{"id":1219,"date":"2010-04-06T15:01:06","date_gmt":"2010-04-06T15:01:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/?p=653"},"modified":"2017-08-26T15:26:29","modified_gmt":"2017-08-26T19:26:29","slug":"speaking-of-easter-marilyn-zehr-apr-4-2010","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/?p=1219","title":{"rendered":"Speaking of Easter &#8211; Marilyn Zehr &#8211; Apr. 4, 2010"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span style=\"color: #454c43; font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif; line-height: normal\" class=\"Apple-style-span\"><a href=\"index.php?option=com_content&#038;view=category&#038;id=10&#038;Itemid=42\">View Archived Sermons\u00a0<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Good morning.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Christ is Risen,<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Christ is Risen indeed.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">So began our worship service this morning.\u00a0 We shared this greeting with one another in several languages. This is one way we speak about this day and the series of events that culminated in this celebration of Easter morning.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">On the way to this celebration we journeyed through Lent together and with Jesus. Along the way we noted that there are some things we need to hold on to and other things we need to let go of.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><\/p>\n<p><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Over time the church has held on to some things and let go of others.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">For example we have let go of the need for women to cover their heads in church, but we have held on to Baptism as a central rite and sacrament of the church. <\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><\/p>\n<p><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Over time we also hold on to and let go of different ways of speaking about what we believe.\u00a0 This includes the language we use to speak about the Easter event.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">There are so many ways to experience the Easter event, that language and the \u201cwords we use\u201d, are important, but they will never function and probably should never function alone.\u00a0\u00a0 I am deeply grateful for the way we were encouraged to experience Good Friday this year.\u00a0 Brad Lepp planned and many others participated in a service that gave a central place to visual arts and the story of the passion.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">While we ate and worshiped together by singing the hymns of our faith and by listening to the story of Christ\u2019s passion from the Scripture, several visual artists in our community sat alongside the rest of us and expressed what they were hearing and experiencing in several different artistic mediums including ink, acrylics and water colours.\u00a0 At the end of the evening, each person who participated in this way was invited to share with us in their own language what they were expressing in their art.\u00a0 We heard words like darkness, chaos, blood red, the human condition, our burdens, God\u2019s self-limiting, everything held in God, and the joy of artistic expression.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">For those of you who contemplated those pictures Friday evening and again this morning, you will have your own language to describe what you experience in response to what is depicted there.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><\/p>\n<p><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">The language we use and in particular the language the church uses functions to name fundamental human experiences and our fundamental relationship to and understanding of God.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><\/p>\n<p><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">The language of our Easter celebration comes to us in many ways.\u00a0 It comes to us in story or narrative form in the stories recorded in our gospels and it comes to us in doctrine distilled through the ages of the church and it comes to us in the interpretations of preachers.\u00a0 <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I\u2019d like to talk about each of these ways that language comes to us but first, <\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">let\u2019s begin with the language of the story \u2013 in particular today\u2019s story that Doreen told us from the Gospel of John.\u00a0 The beauty of the language of story is that we get to enter it wherever we wish.\u00a0 We may resonate with any one or more of the story\u2019s characters.\u00a0 We may find ourselves in one part of the story or another.\u00a0 In the story of Mary Magdalene at the tomb as it was told for you today, I\u2019m not sure what you heard, but I heard a story that spoke of inner longing and grief that led Mary to the tomb in the first place in the early morning in the dark.\u00a0 When she sees that the tomb is empty, I hear a story that invites us to experience her fear and confusion.\u00a0 When Peter and the other disciple run to the tomb I hear in them a deep need to see for themselves.\u00a0 Bold Peter appears not to know what to make of the empty grave \u2013 and so I hear more confusion or at least wonder.\u00a0 The other disciple sees and believes maybe even without a need for full understanding.\u00a0 The story continues with Mary\u2019s grief and confusion.\u00a0 And then the story moves to something inexplicable.\u00a0 There is a vision of angels.\u00a0 They talk to her.\u00a0 She talks to them.\u00a0 Even so, she is still blinded by her grief and confusion and then when Jesus says her name, Mary, she sees and knows that it is Jesus.\u00a0 As much as she wants to hold on to this encounter, she is told she must tell the others.\u00a0\u00a0 And so Mary announces that she has seen the Lord.\u00a0 Christ is Risen indeed.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">The language of story \u2013 it can encourage or discourage, it can convince us or ignite further doubt, it can convict, it can invite, it can increase our own longing for encounter.\u00a0 We are promised that as the rain soaks the earth and brings forth fruit, the Word of God also will not return to God empty.\u00a0 Ultimately, if we let the language of story do so, it can uncover for us a way to make our most important human experiences meaningful.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><\/p>\n<p><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Speaking of Easter, the doctrines of the church and centuries of attempts to understand and articulate the stories and events of our Bible in systematic ways provide us with another important language.\u00a0\u00a0 Sometimes we may find this type of language very helpful, but at other times we may experience the language of doctrine as troubling.\u00a0 I\u2019m aware that for many people, the language of substitutionary atonement; the language that says that God sent his son into the world as a sacrificial lamb in our place to atone for our sins, is troubling for many.\u00a0 We are troubled by what this doctrine says about the kind of God who could treat his son this way.\u00a0 Didn\u2019t we learn from the story of Abraham\u2019s almost sacrifice of Isaac that a loving God does not require \u201chuman sacrifice\u201d?\u00a0 One way to begin to come to terms with this is to remember that Doctrines are important but not always helpful.\u00a0 They come into existence, as this one did, long after the events they try to articulate and occasionally and after very important consideration by the broad community of God, they might be something that we can let go of or at least lay down for a time when their meaning has transformed into something that hinders instead of frees.\u00a0 After all, the Gospel of John reminds us that the Truth will set us free\u2026 and maybe at one time this doctrine was a good way to provide mea<br \/>\nning for our relationship with God that set people free, but now for some it has become almost an insurmountable wall or prison.\u00a0 <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">But there is some language related to this doctrine and related to the Easter event that we seem to have let go of that I propose this morning we may wish to reclaim.\u00a0 I propose this morning that we reclaim the language of Sin and Salvation.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">There, I\u2019ve said them.\u00a0 For some these are the \u201cS\u201d words, loaded down with so much baggage that we\u2019d have to get a trolley or two to help us carry them.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">We had good reasons to set them down for a while. The language of sin and salvation in some contexts have been used and abused.\u00a0 We have left behind and gratefully so the tent crusade language and emotional manipulation of fear and guilt that seeks to scare people into heaven.\u00a0 In that language, sins were defined as lists of things not to do or else. (Some of the things on the list that I remember were smoking drinking, dancing, playing cards etc.)\u00a0 And in my experience of those tent meetings, salvation was accomplished by saying a few magical words through tears of sorrow and terror.\u00a0\u00a0 In that world I had no idea what the joy of salvation really meant or could mean because at first I was too afraid that if I made a wrong move I would be condemned to hell and as I got older and I began to realize what had really happened during those crusades (the emotional manipulation part) I was too angry to want to have anything to do with that language.\u00a0 It has been a long road back.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I\u2019m sure that many of you have your own personal sin and salvation history \u2013 some of it helpful to you, some of it not helpful.\u00a0 I will presume it has not been entirely bad.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">This snippet of my own personal history and your own story fit into some broader trends that makes understanding what happened with the language of sin and salvation a little easier.\u00a0 According to Barbara Brown Taylor, one of my favourite preachers and pastoral theologians, our loss of the language of Sin and Salvation has something to do with the following trends.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Trends such as pluralism, postmodernism and secularism have forced us to be careful about that of which we speak and the meanings we ascribe to these words.\u00a0 These words cannot be used as clich\u00e9\u2019s.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">In brief, Pluralism is about our neighbours\u00a0 &#8211; who are Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist, Jewish and so on.\u00a0 Pluralism is about how we live beside them, talk to them and seek to understand them, just as we seek to make ourselves understood to them.\u00a0 If we are going to do this, then Sin and Salvation can\u2019t be clich\u00e9\u2019s as I\u2019m afraid they had become for many. Our neighbours also have ideas about the human experiences and God awareness that the words Sin and Salvation seek to describe. We really have to know what we mean to say with those words in order to understand and to be understood.\u00a0 <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Postmodernism, though very difficult to define is, in brief and as a working definition, a way to say that the modern age is over. Postmodernism is disillusionment with an age that believed that the authority of science and the power of the state or nationalism and the power or authority of the church could make us better or bring out the best in us.\u00a0 Although these institutions are capable of good, they have also been capable of producing things like the atom bomb, allowing the rise of Hitler and perpetuating things like apartheid, the civil war in Northern Ireland and the clergy sexual abuse scandals in the Roman Catholic Church.\u00a0 Postmodernism teaches us to be justifiably skeptical of authority.\u00a0 The preacher can no longer stand in the pulpit and tell you the list of sins you are committing and expect to have anyone stay to listen. <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">And Secularism, let\u2019s just say that secularism has made it possible to make greed which was once considered one of the seven deadly sins, into a virtue when it comes to the economy and the stock market.\u00a0 In a secular society we have learned to call lying \u201cspin\u201d and greed \u201cmotivation\u201d.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">And so, since we couldn\u2019t comfortably talk about sin and salvation anymore we replaced those words with other words like rule-breaking, and\/or moral and ethical dilemmas, and\/or I didn\u2019t really sin because \u201cit\u2019s wasn\u2019t my fault.\u201d I did what I did or I do what I do because of such and so context or such and so childhood experiences.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">But let\u2019s get back to speaking of Easter.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Deep inside us we know that Easter commemorates events that have something to do with experiences that can\u2019t be described by rule-breaking or moral and ethical dilemmas or avoidance of blame. Deep inside us we know that Christ crucified had something to do with powers of darkness, chaos, and alienation (to use some of the words that our visual artists used and tried to express in their art the other night) And these are powers that we know have touched us and everyone we know at some time or other in our lives.\u00a0\u00a0 <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">These powers of darkness, chaos and alienation are the only powers on earth that make torture and war and murder possible.\u00a0 These are the powers that sneak into all realms of our lives and are capable of corrupting governments, our use of technologies, and even occasionally the church.\u00a0 When we find that we are in collusion with these powers we need to find the right word for what that is and what that means.\u00a0 The Bible and our church tradition names collusion with darkness &#8211; Sin.\u00a0 The definition of sin that I find most helpful is \u201cour collusion with anything that leads to the disruption of our relationships with God, others, all of creation and our selves\u201d.\u00a0 We can participate in sin individually and corporately. When we wake up in the middle of the night because something in us aches or hungers for what we know not, it may be that the grace of God is convicting us of sin either within ourselves or in the systems of the world that surround our daily activities.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I cannot and will not be able to name that sin for you. As a pastor and preacher all I can do is invite you to notice it and when you notice it I can encourage you to listen to it\u2019s nudging and prodding. <\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Also by the grace of God it might be that conviction of sin within you will lead to a desire to change or to let that part of yourself die.<\/font><\/div>\n<div\n align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I can\u2019t describe it any better than this without telling you a story about my own experience of sin and salvation.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Many long years after those tent crusade meetings after which I shut out anything that smacked of guilt or ran away from anyone who tried to tell me what my sins were, I went on a Silent Retreat at Loyola House in Guelph. It was the week after Easter.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I knew when I went on this retreat that I longed to experience the Joy of the Resurrection because I had not experienced that joy during our traditional Easter celebrations.\u00a0 I hoped some rest and relaxation and some silence on retreat would automatically restore my joyfulness. And so each day of the retreat I planned to read again and pray with parts of the story of Christ\u2019s passion and resurrection. The first day of the retreat was wonderful as I experienced the grace and comfort of God in prayer, but by day three I found myself becoming really angry \u2013 angry at the signs all around me of a warming planet, angry at the burdens of others that I carried that I couldn\u2019t seem to put down. Even reading through the Easter story was making me angry.\u00a0 Why couldn\u2019t I experience the joy of the resurrection?\u00a0 At this point my director on retreat had an inspired idea.\u00a0 On that third day he asked me if I had buried Christ\u2019s body.\u00a0 I didn\u2019t understand what he meant.\u00a0 <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cSymbolically,\u201d he said, \u201chave you buried the body?\u201d\u00a0 I was puzzled.\u00a0 \u201cTry it,\u201d he said and that was all \u2013 he sent me back into the silence of my day.\u00a0 And so, alone among the crumbled remains of an abandoned building on the Loyola house property, I symbolically buried Christ\u2019s body and with it all my anger and all the burdens I had been carrying were buried as well. That\u2019s where they belonged. I sobbed for a long time. My sin as I was able to name it to myself at the time was a sin of self-reliance.\u00a0 No preacher had ever told me that self-reliance was a sin.\u00a0 In fact, I had been raised to believe that self-reliance was a good thing, a source of strength and pride. Somehow I thought I was supposed to carry these things, but in that moment I realized in a way that I will never forget <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">it is a <strong>living <\/strong>Christ who carries the burdens of the world, not me. (maybe a sin of arrogance as well) Christ carried my burdens and everyone else\u2019s and all the aching and groaning of all of creation into death with him when he was crucified on that cross.\u00a0 And only when we recognize the power of the darkness that crucified him will we truly know the power of the resurrection \u2013 will we really know the Joy of Salvation.\u00a0 <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Salvation means healing, wholeness, deliverance and the fullness of life.\u00a0 When we recognize and name the power of sin within us and around us, all that mars our relationships, and discover that we want to change, or let these things go or let them die, when we recognize their power and let a living Christ take them from us, then we also put the power back in the words grace and forgiveness that are part of salvation. That\u2019s when grace and forgiveness can also be ours.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Then and only then does God\u2019s grace and forgiveness and the power of the resurrection have power. And this is not something we accomplish on our own by reading the right self-help book, or hiring the right life coach.\u00a0 Those things may assist our desire to set out on a new path and those things are good. Ultimately, however, our Salvation, our deliverance, our healing, our \u201cbeing made whole\u201d requires a power beyond anything we can muster up on our own.\u00a0 Our Salvation requires the power of God to bring Life out of Dead things.\u00a0 <\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">That is the power of the Resurrection and that is the source of our Joy.<\/font><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\"><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Hallelujah, Christ is Risen.<\/font><font color=\"#000000\"><br \/><\/font><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Christ is Risen indeed.<\/font> <\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">\u00a0<\/div>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>View Archived Sermons\u00a0 \u00a0 Good morning.Christ is Risen,Christ is Risen indeed. So began our worship service this morning.\u00a0 We shared this greeting with one another in several languages. This is one way we speak about this day and the series of events that culminated in this celebration of Easter morning. On the way to this celebration we journeyed through Lent together and with Jesus. Along the way we noted that there are some things we need to hold on to&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[10],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1219","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons-a-worship-audio"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1219","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/9"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1219"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1219\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4010,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1219\/revisions\/4010"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1219"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1219"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1219"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}