Sunday, November 27, 2016

DAYS TO COME

November 27, 2016
Advent 1
(prayer)
A match will burn for long enough
to light a single candle.
A candle only burns
until the conversation's done.
One bright conversation
spreads a light across a lifetime.
Every life has time enough
to shine like the sun.
//
Today, by the light of this single candle, we are beginning a conversation that will accompany us (and illuminate our path) over the next four weeks as we approach the Christ Mass.
"Advent" (as a word) has Latin roots and literally means to come - ad... vent == to... come. 
The very name of this season of the church year that we begin today implies anticipation and waiting.
Waiting and Anticipation are common passive responses to being in the context of 'something' that is to come.
A virtue that does well in times like this is... patience.
When we are anticipating something to come, we have to wait for the distance and/or time that seperates us from it to make its way down to zero.
You (or someone in your life) might find patience a bit of a challenge as November gives way to December and we begin to anticipate the coming of Christmas.
The stereotype is... that it is young children who find the clocks moving too slowly at this time of year, and yet I have known many adults who get pretty impatient at this time of year.
//
I said that two aspects of Advent are anticipation and waiting - and that would be enough if Christmas was a day that we expect to simply show up on its own on the 25th of December and we enjoy it in the moment it arrives.
However, for many of us, I suspect that a third aspect will be part of the next twenty-eight days... Preparation.
Some of this will involve practical plans that we choose to do to make the Christmas time a time of celebration.
Some people make preparations to travel or receive visitors.
For many, there will be a special meal that will not just happen if details are left to the last minute.
I know that many people want to (and are able to) share in the tradition of gift-giving at this time of year - gifts for family, friends, co-workers, teachers, [pastors], etc. and generosity shared with people we don't even know personally, but we believe can use some practical grace in their lives. 
The proverb says that it is the thought that counts not the gift itself - thinking about a person and what might be a good and meaningful gift for them, can and should take some energy.
While we will make our way to Christmas by simply waiting... for most of us, the coming weeks will include some preparation as well.
//
The Christmas season has grown to have such a wide appreciation within our Canadian context that it is anticipated by people of many cultural backgrounds, including a significant number of willing revelers with little or no connection to Christianity.
The celebration is cross-cultural and has many deeply appreciated traditions that have limited or no religious roots to them.
I bet you that we could spend the next twenty minutes listing off secular Christmas symbols or traditions or music that we will encounter in the coming weeks.
//
The weeks before Christmas can be busy and have many wonderful distractions to catch our attention.
And yet.... for those who are interested in the Christian aspects of this season, more attention is needed.  We accept the challenge to find the Christ-child amid the tinsel and coloured lights and the jolly old elf in the reindeer-drawn sleigh.
To do this, we willingly work at keeping Christ in Christmas for us.
//
I am not one of those complaining religious zealots who bemoans the secular or non-Christian traditions and activities that surround Christmas and demands a hearty "merry christmas" from every clerk in every store. 
As the Church of Jesus, we don't hold a monopoly on this time of year.  Remember that the reason why the early Christians celebrated Jesus' birth at this time of year had nothing to do with any knowledge of what time of year he was actually born, but because they could hold their celebrations under cover of the winter solstice celebration and the mid-winter festival to the Roman god, Saturn.  When Christianity was an underground (even outlawed) religious sect, they found ways to celebrate without drawing too much attention.
So, when people complain that some people are co-opting the Christmas season, I point out that this is okay, because we did it first.
//
//
As I have noted in other contexts - at other times - we (the church) should not feel the need to rely on those outside of our traditions to do the work of promoting our festivals and the stories those festivals celebrate.  That is our work to do.
//
For us, who are interested in Christmas as a time to remember the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, Advent pretty much has to include some focused preparation as we move closer to December 25th.
//
//
The season of Advent is the vehicle we are gifted with to aide in this preparation, alongside our anticipating and waiting.
//
//
//
For today and for each of the next three Sundays (guided by the passages suggested in the Revised Common Lectionary), we will hear both a reading from the first century Christian writing called the Gospel of Matthew and from the prophetic book of the Hebrew Scriptures, called Isaiah
//
The book of Isaiah (although wonderfully edited together with a consistent writing style) can be divided into three distinct parts - that speak to three different time of Judean history. 
The first 39 chapters come from a time of national stability for Judah - the northern Israelite people had been overrun by the Assyria empire's,  but Judah in the south was allowed to maintain a fair measure of its autonomy.  Since the death of King Solomon 250 years earlier, northern Israel and southern Judah had each felt they were the truly faithful people of God and the other was rebellious.  With the north's defeat, the south was that much more assured of their superiority.
Chapters 40 to 55 come from a slightly later time, after another eastern empire's had forced many people from the southern kingdom into exile. 
The final part of Isaiah (chapters 56 to 66) describes the time of restoration that followed the return of the exiles.
//
//
Matthew, although the first to appear in the New Testament, was written after the book of Mark was already being read in parts of the early church.  Matthew is part of an emerging and evolving early Christian tradition.  Matthew's gosoel was written independently and roughly contemporaneously with Luke.
//
As we go forward in the coming weeks, it may appear that we are moving around the various Isaiah and Matthew texts in sort of a random order, but... as the weeks progress, we will explore some basic aspects of our faithful tradition that will serve us well as we follow the road that leads to the intersection where the divine and human meet.
//
//
As we heard during the candle lighting for our advent wreath, we are designating the first candle with the word: hope.
Hope is... a feeling of expectation that something we desire will come to pass.
Typically, when we use the word, hope, we are not necessarily speaking with a lot of certainty.
Hope can express a desire that others might see as unlikely.
Like many feelings, hope can be more influenced by emotions more than logic.
Jim Wallis of sojo.net defines hope as believing in spite of the evidence.
The architect character in the second Matrix movie (Reloaded) - after Neo chose not to follow the logical path his predecessors had done before him - proclaimed "Hope. It is the quintessential human delusion, simultaneously the source of your greatest strength, and your greatest weakness."
//
Hopeful people are sometimes viewed as flighty, unreasonable, even dangerous... and most likely unprepared for the time to come.
//
Did you catch that irony?
Advent is a time of preparation.  It begins with a light of hope.
And yet, from the outside, hopeful people are seen as unprepared.
//
//
The way I look at it, hope is not a prognostication tool.  Hope is not meant to passively predict the future.
Hope can be what drives us to set a direction for the future we want to help unfold.
//
Isaiah, chapter two, like all of our Isaiah readings this Advent, come from the era of national stability described in the first part of that book.
I mention this because, when things are going well, people tend to become complacent.  They start to believe that the good times will never stop rolling.  Hope can seem a bit unnecessary in the context of stability.
[That is certainly a general theme of the Matthew reading... be watchful, not complacent.  Wonder can be missed if your focus is too narrow and selfish.
For me, Matthew also hints at another barrier to hope.  A resignation that there is nothing new on the horizon to be watching for.  Sometimes, people can be overly cynical that the future will offer anything better that the moment we are in.]
Back to Isaiah... one of the roles of a prophet is often to get people thinking in different and challenging ways... to point not necessarily to what is probable, but what is possible, even preferred... if not predictable.
//
The southern Hebrew kingdom of Isaiah's time was able to maintain its power because of military loyalty to Assyria.
As we listened to the prophet this morning, we heard a longing for a different type of stability.
Isaiah expressed hope for a future that was truly peaceful based on a mutual coming together of adversaries, not a tentative peace held together by fear.
//
Into the complacency of a war-won national stability, Isaiah invites to hope that more is possible.
Imagine a time without war, the prophet preaches.
Imagine if swords were a waste of metal.
Imagine if people were drawn to the temple as equal creatures of God, no matter what nation they were from.
Imagine if Jerusalem was not known for its defensive walls, but for its open gates. 
O house of Israel, let us move forward in the light of God.
That light is the illumination of holy hope.
//
//
We begin this Advent Season with the challenge of hope.
Hope can be equally hard in the face of complacency and cynicism. 
When complacent, we might feel no need to hope.
When cynical, we might feel no ability to hope.
These are the challenges to hope that we (as people who care about the foundational meaning of Christmas) want to face head on.
Can we hope beyond a complacency that we are simply repeating our past?
Can we hope beyond a cynicism that wonder and mystery and change is still possible in a world of disenfranchisement... where we feel forced to believe that one person's desires are meaningless?
//
//
So, fellow Followers of Jesus, let us hold up hope's light as we start down this Advent path.
If the evidence tells you that Christmas is nothing more than a memorial to days gone by, try to believe, in spite of the evidence, that the days to come are worth paying attention to... because Jesus is continuingly being reborn in the hearts of the hopeful.
// end //
Geoffrey Ainger wrote a hymn (fittingly published by Hope Publishing), that invites us to not only remember the events of Jesus' life beginning with his first breaths, but to hope for Christ to walk [in] our streets again, through the hope that we make manifest as those who walk our Christ's way.
//
One can only hope.
//
//
Let us pray:
Holy One, ease us through the barriers of complacency and cynicism so that we can follow the light of this hopeful season.


#95VU "Born in the Night"

Sunday, November 20, 2016

GUIDING OUR FEET

November 20, 2016
Last Sunday After Pentecost
(prayer)
I think that I have mentioned this before, so forgive my redundancy if you've heard this already...
When my buddy, Drew, was in college he had an interesting residence roommate - kind of eccentric: Drew was never quite sure what was going on between his roommate's ears.  But every once and a while... wisdom came out of his mouth.
One night, Drew was awaken in the dark by a loud banging sound.  The roommate had stubbed his foot against a chair on the way to the bathroom.  But instead of screaming or swearing, he simply and profoundly said: "You know what, Andy?  Toes are God's invention for finding furniture in the dark."
//
There is something wonderful in this wisdom - humourous, optimistic.
//
Human beings are hard-wired to be discoverers.  We look around corners.  We open boxes.  We click on Facebook links when one of our friends writes "you gotta see this!".
Although Kinsley [the child we baptized this morning] is only seven weeks old, she had already begun her life as an explorer... at this point, she does it mostly through her eyes, ears and finger tips.  Kristy and Hannah [parents], you know that, as Kinsley's body strengthens and grows, so will her curiosity.  As new neurons fire in her excited brain, she will be motivated to discover her ability to move.  She will engage her inner drive to want to learn more about the world in which she lives.  You are probably okay with ornaments on the Christmas Tree this year.  Next year?  You'll like find out.
//
Parents worry about the extent of their children's drive to discover.  Because, not every corner we round has a positive surprise waiting.  Those of us with a few years of exploring experience have a few regrets to accompany our discoveries.
We try to share the wisdom of our experience with others we care about (particularly children).  And sometimes, they are able to take our advice to heart and avoid our pitfalls.  But, they, like most of us (intentionally or unintentionally), need to learn a lot things on our own... even if it means discovering some of the lessons others have warned them about.
//
In university, I worked as a waiter in a restaurant that served food on plates that came straight out of the oven.  Even though, I always used a thick cloth to handle the plates as I put them on the table and told every diner to 'watch out - the plates are hot', every... single... shift that I worked, someone had to test the truth of my words with their own fingers.
//
//
Zechariah lived in the Judean highlands between Jerusalem and the Jordan River Valley.   He was a priest at the Temple.   The gospel of Luke begins (as part of its Christmas narrative) with an unexpected birth, but it is not Jesus'.
Zechariah and Elizabeth were an elderly couple (by first century standards).  Although, they had prayerfully wanted a family, they had never had any children and everyone (including Elizabeth and her husband) believed that that ship had sailed.  "They were getting on in years" is how the Gospel of Luke phrases it.
The story goes that one day, while fulfilling his normal duties alone in the temple sanctuary, an angel (named Gabriel) visits Zechariah and proclaims that his "prayers have been answered: [he] and Elizabeth will have a son - to be named Johannan".
The angel went on to describe what a joy this will be for everyone and that this child was destined to be a great person who will live in strong faith and righteousness.
Zechariah challenged the logical lack of practicality concerning this proclamation. 
Whether Gabriel was miffed at Zechariah's logical doubt or had some other reasoning, the angel told the priest that he will have to watch all of this take place... in silence.
When Zechariah left the sanctuary to address the assembled congregation, he found himself mute: unable to speak.  When his duties were done, Zechariah returned home to be with his wife.
No immaculate conception followed; Elizabeth got pregnant the old fashioned way.
//
For the better part of the next year, as the baby grew in Elizabeth's womb, as they hosted her young cousin who was also pregnant, Zechariah was restricted to hand signals, body language and scribbled notes.
He was given the gift of plenty of time to think about what he might say if (and when) he regained his voice.
//
//
It was not until eight days after the baby was born, and he was formally named John, that Zechariah could speak again.  The reading from Luke this morning was what he had to say to his new born son... in what must have been in a scratchy, labored tone.
//
In the context of an historically faithful God who continues to bless the world, Zechariah found words for his best hopes for his son, John, and the life that laid before him: my child, you will be a guiding light to those in darkness - who leads people to know forgiveness as they walk the way of peace.
Hopeful.
Ambitious.
Faithful.
//
We heard similar words from the Colossians letter: we are rescued from the power of darkness, redeemed and forgiven.
//
//
Drew's roommate knew that navigating through the dark, unaided, can result in a bruised toe or two.
//
Our scriptures today both talk about darkness, but also about guiding light.
//
John, the child of Elizabeth and Zechariah, grew to be a guiding light on the Way of Jesus.  Gospel writers would quote old words from Isaiah, that John was preparing a path for/to the Lord... a highway in the desert, so to speak (the desert, like the dark is an inhospitable environment).  The highway (like light) is the guide through the wilderness.
(We'll read more about that in two weeks.)
//
//
Today is the culmination of the church year.  Next week, we will be only four Sundays away from Christmas, which means that we will move from the Season after Pentecost into the Season of Advent: a new year in the cycle of the church year.
As I showed with a video a few weeks ago, we may think that because we have completed another orbit of the sun, we have returned to where we once were (again).  The truth of our universe is that our sun has been flying through space over the past year in it's orbit around the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy... our galaxy has been on its own journey in an expanding universe.
Although, we have ended the season of pentecost before, we are in a new time and place, occupying fresh territory in our flight among the stars.
With new times, come new opportunities to discover.
//
//
Imagine for a moment what is about to come into your midst that will add to your life in some way.
// pause //
Does that prospect excite you or worry you?  Both?  Wait and see?
//
I know we are all wondering what we will discover as the politics of our continent take shape over the coming months.  Excited.  Worried?  Both?  Wait and see?
//
//
//
As much as I trust in the truth that new discoveries await us, I am also confident that we continue to carry much that we have accumulated from our past and intentionally hold in this new time.
//
Yesterday, while members of Yellowhead Presbytery met in this room, I spoke about the Prophet Jeremiah's hopeful promise that although many of the Judean people were being forced into exile, that the scattered would be re-gathered, the lost would be found.
The prophet wanted the exiles to remember that they carried a faith in God's everpresence even by the Rivers of Babylon.  Like the psalm-writer from that time (cf. Psalm 137), they might find it hard to sing songs of home.  They might want to just put their instruments away as long as they were in a foreign land.  Jeremiah invited them to remember the legacy that they carry.  It will be valuable to them as they discover how they were going to have to live in the new time.
//
We are in a new time, but it does feel familiar.
God is still our God.
Christ is still our teacher and guide.
The Spirit continues to fill us and enliven us.
//
And the people of your faith community continue to embrace you in Jesus' love and care.
As we proclaimed together earlier: we are not alone, we live in God's world, called to love and serve others, trusting that God works in us and others by the Spirit.
//
//
As Zechariah proclaimed to his eight day old baby: in the tenderness of God, new days will continue to dawn for us.
This new light will guide us in ways of peaceful living.
May their be some calm and kindness around the corners for us. 
May we know that God is with us now and always: in life, in death, in life beyond death.
//
//
Let us pray:
O God, we pray that we will see the hope of your justice becoming real around us.  And we pray that we will play an integral part of this hope.  Amen.


#145MV “Draw The Circle Wide”

Sunday, November 13, 2016

NOT SET

November 13, 2016
Pentecost 26
(prayer)
//
Some things that are true:
//
The eleven and twelve years olds of the Leduc Wildcats are the best peewee football team in Alberta.
//
Leonard Cohen has sung his final earthly song.
//
Even though she has full, enthusiastic support of the Scarborough ON congregation she has served for nearly twenty years (which by all accounts is a happy and healthy community), the Reverend Greta Vosper is facing a formal [disciplinary] hearing to determine whether she will be allowed to remain a United Church minister.
//
A Calgary-Edmonton Grey Cup final remains a possibility (for the next few hours at least).
//
A seven year old Saskatchewan girl was killed by her father In an apparent murder-suicide.
//
Donald Trump will be inaugurated as the next American president.
//
//
There are things that happen which we expect. 
There are things that happen which shock us.
A lot of things happen all the time which escape our notice.
What is true is that stuff happens.
//
//
Stuff we hope for - that result in excited cheers.
Stuff that frightens us - that depresses us, worries us.
//
Pollsters, prognosticators, prophets, pundants and poets point us to possible futures: attempting to prescribe meaning and purpose.
//
//
Another truth is... that (as we sit in this moment of history's path), the next pages of our story have yet to be written. 
//
Theologically, I am a free-will guy; I don't believe in predestination.
The future is an uncertain mystery we have yet to create or discover. 
In fact, we are still struggling to try and write a fair and accurate record of what we have already been through.
//
//
//
The rural peasants from the Galilean north looked (wide-mouthed) up at the impressive centre of their faith and tradition.  They tried to imagine how complex the planning and construction of the Temple must have been: skills and knowledge and patience that seemed beyond anything they had ever experienced.
The Temple seemed so solid.  It could withstand almost anything - built to last, as they say.
And yet, locals and pilgrims alike knew the stories of old that told them that the building (that had embraced their imaginations in that moment) was, in fact, the second such structure in their history: built to last was an obvious exaggeration.
Six centuries earlier, a different building stood there.  And it had a story too - part of the people's story.
The story of the people in this land was one of how the first few generations of one particular immigrant family had fled Canaan (their adopted homeland) during a famine and resettled in the land of Egypt.  This one family gave birth to an identifiable culture with a unique faith in a God they called Yahweh.
In time, the descendants of Jacob  (whose nickname was the one who wrestles with God: Israel) were forced into national servitude until a leader (named Moses) arose and led the people back to their ancestral lands in Canaan.
During the journey back, they developed the practice of having a set-aside, special place to worship and honour their God and the law that would guide them in the land they were seeking to possess.  The tent-tabernacle was a place to shout Praise Yahweh: Hallelujah!
At each stop along the way, the tent of tabernacle was given a prominent place in these nomads' camp.
After a decades-long journey, they reached Canaan and made it their home.
Eventually,  the tabernacle-tent-of-the-journey found a home in a new city called Jerusalem.
The people of Israel were now an established kingdom nation in an established land.
There came a time when the irony of having a nomadic, temporary worship structure for this established nation and burgeoning world power became too much to bear: a stone temple was built.
The Temple was more than a worship space.  It was a symbol of endurance and power: the culmination of more than two millennia of history.  Hallelujahs abound!
//
And yet, the Temple of Solomon (as strong as it was, physically and symbolically) was not immune to change.
Three hundred years after it was built, an Empire from Babylon pillaged anything of value and then knocked it down in only a matter of months.
//
From the squalor of refugee camps hundreds of kilometres away, the Israelites watched the strength of their nation dwindle to almost nothing.
//
When the grandchildren of those exiles returned to Canaan, they found only a pile of stones where the legendary temple had stood.
//
As we heard this morning, in that time of muted hope, a prophet spoke for Yahweh, their God: I am about to create new heavens and a new earth. Be glad and rejoice forever in what I am creating: Jerusalem as a joy, and its people as a delight. No more shall you hear the sound of weeping or the cry of distress. You will not build and plant for others but will build houses and inhabit them yourselves and you will plant vineyards and eat the fruit. You will long enjoy the work of your hands. No one shall not hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain, says Yahweh.
Out of that hope, in the late 6th century BCE, the foundations of a second temple were laid: a temple that (600 years later) the disciples of Jesus marvelled at in the passage we heard from Luke 21.
Jesus' followers knew the history of the cycles of stability and ruin and still they could not imagine the building-before-their-eyes not being there.
Jesus read that conclusion in their eyes and so he decided to upset their utopic vision with these words:  The days will come when not one stone will be left upon each other - all will be thrown down.
//
Really? Teacher, when will this be?  Will we get some warning?
//
Look around you.  There is conflict in the world: wars, insurrections.  Even the earth is unpredictable: earthquakes, drought, famine, plagues.  Look around, nothing lasts forever - this temple is no exception.
//
As shocking as those words may have been for Jesus' disciples, by the time people first read the gospel of Luke, it was already a matter of fact.  Less than forty years after Jesus' warning, before Luke's gospel was written, an insurrection against Roman rule in Jerusalem resulted in Temple number two meeting the same fate as its predecessor.
A cold and a broken hallelujah.
//
//
//
So, how are doing on this edge of the future that will be unfolding before us? - a future that we have a certain measure of control over, but also a future that (in many ways) we will simply need to accept and adapt to.
How are we doing?
//
For several weeks, reflecting on the fact that the readings from Isaiah 65 and Luke 21 were coming up for this Sunday, I was already planning on preaching from the perspective of an open, yet-to-be written, uncertain future.
I did not expect to be dealing with the prospective future coming as a result of the election results we witnessed south of the 49th last Tuesday.
Political leanings aside, I think it is fair to say that practically everyone was shocked that Hillary Clinton is not the president-elect. 
Even the most ardent Trumpeters have to admit the decisiveness of his electoral college victory was a surprise.
Although the possibility of a Donald Trump presidency was always possible, a significant majority of Americans and world onlookers (included, I suspect, even most of those voting for the Republican Ticket) did not anticipate the actual outcome.
It is a lesson for all of us - that (in any given moment), our best guesses and plans for the future are just that: plans and guesses.
Beyond the specifics of that election, in every way that matters, we are ... right now ... standing on the edge of an uncertain future - engaging in a combination of making and discovering what will be.
//
The future is not set or 100% predictable.  It is shrouded in mystery.  And yet, as Jesus said, there are signs around us that give us hints about possible directions we might end up taking.
//
Of course signs are often easy to see in retrospect.  I'm sure you have have had times - in relation to some event in your life - when you had cause to say "I should have seen that coming".
//
In the past five days, media prognosticators have looked back to discover why they should have seen President Trump coming.
Part of the discussion is a realization that the recent years are filled examples of governance fatigue and discontent that is more than the normal posturing of opposition parties, who are not happy that they other side is in power.
Throughout the last decade, all around the world, people have been expressing that they don't feel represented by those in power. There have been actions that (when we take note) serve as signs that there has been a growing, systemic mistrust of established leadership - a mistrust built on what is seen as the self-interest of the powerful to simply maintain power for themselves... rather than to govern with an entrusted-power for the betterment of all.
Examples:
·         Various uprisings of the Arab spring
·         Occupy Wall Street
·         Greek referendum on austerity
·         Election of Rachael Notley and NDP  (after 41 years of PC governments)
·         Election of Justin Trudeau and the Liberals (after a decade of Stephen Harper's Conservative government)
·         Black Lives Matter
·         The Alt-right movement
·         Brexit
·         Bernie Sanders
·         Donald Trump
Looking back now, we can see the signs that made President-elect Trump happen..

What most of us missed is that Trump's own history of using his economic power to his own benefit was not as important as his status as a outsider to the current political power structure.
//
//
//
Our scriptures today invite a few things from us;
·         an attentiveness to what is going on around us... particularly, the needs and dreams that people are expressing.  What is being hoped for?  What is driving the hearts and minds of our fellow travelers on this road of life.  And...
·         an acceptance that more (than the predictable and normative) is possible.  Isaiah of the Judean restoration spoke of a promise that God was not just a creator of the past, but an active artisan in the present.  After seven decades of exile and oppression, the prophet believed that unimaginable peace was possible - as if a lamb could feed alongside a wolf and not fear being it's dinner.
//
//
Even though our world is complex (and there is much that we have minimal control over), I think that there is some truth to the axiom that we are masters of our own destiny
I believe that we can work and move (in our time) in ways that can be signs to others for what is possible.
// 
Gospel writers passed on teachings of Jesus that... peacemakers and those who hunger for righteousness and justice and the hopeful and humble have the potential to be blessings in the world and... can become lights - illuminating a path of God's best dreams for creation.
//
Every time we live out Micah's words that we are to seek justice, love kindness and walk humbly and... every time we follow (what Jesus called) the great commandments to love God with our whole being and love others as we long to know love for ourselves, we are giving the world a sign of what is possible.
//
Yes, there is unrest.  There is worry, terror, war, hunger, violence in homes, streets and nations.
But, we have the ability to ensure that these are not the only signs people see around them.
//
Even amid wars and rumours of wars, earthquakes, famines and plagues, do not be afraid to be signs of hope and goodness.
Do not lose heart.
We believe in God who has created and is creating.
We can be signs of hope and promise for a good and just future.
//
We can be a people who mend broken hallelujahs.
//
//
Let us pray:
Creator of All Life and Matter, you help us to rejoice even in times of worry.  Transform our old ways into new possibilities.  Amen.


#278VU “In the Quiet Curve of Evening”