stand up to the Romans when they try to overstep.  Are you surprised that it wasn’t always this way?
There was a before and an after; what happened that day changed everything. 


After Jesus had stayed in his home, much to our amazement, the very next day, and day after day after that, Zacchaeus visited each person in the village. He brought the record of taxes and revealed in detail how he had cheated us. He apologized, and then, right there, he would open his money bag and pay back four times what he’d taken over the year. Person after person, household after household, he did this. If you think a grown man getting caught with his robes tangled around a tree branch with the whole town looking up at him is humbling, imagine him looking each one of us in the face, with the record of his own wrongdoing in his hands, confessing his sin and making amends. 

The day Zacchaeus came to my house, a few weeks after Jesus had stayed with him, he looked so different it was hard to not to stare. His own eyes were clear instead of troubled, his forehead soft instead of pinched, his shoulders drawn back and his back straight and proud instead of hunched and furtive. Honestly, even as he brought himself low before me, he looked taller than he had ever looked.

Can you even imagine what our community would be like without him? He's our Zach, humble, brave and compassionate, our trustworthy, village tax collector, Zacchaeus.  

*               *               *               *               *

Zacchaeus was lost. He had lost his humanity. Cut off from his neighbors, from himself, isolated and hated, feared and ridiculed. Zacchaeus exploited his individual power to get rich off of them, and they used their collective power to mock and alienate him. He thinks he’s such a big man but look at him, the shrimp! It’s us against him! 

Then Jesus came to town. Jesus doesn’t play our games, or curate his reputation. Jesus ignores our judgments and rejects our labels. In Christ there is no ‘us and them’ only ‘us all.’
We turn one another into objects—objects of desire, objects of pity, or objects of scorn. Jesus sees only people, beloved children of God, all, every single one of us. No matter how we perceive the world or portray it, there is simply no one who doesn’t already belong to God and to all the rest of us, no person whose life is not for ministry – for caring and being cared for.

When Jesus looked up into that tree that day, he didn’t see a corrupt and cowardly tool of an evil regime who had cheated his neighbors and profited on the misfortune of others. Jesus saw a beloved child of God. Filled with loneliness and longing, like everyone else. Born for belonging, like everyone else. Made to care for others, like everyone else. Unique in all the world, like everyone else. Guilty of bringing pain and suffering to others, like everyone else. Trapped in sin, aka, stuck in ‘a misdirection of the gaze' , like everyone else, helpless to free himself, like everyone else. Jesus saw a ready recipient of God’s mercy and untapped agent of God’s ministry.

And whatever it looked like to anyone else, however else anyone chose to interpret what was happening in that moment, didn’t matter. Because what Zaccheaus heard was:
The pain you’ve caused, the choices you’ve made, the labels you’ve earned or claimed or had slapped onto you by others, these are not who you are. You are Beloved Child of God, son of Abraham, member of the household of God, able to give and receive care.  I see you, Zacchaeus. And I’d like to spend this day with you. 

Jesus came to seek and saves the lost. In every one of our lives, there are times when we are lost. Lost in pain or struggle, lost in direction or hope, consumed by the flames of anger or the fog of numbness, lost in who we thought we were or where we believed we were going. We might lose ourselves, become someone we don’t recognize for a time, or be lost to each other, behind walls we can’t break through and seem to keep building higher.  But we are never lost to God. God in God’s mercy—unearned, undeserved, unlimited grace—reaches us right where we are and brings us back home to the love of God that calls us by name and calls us back to each other. God releases us from our isolation and turns our gaze back to what’s real and true and unchanging. This is never not happening.

How are you and I Zacchaeus? Where are we hiding in shame, trapped in our pain, stuck in destructive choices, or locked in labels, longing to catch a glimpse of hope as it passes by, but unable to join in?  

And who are our Zacchaeuses? What terrible people would we rather mock and condemn than entrust to God’s mercy and receive in God’s love?  Whom would we be horrified to see Jesus choosing?

We can’t change hearts—not other people’s and not even our own—but we can hold our hearts out toward God and each other, vulnerable, in humble hospitality to the Holy One who calls us by name, and to these holy ones we’re alongside here on this planet. Ready or not, Jesus keeps showing up among us with mercy, receiving our welcome and reorienting our lives. Thanks be to God, there’s a little bit of Zacchaeus in us all.

Amen.
(Sin as "a misdirection of the gaze" from Simone Weil, in Waiting for God)

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

The Book Has Launched!

 


Our book came out!


We've done a couple of podcast / interviews and, you guys, this is an excellent practice forum for letting go - because I HATE being interviewed. I feel so uncomfortable and out of control, so, here we go! 

We've also just been launched into empty nesthood and, Lord have mercy on me, the letting go of this stage is no joke.

So - coming at you as fellow pilgrims - learning as we go about accepting the uncontrollable and being present in this life with each other as pastors, parents and people, open to being encountered and transformed by something we can't make happen but can only receive and participate in.

Hope you enjoy it! 

I'll update links to reviews, podcasts and interviews here as they come: 





Sunday, June 15, 2025

Who We Are and How We Know

 



 Esther (Bible Story Summary in bulletin here)

Who are we? What makes us who we are? How do we know who we are and not forget?  These are big questions, and the answers matter.

Right now our country is in the midst of these question on a large scale, which we saw played out this weekend in striking contrast of parade and protest, violence and voices, and at the moment, all eyes are on Minnesota at the moment as we reckon with political assassination – something that seemed like an ‘them, over there’ thing until it because an ‘us, here’ thing yesterday.  Is that who we are now?

I attended two funerals this weekend, and funerals also try to answer these questions.  Most funerals wrestle pretty directly with our two big questions, Who is this God and what is God up to? And what is a good life and how do we live it?  This weekend I heard that God is love, and Jesus came to share this life with us and overcome death, so that the separation of death we suffer now will not have the final word. And I heard stories of two very different lives, both lived well, lives woven into other lives with love, and lived for something bigger than themselves.  

How do we know who we are? How do we figure out what is God up to? What makes a life good, and how do we live well? These are not solo questions. We do not ask them alone. Faith is not an independent, self-directed thing. Neither is identity. We do not decide on our own who we will be. We get to explore and become, alongside people who see us and reflect back to us who they see us becoming, and encourage us in our exploring. We are always in context. 

To understand our context we use stories. The stories told at funerals and around the tables afterwards, describing scenes and moments, show us who people are, wonders what makes them that way, and so probe against the question of what a lifetime is for, and how to live it well. Stories tell us where we came from, and reveal how people before us navigated their lives. Stories help us to know who we are.

Reading the story of Esther on Purim grounds the Jewish people in their identity and context. Here was a time when they could’ve all been exterminated, and instead they were delivered. Here is another story of a Jewish person living in the royal court of their oppressors, like Daniel in Babylon, and Moses raised up by the Egyptian princess, and Joseph in Egypt before him.  Here is the story of a young woman whose courage to speak up saved her entire people throughout the whole empire. But she did not have that courage all on her own.  She said to Mordecai, “Have all the Jews pray and fast for me for three days, then I will go speak to the king, even though by doing so I may die.”

But instead of dying for approaching the king without permission, Esther’s request was heard, and the people were saved, and Haman was destroyed instead.  Mordecai himself announced the day of Purim should be celebrated, and so it still is.  

In telling it again and again, year after year, Haman becomes the representative of all anti-semites, and Esther is the paragon of courage. The story tells of this scattered and weak people, who by the hand of God, outlasted the Persian empire that almost wiped them out, and the Babylonian and Assyrian and Egyptian empires before that, and the Roman and Greek empires after it.  You come from somewhere! It says. You belong to something! Telling it again and again together, with food and ritual and songs and symbols and sounds and sharing with others and giving to the poor, helps to ground them in the truth of who they are and keep practicing who they are called to be. And it helps them watch for where God might be calling them to act now. Because in the book of Esther, God is not front and center. The people have to wrestle, and discern, and choose, and act, without some of the flashier directness God uses in other parts of scripture. So, it feels like the kind of discernment we modern people have to do too, when we hear Mordecai wonder if God might have allowed Esther to be in her position “for such a time as this.” And this ancient scroll drops that phrase into words the first time in human history. “For such a time as this” is the kind of line that blows open our imaginations, yanks us from our self-defined ruts and the constraints of what is – and propels us into the possibility that we’re actually living in a broader story, not dictated solely by what we can see, a cosmic timelessness that lands in time at certain points and calls us to respond.

In a little while we will gather at the communion table and we will hear the words of Jesus – the very words Jesus spoke over 2000 years ago, when he invited his disciples and so invites us all these centuries later – to come to this table, and share this bread and this cup – that this is his body and blood shared for us, his very life given for our life, drawing us into life that will not end.

How do we know who we are? How do we figure out what is God up to? What makes a life good, and how do we live well? 

Do this in remembrance of me, Jesus says. Come back to who we are together. You are not alone and apart. You are part of me and joined together as a people claimed for God’s way and defined by God’s love.  

Our identity is not our own. We are in Christ. That means that we have died his death and been raised into his life, and this life that cannot die is what defines us.  Sin says we are apart and against, we must earn our belonging and we can refuse others’ theirs, we have to hide in shame when we mess up and strive to make our life valuable on our own, but we are dead to sin. All need for fear and self-protection has died with Christ.  All our losses and pain are not ours alone to hold, we are held together by God in the hands and hearts of other people. Christ’s complete belonging to God and all others is given to us. That is who we are. Beloved Children of God, each one of us uniquely made and directly called to participate in and share God’s love. And we come from a community of those who’ve died and been risen to freedom and hope.  This identity is unshakable and secure, because God decides it is so. 

But sin is loud and fear’s voice is persuasive. We forget who we are. So when we come to this table, it is like sitting down to eat with all those gone before, and all those right now around the whole world who are also in this community of the died and risen One, whose lives are part of Jesus’ life, and who live as a people claimed for God’s way and defined by God’s love.  

Then we do what Jesus told us to do at this table, but we also retell the story. We remember how it began, and this remembering together and practicing together, helps us remember and practice being who we are right now, with courage and hope, and helps us look forward to the day when what we are practicing for becomes the full reality forever.  

Today we prayed a blessing on our high school graduates. As they keep asking the questions that human lives are shaped around, How do I know who I am? How do I figure out what is God up to? What makes a life good, and how do I live well? Their immediate context will change but their larger context remains the same. The somewhere and someone they come from is not just their families and friends, it’s us, but not only the little LNPC us here and now, the big us. They come from a story that reaches back to the beginning of time and forward beyond time, a story shared in ritual and rhythms, in relationships and in remembering. They come from Esther, and Joseph, and Ruth, and Samuel, and Jacob, and Hagar, and Moses, and Mary and Joseph, and all the followers of Jesus who had no clue what they were doing but followed anyway and God took care of them and invited them to join in what God was up to anyway. They come from these stories practiced in candlelit Christmas eves, and finding Easter Hallelujahs and being served communion by the person next to you, and most importantly, praying and being prayed for. Watching other people struggle with suffering and sadness, and holding them up to God.  Knowing other people are holding you up to God because they’ve literally sung “God in your loving mercy hear our prayer” about something you just named aloud. 

When Esther was faced with something impossible, something terrifying, with huge consequences – it could maybe save her whole people? Or she could maybe die? – she said, ask everyone to pray for me, and I will do it.  

When you belong to the people of God, you are not alone. The people of God are people of prayer, people who help each other remember it is God who saves, and it is God who acts, and it is we who join in, we who get to be part of the action and the saving that God is doing. These people are here in this room, and these people are everywhere. Your community is vast.

We live short lives inside a long story. Empires rise and empires fall, but God is constant. This is our context.  The people we love live their good lives and then die, and we miss them, and then we tell stories to help us know who they were, and know who we are because of them, and help us figure out what makes a good life and how we might live, and watch for what God is up to in all of this. And their life goes on beyond what we remember and so we remember that ours will too.  

As we bump along our own lives, mostly doing our best and making it up as we go, we are held in a web of story, and prayer, and remembering, and retelling. That is how we keep bravely asking the human questions, and this is how our identity is shaped and held. 

Who we are is the people who’ve died to death and been raised to life, who practice being available to God and letting God’s love and healing come through us. And in the cosmic timelessness of Jesus Christ, our lives are always for such a time as this. 

Amen.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Simultaneous and Indistinguishable

 


On Wednesday night, at the same time as a small church in Oronoco gathered to pray for their pastor Lisa, who is dying, and the church Lisa grew up in in LeSuer did the same, the Sues and I opened this space for prayer. Lisa and her husband Peter attended here for a couple of years 2010-2012 or so while she prepared for ordination. Like a weather system on a radar map, I imagined a web of prayer spanning across the miles, connecting us to them and to God. 15-20 people from various parts of Lisa's life, including her first-grade deskmate, came and went, wrote notes and lit candles, walked the labyrinth, and sat for a long time.  I don’t think many of us were praying for her to be cured. Her body is ravaged and weary.  I think mostly we were praying for what comes next for her kids and her husband, praying out our sorrow and anger that moms can be taken young, that death is capricious and cruel, and also, just letting ourselves be in what is, as terrible as it is, in the presence of God.

We pick up our Old Testament story after 70 years in exile. The people of Judah are finally allowed to go home.  And it is not because they have some great new king like Solomon or David to rebuild their kingdom and bring them all together. It is because another foreign power defeated the power that had defeated them, and this one has a ruler who gives permission for conquered peoples to return to their lands and rebuild their cities. So, in circumstances far different than they’d probably dreamed of, they’re nevertheless coming home. 

But not all of them; some are staying where they’ve built new lives Babylon. When the Babylonians conquered Judah, they completely decimated the city, destroyed the temple, forcibly took the warriors and the wealthy, the skilled workers and the young nobility of Jerusalem, and left behind the poor. In captivity in Babylon, many suffered greatly. Others prospered. But for 70 years they built a life where they were. Archeologists estimate that after the various mass deportations, executions, epidemics and battles, perhaps just 10% of the original population remained in Judah. Now some what’s left of them are coming home.  

I have to be honest, you guys, I had trouble staying gripped by these scriptures. There is a reason nobody preaches from Ezra and Nehemiah. (In fact, besides a handful of verses in Nehemiah, neither one is even in the lectionary!). I am sure they make meaty material for history professors, but this preacher struggled to find something to hang onto. 

I will say, as an aside, I was fascinated by the explanation in Chronicles (2 Chronicles 36:21, Jeremiah 25:11) that their 70 years in exile, expelled from the land, was to make up for the sabbaths they owed to the land. For 490 years, since King Saul, they had been disobeying God’s command to rest the land every 7 years, and God repeatedly warned them through the prophet Jeremiah that this would happen. SO, there’s that. Imagining the vacant land resting for 70 years, after having been worked without end. 
But mostly, I had trouble following it all. Because – like all history – it’s not a clear-cut story. It’s messy and it’s confusing, one step forward, two steps back and a shuffle sideways, this person and that person, and one thing leads to another, and things don’t just happen, they happen gradually and haphazardly and then you look back and say, Oh, that happened, and try to make some sense out of it. 

So, imagining them, wherever they ended up, struggling to make a life, and follow God and raise their families, and deal with what came their way, and then finally, finally, being told you can go home. What was that like? Hardly anyone who went back would have remembered home. And it didn’t matter anyway, because Jerusalem was utterly gone, and even all the natural changes that had happened in their absence, like trees growing and streams shifting, would’ve been astonishing. 

After 70 years away, what was it like to go back to the place you knew and loved, in all its glory, but which your last glimpse of was utter devastation?  Or, for most of them, to come finally to the place you’ve heard about all your life, and see only desolate ruins? Because when something or someone dies, we don’t just lose all that was, we lose all that could have been if things were not severed by an ending.

So working together, those who stayed away sent money and support, and those who returned began rebuilding the destroyed temple of Solomon-  the symbol of their identity as God’s people, the place where God and humans met.  But of course, when the temple was destroyed, they had discovered Yahweh was not contained in stone or geographical boundary lines, God met them anyway, and the prophets guided them, and their prayers and practices upheld them and they were God’s people anyway, and Yahweh took care of them wherever they were. But now they here, ready to rebuild what was. 

When the temple foundation is laid, they hold a big celebration. And, the text tells us, intermingled with the shouts of joy is the weeping of sorrow for the few who remembered the temple as it had been, but the noise was so loud nobody could distinguish one from the other.  And here is where my attention awakens. Because that is an amazing line to be plopped right there in the middle of all that historical record-keeping.

My grandma died this week. And I am really sad she is gone. She was quite a person, and her reign in the world, as it were, is hard to overstate in the lives of my cousins, sisters and me, and our children. And yet, she was 95, and so ready to go, and what was could never be again. Her home was gone, she’d buried two husbands and a son and all her friends and dogs and passions, and her final days were misery as her body betrayed her and her mind stayed sharp, so that when she finally died, I mostly felt gratitude and relief for her. And it’s weird to feel glad about a death that takes someone so wonderful out of the world. 

I’m preparing to send my youngest away to college shortly, and the gladness and the sadness are all swirled up, so that often I can barely distinguish one from the other.  So, when I read that same description of messy human emotion all tangled up in the crowd gathered on the bare foundation of the new temple in Jerusalem some 2500 years ago, something in me says, Yes. I get that.

When I was in Christchurch, New Zealand a few weeks ago, I worshiped in the Cardboard Cathedral, a transitional building erected after the second earthquake in 2011 crumbled the Anglican Christchurch Cathedral. 14 years later the Cathedral is still encased in scaffolding and unsafe to enter, and services continue in this temporary structure. With two earthquakes, and over 11,000 aftershocks, with so many lives lost and homes, businesses and church buildings destroyed, life as they had known it ended, and the question, what does it mean to be church? took on a whole new meaning in that place. They had to rebuild a new life, and it would not be what it was or what that could have become; it would be something different.

I got to hang out in May with Church leaders who had decided back then that whatever disagreements stood between them were unimportant, what mattered was taking care of people and ministering to their city, so the various congregations across denominations teamed up and worked together. And instead of rebuilding their own church buildings, some built shared community centers with community gardens and kitchens, or started exploring different ways and places of gathering for worship. The experience reshaped how they now understand what it is to be the church, and they are still cooperating and working together, seeking to shape their lives and communities to be the meeting place between God and humanity.

What was could no longer be, and what could’ve been was gone. So why not look at what else should no longer be and leave it behind? Our Nehemiah text is a first-person account of someone who came to be governor in this time, after he makes an impassioned speech to his fellow leaders about not perpetuating the very things onto others that they had just been freed from. And they all agreed to a different way of leading, and this got him elected governor. But wait, one asks, will he govern like the governors before him, with all the rights and privileges therein? No. Instead he went on to demonstrate compassion, generosity and care, as they all figured out what kind of people they would be now, and what kind of life they would live alongside one another as those brought from death to life and being remade into the people of God.

The thing about history is that it is just stories of the people who came before us, and they were just people, like us. And as different as life and contexts are across time, human beings struggle with the same things: selfishness, fear, greed, despair, loneliness, anger. And we long for the same things: stability, love, belonging, contribution, meaning and hope.  

We all have experiences of getting what we wanted, and it turns out to be bittersweet. Of letting go of what was when it was never ours to hang onto, or it was taken from us long ago anyway.  Of facing an unknown future and trying to work out how to live a good life and make a good life for others amid great uncertainty.  Of recognizing that some of what was normal was actually wrong and damaging, and clumsily figuring out how to do things differently and better. We’ve all had loss; death spares nobody. The grief and the joy are intermingled. 

The church is the place where that should be most acceptable – that is, we are the people who make space for the messiness of this terrible-wonderful living and dying that we’re all busy with, because our life is centered on Christ who died our death and was raised to new life. Jesus is the embodied action of what God has always been up to on this planet and in the lives of human beings, bringing new life out of death. 

On Wednesday night we had a table with note cards that mirrored our gratitude prayer at funerals where we say, "For...", and all respond "Thank you, God" (eg, for her quick smile and joyful laugh, thank you God. For the way she lifted up those she met and honored each person, thank you God. For the hat she knitted me, thank you God.") I got to watch people go from quietly weeping, or stiff with anger, to smiling as they recalled something they dearly love about Lisa and wrote it down. Toward the end of the evening, two childhood friends of hers whispered on a back pew, soft laughter mingling with their tears, "so that people could not distinguish one sound from the other.” 

We are creatures of loss and love, horror and beauty, destruction and newness, poignancy and pain. So, it seems fitting that when the returned exiles and the left behind people stand reunited together on the freshly set foundations of the new temple, the holy ground of meeting place between God and human beings, the joy and the lament of the people intermingle and are inseparable. This temple will never be what it was. But, then, neither will they. They belong to the God who meets us in death and are learning to trust this God to bring new life.

Our lives are not a clear-cut story. They’re messy and confusing, and things happen gradually and haphazardly, and as we try to make sense of it all we get to look back from time to time and say, Oh, that’s what God was doing. So as we stumble along figuring out what kind of people we will be, and what kind of life we will live, we will embrace our holy calling as the people of God-with-us to hold space without fear for the intermingled weeping and joy of it all, and to wait on behalf of each other and this world, for the new life our God will always bring.
Amen.

Be Here Now

  BE HERE NOW A morning prayer (for Advent, Thanksgiving or whenever...)   Be here now, O my soul. Be here now, O my God.   May I be.  Just ...