April 21, 2021

April 21, 2021

Sharing from the Congregation – David Petty

The kingdom of heaven is like a treasure hidden in a field ... —Matthew 13:44

If you’ve been outdoors much, you might have noticed that this has been an unusually colorful spring.  It wasn’t just the beautiful flowers; many of the trees have been displaying “autumn” colors — reds, oranges, and yellows. 

We don’t fully understand the “why” of autumn leaves, in the sense of knowing what value it has to the trees; but we do understand the “how” of it — that is, the chemistry of the changes.  It turns out that leaves begin to produce those bright pigments, such as xanthophyll (yellow) and beta carotene (orange) in the spring at about the same time they begin to produce the green pigment, chlorophyll.  Autumn pigments are actually present all through the summer; it’s just that the intense green covers them up.  In the fall, the green pigment fades first, revealing the other colors that are already there.

Because the yellow, orange, etc. pigments are somewhat “hardier,” in the sense of tolerating cool temperatures, it’s not uncommon for them develop a little earlier than green in the spring, so you get a little foretaste of autumn — although the colors are usually not as intense.  (Some red pigments are only produced in the spring and fall.)  This spring was unusual in that they were more intense and noticeable for a longer time.

We know that many of the worldly signs of God’s glory are unseen for a time.  That can be true of God’s kingdom itself.  Scripture tells us, I believe, that the kingdom is here and now (Luke 17:21), but it also tells us that it can be hidden.  In contrast to the leaves, sometimes our own efforts can uncover (unmask?) the kingdom for ourselves and others.  Sometimes, though, we just have to wait, hanging on tightly to our patience and our faith, for it to be revealed.

Gracefully submitted,
David Petty

April 18, 2021

April 18, 2021

To join our online worship please visit: stmarkknox.org/sermons

11 You have turned my mourning into dancing; you have taken off my sackcloth and clothed me with joy, 12 so that my soul may praise you and not be silent. O Lord my God, I will give thanks to you forever. – Psalm 30:11-12

I’m sure we have all heard the verse before, that the Lord will change our morning into dancing, and in this same psalm, we also find the great promise that “though sorrow may last for the night, joy comes in the morning.” Yet, in the context of Eastertide and those who were the first witnesses to the resurrection, I believe there is more that we can learn of this great truth.

The disciples had experienced the trauma of the cross, were living is disbelief and fear. Their fear was now for their own lives, and if anyone had accused them of being disciples of Jesus, in that moment, they could have met the same fate.  However, when Jesus appears to them, in the upper room, and again by the seashore, we find that their disbelief gives way to so much joy that they are now prepared to go on living.

Jesus will tell them that they must stay in Jerusalem, though it might be difficult to remain hidden there, they believe in their risen Lord, and they remain as Jesus has commanded.  Jesus says, that someday soon they will receive power from on high, the counselor will come to them.  We know that the disciples still are living with a bit of fear, even after seeing their risen Lord.  Even knowing that he is risen, is only the start of the joy that leads us to live forward.

There is more that must come beyond just the resurrection. The belief that Jesus died and rose again is the beginning of faith, but there is so much more, and as we wait on the Lord, as he did command his disciples, we will find that joy that truly moves our souls to sing and praise and not keep silent.  The disciples waited the 50 days till Pentecost, to receive the Spirit of life that showed them the abundant life now.  We may not have to wait as long, though we may have waited, but the joy of the Lord is at our fingertips as we trust in his mercy and grace, and lean on his understanding and guidance. Our mourning can be turned into dancing, as we allow the Holy Spirit of God to move in us, and lead us to better live and love in the name of Christ our Lord.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

April 14, 2021

April 14, 2021

Then your light shall break forth like the dawn, and your healing shall spring up quickly; your vindicator shall go before you, the glory of the Lord shall be your rear guard. – Isaiah 58:8

We all look forward to the day that the healing of our world is complete, though it is a slow process, we know it is coming, and one day, like a flash, it will all be made well.  Whether the reality of this healing takes place in our world, or with the coming new world of the Lord’s return, I think matters less than the belief in our hearts that healing is on the horizon, and that the best the Lord has to offer is still to come.

The later part of the prophecies of Isaiah are interesting, and were written to give a guide to peoples yet to come of what it is like to worship, truly and truthfully in the presence of the Lord. These prophecies speak of the restoration of Israel, and of the world, which we now believe happened through the death and resurrection of Christ Jesus. 

The prophetic word found in Isaiah 58, speaks of true worship. If we read the entirety of this chapter what we find is that when our worship is true and genuine there are certain human constructs and hang ups that we can finally get over. We stop arguing about fasting, as if our fasting somehow draws us closer to God than those who don’t. We begin to humble ourselves instead of others. We chose to worship as a way to lose the bods of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke, and work to let all oppressed go free. We share our bread with the hungry and bring the poor and homeless into our houses, we clothe the naked. Verse 9 and 10 says:

“Then you shall call, and the Lord will answer; you shall cry for help, and he will say, Here I am.

If you remove the yoke from among you, the pointing of the finger, the speaking of evil, 10 if you offer your food to the hungry and satisfy the needs of the afflicted, then your light shall rise in the darkness and your gloom be like the noonday.”

And immediately my heart breaks for myself and for so many in our world. It breaks because I know that our human condition loves to “point the finger” at someone else to blame them for what has gone wrong in our world.  We see all kinds of finger pointing, and I wonder if we should take a breath and realize that if we want to see our world change it starts within. It starts by cleaning up our own biases and shortcoming, it focuses on those around us, and we work diligently, through all the weeks, months, and years of our lives to see that this world is made right, not by blaming others, but by helping them, showing them through the love we have for God the way made right, and world healed through caring.

It’s won’t come quickly, nor easily, but I believe this is the path of Christ to bring genuine healing to our world.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

April 11, 2021

April 11, 2021

To join today’s online worship service at 9 am or later please visit: stmarkknox.org/sermons

Sharing from the congregation: David Petty

Then he said, “Jesus remember me when you come into your kingdom.”  He replied, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise.” —Luke 23:42-43

We don’t know for certain everything that Jesus said while on the cross.  The gospel writers have given us seven utterances, referred to as the Seven Last Words, that they felt were important.  But they never denied that he said other things, and they disagreed over which were worth noting.  The seven utterances are worth studying individually, but it also may be worthwhile to look at each gospel writer’s choices, for that might indicate something that they were trying tell us.

Luke reports three “Last Words.”  The first two, given in adjacent passages, deal with forgiveness; in the first he asks for forgiveness of a crowd that does not know what they are doing, and in the second he reassures a man who appears quite aware of what he has done.  There is another difference, though, between the two utterances, and it has to do with authority.  In the first case Jesus asks his father to forgive.  In the second he speaks on his own authority. 

The question of the father’s authority vs. the son’s is a recurring one in the gospels.  In Luke 5:16-26, the story of the man let down through the roof, Jesus affirms his authority, and in John 17:2 he speaks In prayer of having been given it all.  But in Luke 18:19 he says that no one is good but God alone, and in Luke 20:1-8 he toys with the priests and others who ask about his authority.

The third utterance is, “Father, into your hands I commend  my spirit.”  So you see that Luke is highlighting the elements of the trinity: father, son, and spirit.  This is by no means a theological explanation of the doctrine.  The trinity is a complicated matter; I certainly don’t understand it, and I’m not convinced that the experts do either.  Luke is simply reminding us of it.  The concept has its beginning in the Old Testament but was coming into prominence at about the time the Gospels were written (see Matthew 28:19, for example.)

Maybe you, like I, don’t really understand all this; but there can still be great comfort in realizing that the one who created us and redeemed us continues to walk beside us and guide us every day.

Gracefully submitted,
David Petty

April 7, 2021

April 7, 2021

Sharing from the congregation: Sue Biggerstaff

See!  The winter has past.  Flowers appear on the earth; 
The time of singing has come.  Song of Songs 2:11-12 

Over the years I have kept a notebook of Bible verses and sayings that I have found meaningful.  Looking through them recently, I found the following concerning spring. 

The day the Lord created hope was probably the day He created spring.  ( Bernard Williams)

Spring shows what God can do with a drab and dirty world.   (Virgil Kraft)

Our Lord has written the promise of resurrection, not in books alone, but in every leaf
of springtime.   (Martin Luther) 

Behold I make all things new.   (Rev. 21:5) 

How different our attitudes and feelings are this spring as compared to last March and April.  Last year we were reluctant to go out into public and were unable to attend church.  We had restrictions we had never faced before and had to make adjustments in our daily lives.  This year we are hopeful that the pandemic will end and some kind of normalcy will return.  It is almost as if we are entering a new time.

This spring like no other should bring us joy and a celebrating spirit.  As we savor the beauty of the season, let us give thanks to our God for sustaining us and bringing us into another springtime.

Gracefully submitted,
Sue Biggerstaff

April 5, 2021

April 5, 2021

11 God has made everything suitable for its time; moreover he has put a sense of past and future into their minds, yet they cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end. 12 I know that there is nothing better for them than to be happy and enjoy themselves as long as they live; 13 moreover, it is God’s gift that all should eat and drink and take pleasure in all their toil. 14 I know that whatever God does endures forever; nothing can be added to it, nor anything taken from it; God has done this, so that all should stand in awe before him.
 – Ecclesiastes 3:11-14

When I started sending out daily encouraging emails, I had only planned to keep them going for a season. A season when we needed hope; a season we needed a way to feel connected. That season has lasted longer than I ever imagined, and I know that we are not quite over that season as of yet.

This past year has forced many of us to try new ways of doing life, work, and everything else. Slowly, very slowly we are getting back to a sense of normalcy, but it’s not quite the normal we had hoped for. I remain hopeful that things will continue to get better, and know that God will see us through, or as the teacher of Ecclesiastes says: God’s gift is that we should take pleasure in our toil, for we know that God will endure forever. If God endures forever, then we who are alive in him, shall endure as well.

The season has allowed me to share with you many things that have been on my heart, and hopefully helped you in your faith during those times we could not meet in person.  However, like all seasons this one is now come to an end. 

As we continue to move forward, the encourager will continue, but only once or twice a week. Still, I would be happy to continue to share any messages or devotions that you would like to share with the congregation. For me, as we move forward, I need to devote more time and focus on ways we can gather, grow as disciples, and hopefully begin to have Sunday School, Small groups, and Bible studies once more. 

I want to say a huge thank you to all of you, for reading the messages, and sharing them with those in your life. I especially want to thank David Petty, Sue Biggerstaff, Don Parnell, Edward Pierce, and all the others who have sent encouraging notes for me to share. I also appreciate everyone who took the time to respond, which gave the encouragement to keep on going; knowing my words had an impact on your life and faith was the greatest thanks I could receive. 

As we move into the new seasons ahead, I hope you will continue to find a daily way to focus on God, and spend time in prayer. There are a number of daily devotions out there, if that is something you would like to continue, and if you need a suggestion for one, feel free to ask. One options is to sign up for the daily devotion that comes from the Holston Conference, which can be found at Holston.org (daily devotions tab).

I truly hope that our next season will bring us more together, working and growing together to make an impact on our community, and the world, for the glory of Christ our Lord.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

April 4, 2021

April 4, 2021

To join the online Easter celebration please join us at 9 am or after at: stmarkknox.org/sermons

56 The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. 57 But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. – 1 Corinthians 15:56-57

Christ is risen! and the great news of the day, is that the fear of death is cancelled by the hope of the resurrection. We live in a society that seems to want to cancel many things these day, but today’s victory is one where celebrating. Death is cancelled, the grave is overcome, For those who call on the name of Christ Jesus, we have seen, believed ,and received the victory by his cancelling of our debt to sin.

If you ever have the chance, you should visit Christ Church in Philadelphia. There, you have the opportunity to be in the place where many of the founding fathers of our nation once sat. Christ Church is a short distance of Independence Hall, and in the cemetery around a block away from Christ church, you will discover the tomb of Benjamin Franklin. On Franklin’s tombstone is a self-composed epitaph, he had written and requested be engraved over his body.  The epitaph reads:

The body of Franklin, printer, like the cover of an old book its content torn out and stripped of its lettering and gilding lies here food for worms.  But the work will not be lost for it will appear once more in a new and more elegant edition revised and corrected by the author.

Franklin, before his death understood the truth that awaited, for those who are in Christ, they will rise again, revised, perfected by the creator.  For those who live in Christ, they echo the questions of Paul and the psalmists before him: “Where, death is your victory? Where, death, is your sting?”

What follows in Paul’s epistle to the Corinthians is a great truth about the resurrection. He give evidence, talks of its importance the sequence of it, and the value of it; and then speaks the glorious praise in response to the resurrection.  The response that we should all have when we understand this truth. In that moment of understanding we join the celestial symphony in praise and adoration to Jesus Christ, Victor over death! Hallelujah! 

If there is something this past year has taught us, from our time away from one another, from our unfortunate focus on death, we should understand that great celebration of Easter all the more, for today, we remember that death did not win. Christ is risen, and with him we are risen indeed to a life abundant and eternal. Praise be to God for our victory in Christ!

Grace & Peace,
Sam

April 3, 2021

April 3, 2021

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?

— Matthew 27:46

The psalms have been classified by many different systems, but almost all systems include a large category called “laments,” or complaints to God,  In most systems these are the most common category.  And yet when we sing psalms in church we almost never sing laments.

It’s not as if we object to complaint songs — if you don’t believe me, listen to a country music station for about five minutes.  We seem to feel that it’s just not right to complain to God.  There is some biblical support for this attitude — in Numbers 21 the Israelites complained and were attacked by venomous snakes.   But Jesus himself endorsed the laments.  During Holy Week we often remember the seven last words of Christ.  Of these two are direct quotes from lament psalms (Matthew 27:46 and Luke 23:46) and another is said to be the fulfillment of a lament (John 19:28.)

Theologians and writers have lamented our loss of laments.  In an age when the church is trying to reach out to the lost and the least, the acknowledgement of suffering   through the powerful medium of music is one thing not to be thrown away lightly.  The Old Testament idea of God was of one who walks with us in all our paths, in sunshine and in the valley of the shadow.  I could be quite wrong, but it seems to me that this is the relationship that God wants.  Inclusion in worship — the most cherished of our times with God — of what troubles us the most might be entirely appropriate.

Sam here: On Holy Saturday, many sit in a time of silent lament. It is a time to reflect that Jesus spent time in the grave, or some might say in the underworld, or hell.  Jesus went to set the captives free, but before the resurrection we do not know this, before Jesus rose on the third day there was mourning. In much the same way, those who are ‘captives’ by the situations in their lives even now don’t know that better days are ahead, and for them the lament in all they know. We sit and wonder, lamenting, but in hope we believe that one day, as the psalmists say God will turn our mourning into dancing.

Gracefully submitted,
David Petty

Grace & Peace,
Sam

April 2, 2021 - Good Friday

April 2, 2021 - Good Friday

Excerpt from an article entitled Via Dolorosa written by Sarah Winfrey:

A man struggles up a dusty path.  He staggers, clearly not strong enough to bear the massive wooden beam that sits across his shoulders.  Falling, he catches himself, pauses for a breath or two, and slowly pushes himself upright again.  He glances toward his destination, only a few hundred meters from where he is now. It is a desolate place: a rock outcropping looking out over Jerusalem, where another piece of wood already stands.  This one is taller, with one end buried in the dirt.  He knows that, when he arrives, the soldiers will fix the beam currently across his shoulders high up on that wooden pole. Then they will nail him to it, and then he will die. 

He stumble again, and this time he cannot catch himself.  He tries to stand but falls back to his knees.  The bloody wounds on his back are flowing freely again, and he does not move except to heave a weary breath into his longs.  The soldiers grab someone, a simple passerby, and thrust the beam upon him.  Then they drag the man to his feet and pull him forward once again.  Even without the weight across his shoulders, he struggles to move. They goad and jeer, and eventually he stumbles on.

It is no doubt that Jesus suffered terribly.  He was beaten and bloody before this journey down what is known as the Via Delarosa ever began.  Walking about a third of a mile, with a cross beam weighing probably close to 100 pounds on his back.  He was sweaty and bloody, dirt ground in his wounds from falling; he was already gasping for breath. 

If you think of the wounds that Jesus had already endured before carrying his cross, you would probably be amazed that he made it even a single step, yet Jesus made it most of the way there before needing Simon, the innocent Cyrenian to carry his cross for him. 

Along with Jesus’ torture and accusations the night before, this one of the most brutal scenes in the Bible.  It is easier to look away, to pass directly from his arrest to his joyous resurrection.  Or it would be even easier to pass from the pomp and celebration of Palm Sunday’s entrance into Jerusalem to the grander celebration of Easter morning.  But we can’t and truly have an appreciation for the faith we have made alive in Christ.

We cannot avoid the pain, nor can we avoid the suffering of our Lord because of what the prophet Isaiah foretold, and the apostle Peter reminded us, that it is only by his wounds are we healed. His wounds. His torture. His death. That is what opened the door to the fullness of life for us.

Jesus embraced his cross and his death on behalf of the sins of the world.  That those who would believe in him, would not perish but have everlasting life.  It’s a hope that one day we will be united with our Lord in a New Heaven and a New Earth when Re-creation or New creation comes to pass. But there is hope even now, as we can embrace our times of pain and suffering, knowing that Christ has endured, and now abides with us as we abide with him.

Knowing the true love of God as seen in Jesus reminds us that we can’t skip ahead to the celebration without remembering why we are celebrating. We must understand that the love Jesus shows as the last supper, is a love that moves on to become sacrificial, a love that means giving up something even when you don’t want to; that you are submissive to another even when you would rather do something else.

I wonder how many marriages could learn about love from reading and understanding the true love that is in the passion story?

To understand that to really know what love is, we have to take up our cross daily and follow Jesus.  Even when we are exhausted, worn down, bloody but the beatings we have endured.  We still take up the cross and go up to hill called Calvary.

Only in Christianity could a symbol such as a cross bear with it a sign of love, hope, and victory.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

April 1, 2021

April 1, 2021

The virtual Maundy Thursday Service will be available after 1 pm at stmarkknox.org/sermons

23 But they kept urgently demanding with loud shouts that he should be crucified; and their voices prevailed. 24 So Pilate gave his verdict that their demand should be granted.
– Luke 23:23-24

One of the lines I always find most interesting in the creed of our faith, the apostle’s creed is that line that says: “…he suffered under Pontius Pilate ….”

When we go to the gospel record, we do see that Pilate has the final word on the punishment of Jesus for crimes against his own people. However, Pilate in all the gospels wants no part in this charade. In John’s gospel, Pilate finds not fault in Jesus, is warned by his wife to not follow through with the execution, and washes his hands of the situation. In Matthew’s gospel Pilate claims he is “innocent of this man’s blood; see to it [the crucifixion] yourselves” (27:24). In Mark’s gospel indicates that Jesus turned him over to be crucified just to pacify the crowd. And in Luke’s gospel we see a response similar to Matthew and Mark.  Pilate doesn’t seem to want to have Jesus put to death, but allows it to keep the crowd from revolting.  Yet, we recount our faith as Jesus being crucified under this man, appointed by Caesar.

For the earliest Christians, we must remember that they were Jewish, they were children of Abraham, and as such, they were under the same laws that the Pharisees were required to operate, namely, they had no rights execute anyone. To say that the Pharisees, or the Jewish authorities had Jesus crucified, would be to discredit their own people, and by doing so their own witness as they called others to believe in the death and resurrection of Christ, that through him we might all have salvation, and enter in the kingdom triumphant.

However, the Prince of Peace did not let such suffering keep him from bringing peace to all who would have faith and believe in him. We know that he suffered, was crucified, and buried.  But it is not the end of our faith that Jesus taught and died.  Jesus rose again, to bring new life for all. Today, on Maundy Thursday we start the Holy Weekend, remembering Jesus betrayal, denial, suffering, and death, but death is not the end of the story, we will see life on the other side.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

March 31, 2021

March 31, 2021

Then the whole assembly rose and led him off to Pilate. And they began to accuse him, saying, “We have found this man subverting our nation. He opposes payment of taxes to Caesar and claims to be Messiah, a king.”            - Luke 23:1-2

The dark, immoral, and illegal trials of the Jewish council now lead to Jesus being taken before the authority that truly can have him put to death.

The members of the Sanhedrin parade Jesus off to Pilate who questions him,  and initially tries to pass him off to Herod. Herod only mocks him, ridicules him, and dresses Jesus in a royal robe having guards slap and beat him. Then, only to send Jesus back to Pilate, again.

24 hours earlier Jesus and his disciples were preparing the Passover.  A few days earlier, Jesus was making a triumphant entry into Jerusalem.  He was being praised by the people along the streets, the palm branches waving and being laid at his feet.

How could all of this come to such an abrupt halt?

We are a people who love the pomp and glory of Palm Sunday.  We love to see the palm branches waved, and to hear the Hosannas.  We are a people who have been taught that we are resurrection people, that life is abundant and full in Christ Jesus our lord, who conquers death.

We love Palm Sunday, and we love Easter, when we get to shout the Hallelujahs because our Lord has risen from the grave. But how can we truly understand the joy of those Sundays without entering into the Holy Week of Christ’s passion?

We must know that life is not always full of moment of joy, we are not always living in times of celebration. We sometimes have need for morning, desperation, failure, and we know that sometimes we feel falsely accused. Jesus walks every bit of the valleys of life with us, because he walked them before us.

the accusations and the illegal trials our Lord was forced to endure when no trials were to be held, when it was still the middle of the night, without representation, asked self-incrimination questions, condemned without a vote, and executed before even a day passed.  For even according to Jewish law after a death penalty was issued, an entire night needed to pass before the execution was carried out. 

We need to know the before we endure life, not just its joys and celebrations, but its times of desperation and accusation that our Lord endured it far before we were born.  He endured the worst devastation that life could offer, and he did it submitting constantly to the Father’s will, that we might be taught to follow Him into everything.

Jesus is offered to us, the sacrificial lamb, as the new mandate for our sin.  No more sacrifice, no more burnt offering, no more death for those who call on the name of the Lord, for Jesus endured it all in our stead, as our scapegoat.  As our sacrifice of the New Covenant between God and humanity.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

March 30, 2021

March 30, 2021

53 Every day I was with you in the temple courts, and you did not lay a hand on me. But this is your hour—when darkness reigns.”         – Luke 22:53

The more we learn and understand about the law of Moses, the more we begin to understand the events that happen on the night Jesus was betrayed and handed over.

Leviticus 16 spells out for the priest of the Hebrew people an order for the atonement of sin, for it to be acceptable to God and true for the people. The Yom Kippur sin offering must be delivered over to death by the high priest himself, otherwise the sins of the people would not be covered.

So on the night after the Passover meal, after Judas betrays Jesus with a kiss, he is handed over to temple officials with the help of Roman guards and taken to the house of Annas, a former high priest, and member of the Sanhedrin, but who is also father-in-law of Caiaphas the high priest for that year.

3 Trials of Jesus take place before the sun ever comes up.  1.  Jesus is taken from the garden of Gethsemane on the Mount of Olives by temple guards, to Annas who calls together a few temple administrators and they have court.  Even though it is the middle of the night, even though it is still the day of the Passover.  Both forbidden under Levitical law.  All courts are to be held in the daylight, and no court is to be held on a feasting or festival day.  Ignoring both of these Annas holds court, but though he has arrested Jesus, he has no charge of which to hold him, so he must catch Jesus or trap him into saying something worthy of accusation, trial, and condemnation.

Annas can get no confession out of Jesus of which to accuse him, so rebukes him and denounces his honesty and sends him to Caiaphas.

2.  Still in the early morning hours before the sun is up, Caiaphas now has the charge and goal of producing a formal accusation at the second trial.  Jesus by Annas is charged with religious insubordination.  So, Caiaphas assembles priests, the council and witnesses to come up and corroborate charges against Jesus.  Nothing seems to match up, so in a moment of desperation to end Jesus, Caiaphas does something both illegal and unethical.  He introduces two new questions into the trial, and these questions essential compel Jesus to testify against himself, then to make matters even more unethical Caiaphas adds an oath to the mix, making Jesus situation in answering, “damned if you do, damned if you don’t.”

According to Matthew 26, Caiaphas asks: I command you by the authority of the living God to say if you are the Messiah, the Son of God”

To which Jesus has no other choice, but to respond as he does in Mark 16:62. “I am”

Done. Now it’s time for the 3rd trial.

Just as the sun was coming up and Peter has denied his Lord now for the third time, the third Jewish trial convenes. 

3. The Sanhedrin is gathered with chief priests Anna and Caiaphas at the helm.  They have Jesus for a religious crime for claiming to be the Son of God.  But they knew that the roman authority could care less about these claims. Many of their own persons in authority were claimed to be ‘sons of gods.’  This would not be enough for Jesus to be handed over and put to death, they needed more.

The Sanhedrin council questions Jesus, and ask him: “are you the Messiah?”

Jesus responds: “If I tell you, you will not believe me, 68 and if I asked you, you would not answer. 69 But from now on, the Son of Man will be seated at the right hand of the mighty God.”

70 They all asked, “Are you then the Son of God?”

He replied, “You say that I am.” This is the “gotcha” moment.

Jesus has now made a political claim that he has a right to the throne as the Messiah, the anointed one of God.  This is all they needed, now Jesus can be bound and taken before Pontius Pilate, the governing authority in Judea for a criminal charge of treason and he is to be executed.

These events of Maundy Thursday and Good Friday have significant meaning, for the people of God, and for the fulfillment of the law. When we see it, we begin to understand the Passover lamb, the lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

March 29, 2021

March 29, 2021

31 “Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift all of you as wheat. 32 But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail. And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.”

33 But he replied, “Lord, I am ready to go with you to prison and to death.”

34 Jesus answered, “I tell you, Peter, before the rooster crows today, you will deny three times that you know me.”         – Luke 22:31-24

Simon, called Peter, is at the meal of the Passover with his Lord.  He is not only a disciple of Jesus, but probably considers himself to be the Lord’s best friend.  He hangs on every word that Jesus says, Peter always has a response to what Jesus would ask.  Peter is the prime example of the “teacher’s pet.”

I don’t thinks there are any huge issues with being a “teacher’s pet” other than perhaps by your peers who do not like the attention you get, or the smugness that you feel as though you might be better than them. But one thing is for sure, if you are the one to whom the teacher shows appreciation, everyone knows who you are.

In the moments after Jesus arrest, people knowing Peter was not to Peter’s advantage.  He followed Jesus to the house of Caiaphas, the High Priest, wanting to know what was going to happen to his Lord, while keeping his distance.

The home of Caiaphas would have been near the temple complex, and quite possibly as Jesus and his disciples headed to the east gate to make their way to the Mount of Olives, they would have walked right past it.  I wonder, if as Jesus walks past the place where he will soon be charged and accused in a completely illegal trail that his heart broke for Peter who would deny him on those same grounds.

Peter follows, and the gospel of John tells us that the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved was also there, indicating that John was with Peter in the courtyard.

Peter warms himself by a fire, because it is the middle of the night, and perhaps from such a vantage point he might be able to see Jesus, and/or hear the outcome what is taking place.

It’s there by the fire, that Peter gives into fear and doubt, but he does not turn over his Lord, instead denies ever knowing him.

First, a servant girl, notices is face in the firelight.  She looks at his face, tries to remember where she has seen that face before, perhaps when Jesus was teaching in the temple she had seen this man with him, so she speaks up, this man, he was one of those who was with Jesus.  He is one of his followers. Peter exclaims, I don’t know him.  1.

Then someone else begins to examine the face of Peter, how he is dressed, looks at his body language, and begins to think about if they have ever seen this man before, and then they too accuse.  You are one of them. Peter exclaims, I am not.  2.

An hour or so goes by, Peter getting anxious trying to see what is going on in the courtyard, now even in view of Jesus, another person who has probably been watching him this whole time, seeing how he reacts to what they are doing, noticing that by the way that he looks and is dressed, that he is a Galilean, like so many who had followed Jesus were.  And this man exclaims that he must be one of Jesus followers. And Peter exclaims, I don’t know what you are talking about.  3.

We all have weak moments in our faith, but it is not by our weakness nor by our times of denial that set us apart from those who are called on to be saints.  It is by the grace of God in which we are forgiven and reconciled, that we join with Christ and are remade in his image of love.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

March 28, 2021

March 28, 2021

To join our online Palm Sunday Service please visit: stmarkknox.org/sermons

37 As [Jesus] was now approaching the path down from the Mount of Olives, the whole multitude of the disciples began to praise God joyfully with a loud voice for all the deeds of power that they had seen, 38 saying,

“Blessed is the king
    who comes in the name of the Lord!
Peace in heaven,
    and glory in the highest heaven!” – Luke 19:37-38

Today, we celebrate the palms, the parade, the time when Jesus along with a great multitude of people are there as Jesus enters into Jerusalem.  It’s one of the high points of the church calendar year, and marks the beginning of Holy Week.

As I think about all that happens this week, we should be reminded that we may have more in common with Jesus and the disciples than what we realize this week.  The celebration of today is marked with the grand parade of Palm branches. We missed out of that grand parade last year, and even as we enter this holy day in 2021, we know that we aren’t fully here yet.  We know there are still restrictions around our gatherings, and the ever-reminding of our mortality in the masks we wear to keep ourselves and others safe, especially among the crowds. 

However, the rest of the week the disciples are in places away from the crowds. They are at a home in Bethany, in a private upper room, in the garden of gethsemane.  These places show times of solitude, times of intimate gathering as Jesus gives his disciples their final instruction before Jesus ultimately fulfills the law of God and becomes the sacrificial lamb.

It has been a hard, long year to get to this point again, and we may find ourselves a little emotional at the celebration because it has been missed, even if only for a year.  We may also feel a saddening in our hearts for those who did not make it with us to this point.  Still, we know the power of praise and adoration for the One who comes as our king, and so we gather, going out to meet him along this path to shout Hosanna! And know that Jesus comes to a place of ending this week, but rises to a new beginning next week as we celebrate Easter.

May the overwhelming joy of the Lord, meet you today, singing “blessed is He who comes in the name of the lord.”

Grace & Peace,
Sam

March 27, 2021

March 27, 2021

Sharing from the Congregation – David Petty

Turn to me and be gracious to me, for I am lonely and afflicted. — Psalm 25:16

John Donne was an English poet and an Anglican priest in Shakespearian times (late sixteenth to early seventeenth century).  When he was 51 he suffered from a severe mysterious illness, from which he eventually recovered.  During the illness he wrote a series of devotions which were published shortly thereafter.

Donne’s illness was not pandemic related, but because no one knew how infectious he might be, his friends, family, and even his doctors were keeping socially distant.  This prompted him to write about loneliness, a subject not unfamiliar to survivors of this past year.

Donne believed that just as nature abhors as vacuum (I’m paraphrasing all his words due to changes in the language), it considers solitude to be almost as bad.  He points to the fact that everything in nature occurs in plurals — plants, animals, even (as he believed) angels.  He suggests that God, even though existing in three persons, was lonely and that this was why humanity was created.

He argues that our own experience demonstrates that we, too, are not meant to be alone.  He goes so far as to theorize that our interest in life on other planets (this was in 1623) is based on our need for company.  

As in his case, sometimes we have no choice but to be lonely.  But he places ending the loneliness, as soon as possible, high on his list of things to pray for.   Perhaps our own time of distancing is coming to a close; we have reason for optimism.

Gracefully submitted,
David Petty

March 26, 2021

March 26, 2021

Sharing from the Congregation – David Petty

About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the prisoners were listening to them.  Suddenly there was an earthquake, so violent that the foundations of the prison ere shaken; and immediately all the doors were opened and everyone’s chains were unfastened. —Acts 16:25-26

A prison escape always makes for a good story.  Luke, that great storyteller, tells two such stories in the book of Acts (Chapters 5 and 12.)  This is not one of them.  Paul, Silas, and others, imprisoned at Philippi and given an obvious chance for escape, chose to not do so.  We might wonder why. 

The result of that choice was, as we know, that their jailor and his family were converted to Christianity.  Perhaps Paul had reason to believe that would happen.  Or perhaps the Holy Spirit told the prisoners to remain where they were (although usually in Acts the Spirit gets credit for what it does.). 

But here could be another reason why they did not escape. Maybe they did not seek freedom because they already felt free.  Maybe they realized that, whatever their earthly situation, their spirits were free from all bonds. That may have been why, like the sparrow on that old song, they were singing.

Years later, when Paul was in another prison, he sent a letter back to the church in Philippi, which by that time was flourishing.  I wonder whether his previous jailer was present when the letter was read.  In the epistle to the Philippians Paul speaks of joy rather than freedom, but under his circumstances it probably meant much the same thing.

Paul’s joy, like his freedom, was beyond the ability of the world to control.  Most of us haven’t really been imprisoned recently — although it has felt that way just a bit — but it was Paul’s talent to use the extremes of his own experience to illustrate matters to others.  If we can do the same our present suffering is a blessing.

Gracefully submitted,
David Petty

March 25, 2021

March 25, 2021

21 “Lord,” Martha said to Jesus, “if you had been here, my brother would not have died. 22 But I know that even now God will give you whatever you ask.” 23 Jesus said to her, “Your brother will rise again.” 24 Martha answered, “I know he will rise again in the resurrection at the last day.” 25 Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; 26 and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?” 27 “Yes, Lord,” she replied, “I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, who is to come into the world.” – John 11:21-27

Why must we suffer? Why must suffering happen this way? But someone has said, that instead of asking why, the better question is “what?”  What can I learn from this time in my life, of trial?  Or even ask, “How?”  How does God want to see me grow through this pain?  We don’t always know the answers to these questions, but eventually God will work them out through us, and sometimes in spite of us.

In her first book, Joni, Joni Eareckson Tada tells of the tragic driving accident that left her paralyzed from the neck down.  She chronicles the agony she went through in the aftermath and how eventually she came to trust in Christ and submit to Him.  She ends the book by telling of speaking at a rally to hundreds of young people and her hope that scores of them would come to have a faith in Jesus Christ.  The she adds (p.228), “But I will be please if only on person is drawn to Christ.  Even one person would make the wheelchair worth all that the past eight years have cost.”  Even though it was many years ago, she dedicated her life to allow her suffering to help others find a faith in Christ. 

God teaches us that even in the midst of pain, even in the midst of suffering and grief, even in the midst of death, God can be glorified. 

These sisters, Martha and Mary did not understand the Lord’s delay.  Both of them cried out the same complaint, “lord, if you had been here, our brother would not have died.” They blamed the delay of Jesus for the death of their brother.

But the reason for Jesus delay was not disregard, it was love.  By delaying, the would see more of God’s glory in their Lord, and know even more of His almighty power.  Their faith in Him, and in His purpose would grow.  The Lord’s deliberate delay was from love, though they did not understand it. 

Paul writes in Romans 8:28: “And we know that God works all things together for the good of those who love Him, and are called according to His purpose.”

And how much more in Scripture could we read about our need to wait upon the Lord?  If God answered instantly every time, we might not recognize our need to depend on Him, nor our need to be surrounded by the communion of saints in our faith community. Here we learn to rely on God’s almighty power, and the communion we share by those who share in the faith, that we might find care and comfort, and Jesus in our midst despite our times of suffering and grief. We learn from this passage that delay in raising Lazarus from the dead is the precursor for our own resurrection.  Through this we see that although we will all die, one day we will all be raised, and we will be made like Christ.

Jesus is the resurrection and the life, if we believe in Him, then even though we die, we will live forever more.  And that is a certainty worth believing in.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

March 24, 2021

March 24, 2021

So the sisters sent word to Jesus, “Lord, the one you love is sick.” When he heard this, Jesus said, “This sickness will not end in death. No, it is for God’s glory so that God’s Son may be glorified through it.” Now Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus. So when he heard that Lazarus was sick, he stayed where he was two more days… John 11:3-6

Anyone, who has ever lost, knows that even when death is inevitable, we don’t desire or expect it, we simply come to accept that it is this loved one time, and prayer for their comfort and peace as well as our own. Death remains a great mystery even today.  No matter how much we can explain and determine why one’s body has no life left within it, we cannot understand what happens to consciousness.  We are left with our faith in such times to help us through, to help our hearts makes sense of loss, and to give us a hope of knowing our loved one once more.

Death is a part of life, everyone will get there, but none are ever truly ready.  The hope we find in death, is that death is not the end, but we believe in a resurrection.  And because our Lord has overcome death, through him, we believe we shall overcome as well.

Here, in the gospel of John we see a third gospel account of Jesus raising someone from the dead back to life.  The others include the raising of the widow’s son in Luke 7, and Jairus daughter in Mark 5 & Luke 8.  However, in this account, we don’t see Jesus raising to life because he has compassion on the loved one’s.  Instead, in this account Jesus is a loved one.  Jesus is acquainted with Martha, Mary, and their now deceased brother Lazarus.  They all have spent time together, and they were considered disciples of Jesus.

How could Jesus let one of his own disciples perish before everything he came to do had been accomplished?  There are two things within the text, that I believe help us to understand Jesus hesitation to go to Bethany, or to raise Lazarus from afar.  After all if Jesus is God, he need not be present for Lazarus to be raised, he could have said the word, and it would happen.  Yet, part of what make our faith is Jesus so great, is our belief that he is present with us, even now.  For we believe the scriptures, that were two or more are gathered, there He will be in their midst.

In verse 4 Jesus says: “This sickness will not end in death. No, it is for God’s glory so that God’s Son may be glorified through it.”  - and after saying this he decided to stay where he was for another 2 days.

Scholars believe that based on the end of John 10, that Jesus at this point was somewhere in the vicinity of Peoria some 20 miles away from Bethany.  Turning, and going to Bethany even at the moment of receiving word, chances are that Lazarus was already dead.  However, he stays for two more days before going back.

We know what transpires when Jesus does arrive. Martha weeps and wails that if only Jesus had been there, their brother would not have died. Jesus sees Mary with professional mourners surrounding her, and he weeps himself.  Truth is, we all would rather has something or someone keep us from suffering rather than help us through our suffering.  However, the power of God is found in knowing that even while we suffer we can bring our troubles before God, and in God’s mercy, grace, and love, we will know relief even if it is in God’s timing, and not our own.

May we always seek to know God’s timing, knowing in His infinite love and grace, God does hear our prayers and brings us comfort, forever.

Grace & Peace,
Sam

March 23, 2021

March 23, 2021

I will thank you forever, because of what you have done.
In the presence of the faithful, I will proclaim your name, for it is good. – Psalm 52:9

Each day that passes this spring, I find more reason to rejoice. It’s hard to believe how much life has been affected over this past year, but God did not even once abandon us.

We can admit that there were times when it seemed that we were lost and in a dark place, personally and perhaps as a society, but the faithful continued to have hope, to pray, and to believe that better days would be ahead.  I know that we still are living with many restrictions that still hamper the full sense of ‘normal.’ However, as more and more people have the opportunity to receive vaccination, and as the spring weather allows us to spend more time outdoors, I have a great hope in the goodness of God who is leading us ever forward by his grace and love.

The psalmist reminds us that there is only one whose name is good. The opening of this psalm calls down those who seek more evil than good, or who love lying more than the truth. However, it is God who will break them down, and uproot them from the land. Those who believe they are the power of the land will one day be in laughter, and those who trust in God will be trusted with the abundant riches of His kingdom that will last forever.  I hope that we will stand on the truth of God’s grace, mercy and love as seen in the person of Jesus the Christ. Accepting and loving others as Christ first loved us, and believing in the truth of the eternal kingdom alive in us. Let us give thanks to God forever, for being accepted for He is good.

Grace & Peace,
Sam