Monday, March 2, 2026

Repenting Slowly


Gospel: Luke 6: 36-38

Consider the various events in spiritual Olympics.  In the category of judging other people our rates are incredibly fast.  We can go from rumor to accusation in record time.  But in the next event of accusing oneself of sin our times are quite slow and often uncompetitive.  In the area of our claims to knowledge of the actions and character of others we are remarkable adept, but in the contest of knowing our own actions and character we are quite agnostic.  

We rush to war at the slightest provocation.  We prepare the gallows to satiate our bloodlust.  We erect our stockade fences, install our security cameras, and fortify our homeowners associations because everyone is suspect but ourselves, and every barrier necessary to keep me from an encounter with the other.  It is worth wondering whether sentient life in other parts of the universe look at the behavior of humans and construct ways to shield themselves from us.  

We would not survive the judgment we heap upon other people, though we absolve ourselves so readily all the same.  The audience and appetite for attacks and condemnations is vast while the confessional line remains predictably short and unpopular.  Is Lent merely an exercise in doing deeds of self-satisfaction and personal self-fulfillment, or is it rather about repentance, reform, and conversion of ourselves so that we might be more loving and merciful, more like the Lord Jesus in our words and deeds? 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Listen to Him


Gospel: Matthew 17: 1-9

We have heard these words before - listen to him - at the waters of the Jordan when Jesus was baptized.  Now we hear them again on the mount of the transfiguration.  We hear these words again and again in the depths of our conscience, in the heart of faith as we journey through this vale of tears.  Throughout our lives these words continue to speak to us and sometimes haunt us as we reflect on our thoughts, words, and actions, on what we have done and what we have left undone.

For the most part we have not heeded these words.  We continue to find ways to hate our neighbor, to think, say, and do horrible things to untold numbers of people in the world.  From the wars we justify to the executions we celebrate, from the degrading prison systems to the abuse of the poor and marginalized, the immigrant, refugee, and migrant - we find untold opportunities to do other than what Jesus had done and taught.  And we create apologetic to maintain the claim that we are followers of Jesus.

But today we seek to ascend Mount Tabor so that we might be transfigured and changed anew.  Jesus spoke to Moses and Elijah about his violent death, not to plan that of others.  When we take on the mantle of non-violence, the burden of the cross, then we are transfigured as well.  We become the mercy of God on earth, extending healing, liberation, and nourishment to others as Jesus did, rejecting the path of violence for the path of mercy and love.  Let that be our Lenten journey today and evermore.   

Saturday, February 28, 2026

The Great Challenge


Gospel: Matthew 5: 43-48

The commandment of love applies to all people without exception, including our enemies.  It is a shocking teaching for Jesus' time as well as our own.  We struggle with the commandment of love even for those we claim to like; how often is our love fickle and self-centered even in these relationships.  But now imagine the idea of loving our enemies when we are consumed with our murderous thoughts and things we say about other people.

Consider the modern Christian and his active to do list regarding the treatment of enemies: the constant drum of war justified at all times; the execution of prisoners and their maltreatment in a retributive inhumane system; the animus toward foreigners, immigrants, refugees, and migrants; the vitriol leveled against Muslims, Jews, non-Christians, other Christians not of our tribe, and anyone else who crosses our nativist theology.  The teaching of Jesus regarding our enemies is not one we remotely try to abide.  

This teaching of Jesus is one he lived in his own life.  He healed, liberated, and fed people of all backgrounds.  He ate with his friends and his enemies.  He ate at table with his betrayer, denier, and abandoners.  He forgave those who executed him, offering a general absolution to all.  Jesus practiced  this love and showed us the way in concrete terms.  This Lent let us imitate the Lord and walk away from the false Christianity of the day.