Monday, March 16, 2015

Sermon - WARNING: Your favorite bible verse may not mean what you think it does (Lent 4 - Year B)

Fourth Sunday in Lent            - Year B                                                                     March 15, 2015
Numbers 21: 4‑9; Ephesians 2:1‑10; Psalm 107:1‑3, 17‑22; John 3:14‑21

I’m teaching a bible study at PWOC this semester called Read the Bible for Life by George Guthrie.  Its 10-week mission is to help students read the bible in a new way. Each week we look at a different part of the bible and see how it is different from other parts of the bible. Whether it’s the books of the Law, the history , the prophets, Old Testament wisdom literature, the gospels, the letters or apocalyptic writings from the both the Old and New Testaments, each was written with a certain audience and purpose in mind. Understanding those intentions, along with the historical and cultural contexts of scripture, can make reading the bible and putting it into action in our lives even more possible.

The problem with this is that understanding how complicated scripture is will challenge the way we read or hear the most familiar stories of faith. Gone are the days of opening the bible, pointing to a verse and saying, “This is how I’m going to live out my faith today.”  Scripture was certainly divinely inspired and penned by human hands, but it was not written one verse at a time. It was written at a particular time and place, in stories to teach history, as poems and hymns for worship or devotion, or as letters meant to encourage and clear up theological confusions or crises and to address pastoral needs.

Understanding those starting positions helps us get more meaning from a group of verses. It can also challenge the way that we have previously understood what those verses mean to us on our faith journeys. I think that today’s gospel lesson is a great example of this predicament.

In John’s gospel, the coming of Christ into the world is at the same time judgment and grace.  The reference to the lifting up of Christ, as the serpent was lifted before the people of Israel, was a prelude to his being lifted up on the cross, and a looking forward to the lifting of Christ to his rightful place at the side of the Father, tying together the old and new covenants.  Clearly, John's gospel deals with the very meaning of Christ coming into the world, not just historically, but theologically as well. 

John uses the themes of light and darkness to talk about Christ's presence in the world.  Light is used as a metaphor for grace & salvation, while darkness is used to describe our tendency toward self interest and our hiding from God.  John reminds us that the light is there to help everyone to see.  Some rejoice in it, some hide from it.  Implicit is the question, “Which do we choose?”

These gospel verses are the end of an encounter between Nicodemus and Jesus, including what is probably one of the best known verses of scripture: "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life" (John 3:16). This is quite powerful as a stand-alone idea – God gave the world Jesus out of love. But Jesus did not stop teaching there, because if he had, then the main actor in the story would be us and our belief, not God and his gift.

The verses that follow tell us of our need to come into the light of Christ so that we might be fulfilled through him.  God is the main actor here, not me or you. Believing in Jesus is just one of the many steps in our faith journeys.  It’s almost as if I can hear God saying, “I believed in you long before you believed in me.”  And it is in our belief and realizing our need for him that we begin to ask questions about how we are living our lives.  Like: Why do we hide from the light? What is the light exposing that we would rather forget and ignore? And maybe, to what lengths will we go to cover up, hide, or run away from the darkness in ourselves and others and, in the process, turn away from God?

Last week we talked about what it takes to believe: faith.  This week we are talking about what comes after belief and faith: action.  John's Gospel and Paul's letter to the Ephesians each remind us that it is not enough to just believe.  Belief and faith are anchored in our need to act, to participate in a life of faith. 

Paul writes, “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God‑ not the result of works, so that no one may boast.  For we are what he has made us, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand to be our way of life” (Ephesians 2:8‑10). 

The Ephesians passage shows the interlocking nature of faith and action.  Faith leads to action, which leads to faith, which leads to action, and the cycle goes on and on. I’m always amazed at how choosing faith has totally changed my life. I’ll bet the same is true for you. It’s a great explanation for how we end up in places totally different from where we expected to be.

Earlier I asked some hard questions. The one that keeps coming back to me is, “Why do we hide from the light?” The love of God has the power to total change everything – maybe that’s the point. Maybe we hide from the light because we don’t want to change. Or maybe we are just afraid. Writer David Lose says it this way:

The kind of self-sacrificing love Jesus offers is frightening to such a world. No wonder some run and hide, as it requires us to trust nothing other than God. And most of us find it impossible to embrace Jesus’ example…except when we ourselves have been brought low by illness, or loss, or a broken relationship, or disappointed hopes or some other way by which the world taught us that no matter how hard we try, no matter what position we may achieve, no matter how much money we may save, yet we cannot secure our destiny or save our lives. Only God can do that. Only love can do that. And it’s frightening to be so utterly dependent on God.[i]

But God continues to work with us, even through our fear and stubbornness.  I'll bet you know the words to this hymn... but what do you know about its author?

“Amazing Grace… How sweet the sound, that saves a wretch like me.  I once was lost but now am found, was blind but now I see.”

John Newton, writer of the hymn “Amazing Grace”, spent part of his life as a trader and ship captain transporting slaves from Africa to the Caribbean and the Colonies.  The capturing, selling and transporting of black slaves to the West Indies and America was a cruel and vicious way of life.  Ships would make the first leg of their voyage from England nearly empty until they anchored off the African coast.  There, tribal chiefs would deliver to the Europeans ships men and women, captured in raids and wars against other tribes.  Buyers would select the finest specimens, which would be bartered for weapons, ammunition, metal, liquor, trinkets, and cloth.  Then the captives would be loaded aboard, packed for sailing.  They were chained below decks to prevent suicides, laid side by side to save space, row after row, one after another, until the vessel was laden with as many as 600 units of human cargo. 

This hymn is John Newton’s own song of salvation.  On the 10th of March 1748, returning to England his ship was in a terrible storm.  He feared for his life, believing the ship would sink.  He said without really meaning it, as we often do, "The Lord have mercy on us'. But God must have taken him at his word.

This was a turning point in his life.  He remained a slave ship captain for several years and tried to justify his position by improving the conditions for the slaves.  He even held services for his ship's crew each Sunday.  But eventually he became a strong and effective crusader against slavery.  He realized that he was lost in sin and was blind to the truth of the Gospel.  He knew that even in a prayer that he had prayed in desperation, God in grace had answered his prayer and forgiven his sins. 

His epitaph in part reads:
JOHN NEWTON, Clerk Once an infidel and libertine,
A servant of slaves in Africa Was
by the rich mercy of our Lord and Saviour JESUS CHRIST
Preserved, restored, pardoned
And appointed to preach the faith He had long laboured to destroy…

For centuries, the biblical word has been used to justify slavery, the objectification of women, and the maltreatment or shunning of those who are not believers in Jesus Christ. Last week, Jackson and I talked during the children’s sermon about the two greatest commandments – love God and love your neighbor, and how simple and hard they are, all at the same time. John Newton was compelled to totally reject his previous life because he came to an understanding that the people he was delivering into slavery were human beings worthy of his love and compassion. Not only did he leave the slave trade, but he became an Anglican priest, was a leader in the 19th evangelical revival in England, wrote over 200 hymns, and became a mentor and inspiration to William Wilberforce, who eventually led a successful campaign to abolish slavery in Great Britain.[ii]

For each of us there will be the time and place where we will know without a doubt that we have to leave behind our past expectations and jump into the middle of the fray, to start depending on God more than ourselves. It will be a time when we say, “Because I believe in Jesus, I am different.” Despite what we hear from those who use the good news of Jesus as a weapon to bring people into line, the grace and love of Jesus Christ is given as a gift, a frightening and wonderful gift. And we are called to use it as a way to bring people into the family of God, not turn them away.

Nicodemus came to Jesus in the middle of the night because he was afraid of what other people would think. But Jesus invited him to come into the light. The good news for him, and for us today and every day is this: 

16“For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.17“Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him. 

In the name of the Father and Son and Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Sermon - Will you be a fool for Christ? (Lent 3 - Year B)

Lent 3 – Year B                                                                                              March 8, 2015
I CORINTHIANS 1:18-31                                                                Panzer Liturgical Serivce

This Sunday gives of three really wonderful lessons… Moses giving the Ten Commandments, Jesus cleaning the Temple, and Paul’s writing on the wisdom of faith.  As much as I could see the Old Testament and Gospel scene’s unfolding before me, I could not stop this one question from rolling around in my mind. And that is the question I bring to you today:  Will You Be A Fool For Christ?

How many of you wear a cross?  It is not unusual for us to see in the US or even here in Western Europe people wearing this symbol readily associated with our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.  But if you think about it, it’s really sort of odd.  After all, the cross was a means of execution – a means of torture and shame for those who lived in Jesus’ time.  In fact, as soon as the second century, the cross was no longer used a means of execution because it was considered too inhumane.  People suffered too much, and other, quicker forms of execution were employed.

Today we see a cross and we immediately associate it with a particular religion, but to the first century Jews and Gentiles, it was a symbol of imperial Roman domination.  It signaled oppression and hopelessness, failure and loss.  How could something good come from this cross?  How could the future give this method of killing a meaning that was full of life? 

And that is exactly the question that Paul was trying to address. First century people struggled to understand how Jesus could be the fulfillment of any of God’s promises.  For those who expect God's power to be made manifest through acts of strength and the violence of a revolution, it is foolish – even crazy – that a Savior would come to his people, only to be sacrificed on a cross.  The Jews asked the question, "Who could believe that this Jesus could be the son of God?  This is not who we have waited for.  God promised us a mighty soldier, a ruler like David, wise and powerful and able to conquer the world."  They ask the question, "What good is a dead king to us?"

For those who believe that God's power will be made known to human kind through wisdom or intellect, the cross represents a stumbling block to their faith.  The Greeks asked questions like, "What kind of sense does it make for this son of God to come and die so that we might live?"  OR “How can life come from death?"

Paul's answer is this:  The message of the cross doesn't make sense to those people who cannot believe.  But to the ones who believe, to the ones who have faith that God will do what God will do, the cross is the symbol of God's power in this world.   It is God's power alone which saves each of us, not anything that we do or don’t do ourselves.   God chose this novel way to communicate with us, so that we would believe in God's ways, and accept God's power for what it is; the power to shape our lives in a ways which put God first, instead of ourselves.

Through the cross, God’s character is more clearly revealed to us.  Unlike miracles, the cross is not a grand display of power and strength.  Instead, it is raw powerlessness.  Unlike wisdom, the cross is not logical – It does not conform to our way of thinking.  Instead, the cross confounds us and calls into question the way we think about God.  No matter how much we want to think that we are the masters of our own destiny and the world around us, God has a way of reminding us that the world can be turned upside down, and it will still be OK.  As crazy as it sometimes seems, the cross shows us that God is in control.[1] 

Marian Wright Edleman said it well in her book, The Measure of Our Success

God works in direct defiance of human standards.  What we believe to be the best way may not be God's way.  What we believe to be God's judgment of a certain group of people or a particular kind of behavior may only be our own fear and prejudice holding us back from loving and caring for others who are different from ourselves.  In light of Jesus’ teaching, our expectations are turned upside, and we have to learn to think differently about the world, ourselves and people with whom we share life – those we know and those we don’t know.  God's work is so powerful that is incapacitates and reverses the established values of this world.  What that means is that we have to work very hard to let go of all the baggage that we bring with us on our journeys, and on our way to the cross be open to all of the experiences and people that God has in store for us.[2] 

United Methodist Bishop Will Willimon tells a story about serving a church in the town where he grew up.  Northside Church needed to grow – it had the “we-had-better-go-out-and-get-some-new-members-or-we’ll-die” syndrome.  They studied a program from their denomination telling them how to get new members.  Among other things, the program encouraged door-to-door visitation.  So they pulled out the town map, organized themselves into groups of two, and armed with pamphlets about the congregation, these missionaries set out to invite people to church.

He recalls, “Each team was given a map with their assigned streets.  Helen and Gladys were clearly told to go down Summit Drive and turn right.  That’s what they were told.  I heard the team leader tell them, ‘You go down Summit Drive and turn right.  Do you hear me, Helen, Summit Drive – turn right.’  But Helen and Gladys, being retire elementary school teachers, were better at giving instructions than getting them.  They turned left, venturing into the housing projects to the west of Summit Drive.  We told them to go right; they turned left.  Which meant that Helen and Gladys had proceeded to evangelize the wrong neighborhood and thereby ran the risk of evangelizing the wrong people.”

Upon their return, Helen and Gladys only had one taker – Verleen – who lived with her two children in the projects and had never been to church before.  The next Sunday, Helen and Gladys proudly show up for church with Verleen and her two children in tow.  Verleen liked it so much that she decided to attend the Thursday morning Bible study.  Picked up by Helen and Gladys, Verleen appeared, proudly clutching the new bible that was a present from Helen’s Sunday school class.  And when the group started talking about temptation, after reading the 4th chapter of Luke’s gospel, Will asked the question, “Have any of you ever faced temptation and, with Jesus’ help, resisted?” 

One woman talked about returning to the grocery store to pay for an item that had been stuck under the cart and missed by the checker.  “Good, good, just the kind of story we’re looking for,” Will replied.  Then Verleen spoke.  About a cocaine habit she had kicked… and refusing to rob a gas station with the daddy of her first child, even though she knew he would beat her up… saying no, she said, “made me feel like I was somebody.  I couldn’t have done that on my own… it must have been Jesus.”  The lesson learned?  That evangelism is not about getting new members in the church, but about participating in God’s harvest, which is a gracious, unmanageable, messy by-product of the intrusions of God.[3]

I love reading different translations of scripture because sometimes a new word or phrase will open up an idea that I had never thought of before. Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase is especially helpful, interpreting the words that are familiar into modern day language – getting down to the bare essentials of what difference these words can make.

At verse 26 we are used to hearing Paul say, “Consider your call, brothers and sisters…” But Dr Peterson uses plain English to remind us that faith thing is really serious business… and God is the hero in all of our stories.  Hear these words: 

Take a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life.  I don't see many of "the brightest and the best" among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families.  Isn't it obvious that God deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and abuses, chose these "nobodies" to expose the hollow pretensions of the "somebodies"?  That makes it quite clear that none of you can get by with blowing your own horn before God. Everything that we have—right thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh start—comes from God by way of Jesus Christ.  That's why we have the saying, "If you're going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God."[4]

Our salvation is not dependent on what we believe about the doctrines of the church.  We were not saved because our exemplary behavior – we break at least one of the Ten Commandments every day.  Our salvation is dependent on only one thing:  THAT WE BELIEVE THAT GOD CAN DO WHAT GOD WILL DO TO SAVE US FROM OUR SIN.  God chose Jesus’ path to the cross so that we could have eternal life.  It isn't what we expect.  It doesn't seem smart or wise that God would let his Son die for us.  It doesn't even make any sense.  But again, that is the whole point:  WE DO NOT HAVE TO UNDERSTAND WHY GOD DID IT THIS WAY, WE ONLY HAVE TO BELIEVE THAT HE DID.

At my first appointment after seminary, I ended a youth meeting with the comment, "We have about 10 minutes left over. Does anyone have any questions?" A ninth grader raised her hand and said, "So what; the big deal about the Trinity? I don't get it at all." (It really is every pastor’s nightmare… to be questioned on one of the foundations of faith without the possibility of preparation.)  So I started asking them questions about what they knew about the Trinity - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, check... three in one ‑ one in three, check... ways we experience of God, check.  They knew many of the right words. And I talked a little about the controversies that had arisen over the years, and the splits that had taken place in the church because people couldn't agree on how to talk about who God is and what God has done for us.

And at 15 minutes after the ending time, when parents start showing up to find out where their kids were, I said, "But in the end, you just have to believe, because there's always someone to explain every point and possibility of the Christian faith away. And belief takes faith, which is a gift from God, available to everyone who asks and is willing to receive it. So I guess the answer to the question is... the big deal about the Trinity is faith."

And that's how it is with us. We have libraries full of stuff we've never read. We have the record of scripture, and the experiences of our lifetimes and the lives of faithful Christian people. But none of those alone make us believe. Belief is about faith... and faith is a gift from God. What does it take to believe? It takes faith.

Paul’s words remind us that our worlds are turned upside down when we invite Jesus inside our lives.  It means learning to listen with our changed heart instead of our head when it comes to matters of faith.  Or resisting the urge to turn around when we have strayed off course – when we have turned left instead of right.  Gladys and Helen could have called for directions when things began to look different from what they expected.  But they didn’t.  They just kept going and soon they met Verleen…and none of them were ever the same.

The foolishness and power of the cross upsets the apple cart, redefines the status quo, and turns our lives upside-down.  But without it, our lives are nothing.  If our lives have any meaning, it is Christ who gives it to them.  

So now I ask the question:  Will you let the power of the cross and all of its implications turn your life right-side up?  Will you be a fool for Christ?  Because that’s the best chance at real life we’ve got. 

Thanks be to God.



[1] Craddock, Fred B, et al, Preaching Through the Christian Year:Year A, Trinity Press International, Philadelphia, PA, 1992, pp. 97-100.
[2] Edelman, Marian Wright, The Measure of Our Success: Letter to My Children and Yours­­, Harper Perennial, New York, NY, 1992.
[3] Willimon, William H., The Intrusive Word: Preaching to the Unbaptized, William B Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, MI, 1994, pp. 1-4.
[4] Peterson, Eugene, The Message, 1 Corinthians: 1:26-30.

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Sermon - Desert Journey (Lent 1 - Year B)

FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT, YEAR B                                                          February 22, 2015
Genesis 9:8-17; I Peter 3:18-22; Mark 1:9-15                                     Panzer Liturgical Service

Desert Journey

The season of Lent grew out of the ancient church’s practice of holding baptisms at Easter.  Prior to their baptisms, converts to the faith were expected to go through an intensive period of repentance, self-examination, prayer, and preparation for their new life in Christ.  That period could sometimes last as long as three years; but the final forty days before Easter were always the most important.  Our lessons for the First Sunday in Lent reflect those central themes of baptism and preparation for new life. 

The reading from Genesis is the finale of the Flood story, when God makes a covenant with Noah, his offspring, and every living creature that accompanies them off the ark. In this new covenant, God promises never again to use destructiveness as a creative tool.

In the passage from 1 Peter, the writer draws a parallel between the promise God made after the flood (I will never destroy the earth) with the new covenant of baptism in Christ (I will make all things new).  Jesus overcame sin not by flooding it or destroying it, but by transforming it through his own death and resurrection.  To be baptized is to be taken up into this re-creative work in the world.[i]

We have visited the baptism of Jesus already once this year, but as a reminder, for Mark, the Gospel story doesn’t begin with angelic visitors or a prophetic dream. There is no miraculous birth – no poetic hymn to the incarnate Word.  No soaring prose, no travelers from the East, no expensive gifts, no awestruck shepherds, no jealous, brooding king.  Instead, Mark’s Gospel hurls us, ready or not, into a lonely and barren wilderness— a desert— where everything either bites or burns or stings. 

It’s hard to imagine a more dramatic moment than the baptism of Jesus.  As he emerged from the water, the heavens ripped open and the Spirit descended like a dove while the voice of God proclaimed, “You are my beloved Son, in you I am well-pleased!"   This, truly, would be a moment to savor— A moment to remember and celebrate.  And yet, almost immediately, Jesus was driven out into the desert to be tormented by wild beasts and tempted by evil.  

It’s not exactly what you would expect, is it?  After all, God was pleased— no… make that WELL pleased with Jesus.  But this beloved son was driven directly from a moment of affirmation and love into the harsh wilderness.    

The experts say that it takes certain meteorological and climatic conditions to form a desert.  Maps show that they cover about 25 percent of the earth’s land mass.  Globes show that they occur only between certain latitudes.  That’s what the experts say.

But we all know that there is a different truth about deserts.  The truth is, that no matter where we live, or how far we travel, or how green the grass of our daily lives, sometimes the desert is all that we know.  Sometimes, despite what the weather report of average rainfall may indicate, we find ourselves right in the middle of the desert: blinded, disoriented, sunburned, and just about dying of thirst.  Sometimes, the desert feels so familiar, that we can name every shriveled plant, every venomous snake, every blistering ray, and every irritating little grain of sand.  Sometimes, the wilderness can begin to feel a lot like home.[ii]

Some of the harshest deserts aren’t marked on any map, but lie just around the corner, or are found in the middle pew on Sunday morning at 1100.  Each of us has experienced the desert at some time in our lives.  Maybe we are there right now.  Think of mothers and fathers caring for children alone, not because there are divorced or abandonned, but because their spouse is deployed away from home for an extended period of time.  Think of people battling physical and emotional illness, unsure of what the future looks like, at some level, afraid.  Thinking of people facing death – their own or someone they love, knowing that things will never be exactly the same again. Think of people who are the outcasts of society – the poor, those in prison, those whose lives are considered less worthy by those around them. 

Yes, we know that deserts are everywhere, but there is something else we need to know about deserts… something Mark wants us to hear.  Jesus has been there first.  That is the good news of the opening scene for Mark.  No desert on earth is so remote, or so barren, or so lifeless that Jesus hasn’t walked there first.

And his presence there reminds us of another truth about deserts.  Despite all indications to the contrary, the desert is filled with life.  It may be life as we have never seen it before, but it is life.  A handful of dirt can be filled with hundreds of seeds just waiting to burst into life.  The roots of the withered plant go very deep, and take in whatever nourishment they can, in order to sustain their leaves and flowers.  The empty landscape, barren and lifeless in the daylight is suddenly teeming with life at night, as all sorts of animals and insects emerge from hiding.  Even at its most desolate, the desert is ready to burst into bloom at the first sign of life-giving water.

Throughout the biblical story, God uses the desert as a place of transformation.  It is a place of calling, where God’s plans become solidified and made clear.  Think of Moses.  Think of Elijah.  Think of Jesus, emerging from the waters of baptism, only to be driven (compelled) into the desert.  And if we look very hard at our own lives, we can see how the desert places can bring us closer to God.  They help us understand the necessity of having meaningful relationships with other.  They hopefully remind us of what it means to be a community of faith.

Author and church historian, Karen Armstrong writes of her struggle with epilepsy and how it impacted her relationship with God and her understanding of faith.  After years of asking, “Why did this happen to me?” she finally understood that God calls each of us to a different path.  She writes, “The great stories of history show that when you follow someone else’s path, you go astray.”  Ultimately, it is in the wilderness that we fight our own monsters and experience what it missing in our lives.  Thus transfigured, we can bring something of value to the world that has been left behind.[iii]

It is not coincidental that Jesus goes into the wilderness, or that it is the Spirit who leads him there. Though he does not need to be confronted with his own sin, as I always am, he is still led to discover who he is, and is tempted by the things that are not part of God’s call for him.  In the wilderness, we also can become more aware of our dependence on God.  In the wilderness, we learn to trust God’s way of being.  In the wilderness, we are connected to what God is doing in the world.  In the wilderness, when all else is taken away, we learn the true value of things, and the ultimate value of love. [iv] Ultimately, it is our own pain which gives us perspective and the empathy to give others hope that there is indeed a rainbow (and angels) on the other side.

Jesus leaves the desert to proclaim the gospel – that is, "good news," a term used in secular Greek for the public proclamation of a major event. The news is good because God’s "reign" is at hand, a kingly God who protects an endangered people, has special concern for the vulnerable, and who judges against violence and injustice.  As we continue to experience Lent through Mark’s eyes, remember that Mark’s terse and succinct prose does not give us a lot of details on what God’s reign involves. He only bids us to follow Jesus, and by hearing his word and following his example we can understand more deeply the mystery of God’s sovereignty.[v]

The beginning of this journey through the Gospel and through Lent calls for metanoia—repentance or a second look at life—and belief, an act of trust in the God who guides the unfolding journey.  As each of us experience these forty days of Lent, let us gather the courage to make this a journey of honest reflection.

Episcopal priest Barbara Brown Taylor left parish ministry after 15 years to teach seminarians. Like many of us, she ended up in a place she never imagined she would be and walked through many doubts and much darkness along the way. In her new memoir, Learning to Walk in the Dark, she remembers that some of the most important encounters with God happen in the dark or in the wilderness – think Abraham, Moses, Jacob and Jesus. And when she feels that the darkness is about to consume her, she writes:

There is only one cure for me on nights like this. If I can summon the energy to put on my bathrobe and go outside, the night sky will heal me – not by reassuring me that I am just fine, but by reminding me of my place in the universe. Looking up at the same stars that human beings have been looking at for millennia, I find my place near the end of a long, long line of stargazers who stood there before me… [vi]

Peace, Deb







[i] Nancarrow, Paul, “Process & Faith lectionay Commentary, March 5, 2006”, http://www.ctr4process.org/pandf/lectionary/Year%20B/Lent%201%20March%205%202006.htm
[ii] McGurgan, Susan Fleming, “Sermon for the First Sunday in Lent, 2006,” http://www.mtsm.org/preaching/homilies.htm
[iii] Armstrong, Karen, The Spiral Staircase, 2004, p 268.
[iv] Bouman, Luke, “Sermon of Mark 1:9-15,” http://www.predigten.uni-goettingen.de/archiv-8/060305-6-e.html
[vi] Taylor, Barbara Brown, Learning to Walk in the Dark, 2014, pg 64.

Monday, February 9, 2015

Sermon - What He Came to Do

5th Sunday after Epiphany                                                                                February 8, 2015
Mark 1:29-39                                                                                      Panzer Liturgical Service

In my first church, I had one of the worst months imaginable. Within two weeks, three longtime members of the church died unexpectedly and the wife of our senior minister was diagnosed with an inoperable cancer. The church and the staff were devastated, and it didn’t take long for us to feel burdened by all of the grief and pain surrounding us. I remember believing that there was nothing I could do to make anyone feel any better. One day, I went home from work before 5pm and went to bed, not remembering that I was supposed to give the invocation at our church’s kindergarten graduation that night. After that, I felt like a total failure.

The next morning I went to the office of our preschool director to apologize and beg her forgiveness for not being where I promised I would be. She got up from her desk and gave me a big hug. And she asked if she could pray for me and whatever was weighing me down. Soon, I poured out all of my grief and frustration, but her simple prayer helped me to get up and get on with the business of ministry.

The passage from Mark’s gospel lifts up important aspects of Jesus’ ministry.  It begins to tell the story of what he came to do, and what his ministry would look like in the future.  Jesus’ ministry was multi-focal… it was a ministry that touched many parts of life.  And Mark was not just telling us about Jesus casting out demons or curing people of illness.  He also gives us a glimpse of how life-changing… unorthodox… and miraculous Jesus’ ministry will be.  In these first few scenes, we see a different kind of teacher, healer, and prophet.  Jesus give the title “Messiah” a whole new meaning.

The gospel story was told and eventually written down to change the way we understand and participate in life. Even so, we still tend to focus on what happens to us in our lives of faith, rather than on the impact Jesus has upon the way we live. Jesus didn’t want us to see him as miracle worker. He wanted us to know him as the Word.

Jesus’ disciples didn’t get it either.  They kept bringing people to him, almost as if to prove who Jesus was.  But Jesus wanted people to know him through the Word – through preaching and teaching and living life with him.  Jesus wanted people to know about the authority from which he spoke.  He wants people to know and love God, not just because of what God has done for them, but just because God is God.

There is an interesting pattern of ministry that emerges in this text.  Jesus’ standard operating procedure (SOP) was established early on and maintained throughout his ministry.  I think we can see in this passage the main elements of Jesus' ministry in microcosm.  First, he responds to people's needs by healing their infirmities and meeting their needs.  Second, he proclaims the message of truth, that evil must be confronted so that God’s peace can reign.  Then third, he withdraws to nurture his relationship with God, and gather strength and focus to begin it all again.

The first two are two sides of the same coin:  he proclaims the Gospel by meeting people's needs, by “being” good news to them, as well as “telling” them good news.  Then he goes away to regroup, especially essential because being in touch and in tune with God is the foundation of all ministry.

And this shows us a pattern for ministry, too.  No matter what our calling in life or what our position in the church, everyone who undertakes any kind of ministry in the name of Jesus needs each of these elements, although the balance of them will be different for different people at different times in their lives.  And as a community of faith, we are continually working to get the balance right.   How often do we get stuck in one stage and forget about the others?  Effective work requires us to recycle ourselves through the process - continuously.  And it’s a lot of work, but well worth the effort.

There is one more thing about this passage which strikes me.  Jesus’ priorities of ministry are vast and varied.  First, we see the priority of people. Jesus ministers to the crowds, but Jesus also ministers to one individual who has fever.  Wherever people are in need, Jesus will be with them.  Healing restores the order in their lives, and to the lives of the community!

Second, we see the priority of prayer. Jesus took time to be alone with the Father.  He needed to get away from the demands of ministry and find spiritual refreshment.   Do we neglect the importance of prayer and solitude in our own ministries?  Let’s face it; many of us are afraid, or at least uncomfortable, with silence.  And there is question in my mind many days what exactly I would do if I heard the voice of God. 

And still, God’s voice prevails.  Through scripture and other readings, through prayer, through Christian conversation.  I would not be here today if God’s voice were not somehow ringing in my ears.  And neither would you.  Sometimes we just have to work on our listening skills.

Lastly, we see the priority of preaching and teaching.  For Jesus, preaching the good news of the kingdom of God was more important than spectacular miracles, for many even more lives would be changed by this more mundane ministry.  We look at healing and helping ministries, and see the glamour and the excitement of physical change.  But if we overlook the importance of sharing God's word, we are neglecting the most important thing of all – a changed heart and life! 

My friend, the one with inoperable cancer, asked our congregation for prayer. And my preschool teacher friend helped lead a special service, with over 100 people gathering to lay hands on Iris and her husband, Ed on a Sunday afternoon. A few weeks later, when she went to have scans prior to the beginning of her chemo and radiation therapy, the doctors could find no sign of her cancer. They classified it as a spontaneous remission. We called it something else… a healing miracle and gift from God.  My friend eventually died from this same kind of cancer, but she was grateful for the years that she had and for every opportunity to share the love of her God and the prayers of faithful friends.

Jesus heals because people need healing.  And in great compassion, he meets the needs of those around him.  But he also tells us that in all things, his purpose is to proclaim the good news – the Kingdom of God is at hand.  And when we follow Jesus, we, too, find renewed purpose in proclaiming God’s word of faith, hope, and love.  It means not only inviting people to the party, but telling them why we are celebrating.  It means having our actions match our words, living our faith in practice every day, in every way.

Thanks be to God… Amen.


 Peace, Deb

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Sermon - And they believed...

3rd Sunday After Epiphany - Year B                                              January 25, 2015  
Jonah 3:1-5, 10; Mark 1:14-20                              

There are many other stories about people being called – Moses was called into the desert with the Israelites to journey to the Promised Land.  Samuel was called as a young child, God even calling his name out loud.  Amos, Jeremiah, Isaiah – most of the Old Testament prophets include a little bit about their call in the beginning of their prophetic utterances.  In the New Testament, we see Paul literally knocked off his horse and blinded by the call of God.

What does it mean to be called? What is required of the one who is called?  Today I’d like for us to look at two other stories about call – one from Old Testament wisdom literature and one from the gospel of Mark.

Poor Jonah… his worst nightmare has come true.  He has gone to give a word of gloom and doom to the people of Nineveh and they have believed all that he has said.  The people have done exactly what Jesus also instructed the people to do… they repented and believed in God.  What a miracle for God… so why is Jonah so mad?  Let’s start at the beginning. 

In the first chapter of the book of Jonah we see Jonah being called – called by God to proclaim to the people of Ninevah the need for repentance.  But for whatever reasons – fear stubbornness, or lack of faith, Jonah ran away.  And when he ran away, he ran away big.  “I’ll go to the other side of the world – to Tarshish – to Spain.  Yahweh will never find me there.”  But just as his journey was beginning, a violent storm shook the ship carrying the runaway cargo of God.  And the further out to sea the boat went, the more violent the storm became.  Soon sailors were throwing cargo overboard to try to save the ship.  When that didn’t help, they started searching for the one who had angered the gods so badly.  Jonah, asleep in the hold of the ship, was found and ultimately admitted that he was probably the guilty party.  “Please throw me off the ship and you will be saved.”  And as a last resort they obliged him.  So there was Jonah, sinking fast in a restless, turbulent sea.

But God believed that Jonah was worth saving.  He just needed to learn an important lesson or two.  So the story tells us Jonah was swallowed by a very large fish, where he lived for three days, talking to himself and praying to God.  And when God thought that Jonah could be reasoned with again, the fish set Jonah free, depositing him up on a deserted beach.

Here’s where today’s reading starts. “I got it,” Jonah told the Lord.  “You want me to go to Nineveh.  I’m on my way.”  Three days later Jonah began what he thought would be a 40-day campaign to the destruction of Ninevah.  On the first day, Jonah began to preach.  The crux of the sermon was this… “Forty days and Nineveh will be overthrown by Yahweh, the God of the Israelites.”  No word of grace… no promise for the future.  No “what if”… no “but on the other hand.”   Jonah felt his responsibility was to warn these worldly, evil people of their destruction at the hand of God.  But there were two things Jonah didn’t count on.  The people believed… and God changed his mind.

Can you think of a moment when God became very real to you?  It may have been when life was swirling around you.  Think hard… when did it dawn of you that God is real?  Was it the way you experienced love, grace, peace, repentance, salvation, sanctification… or maybe even disappointment or anger?  When was the time you could no longer deny God’s existence and God’s overwhelming power over life and death?  For each of us, there is some moment in time when, without a question or doubt, or maybe with lots of questions and doubts, we believe.  It often happens when we least expect it.  For some, it is a blinding flash of truth – for others, it is the realization of a truth that has been there all along. 

The people of Ninevah experienced knowledge of God in an unusual way, for as Jonah was preaching his word of doom and destruction, they heard God’s word of hope and possibility.  Deep inside God’s message was a churning word of hope.  “Maybe it’s not so.  Maybe it’s not too late.  Why would God warn us if no possibility existed for us to change the outcome?”  And in verses 8-9, the king speaks for and to the people of Ninevah, saying “All shall turn from their evil ways and from the violence that is in their hands.   Who knows? God may relent and change his mind; he may turn from his fierce anger, so that we do not perish.” 

The second call story of the day comes from the gospel of Mark.  It’s such a bare-bones story.  And we have some many questions.  What did their families think?  Did they know who Jesus was?  Did they have any idea what was in store for them?  And if they did, would they do it again?

We don’t know the answers to any of those questions, at least not from what the Bible tells us.  We do know that this was a turning point – a totally life-changing event.  No one’s life was ever the same after they followed Jesus. 

There are very special “God moments” in each of our lives.  Sometimes they are very subtle, and unless we tune into them we may not even recognize them.  Others are like huge flags waving in our faces, saying “This is it. God is here.”  And while these experiences may take up very little chronological time, they occupy a large part of our memory and faith experience.  They engage us in such ways that they change us and often steer us on paths we might not have chosen for ourselves.  Or they confirm to us the reality that God is present with us, watching and reacting and directing us, even at the times when we think we are all alone.

The Greeks solved the problem of talking about these two kinds of time by giving each a different word.  The passage of time in seconds, minutes, hours and days, is called kronos, giving us the word, “chronological.”  In kronos time, things move in an orderly fashion, dependable and never-changing.  It’s military time – where there are 24 hours, or 1440 minutes, or 86400 seconds in a day.  It’s what keeps school and work schedules running smoothly, and it’s what keeps us on track to be productive members of society.

But there is another kind of time called kairos.   The word is used in the sense of “a time set by God.”  Kairos time set apart – it is about grace, truth and decision.  It is a God-given moment and when it is used by the New Testament writers it is always describing an opportunity for conversion and hope. 

Jonah expected the people of Nineveh to ignore his words, to go on about their evil little lives.  Instead Jonah’s words changed their lives forever.  Instead of thinking, “Yeah – whatever…” Jonah’s words of disaster were heard as an opportunity for change.  It’s actually pretty amazing… without any hope of God’s repentance, without a clue of God’s turning around, the people of Ninevah believed, and because of that belief, their lives would never be the same.

For Simon and Andrew, James and John, this kairos moment meant leaving behind the only work they had ever known.  It was the work that fed their families. They contributed to the local economy, waking early, following the patterns of fish, and selling at market.  Being a fisherman was hard work, but offered them a good life. 

But Jesus asked them another path, one of liberation. There was excitement in that – the possibility to break the chains of social oppression, to form a different kind of community. And there was a cost to it too. The price of admission was no less than their lives, or at least their lives as they knew them, and their friends and families knew it.

When he called for these fishermen to follow him, Jesus changed more than their lives as individuals; he revealed that they were not locked into the identities the world had constructed for them. Instead, in following him, they could change their perspective and the way they lived. Their circumstances did not determine how God saw them or in what God could accomplish through them.  And the same is true for us.  In giving up the preconceived notions about how we’re supposed to live and what we are “required” to do, we surrender ourselves to God and Christ. This is scary, because there is comfort and familiarity in who we think we are. But in shedding the world’s labels, we also have the opportunity to release the fear and shame that often accompany them.[i]

Hopefully, when we hear the story of Jonah, or the stories of the disciples leaving their old ways of life to follow Jesus, we realize that there are many opportunities to sense God’s presence with us.  These kairos moments can change our lives, shift our perceptions of what is important and help us redirect our efforts and experiences.  And like the Ninevites and the disciples, all we have to do is repent – turn to God, and to believe in the good news of Christ.  If we do this our lives will never be the same. 

I can’t tell you how to do this – I can only know what that has been like for me.  It has taken me 25 years and 11 moves to understand that God has never called me to give up anything, but has always gone ahead of me to prepare a place of worship and service and friendship wherever we have been.  And in the joy and the sadness and the fear and the excitement of living a life of faith, I know that God is with me.  And I believe that God has called me – to this place, on this day, to preach this word of faith and hope.

This freedom is not doing as you please. It's a journey on which we discover what it means to be loved by God, and through this, become the sort of person who is drawn to the lives of others – their joys, their pains, their tragedies, their hopes. In time we realize that it’s about not placing ourselves at the center of the universe, but in understanding that God has created us to worship him, and not the other way around.  It's a journey of identity in which we move from understanding ourselves as living for our reasons, and instead believing that God is giving us a heart with which to love God and the world.

God said to Jonah, go – and after some serious negotiation – Jonah went and proclaimed a word for God.  And despite Jonah’s intentions for God, a people were saved.  Jesus said, “Follow me.”  And even though they didn’t always get it right, the disciples experienced God’s grace in a way that was totally new.  And a church was born.  And the good news for today is this:  we, too, are a part of the story… if we believe.

Peace, Deb

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Sermon - Baptism of the Lord Sunday

Genesis 1:1-5; Mark 1:4-11            January 11, 2015

A child is born.  Let’s say that it is a girl child.  She is a daughter, sister, and eventually a wife and a
mother.  She moves in and out of relationships throughout a lifetime.  She is baptized as an infant and grows up in the Church as at least an "average" Christian.  She hears about God, has read much of the Bible, attends youth group and Sunday School most Sundays, works in the nursery when her own children are there, and takes a turn at teaching Sunday School.  She works outside the home, at first part time and then full time.  She provides volunteers in the community.  She cares for her parents' when the time comes. 

People think that they know her, but just when they think they have her pegged, she surprises them.  In reality, people know only a little bit about her.  It would take all of the chapters in a very large book to know her so well that we would never be surprised or disappointed.  And even then we could not know her as she knows herself or as well as God does.

And if we can't really know one of our fellow creatures, how can we expect to know everything there is to know about God? Throughout the ages, the Church has incorporated the telling of its family story each week in worship.  The story defines the way we think about a year.  Our year starts at Advent, not on January 1st, in the story of the Holy Family, throughout Jesus’ ministry, on Holy Thursday and on Good Friday, on All Saint’s Day and at Pentecost.   We celebrate the whole story through the whole year, and we know who we are through the stories of Palm Sunday and Easter as well as in the stories of Christmastide.  

Baptismal Font - Freudenstadt, Germany
Holy Scripture is a vehicle for that knowing.  God is, in part, known through relationship with the created.  In the readings for today we hear of the relationships between Father, Son, and Spirit. Through the readings we share in intimate moments, moments that are some of  the most revealing.  Especially in the Hebrew Bible lesson and the gospel, God introduces Himself to us and invites us to meet the rest of the family.

If you close you eyes and imagine the first five verses of Genesis, what would you see?  What would you hear?  At first, there is darkness, and then the sound of water.   Water, water, everywhere.   And God stirs the water around and starts the creative process.   Darkness and light, day and night, earth and heaven.  Animals and human beings.  It all began with the water.

Water plays such an elemental role in our lives and in the lives of the Biblical characters.   How many stories can you think of where water was a symbol pointing to the greatness of God?  Crossing the Red Sea, Jonah and the whale, water from a rock in the wilderness, Noah and the flood, water into wine, Jesus walking on water… and many more.   And water is present even the story most familiar to us.   In the baptism liturgy it goes like this:  “In the fullness of time you sent Jesus, nurtured in the water of a womb, baptized by John, and anointed by your Spirit.”

Born in a stable… baptized with sinners in the Jordan River… This is a scene of epic proportions. Jesus’ ministry begins so simply.  John in his holy lunacy mingles with the crowd from the villages, people aching for some Good News.  This good news comes in two forms: the baptism of John which is a forgiveness of sins, and his prophecy of the one who is greater and who will follow.  Indded, there is more to come. There will be a baptism of the Spirit.  In the end, there will not be a human intermediary with this new baptism.  It will be straight from God.

Jesus, the righteous one, goes to John and enters the water of the Jordan.  And with water John baptizes Jesus, even under duress.  Mark tells us that as he leaves the water he sees the "heaven torn apart."  Now, that is a picture worthy of the best filmmaker.  "You are my Son, the Beloved."  It is as if God the Father cannot get close enough to his child.  It is as if the parent is confined to heaven at this intimate moment and in euphoric frustration rips and tears the very fabric of the universe to lay his claim upon his Son.  It is a cosmic YES, arms raised high and feet dancing.  It is love spilling out, the cup overflowing. God knows, and from Scripture we too know what will be the result of this descent of the Spirit to Jesus.  Justice and mercy will be preached to all people.  He will go about doing good and reminding people of God’s real intentions for his creation.

Baptismal Font
Salisbury Cathedral, England
Where are we in this story? We stand with the crowd at the Jordan. We have trudged out from town, weighed down by our sins and hopeful that the madman from the desert will give us a new purpose for living.  We don’t know that the man in our midst is one born without stain.  We probably don't recognize him as the Messiah.  But we go back to the village and step back into our routines.  We are refreshed and feel the sense of a clean start. We know that something has changed.

What do we learn of God in this moment?   We are introduced to the Son, the Servant.  We see the Holy Parent leaning down from heaven to give us our first glimpse of the Holy Spirit.

God wants to be known by us.  He sought out the prophets and, piece by piece, the knowledge which can change lives and make them whole was given to humankind.  It was given flesh in his Son who was sustained by the Spirit in his labors.  This Creator God is our Parent as well.  We are not so small that we can be overlooked by his love and protection.  It is impossible for us to be excluded.  We only need to respond to one whose response is eternal and unchanging.  One who is in three persons, Creator, Redeemer, Sanctifier … the one who is all that we need. 

Baptismal Font -
Our Lady Cathedral
Krakow, Poland
Baptism is the church’s symbol, the sacrament, that says that we are anointed and accepted and recognized by God.  It is our way of handing ourselves and our children and our church over to the God, the one who created us and our world.  Through baptism we are cleansed.  Through baptism we are marked.  Through baptism we are set apart to be in ministry, to perform acts of justice and mercy, and to know and be known by God even better.

It is not a small thing we do when we come to the fountain of life, even if we had nothing to say about it.  How many of you remember your baptisms?  Have a story to tell?  How many of you do not remember you baptism?  Do not know the date or the circumstances? 

Your assignment is to find out what you can… to hear or tell the story as you know it… and to celebrate that day of recognition and initiation into the life of the church.  After all, isn’t that what we need more of… days to celebrate and thanks to give to God for a job well done.

Jesus’ baptism by John is one more piece in the puzzle of  of our Christian story.  Jesus knows me a little bit better because he too has felt the coolness of the water and heard the voice of God, sending him out to serve.  And I know him better because I hear the story of God actively participating in what baptism is all about.

Jesus’ baptism propels him into the world – to teach, to serve, to live and to love. And it does the same for us. God claims us at our baptisms – this is my child with whom I am well pleased – and sends us out to go and do the same… to live and serve and love in him name. Thanks be to God!

Amen.

My baptism day - August 30, 1959


Sunday, December 21, 2014

Sermon - A Circle of Trust - Advent 4

Luke 1: 26-56                                                                      December 21, 2014                  

In the early 1980’s an article was published in The Christian Century which claimed Mary as a significant role model for women.  One pastor wrote back, saying “that would be tragic.  Half of humanity would miss Luke’s point.”  Luke perceived Mary as a significant role model for all of us, women and men alike.  Every day we find that the world cannot possibly live up to its promises or our expectations.  People we trust let us down, situations are not what they seem, and we find ourselves desperately in need of direction and hope. 

But Luke points out to us someone who is very much like us.  He gives us Mary, as mother of our
Lord, and as example of the faithful trust.  Mary heard the angel’s word, she believed, and she acted out that trust in discipleship.  She responded to God’s word, both in song and in deed, as she brought into the world a Savior, who we call Christ the Lord.

Everybody who has ever given birth to a child has a birth story. Whether it’s going into labor, getting to the hospital (or sometimes not getting there), the circumstances surrounding the delivery, or something memorable that happened in the aftermath, some of the most often-told stories are those about being born. And none of us has a birth story any more remarkable than the story about Jesus’ birth.

I imagine it was a pretty stressful day or week or month for Mary.  An angel visitation, a disturbing message, an unusual burden to bear.  And while she was convinced by the angel’s explanation, I’m sure that she needed confirmation to make sure that it was not all a dream.  So in the verses after today’s reading, she took off to see Elizabeth.  Maybe she needed to confirm what the angel had told her about Elizabeth’s pregnancy.  Maybe she needed to say, “You’re not going to believe this, but…”  What a wonderful trusting relationship to share -- being able to have Elizabeth know without even being told all that Mary was going through.  What a safe place to stay -- a place to process all that had happened so far and all that would happen in the future.

Our children’s Christmas pageant today reminds of the characters in the story and how Jesus came to the young and old, rich and poor alike. But in all likelihood, it was not quite the silent night we sing about each year. Afraid and alone except for her husband, Mary gave birth to a son in uncertain circumstance, and that was only the beginning of the story.

The Blue Madonna
Chartres Cathedral, France
Who of us would really want to be in Mary’s shoes?  Pregnant out of wedlock in a society that didn’t tolerate that kind of behavior.  About to marry a man she hardly knew, bringing a ready-made family into the world, and all at the will of God.  How Mary must have trusted the Lord!  Trusted God to know that in the end it would be OK... that in the end the Lord’s word and work would be fulfilled. 

Would any of us want to be in Mary’s shoes, knowing that her son would be born in less than honorable circumstances far away from home? Knowing that her husband would die before her son reached the age of adulthood, and that Jesus would leave the family business to become an itinerant preacher? Who of us would be happy to see him followed around by a band of disciples who never seemed to get the point of his teachings?

Would any of us want to be Mary, seeing her son convicted and sentenced to die, then sitting at the foot of the cross, watching and waiting for the angel’s word to be fulfilled?

The circle of trust that existed between Mary and God was not just born as she carried her son and gave birth in that stable in Bethlehem.  It was not just lived out as she dressed him and fed him and played with him and educated him in her home.  It was a circle that extended out as she and Joseph dedicated him at the Temple, and looked for him when he had gone back to talk to the rabbis.  And it went out further as she became a part of his ministry, traveling with him throughout the Gallilean and Judean countrysides.  And it was fulfilled as she saw that same son, our Savior, die. 

And because his life did not end in that moment, in his resurrection, she must have felt and believed more fully those words which rang out even before his birth, “He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his ancestor David.   He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end."

The song of Mary rings forth in the world.  It is a song of hope, of faith, and of trust that God will not abandon God’s people.  Let it also be the song sung out in our hearts.  Let us a people a people who can sing “My soul magnifies the Lord,  and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant. Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed;  for the Mighty One has done great things for me, and holy is his name.”  And let us believe it and mean it, and live it out every day.  

Let the circle of trust be unbroken from day and forever more.  Amen.

Let us pray:

God of hope, who brought love into this world,
be the love that dwells between us.
God of hope, who brought peace into this world,
be the peace that dwells between us.
God of hope, who brought joy into this world,
be the joy that dwells between us.
God of hope, the rock we stand upon,
be the centre, the focus of our lives
always, and particularly this Advent time. In your name we pray, Amen.

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