Monday, September 2, 2013

One Morning in Maine...

... this title actually belongs to the classic children's book written by Robert McCloskey, who also created other such classics as Blueberries for Sal and Make Way for Ducklings, all of which reside in my future children's library. The children are in the future, not the books, which I have in my possession right now, thanks to my mother-in-love (MIL). But I digress.

The RevEv and I returned just a few days ago from ten amazingly lovely days spent on the Maine seaside. We took a lot of walks with The Girl Named Duke, ate way too many cookies and whoopie pies, slept in almost every morning, and lolled around in the sun and sea air. Want to see some pictures? Good, I hoped so. : )

 This is one of the many views from Nana's back deck in Starboard Cove. The swing-set belongs to Maya, RevEv's fabulous cousin who is one of my favorite little girls in the whole wide world.









     These flowers from my father-in-love's (FIL) garden- he knows how much I love sunflowers and planted this variety just for me. We enjoyed this sunny bouquet, along with a big pot of coffee and a rousing game of Phase 10 Saturday morning.


    

Remember I said we took a lot of walks? Here are just a few pictures from our many walks down the road.




These were taken by "the Pond"- it's not really a pond, more of an inlet that is filled with water at high tide which transforms into a mud flat once the tide rolls out.
The Girl Named Duke enjoyed getting her feet wet.




This is an apple tree that has been untended for who know how many years. Each day we tasted one of the teeny apples that cover its branches. Each day we spit our pieces out and declared them to be "Yucky!". They are incredibly tart, hard little things... I wonder if they would be good in pie?



This is an old captain's house that is said to be haunted. I think it looks rather cheerful myself.



One morning in Maine RevEv, Nana, Maya, Tracey, NuNu, Granny, and I went for a hike to the Point of Maine (The Girl Named Duke stayed behind, asleep on her blanket).


 






It was an incredibly foggy day, so the views were not as spectacular as they would have been had the sun been shining, but I think the fog and mist lends a sort of mystery to the place, don't you?









I always love going up to Maine. The Girl Named Duke enjoyed herself too.
We're looking forward to our trip in November, for Thanksgiving, when we will get to see our Maine family again.






Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Monday Morning Sabbath

Any person who works in the church knows that Sunday is not a day of rest. For the sake of self-care, you must carve out your own bit of sabbath time, be it a week day, a morning, or just an hour out of one day. Monday morning was my sabbath time... and it was a wonderfully calm and peaceful morning.

I woke up a little after 6:30 to a sunlit room, with The Girl Named Duke sleeping soundly beside me.



Instead of going back to sleep I finally finished reading this book:


Rita Nakashima Brock and Rebecca Parker's Proverbs of Ashes.

Once finished, I
took Duke outside to do her business,
gave her breakfast,
and admired the hydrangeas Lettie,
a parishioner from Asbury,
gave me after church yesterday.


While coffee brewed I put away dishes, washed some more dishes, folded laundry, 
and visited with this guy. 

I contemplated taking out the final round of stitched on the shawl I (finally!) finished, and decided to let it be. For now.

                             


I poured myself a cup of coffee in my favorite muf, gathered my journal and pens, and sat down to write. When I opened my journal I found an entry made by Jack:




I think it's going to be a perfect Monday. Who knew such a thing existed?

Peace and love,
Amanda

Saturday, July 20, 2013

7th Sunday after Pentecost

**I gave this sermon on Sunday, July 7 at the Broadway/Port Colden UMCs where my husband serves as pastor, and then at Asbury UMC where I am the summer supply pastor**

Luke 10:1-11, 16-20


When I was growing up, my father worked very hard so that my mother could be a stay at home mom. He still works incredibly hard, continuing to work two, sometimes three different jobs in order to provide for his family. Ever since I can remember he has had a lawn cutting business, and in the spring, summer, and early fall he would come home from whatever other job he had at the time, put the mowers and the trimmers and the blowers onto his trailer, and then go work until it was too dark to see. Weekends were also taken up with mowing and trimming, and he always came home hot, sweaty, and bone-tired. Perhaps not surprisingly, the proverb that “the shoemaker’s children go barefoot,” applied to our lawn and gardens. He spent so much time and energy caring for other people’s yards that he had very little time to devote to our own.
While this was sometimes an annoyance to my mother, it gave ample opportunity for the multiple boys who had taken an interest in one of the four of us to make a good impression on my father and mother. There was one high school boy in particular, who clearly didn’t have enough chores to do at his own home, who spent a lot of time taking out the trash cans, stacking firewood, and weeding the flower beds. He became more of a son than a suitor, and would soon make himself perfectly at home. One evening it was getting close to suppertime and I had decided to make dinner. I am actually quite a good cook, but something went terribly wrong with this dish. I still don’t know what could have happened- it was a boxed meal, the kind that had the noodles, and the spices, and everything you needed. All you had to do was “just add chicken” -and some water and oil- and you were golden! I had made this dish before, and I was looking to impress the young man just a tad. We all sat down to dinner: me, my sisters, my mom, the boy from down the street, and another neighborhood kid who spent a lot of time under our roof. We all sat down to eat, and immediately something was wrong. The dish was horrible! My face flushed with embarrassment, and it was so bad nobody, not even me, tried to eat more than the first bite. Except Carrie, the young girl down the street, who was determinedly chewing and swallowing each unpalatable mouthful. “Well, it’s not a total waste,” my mom said, laughing. “At least Carrie likes it!” To which Carrie replied, with the honesty and bluntness of a child, “Oh no, it’s bad. My parents just told me to always eat what’s put in front of you when you’re a guest.”
We didn’t make Carrie eat anymore of the failed chicken dish. I think we ordered pizza.

It can be difficult, even stressful, to be the host. 
But sometimes it can be even harder to be the guest.

In the gospel lesson that we heard today, Jesus is once again sending disciples ahead of him to announce his arrival at various towns as he travels towards Jerusalem. Now, he had done this before, actually twice before, with varying results. First, Jesus called the twelve together, and he gave them the power and the authority to heal the sick and cast out demons. Then, he sent them out, two by two, into the neighboring towns to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal, just as he had been doing. “He said to them, ‘Take nothing for your journey, no staff, nor bag, nor bread, nor money—not even an extra tunic. Whatever house you enter, stay there, and leave from there. Wherever they do not welcome you, as you are leaving that town shake the dust off your feet as a testimony against them’” (Lk 9:3-5). The twelve did as they were told, and they were successful! They had been welcomed in the towns that they traveled to, and they were able to heal the sick and cast out demons, and people were eager to hear the teachings of Jesus. Later, after the twelve have returned, Jesus sends an unnumbered group of messengers ahead of him. However, this group was not successful- at all. The gospel tells us that they were not received in the Samaritan village that they came upon. Never one to be daunted by setbacks, Jesus tries again, falling back on old tactics but with greater numbers. This time, he doesn’t send out twelve disciples, but seventy! That’s thirty pairs of disciples who can be teaching and preaching and healing in his name! His instructions begin in the same way he instructed the twelve: carry no purse, no bag, no sandals. Whatever house you enter, say “Peace to this house!”- and then stay there.
But then he continues: Don’t go hopping from house to house. That’s rude. Eat and drink what your host puts in front of you. Don’t overstay your welcome; heal the sick, teach them about the kingdom of God. Be a good guest, because you are representing me. Jesus reminds them that, for all intents and purposes, they are the hands and feet and mouthpieces of Christ, and they must act accordingly, accepting the hospitality that is offered to them, entering into each town and home with peace in their hearts and joy on their lips as they proclaim the incredible, inclusive hospitality of the kingdom of God.
Jesus sends the seventy out, just as he had the twelve, to do these things, even though he knew the potential danger they faced. The seventy went out, just as the twelve, knowing the risks that they were taking. They were taking no money- they had no way of purchasing provisions, or to offer up to thieves on the road if they were waylaid. They were taking no extra clothes, nothing to protect them from the elements other than the clothes on their backs. They were taking no bread or water for their journey, which put them at the mercy of those they encountered, giving the towns the power to give life, by taking them in- or take it away. In a world that was wracked with religious and political tension, it could be dangerous to be associated with Jesus. And yet they went anyway. They went out into the world, despite the dangers, despite the personal risk, trusting that God and the people they had been sent to minister to would provide for them. They went without anything tangible to offer, only the words of their mouth, the presence of their spirit, and their faith in Christ and the kingdom of God. And they were rewarded, as they encountered gracious hosts whose doors were open to strangers, and whose hearts were open to their teachings. And the disciples taught them many things.
Just as their hosts welcomed the disciples into their home, so too will they welcomed into the kingdom of God.

Just as we welcome the least, the last, and the lost into our hearts, our homes, and our lives, so too will we be welcomed into the kingdom of God.

We too live in a world that is often dangerous, and frightening. It can be difficult to follow where Jesus calls us when it is so easy to worry about the food on our tables, the clothes on our backs, the taxes that we pay, the lives that are needlessly lost due to senseless violence. And yet, Jesus calls us, just as he called the twelve and the seventy, to go out and be present in the world. Jesus calls us to be both host and guest, to welcome those who are sick and hurting, or hungry and naked, Jesus calls us to be the hands and feet of Christ in a broken world. But Jesus also calls us to be guests, offering peace to those we encounter, accepting whatever gifts they give us, reciprocating with acts of kindness, and mercy, and love.
Whatever road we happen to be on, whether we are standing in the doorway with open arms, or standing on the threshold with outstretched hand, let us always offer one another the peace of Christ, who calls us to follow him on this earth, with the promise that all of us will be guests in his heavenly kingdom.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Asbury UMC

 On Sunday, July 7, 2013 I began serving the congregation of Asbury UMC as their summer supply pastor. I am incredibly honored and excited for this new adventure, and look forward to the new things that God will do through and with this small congregation!


Here's the church from the outside- I love the purple doors! Want to take a look inside? 




Come on in!





This picture makes the sanctuary look deceptively large, but here it is!
(Sorry the picture is dark- I couldn't find the light switch...)

Here's another dark photo of the pews. I love the way they curve. There is a slight slope- I suppose you would call that stadium seating?

And now... the best part. Other than the people, that is. ; )


ISN'T IT GORGEOUS!?!?!?
I am in love with this window. 


 
 These are pretty incredible too.



The Asbury congregation began as a Methodist class in 1787 that met in the home of Colonel William McCullough, and became established in 1796. Francis Asbury laid the cornerstone for the original building on August 9, 1796, and the church and town came to be the first named after the famous bishop. Asbury visited and preached here multiple times before his death. After his last visit on May 9, 1811 he wrote:







"We came to Asbury. I preached and added a special exhortation. Were it not for the brewing and drinking of miserable whiskey, Asbury town would be a pleasant place."



So far I haven't seen any signs of a distillery. I think if Asbury were to return today, he would be quite pleased.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Communion Liturgy: A Celebration of Voices

**This Communion liturgy is adapted from the Service of Word and Table found within the United Methodist Hymnal and Book of Worship. It was written for the celebration of holy communion on Sunday, June 30, 2013 at The United Methodist Church in Madison.**

The Lord be with you.
And also with you.
Lift up your hearts.
We lift them up to the Lord.
Let us give thanks to the Lord our God.
It is right to give our thanks and praise.

It is right, and a good and joyful thing always and everywhere to lift our hearts and voices in praise to you, most gracious and loving God.
With your voice you spoke creation into being, making the sun and the moon, the fields and the skies, lending your voice to the beasts of the land, the birds of the airs, and the creatures of the deep. With a word you made us in your image, breathing your own spirit into us, giving us our own voices to speak, and sing, and praise you. With your voice you called us good, but we didn’t stay that way for long.
We learned how to say words of hate instead of love, how to tear another down by the words of our mouths if not the violence of our hands. We couldn’t hear you over our own noise, and so you spoke through the prophets, through people who looked like and sounded like us. You spoke to Joseph in dreams, to Moses in burning flames, to Elijah in sheer silence. These prophets spoke to us, and sometimes we were able to listen. Sometimes their words brought deliverance and freedom, or promises of what life could be like if only we could quiet ourselves and be attuned to your voice. Through your prophets you made with us a covenant to always be our God, promising to always call us back to you.

And so with your people on earth and all the company of heaven we praise your name and join their unending hymn:
Holy, holy, holy Lord, God of power and might.
Heaven and earth are full of your glory.
Hosanna in the highest!
Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord.
Hosanna in the highest.

We heard your promises but once again your voice was drowned out by the noise of the world. We shut our ears to the prophets, no longer willing to hear what they proclaimed. So you sent your son, the Word made flesh, to live among us. He healed the hurting, fed the hungry, and blessed the ones who had been cast down. He spoke of the kin-dom of heaven and helped us remember what the prophets had told us. But there were those who didn’t want us to listen or remember. They called him a rebel, they called him dangerous, and they decided he needed to be silenced.
On his last night among us Jesus refused to give up his voice out of fear or sadness. He gathered together with his friends around a table and, taking bread, blessed it and broke it, saying, “This is my body, which I give for you. Take, eat, and remember me.” When supper was finished he took the cup, gave thanks, blessed it, and shared it with those around him, saying, “This is the blood of the new covenant, poured out for you and for many. Take, drink, and remember me.”

And so in remembrance of these your mighty acts in Jesus Christ we offer ourselves in praise and thanksgiving as a holy and living sacrifice, in union with Christ’s offering for us, as we proclaim the mystery of faith:
Christ has died.
Christ is risen.
Christ will come again.

Pour out your Spirit on us gathered here, and on these gifts of bread and wine. Make them be for us the body and blood of Christ, that we may be for the world the body of Christ, redeemed by his blood.
By your spirit make us one with Christ, one with each other, and one in ministry to all the world, united as one voice, proclaiming the coming of the kin-dom of God until Christ returns and we all feast at a heavenly banquet.
Through your Son, Jesus Christ, with the Holy Spirit and your holy church, all honor and glory is yours, almighty God, now and forevermore.
Amen.

-Amanda Rohrs-Dodge
June 29, 2013, Washington, NJ


Sunday, June 23, 2013

Loosing Demons

Luke 8:26-39
-and-
Psalm 42
As a deer longs for flowing streams, so my soul longs for you, O God.
My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and behold the face of God?
My tears have been my food day and night, while people say to me continually,
“Where is your God?”
These things I remember, as I pour out my soul:
how I went with the throng, and led them in procession to the house of God,
with glad shouts and songs of thanksgiving, a multitude keeping festival.
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you disquieted within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my help and my God.
My soul is cast down within me; therefore I remember you 
from the land of Jordan and of Hermon, from Mount Mizar.
Deep calls to deep at the thunder of your cataracts;
all your waves and your billows have gone over me.
By day the Lord commands his steadfast love, 
and at night his song is with me,
a prayer to the God of my life.
I say to God, my rock, “Why have you forgotten me?
Why must I walk about mournfully because the enemy oppresses me?”
As with a deadly wound in my body, my adversaries taunt me, while they say to me continually, “Where is your God?”
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you disquieted within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my help and my God.

The first time I ever sang the song Precious Lord, Take My Hand was at a funeral for one of the matriarchs of the church I grew up in. I was young, probably in middle school, and I remember thinking how incredibly sad this song is. Sad, and morbid. I barely even know the woman who had died, and yet as I sang the words of this hymn I was forced to choke back tears. Since then I have sung it many times, often at funerals, and my feelings towards it have changed, but only slightly. If you look at the top of the United Methodist hymnal you will see it is placed in the section titled, “Prayer, Trust, Hope”. This song is certainly those things: it is a prayer. It is a prayer that trusts that God will lead the singer through times of storm and darkness, it is a prayer of hope, that there is something better waiting for us on the other side of this life. It is a prayer of trust, it is a prayer of hope, it is a prayer of gut-wrenching lament.
Written by the famous gospel writer Thomas A. Dorsey, this song has been performed by many great artists and sung at thousands of funerals. But Dorsey did not write it for a funeral. Just as Horatio Spafford wrote the famous hymn It Is Well with My Soul following the tragic deaths of his family members, Dorsey bared his own soul as he penned these words following the death of his wife, Nettie Harper, who died giving birth to a son, a son who also died only two days later. In the midst of his despair, and in this time of inconsolable grief, Dorsey wrote: Precious Lord, take my hand, lead me on, let me stand, I am tired, I am weak, I am worn; through the storm, through the night, lead me on to the light: Take my hand, precious Lord, lead me home.
A song -a psalm- of lament. A psalm of despair. A psalm of hope.
Similarly, the psalm that we read today is a psalm of lament and despair, as the psalmist cries out to the God who created them and called them good: Why have you forgotten me? Why must I walk about mournfully, as with a deadly wound in my body? Why is my soul disquieted, why is my soul cast down? My soul longs for God as a deer longs for flowing streams but instead of flowing streams the one who thirsts is overwhelmed by waves of chaos, the one who longs to once again sing praises to God can only choke on the tears that fall endlessly down their face for apparently no reason at all.
Sometimes language fails us in these moments of despair, and all we can do is cry. And we cry- or don’t- because we realize that sometimes the feeling of being alone, or of being in despair, or the feeling of drowning isn’t because we have lost someone we love, or because we’ve lost our job, or because we didn’t get into the school or career we wanted to badly- it’s because our spirits are sick. It’s because we are mentally ill.
Sometimes the tears come out of a sense of fear: a fear that things will get darker before they get brighter, a fear that things will continue to get worse. Have you ever sat and cried because you can’t feel happy, even though there is no reason for you to be sad but sad isn’t the right word anyway because you’re not sad you’re just... nothing? Have you watched as someone sat and cried because they managed to haul themselves out of bed only to sit with their arms wrapped around their knees and that is their big accomplishment for the day? And they don’t know if they’ll make it that far tomorrow?
Sometimes you don’t cry. Sometimes you are just numb. Or you feel so incredibly alive you feel like you are going to explode- and even though you are barely sleeping, or eating you are filled with exuberance and so much energy and everything is happening really really fast and isn’t it great how productive you are... and everyone can see, and they think it’s great because the energy and love is just radiating out of you... but they are also a little afraid. They are afraid because they know you can’t fly so close to the sun for very long without getting burned. They are afraid because, the higher you fly, the longer and harder the fall.
And then sometimes you cry because you’re surrounded by people and yet you feel completely and utterly alone?
And you get tired of trying to explain why you can’t just look on the bright side, and of trying to smile, trying to be “normal,” so you withdraw from those around you and, like the man we now call the Gerasene demoniac, live among the tombs, because sometimes its easier to live among the dead than the living. The dead don’t ask questions, the dead don’t give suggestions. The dead won’t tell you that you’re crazy.
When Jesus reaches the town of the Gerasenes, a Gentile town across the sea from Galilee, he is met not by crowds or even people going about their everyday business. He is met by a man who “had demons.” A man who was naked. A man who had withdrawn from society to live in the tombs after having broken free from the bonds and chains his people had used to restrain him. This man comes to Jesus, at first raving at the top of his voice: “What have you to do with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I beg you, do not torment me!” And Jesus, who I imagine looks him straight in the eyes, unlike his own people, who have not been able to meet his gaze for years, too uncomfortable to even look up from the ground, Jesus looks him in the eyes and asks, “What is your name?”
Like far too many people who struggle with mental illness, or any illness at all, their diagnosis becomes the primary identifier. I am bipolar. I am depressed. I am schizophrenic. “I am Legion.”
Why can’t we look at one another and see, instead of a label or diagnosis, what Christ sees? In my mind I see the man, dirty, naked, with unkempt hair, cowering before Christ, believing that he is nothing more than his illness, nothing more than the demons that have taken residence in his mind. “I am Legion,” he says, and Jesus shakes his head slightly. No, you’re not. You are my brother, you are my sister... and we are all beloved children of God.
In this story a miracle occurs: the demons leave the man. When the man is brave enough to name the thing that binds him- Legion- he can begin to heal. The story says that Jesus told the demons to leave the man, that they enter into the swine that keep the economy of the town afloat, and the swine run into the sea and drown. Legion goes under the water and comes out whole. As the psalmist feels that he is drowning under the waves and billows of the sea we are reminded that it was out of the waters of chaos that God created a new thing in the beginning. At the river we stand, praying God might guide our feet and hold our hands as we plunge into the river, trusting that when we emerge from its depths we will be made new.
It’s a terrifying thing, to give voice to the thing that binds us. It’s terrifying, because that means you can no longer be in denial. You have to accept, to some extent, that this is the way things are, even if it’s not the way things have to be. It is terrifying, because there are so many misconceptions about mental illness, and people are so afraid of what they don’t understand. It is terrifying, because you know the stigmas, and you know how people laugh about “the looney bin” and you worry that once you give name to the thing, whatever it is- that is the only thing people will see about you.
But I can’t stand up here and talk to you about mental illness, and how we need to break the stigmas, and how we are called to be Christ-like to those around us who are hurting, especially if we are the ones who are hurting, without giving voice to my own demons. And it terrifies me. 
I am Amanda. 
I have depression. 
Depression and anxiety runs in my family, and it runs through me. There have been dark nights that have stretched on for weeks and months, and there have been times when I have been afraid that the light will never shine through the darkness, even though I believe with all my heart that the words of the gospel are true, that: "the Light shines in the darkness and the darkness did not overcome it" (Jn 1:5). And the light always shines through. I go to a therapist almost every week, and I believe therapy is a wonderful thing. I take an antidepressant, and that helps to keep the darkness at bay. I am afraid to tell you these things, because in the back of my mind I am afraid that you will think I cannot be a good pastor, or teacher, or friend because of this illness. But I know that my fear is unfounded. I am Amanda, I do have depression, but I am so much more than that. At my core, I am a beloved child of God, just like you.
My sisters and brothers, sometimes we will be caught in an ocean of despair. Sometimes deep will call to deep and we will enter into a darkness that seems impenetrable. Sometimes we will have to watch as loved ones cry for no reason at all, and cannot be consoled. Sometimes the person we are speaking to may be anxious, or paranoid, or hear voices that we don’t hear. When this occurs we have a choice. We can, like the Gerasenes, avert our eyes, or try to chain what we do not understand, or drive out the ones who make us uncomfortable. We can let them believe that they are Legion. Or we can be like the psalmist, who gives voice to the pain and confusion and uncertainty, refusing to be silent about the despair that nobody wants to hear. We can be like Jesus, who asks, person to person, “What is your name?” and we can sit and listen, or sit and cry, or just sit and be with those who are struggling. We can remind them that they are a beloved child of God. We can remind ourselves that we are beloved children of God. We can continue to hope in the promise that we will once again praise the God who is our creator, who is our light, and who holds our hand.


Friday, April 26, 2013

'Shepherd Me, O God'


This is the reflection I gave on Sunday, April 21 at the church I serve as student assistant pastor as I struggled to find some "good news" in the events of the past week.



Psalm 23
John 10:22-30

As I sat down to write this morning’s sermon, I must admit that I felt as if I were staring at a huge wall. It wasn’t sermon block, it wasn’t writer’s block... it was some other kind of wall that kept the words from coming. It came from a place of fear and grief, a place from out of which the only thought that could come to mind was this: with what words shall I speak to your people, God? You see, I thought this week would be easy! It’s Psalm 23 for crying out loud! I thought we could just waltz our way through those nice green pastures and maybe pause for a bit by those still waters. I thought we could acknowledge -very briefly- that valley of the shadow of death, and then spend time rejoicing in the cup that overflows and the oil that anoints us. This should have been an easy week to write a sermon for!
But then Monday happened. And Wednesday happened. And Friday happened. All this happened after a year of things happening... and as I sat down to write, I found myself praying that, what God says to Moses in Exodus might be true: "Now go; I will help you to speak and will teach you what to say." (1)

Will you pray with me?
Most gracious and loving God, we come before you today needing to hear words of hope and peace after a week of fear, and anger, and grief. May your Spirit be present, with us and in us, that even though we walk through dark valleys and confront the evils and injustices of this world, we shall not fear. I ask that the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be pleasing in your sight. In the name of Jesus the Christ, our Rock, Redeemer, and Shepherd we pray, amen.

‘The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want.’ I am sure these words, which usually bring so much comfort, were said a lot this week. There are certain Bible passages that come to mind when one is facing tragedy of some sort, and whether it’s at the side of a hospital bed, or at a funeral, or while one is hiding from danger, this is one of the go-to passages. ‘The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want... Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear no evil, for thou art with me. Thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me.’ We certainly needed a lot of comfort this week, didn’t we? Where are those green pastures and still waters the psalm promises? I haven’t seen much of them this past year.
Where were those green pastures when The West Fertilizer Company in West, Texas, a source of fertilizer and pesticides to large-scale farms, exploded on Wednesday? A report from CNN (2) on Thursday estimated that at least 35 people had died and more than 160 people had been injured from the explosion and fire, with the death toll expected to rise as first responders continue to search for missing people.

Where were those still waters back in the fall, when Superstorm Sandy hit the East coast, destroying businesses and homes and life as we knew it?

How were our souls restored when, back in December, twenty children and six adults were killed in the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut?

Why couldn’t the last stretch of the Boston Marathon have been a path of righteousness, instead of becoming a place of fear, and violence, and death?

‘The Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want’? Really!?!?

It’s easy to get bogged down by all the senseless violence and suffering in the world. It’s easy to ask the questions I just asked, to become angry at God, to vilify a group of people who are different from us, to wish things could go back to the way they were before. It’s easy to feel like sheep without a shepherd. It’s much more challenging to be merciful to those who have caused us harm. Or to look towards a future where such suffering will be no more.
There is another passage from the Bible that is also used at funerals and memorial services, or in times of great fear and desperation. It comes, somewhat surprisingly, from the book of Revelation, and it is the one lectionary text we did not read this morning. So let me read a portion of it to you now:
those before God’s throne "will hunger no more, and thirst no more; the sun will not strike them, nor any scorching heat; for the Lamb at the center of the throne will be their shepherd, and he will guide them to springs of the water of life, and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes." (3)
The Lamb will be their shepherd; the Lord is my shepherd. It’s important to remember that Psalm 23 continues beyond the images of green pastures and still waters, and perhaps, like the passage from Revelation, that is where the real words of hope can be found. That, even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, or the scorching desert, or cross stormy seas, God is with us, comforting us, wiping away our tears, blessing us. That we do not need to be afraid.
Even though we know this in our heads, and believe this in our hearts, it can be difficult to remember that God is always beside us, especially in times such as these. And so we search for anything good that can be found, and we can usually find it, even in the valley of darkness. We find it in those who ran towards the injured runners and bystanders on Monday, even as the bombs were still detonating. We find it in the firefighters who battled the fire in Texas, potentially exposing themselves to not only fire but also dangerous chemicals in order to keep people as safe as possible. We find it in the police officers who tirelessly searched the city of Boston on Friday. We find it in the way community is formed in the midst of such unexpected tragedy. And that, I believe, is where we see God, and Christ, and the Spirit at work, not far off in some distant place, but down on the ground, before us, behind us, and beside us.
We heard today from the gospel of John that Jesus says, ‘My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish.’ Even though we live in times of death and darkness we must remember that we are also living in the season of Easter, and that we are resurrection people. We believe what Jesus says is true, we believe that the light shines in the darkness and the darkness did not overcome it, and we believe that the words of the Psalm are true: that God, the Good Shepherd, is always beside us, and that ‘goodness and mercy shall follow [us] all the days of [our lives], and [we] shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.’



1: Exodus 4:12 (NRSV)
2:http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/18/us/texas-explosion/index.html
3: Revelation 7:16-17 (NRSV)