Lent 2014 – Devotion 2

What are you giving up for Lent? At one time the church promoted giving up meat on Fridays during Lent. That led to Friday fish dinners at many churches. We all know people who have given up chocolate for Lent, or sweets, or alcohol, or ice cream. Giving up something to do with food is a common practice for Lent. It is a modification of the spiritual discipline of fasting which may involve not eating for a period of time or significantly reduced consumption. Today, fasting may be more associated with having a blood test or other medical procedure done than with religion!

Food is an important part of life. It is something we are involved with every day. We are biologically constructed to need food on a regular basis. Other animals can go for long periods of time without eating. Bears and other animals hibernate in cold months and don’t eat for long stretches. We had snakes for pets at one time. They had to be fed live rodents. They were only fed every week or two – thank goodness! But we humans need to eat day in and day out and, ideally, several times a day.

This frequent need for food keeps us mindful of our bodies. It reminds us of how the earth so readily provides the food that we need. Eating numerous times a day brings to mind how much energy, time, land, and labor are needed to sustain us and what a large industry agriculture and food production is.

In addition, eating is associated with relationships and community. People often eat together. We get together for lunch. Families sit down together for dinner. In these shared moments of eating, intimacy and relationships develop. There is much more than taking in calories to food consumption.

A Lenten discipline involving food also has other implications. If we give up something we are used to eating on a regular basis, then we have an ongoing reminder that this is Lent, this is a time to reflect on our relationship with God and neighbor. A food discipline can be a persistent reminder of our faith commitments. It can make us think of the food scarcity and limitations that millions of people live with each and every day in our community and around the world.

So, while we may think of giving up sweets for Lent as something frivolous and insignificant, there may be more to it than we realize at first glance. What are you giving up for Lent? Is it food related? What are your feelings and insights about your experience as the season unfolds?

Prayer: Over and over we pray, “Give us this day our daily bread.” We are grateful that we have food daily, and that, for most of us, food is in abundance. May we be aware of our access to food and all who are involved in providing it for us. As the farmworkers march for fair food rights, we give thanks for those who pick our produce and pray for them to be treated with respect and dignity. May we appreciate all that food reveals to us about the sacredness and interconnectedness of life. May our Lenten discipline help us to appreciate all that we do have and that we are able to restrict our diets not out of necessity but out of choice. Amen.

Lent 2014 – Devotion 1

Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. These are words that are familiar to us from many funerals and memorial services and burials. The book of Ecclesiastes reminds us, “All go to one place; all are from the dust, and all turn to dust again.” (3: 20)

Lent begins with Ash Wednesday. From a religious perspective, ashes are a sign of penitence. To be covered with sackcloth and ashes was a sign of the awareness of wrongdoing and the desire to repent and restore relationships with God and neighbor.

Ashes carry many other symbolic meanings. They are the product of destruction. They represent the essence of a thing. They are elemental. They are also used for fertilizer; to stimulate growth.

Lent is a time to return to our essence. To shed, peel off our shells of illusion and denial. It is a time to confront ourselves honestly and to see our sin. Lent is a time to destroy and cast off all that separates us from God, our truest selves, and our neighbors.

Ashes to ashes. This is a season of to consider what must be left behind and destroyed because it is interfering with our relationships to God, ourselves, and the world. It is a season to give something up. What are you giving up for Lent?

But in the book of Genesis, a book of beginnings, we are told, “. . . then the Lord God formed a human from the dust of the ground, and breathed into the nostrils the breath of life; and the human became a living being.” (2:7) From the dust and ashes of our Lenten devotion, God re-creates us, we become new beings, truly alive in God. Do not be afraid of this somber season. Do not be afraid of the self denial. Do not be afraid of the sacrifice. Do not be afraid of the self examination. Do not be afraid of the honesty. From the ashes of repentance, new life springs forth.

Prayer: As this season of Lent begins, may we affirm the desire to grow closer to God and to one another. May our spiritual disciplines result in true growth and maturity. May we face our fears of letting go; giving up power and control and releasing harmful attitudes and behaviors. May we be with Jesus in spirit through his 40 days in the wilderness trusting in Divine love to sustain us and renew us. Amen.

Epiphany Devotion

Today is Epiphany. For those of us in Pinellas County, Florida, that means that the Greek Orthodox people in Tarpon Springs will have lots of festivities and the teen boys who dive for the cross will be very cold today! For those of Latino descent, this is Three Kings Day, also complete with presents and festivities.

Epiphany is a day to celebrate the light of God coming into the world. We see that light in Jesus. The scripture for the day comes from Matthew 4:12- 17:

Now when Jesus heard that John had been arrested, he withdrew to Galilee. He left Nazareth and made his home in Capernaum by the sea, in the territory of Zebulun and Naphtali, so that what had been spoken through the prophet Isaiah might be fulfilled: ‘Land of Zebulun, land of Naphtali, on the road by the sea, across the Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles – the poeple who sat in darkness have seen a great light, and for those who sat in the region and shadow of death light has dawned.’ From that time Jesus began to proclaim, ‘Repent, for the realm of heaven has come near.’

The light comes to people on the edge, to the margins, the borders. The light comes to those facing death. The light comes to those who are in darkness. We are given the impression that the light comes where it is needed most.

This invites the question: Where is the light needed most in our world today? Where do you think the light needs to shine?

We are told that Jesus begins his ministry after John is imprisoned. John’s active ministry is finished. Jesus carries on. Now, Jesus’ active ministry on earth is over and he has commissioned his followers to take over and carry on.

Thinking about where the light is needed in today’s world, we then ask: What are we doing to shine that light where it is most needed?

Prayer: May we see the light of divine love illuminating our reality, our lives, and all of life. And may we shine that light where it is needed most. Amen.

Advent Devotion 24 – The Night before Christmas

‘Twas the night before Christmas . . . So the famous poem by Clement C. Moore begins with all of its magic. Visions of sugar plums. The clatter on the lawn. The lustre of the moon on the snow. A miniature sleigh and eight tiny reindeer. The prancing and pawing on the roof. St. Nick with his dimples and cherry nose. The poem is magical and is credited with making Christmas into the widespread holiday celebrated today with Santa and reindeer and stockings and all.

So, it is the eve before Christmas and, yes, children may have a hard time sleeping tonight after they put out the milk and cookies for Santa. But underlying those traditions of Santa, behind the presents and the bows, there is another Present. The gift of love given to the world by God in Jesus. There is the birth of light and hope into the world. There is the dawning of justice and peace. There is the inception of expansive community and compassion. There is nascent joy. All this and more is birthed into the world through Jesus.

Though Jesus was born some 2,000 years ago, his life continues to impact the world. His message continues to transform hearts. His teachings continue to spur compassion and justice. There is no “undoing” the effects of his life and ministry. And the power of that witness, the salvation in those teachings, the wholeness in that life path are available to us each and every day, not just at Christmas. So, really, every day is the eve of new hope and joy being born into the world with all of its magic and promise!

“Do not be afraid; for see – I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people. . .”
Luke 2:10

Prayer: We have such high expectations for Christmas. We forget that the hope and promise of this season is waiting for us each and every day. The holy day is simply a reminder of all God intends for us and for this precious world all 365 days of the year. May we expect the fulfillment of God’s hopes and dreams each and every day. Amen.