NEWS FROM PASTOR
During my very first week in Greek class with Rev. Dr. Robert Kelley at Pittsburgh Seminary, we were required to memorize the first verses of John 1{ in Greek!}: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” Then by the 2nd week the entire Chapter One in Greek! This, for St. John, and for you and me, is set in the context of God’s creation, incarnation, and re-creation.
Easter morning demonstrates God continuing to give the gift of life to His people. Easter is the re-creation of God’s celebration of humanity. It is God’s entrusting of God’s self to human beings—to you and to me— through God’s incarnation. Divinity was clothed in humanity so that humanity might be clothed in divinity. Easter means that you and I are holy and intended to be holy, not as an achievement on our own, but as a gift from God. This is the gift of Christmas that culminates in Easter—the gift that empowers us to become children of God. Have you ever thought of yourself as a sacrament? Have you ever looked at someone across the street and said, “Hey, look! There is the sacramental image of God”? What is it that prevents us, do you think, from seeing that image in ourselves and each other? In Jewish tradition, rabbis recount that each person has a procession of angels walking ahead of him or her and crying out, “Make way for the image of God.” Can we even begin to imagine how very different our lives and our world might be if we lived with this as the reality and truth that guides our lives? It would mean that everywhere we go, God’s angels would go before us shouting out loudly and clearly, “Here comes an image of God!”! And so, what Easter morning means for us is the fulfillment of the Incarnation, that day known to us as Christmas, as “God with us” to share our joys and bear our sorrows. In truth, Jesus 33 years of “God with us” continues today, for us, in the power and presence of the Holy Spirit! And so, if that is the truth of Easter for us, then it may also be the Easter truth for our next-door neighbor, for those we love, for those we fear, for those who are like us and those who are different, for the stranger, and yes, even for our enemies. It means that we cannot limit Easter to a one-day event. We must begin to think of the “Easter Son-Rise” as a style of daily living and a way of being. We must begin to understand Easter as a verb rather than a noun—and to live out our daily lives with that understanding. PRAYER Our Lord and our God, on this day when we celebrate your resurrection, help us to come to understand that Easter is much more than a one-day celebration each year. Help all of us to know and understand ourselves as an “image of You.” And empower us to live out our daily lives as your image to our family, friends, neighbors, strangers, and yes, even, our enemies. Amen. Grace and Peace, Pastor John
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