Search This Blog

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

321 Two Big Stories

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “Two Big Stories” originally shared on July 24, 2024. It was the 321st video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.) 

   Two big stories will dominate our consciousness this week, and they happened almost back-to-back. Two thousand years ago. Today, we’ll find out what they are.

   The daily news has been dominated by two stories this week. First, the attempted assassination of former president Donald Trump just 11 days ago, and second, President Joe Biden’s decision to withdraw as a candidate for a second term as president, paving the way for Vice-president Kamala Harris to run for President, just 3 days ago.

   Two other stories will be on the minds of hundreds of millions of Christians all over the world this coming Sunday. They are well known in popular culture outside the Church as well, and people have been talking about them for over 2,000 years.

   The first begins with a riddle: “How many people did Jesus feed at the ‘Feeding of the 5,000’”?

   That meal that starts with a little boy’s lunch and has lots of leftovers, is the only miracle of Jesus that is found in all four of the gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and in today’s passage from John.

   I think that one of the reasons for this is that it centers on a universal human need for food.

   Most of us could complete the saying, “The way to a man’s heart is through his…”

   And many of us could complete quote from Napolean, “An army marches on its…”

   But I think that we miss much of the impact of this miraculous provision of food by Jesus because food scarcity of the kind that was commonplace at the time of Jesus is so rare for most of us in Southern California.

   In fact, the food in our diet is fresher and more varied than that of most royalty throughout human history.

   Just take a mental trip down any main thoroughfare around you and you will find that food dominates the landscape. It’s everywhere, in every form you can imagine, and it comes from all over the world.

   You’ll see fresh food, fast food, fine food, junk food, fun food, organic food, decorative food, food that is locally sourced and food from far away, cuisines from many countries, survival food, and food that is given away for people who are experiencing basic food insecurity.

   Walk into a grocery store and you’ll find one of the main reasons for the fall of the Soviet Union. Lines to buy basic food necessities are almost unheard of anywhere in the United States. And when the communist people found out what life was like for the average person in the United States during the late Cold War, their dissatisfaction boiled over and their empire fell.

   Shortages were rare even during the worst of our recent pandemic when we had major supply chain issues.

   In fact, there is enough food in the world to feed everybody, several times over. Our main problem is that it’s not evenly available, and there are major issues of distribution and of human will in getting it to the people who need it.

   Scientists all over the world continue to develop methods of sustainable agriculture in every corner of our planet to help people eat. The famines that were commonplace just decades ago are rare today.

   But Jesus lived in a time where nobody ate like we do. As a skilled worker who had now become an itinerant, Jesus was probably muscular. And thin. 

   Jesus had been in Jerusalem for a Jewish festival, where he healed and taught. We pick up the story at John 6, verse 1:

After this Jesus went to the other side of the Sea of Galilee, also called the Sea of Tiberias. A large crowd kept following him, because they saw the signs that he was doing for the sick. Jesus went up the mountain and sat down there with his disciples. Now the Passover, the festival of the Jews, was near.

   The Sea of Galilee had been renamed the Sea of Tiberias by Herod Antipas (a petty and ruthless tyrant who had recently killed John the Baptist; we heard about him last week) to curry favor (I guess that’s a nice way to put it) with the emperor, Emperor Tiberias, in 29 A.D.

   The crowd walked around to the northeast corner of the Sea of Galilee where Jesus was taking his disciples for a retreat by boat. The Sea was ringed with villages, so they would have had to walk way up the hills to find room for them all on the green grassy fields of the Spring. The crowds were excited to do this because they had seen the healing miracles that Jesus had done, and medical care in those days was almost non-existent. They were poor.

   Then John drops a little detail into the story that the Passover was near. Why was that important? We see, as the story continues with verse 5:

 When he looked up and saw a large crowd coming toward him, Jesus said to Philip, “Where are we to buy bread for these people to eat?” He said this to test him, for he himself knew what he was going to do. Philip answered him, “Six months’ wages would not buy enough bread for each of them to get a little.”  

   Hospitality was a major social obligation in the honor and shame culture of Jesus time. Jesus wanted he and the disciples to be good hosts. Everyone was to be treated as close family.

   Phillip stated the obvious that their resources were so small in light of their needs. It’s a a situation that almost every church in the Western world can relate to.

   So, suppose you were hosting a family meal. How would you prepare?

   Suppose you were hosting a large family reunion? It would be difficult, but you could do it.

   Suppose 5,000 people just showed up and you were responsible for feeding them? Here’s what happened, continuing in John 6: verse 8:

8One of his disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother, said to him, “There is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish. But what are they among so many people?” 10 Jesus said, “Make the people sit down.” Now there was a great deal of grass in the place; so they sat down, about five thousand in all. 11 Then Jesus took the loaves, and when he had given thanks, he distributed them to those who were seated; so also the fish, as much as they wanted. 

   It’s a sign of our relative affluence that many of us hear the part about the bread and think, “Woah, that’s a lot of carbs! Of course, now some dietitians are saying that carbohydrates are good for you. <sigh>.

   But for people who didn’t regularly get enough to eat, except at weddings and festivals, to be allowed to eat as much as they wanted was a huge deal.

   And there were leftovers (!), another rare event. Jesus knew the needs of the people, and he didn’t want anything to go to waste. We pick up the story in verse 12:

12 When they were satisfied, he told his disciples, “Gather up the fragments left over, so that nothing may be lost.” 13 So they gathered them up, and from the fragments of the five barley loaves, left by those who had eaten, they filled twelve baskets. 14 When the people saw the sign that he had done, they began to say, “This is indeed the prophet who is to come into the world.”

   I just want to mention here the naturalistic explanation for this miracle. Some have given the plausible explanation that people of Jesus time would not have gone anywhere without taking some food with them. The miracle here is not the multiplication of loaves and fishes, but that there was something about Jesus that inspired people to share, and when they shared there was more than enough. It’s plausible, but I don’t think that that’s the story here.

   It doesn’t seem to me that such an event would have made the cut for all four gospels. Nor does it seem likely that people would be able to hide that much food in their clothes.

   Plus, look at how the people reacted. They declared Jesus to be a prophet and wanted to make him King. I don’t think that that would happen if Jesus had merely drawn a spirit of sharing out of them.

   John the Baptist’s execution was fresh in their minds. Things were happening. They just didn’t understand what they were.

   Then things took a turn for the worse for Jesus, in the concluding verse of this story, verse 15,

15 When Jesus realized that they were about to come and take him by force to make him king, he withdrew again to the mountain by himself.

   Jesus had already rejected the offer of the devil to gain political power, to rule as an earthly king, and he rejected all the efforts to politicize him and all the efforts to make him chose a different path than that to the cross.

   Jesus is shown in this story to be like a prophet, but as in the prophetic ministry of Moses, a deliverer of another kind.

   Like Moses, he crosses the water, the people follow him, he goes to the mountain, and food is miraculously provided in the middle of nowhere. Twelve baskets of leftovers were collected, which is the same number as the number of tribes of the children of Israel. And remember that little detail that John added at the beginning of the story? “Now the Passover, the festival of the Jews, was near.” (v. 4)?

   The night before he was betrayed, Jesus recast the Passover with himself as the sacrificial lamb. His death on the cross would set God’s people free from sin, death, and all the forces that defy God. The feeding of the 5,000 points to God’s generous and extravagant provision.

   The free food given in the feeding of the 5,000 was Jesus. It points to God’s redemption of all who believe and are baptized, including you, and me.

   Miracles like this are not suspensions of the laws of nature but acts that point to God’s intention for the world at Creation, and to God’s coming redemption of the world in the new heaven and the new earth. In fact, in the gospel of John, as in today’s reading, “miracles” are often called “signs”, and signs point to something else.

   The cross lies at the center of human history, providing the means by which our sin, our separation from God, is overcome by Jesus, fully God and fully human being, in his sacrificial death on the cross.

   But that’s not what the people wanted from Jesus. We see in the gospels that once Jesus scales back on the free healing and the free food, and points to his coming death on the cross, his popularity sinks like a stone.

   The greatest miracle was yet to come, but the people couldn’t see it and, I suppose, most people can’t see it even today.

   The greatest miracle is the cross.

   How many people were at the feeding of the 5,000? We don’t know. The Greek word used in the Bible could mean 5,000 men in the specific gender sense of the word, or 5,000 men in the generic sense that includes women and children, or 5,000 men plus women and children.

   What we do know is that Jesus is the bread of life, and that that food is given for free for all people to receive. Jesus is the bread of the world!

   The second story is about another miracle. Jesus walked on water.

   Have you ever walked on water? I have. Many times.

   I used to walk across frozen lakes and rivers all the time. I walked on the frozen pond we made with the garden hose on our back yard, and on the delicate ice sheets in the streets and on the sidewalks. Well, ice is water too, right? It’s just in its solid form.

   Walking on water in its liquid form? That’s something else. That’s an attention getter. That creates an impression.

   We can’t do it. It wouldn’t even occur to us to try.

   Jesus walked on water in its liquid form. Several times. We see it one time in John 6:16-21. It was a dark and stormy night.

   It was the night after the feeding of the 5,000.

   Jesus had withdrawn to the mountain to pray after people were about to come and take him by force to make him king.

   The disciples had left the venue without Jesus and were heading back to Capernaum, their home base in Galilee. It was the location of Peter’s mother-in law’s-house and they often stayed there. This is how the story begins, in John 6:16-17:

16 When evening came, his disciples went down to the sea, 17 got into a boat, and started across the sea to Capernaum. It was now dark, and Jesus had not yet come to them. 

   Jesus had not yet come to them.

   Well, how was he going to come to them? He was in the hills above the northeast corner of the Sea of Galilee. They were out at sea. And then one of those sudden Sea of Galilee storms came up. They were commonplace when the cold mountain air circulated with the warmer below-sea-level sea air.

   The wind was heaving in from a direction that made their sail useless. They had to get out the oars and row, in a storm, at night. They rowed for a mile, then for two miles, then three, maybe four. And that’s where we pick up the story in verse 18:

18 The sea became rough because a strong wind was blowing. 19 When they had rowed about three or four miles, they saw Jesus walking on the sea and coming near the boat, and they were terrified. 20 But he said to them, “It is I; do not be afraid.”

   The disciples saw Jesus, but they didn’t know it was Jesus.

   They were in a storm. They were scared. Then they saw someone walking on water. People don’t walk on water, so what was coming at them? Was it a demon? Was it a ghost? It was getting closer. It was coming directly at them. They were terrified!

   Then Jesus, says “It is I; do not be afraid.” There are those words again.

   I don’t know if that calmed them down much, at least not right away. What was he doing there? Who walks on water, in a storm, on the water?

   And then they knew.

   The story concludes with verse 21:

 21 Then they wanted to take him into the boat, and immediately the boat reached the land toward which they were going.

   I’m not sure what “immediately” means here, as the disciples and Jesus were about half-way to their destination at this point.

   John is highly symbolic, though. There are layers upon layers of meaning in the gospel of John.

   Perhaps it means that when they saw it was Jesus, they knew they were OK. 

   Jesus is life’s destination. Jesus will calm us in our life’s storms when we recognize him for who Jesus is. Our Savior. When Jesus is within us, we’re all in the same boat, and that means that we’re all going to make it home.

   The pivot point of human history and of our histories, between the beginning and the end, is the cross. Jesus is the beginning and the end. The Alpha and the Omega.

   The disciples saw Jesus, but they didn’t know who he was.

   He was revealed to them in the midst of a storm.

   I don’t suppose that the storms in our lives are the first place many of us would look for Jesus. In fact, for many people, it’s the last place. But among we who are being saved, that’s where Jesus is. He is with us in our suffering. That’s what Emmanuel means. God with us.

   And so it is with our sharing that faith that has been given to us, that has connected us to Jesus, with our friends and our relatives. Faith is like a beard. If you let it grow, it becomes the first thing people notice about you.

   Faith is a living relationship with the one true living God. It transforms us. We are made new. We are made a new creation; we are born again because of the indwelling power of God pointing us to the cross. We live in Christ because Christ died for us. That is a countercultural life. And people notice.

   Jesus is the destination and Jesus will calm us in all of life’s circumstances, including in our life’s storms, when we recognize him for who Jesus is. He is there with us. Our Savior. Our Redeemer. The Prince of Peace.

   Whatever is at the top of the news, whatever twists and turns the coming months may take, however hard we have to row against the wind, we know that Jesus is with us, and will be with us forever. The two big stories we have read today show us the way, and it’s Jesus.

   We don’t know what the future holds. But we know who holds the future.

   And that means that, with Jesus, we’re going to make it home.



Wednesday, July 17, 2024

320 The Way Forward

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “The Way Forward” originally shared on July 17, 2024. It was the 320th video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

   When our divisions seem to have brought us to rock bottom it can seem like there’s no way forward. There is a way forward, and it has two seemingly unrelated parts. Today, we’re going to find out what it is.

   There was an attempt on the life of former president, and current presidential candidate, Donald Trump last Saturday. We are still wondering why security was not more robust within firearm range of the podium. We are also wondering about a motive and our first questions are about politics when it could be nothing more than someone who was bullied in high school and who was now not a fully formed adult male. Someone with an a-typical personality doing something that he concluded would make a mark for himself in the world.

   Social media, or what might often be called “anti-social media”, is filled with bizarre conspiracy theories across the political spectrum about this, as well as questions regarding who was responsible for security, calls for violent vengeance, fears for the future, and bland “can’t we all just get along” pleas.

   Time will tell how it all plays out, and only God knows what the future holds, but I am reminded of another shooting.

   When President Ronald Regan was shot in 1981, over 43 years ago, he was taken to a hospital, treated in the emergency room, and then taken in for surgery by a team led by Dr. Joseph Giordano. Before he was sedated, President Regan took off his oxygen mask and said, “I hope you are all Republicans.” Everyone laughed and Dr. Giordano, a Democrat, said, “Today, Mr. President, we are all Republicans.”

   Is that the way forward?

   Can we find unity around addressing what is a common disaster?

   Or are we so broken that we can’t see this attack as a common disaster?

   As many have said, this was not just an attack on one person. This was an attack on our democracy and its imperfect processes. It was an attack on our sense of security, on the rule of law, on the way things ought to be in a free society, including being free from fear.

   It was an attack on all of us.

   There was a time, or at least it seems so to me, when we could disagree without hating one another. How can we move toward respect for one another as persons? Could we even ask for love for one another?

     I appreciate the words of a past president of the Parliament of the World’s Religions, a group that gathers leaders of the world’s religions periodically to discuss shared interests, who opened one such gathering by saying something like, “Our task here is not to agree with one another. Our task is to acknowledge that we have rival truth claims without killing each other.”

   To the world, that is a ridiculously low threshold for tolerance, but for people of all religions, that is a goal that has integrity.

   That same goal may not seem like much for our political life. But today, unfortunately, it’s a start.

   How do we build a bridge made of common values in our political life, and what can Christians contribute?

   Paul was a Roman citizen and was proud of it. He called for the support of the just actions of the empire and for the good that it did even when it was persecuting Christians.

   Martin Luther, the 16th century Church reformer, wrote of his two-kingdom theology, that God rules through the Church and through the good government of this world. He pointed out that both the Church and the government should be held accountable for doing God’s will to promote the good of all people.

   The blending of Church and State into a “civil religion” is neither civil nor religion.

   Violence like we saw last Saturday likewise takes the work of God into human hands. That never ends well.

   Can we agree that what happened last weekend was wrong, and should not be repeated? It may not seem like much, but it’s a start.

   Can we see one another fundamentally not as Democrats or Republicans, or as liberals or conservatives, or as our races, or our cultures, or as our genders, but as people, God’s people, people, created and loved by God?

   Can we see all people as children of God, and therefore see one another as our brothers and our sisters??

   Can we be a witness to the world and encourage one another to live holy, transformed lives as a people who have been redeemed and made new, as new creations in Jesus Christ, as Paul describes in Colossians 3:9-11,

9 Do not lie to one another, seeing that you have stripped off the old self with its practices 10 and have clothed yourselves with the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge according to the image of its creator. 11 In that renewal there is no longer Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave and free; but Christ is all and in all!

   Can we model that unity for the world? Can we remind one another that we are like spokes on a wheel with Jesus at the center? The closer we get to Jesus, the closer we get to one another. The farther we get from Jesus the farther we get from one another.

   Can we find our unity at the hub, in Jesus Christ? As Paul reminds us in Galatians 3:27-28,

27 As many of you as were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. 28 There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.

   The reading from the gospel of Mark that will be read in the vast majority of churches throughout the world this coming Sunday, Mark 6:30-34, 53-56, offers us the way forward in two parts.

   First, is listening and compassion.

   Jesus saw the personhood in his disciples. He was concerned for their personal well-being.

   Just before our Gospel reading, there is an interlude to describe the death of John the Baptist (that we read last week), preceded by Jesus sending out his disciples two by two to the villages of Galilee, calling people to repent.

   He taught his disciples how to conduct themselves and how to deal with success and failure.  He gave them the power to heal people and he gave them authority over the unclean spirits.

   Then, the story resumes in today’s Gospel reading when the disciples, now called apostles because “apostles” means “sent ones”, with Mark 6:30,

30 The apostles gathered around Jesus, and told him all that they had done and taught. 31 He said to them, “Come away to a deserted place all by yourselves and rest a while.” For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat. 32 And they went away in the boat to a deserted place by themselves. 33 Now many saw them going and recognized them, and they hurried there on foot from all the towns and arrived ahead of them. 34 As he went ashore, he saw a great crowd; and he had compassion for them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd

   Jesus listened to his apostles to hear about their mission trip. He wanted to take them to a deserted place so that they could get some rest and some food. But when the crowds saw them and arrived ahead of them by foot, disrupting Jesus’ plans, Jesus didn’t get angry. Jesus had compassion for them because “they were like sheep without a shepherd.”

   Second, is the healing that comes through the touch of Jesus.

   Mark tells of the feeding of the 5,000 and then of Jesus walking on water, and then this happens in the other part of our Gospel reading for this coming Sunday, beginning with Mark 6:53,

53 When they had crossed over, they came to land at Gennesaret and moored the boat. 54 When they got out of the boat, people at once recognized him, 55 and rushed about that whole region and began to bring the sick on mats to wherever they heard he was. 56 And wherever he went, into villages or cities or farms, they laid the sick in the marketplaces, and begged him that they might touch even the fringe of his cloak; and all who touched it were healed.

   Jesus brought healing even without his active intention, but even passively, even when people only touched the fringe of his cloak, because the Holy Spirit led them to recognize God in Jesus.

   Jesus showed his control over nature, over disease, even over death, not to put on a show of his power, but to show who he was, and who he is.

   Miracles are about time. They point both back and forward in time. They point to the world that God created, where there was no disease, no storms, and no death, a world that human beings messed up by their rebellion against God. Miracles also point to the world that one day will be, to the new heaven and the new earth, to the eternal life that begins in our baptism and is made perfect in the life to come, the life that Jesus made possible for us on the cross.

   Why does there seem to be so much violence in our culture, more so than in other cultures around the world? I think that one reason is that we value personal freedom. In cultures where people have a great deal of personal freedom more people will make bad choices that bring evil into the world.

   But God offers us another kind of freedom. God offers freedom from sin, from death, and from the power of the devil.

   It’s given to all who received it in Jesus Christ. It is a gift of God given in our baptisms. It is the kind of freedom that makes us want to make the choices that glorify God.

   Jesus is the way forward, Jesus is the good news that we can trust. Jesus is the way to eternal life, as Jesus says in John 14:6,

6 Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.

   We were created for unity, in a living relationship with the one true living God.

   Jesus is the Way. The way forward is Jesus.