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dreamprayact

~ Reflections of a preacher, poet, and contemplative activist

dreamprayact

Monthly Archives: August 2012

Choosing to Receive a Life

29 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Reflections, Sermon portions

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Bread of God, Eucharist, faith, incarnation, Jesus' death, Living bread, manna in the desert, sin, spiritual journey

In John chapter 6 Jesus reminds his questioners that it wasn’t Moses who provided manna in the wilderness. It was God – the same God “who gives you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is that which comes down from heaven and gives life to the world” (John 6:32-33).

The manna only met the Israelites’ immediate needs for sustenance, not their ultimate human needs. The bread of God is different. It is the gift of life, the pouring out of Jesus’ life for the sake of the world.

Jesus has been living bread in my life! I see illumined in Jesus a life filled to the utmost with the presence of God!

People were healed with a touch.
People were forgiven with a word.
People were given new life through a holy conversation.

I have always felt that Jesus is a friend who is so close to God that he has brought me closer just by hanging out with him!

So when Jesus says, “The bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh” (6:51c), there are several meanings.

First of all, it recalls the opening chapter of John, where we hear “and the Word became flesh and lived among us” (1:14). These are the words we usually ponder at Christmastime as we consider the incarnation, the gift of Jesus’ life that is born from God’s love for the world.

Likewise, we see an allusion in John’s words to Jesus’ death. Jesus will give up his life, his flesh, as an expression of the same love revealed in the incarnation. He offered himself to God in death, thus releasing his life for the life of the world.

Finally, we hear a clear eucharistic note in John’s words. Jesus mentions his flesh and his blood as gifts of true food and true drink (6:55). We are invited to have a sacramental meal with our Risen Lord, and to witness to the life that is ours through Christ.

Craig Barnes says this about our role as witnesses to the life we have in Christ: “When Christians take on the vocation of being witnesses, it has a dramatic effect on how they conduct their lives. They stop trying to achieve a life and choose instead to receive one. As long as their goal (is) achievement, their constant companion (is) complaint because they (can) never achieve enough. But the day they (decide) to start witnessing the many ways God is still creating their lives, their companion (becomes) gratitude. Even when their lives take a hard turn, there is still opportunity for quiet moments of thankfulness, because by now they have learned how to find the manna and the gentle stream that flows into every desert” [M. Craig Barnes, The Pastor as Minor Poet (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2009), p. 64].

How to find the manna – how to find the living bread that comes down from heaven – how to be nourished by the very presence of the living Christ in our midst – these are the desires in every believer’s heart!

Still we do sometimes run into problems. We get wrapped up in trying to “achieve a life,” in trying to earn our standing before others or before God, in striving to be “good enough” or “smart enough” or “well off enough” to convince ourselves that we have achieved what we set out to achieve.

Protestant Reformer Martin Luther defined sin as “the heart curved in on itself.” Too often we are curved in on ourselves, even us followers of Jesus, focusing mostly on our own needs and wants, our own aches and pains, our own preoccupations, our own temporary achievements.

Jesus beckons us on one of the most important journeys we will ever undertake – the long, countercultural journey outside of ourselves toward the true center of our being, the God who creates us and loves us and saves us from ourselves.

Jesus invites us on a journey toward wholeness as we risk living and loving for the sake of a calling bigger than ourselves. No more hearts turned in on themselves, but rather hearts turned outward in Christ-like love for the world!

Words (c) 2012 Mark Lloyd Richardson

Generosity and Grace

25 Saturday Aug 2012

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Reflections, Sermon portions

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

Apostle Paul, Christ, Christian life, Divine grace, generosity, Giving, God, Second Corinthians

A monk was out walking one day and saw something shiny on the ground. He bent down to pick it up and found that it was a very valuable, precious gem. So he cleaned it off, put it into his bag, and continued on his way.

A little further along, he met up with a man who asked him if he could spare something to eat. The monk said “Sure” and he opened his bag to get something out. When he did, the man looked inside and saw the gem. He asked the monk, “Could I have that?” and the monk said “Certainly.” The man took the gem and went on his way.

Later the man came back to the monk and returned the gem to him. The monk was very puzzled and asked him why he was giving it back. And here’s what the man said to him: “What I want is whatever it is that allowed you to so easily part with such a valuable gem, because that is what is most precious.”

The Christian life begins in grace and grows in grace and reaches its final rest in grace. This life, when we have eyes to see and ears to hear, is pure grace. It is God’s gift to each of us, and we do not know how long it will be.

The apostle Paul speaks of grace as God’s generosity to us and our generosity with one another. The basis for all of this is our relationship with Christ. Paul states it beautifully when he writes, “For you know the generous act of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich” (2 Cor. 8:9).

This is a powerful Christian affirmation. As we hear the words of Paul we become aware again of what has drawn us to this Christian journey – that Christ has done something for us, indeed he’s done something in us, and we can’t see the world the same anymore.

We can’t turn a blind eye to the suffering in other parts of the world. We can’t pretend that people near to us are without need. We can’t live only for ourselves, because that would deny who we are becoming through Christ.

You and I are called to live generous, grace-filled lives. A generous life is a life that recognizes the poverty in riches, and the riches to be discovered in giving ourselves away. God’s grace, when we truly receive it, inspires us to be gracious to others.

How can there be a limit to our lives when we have been given everything? How can we fail to see the amazing grace that is poured into our lives, bringing us forgiveness, purpose, and peace? How can we not respond with an eagerness to reflect the presence of Christ here and now? “For if the eagerness is there,” Paul writes, “the gift is acceptable according to what one has — not according to what one does not have” (2 Cor. 8:12).

That is all God asks of you and me – not to give until it hurts, but to give until we find our joy overflowing, to give until we experience what grace is all about, to give by sharing Christ’s abundance in a world that tends to see only what is lacking.

Words (c) 2012 Mark Lloyd Richardson

From Water’s Edge

20 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Poems

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Avila Beach, California, dolphins, humpback whales, nature, ocean life, pelicans, San Luis Bay, whale migration

Over placid waters
of late summer,

brown pelicans
glide effortlessly

just above the surface
then abruptly rise,

and spotting their quarry
plunge like fierce arrows

shot from the heavens
to capture their prey.

Standing on Harford Pier
we watch their show

amused and amazed
by their grace,

their swiftness,
their accidental nonchalance.

A steel-blue day greets us,
as well as a bustle of birds,

a sampling of seals,
a dalliance of dolphins,

and a fortuitous sighting
of Humpback whales

cruising the harbor,
tails slapping,

feeding in the plentiful waters
of San Luis Bay

before heading south again
on migration to Mexico.

Words (c) 2012 Mark Lloyd Richardson
Photos (c) 2012 Dallis Day Richardson

The Uninvited Wedding Guest

10 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by mark lloyd richardson in Reflections

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

California, donkey, La Purisima Mission, Marriage vows, wedding guests, Weddings

Weddings are both solemn and joyful occasions – a blend of seriousness and serendipity.

Wedding vows reflect the heartfelt commitment a couple makes to each other. After all … a wedding is for a day … a marriage is for a lifetime.

At the same time, the most memorable wedding moments are often the surprises.

Dallis and I will never forget the collective gasp of our guests when our friend Jim, who was officiating, dropped my ring on the deck where we were standing and it rolled several feet, nearly falling through a crack. We took a brief time-out to retrieve it, and the episode has been a source of fun and laughter ever since.

Recently Dallis attended an outdoor wedding at La Purisima Mission in Lompoc, California, founded by the Franciscans in 1787, and now a State Historical Park. It was a beautiful day in a picturesque setting.

The ceremony had started a little late and was coming to the place where the bride and groom would be introduced as a married couple.

The presiding minister said, “And now we have come to a very special moment.”

And at that, a VERY loud and quite obnoxious “HEE HAW HEE HAW HEE HAW HEE HAW” came from what seemed like heaven, but in reality was from the corral next to the Mission.

Did I mention that livestock are kept in the park?

Laughter and smiles broke out! It was a surprise moment that won’t soon be forgotten.

Here’s the uninvited wedding guest – doesn’t he looked pleased with himself?

“What?”

Words (c) 2012 Mark Lloyd Richardson
Photo (c) 2012 Dallis Day Richardson

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