Sunday, April 23, 2023

The Unknown Companion


Matham - Maaltijd te Emmaus. Rijksmuseum.



Who do you break bread with?

Who do you invite to stay with you?

Who is the unknown companion?

How will you know him?


I remember: The Falafel Guy at Sather Gate in Berkeley would fill your pita with lettuce, tomato, falafel, and if you asked, baba ganoush, and hummus. Bless him... Years later on pilgrimage to the Holy Land our last stop was to be in Abu Ghosh, a village with two claims to fame. Most recently it held the world record for the world's largest hummus platter, which alas we did not taste; as it is, Lebanon has taken the title away. More traditionally and lastingly, Abu Ghosh is near the site of the disciples' visit to Emmaus.


There is a church there, the Church of the Resurrection, that houses frescoes depicting the story from today's gospel. We learn how the disciples knew Jesus in the breaking of the bread. And in seeing those pictures and hearing the story, and breaking the bread together ourselves, the past becomes present to us. 


The story begins: It was a long time ago – it was earlier today. On the Emmaus road two were walking – and a third came alongside. Who was the third? They did not think to ask. They were preoccupied, overwhelmed, bewildered and baffled, with troubles of their own.


The news, the good news, was hidden in a maelstrom of fear and anxiety – even terror: for it was an act of terror that set their feet on the road, drove them from Jerusalem. Jesus of Nazareth was crucified under Pontius Pilate. And then, on top of that, came the truly incredible news the women were telling: the tomb was empty. He was not there. Angels spoke to them.


When the disciples set out down the road to Emmaus they did not know where they were going. Sure, they knew where the road led – but they did not know what the future held. They were talking with each other about what had happened, trying to sort out what was really going on. What did it mean?


The third approached, and walked along with them. They did not recognize him. But he accompanied them on the way. And at his inquiry they rehearsed for him the events of those days, almost like a creed, beginning with the words and deeds of Jesus, a prophet mighty before God and the people. They spoke of his betrayal and death, the empty tomb, and the angels’ message. But they didn’t get it – they did not know what it meant, what was really going on beneath the surface of what was happening.


O you foolish Emmæans! How slow you are to grasp it – this is what the prophets were talking about – that the Messiah must suffer, must pass through passion and death and resurrection, before he can reach his glory.


As they reached the village the unknown companion made as if to go on. But they stopped him, offering hospitality. They insisted. Stay with us, for evening is at hand, and the day nearly spent.


So he went in—


“But let me tell you, that to approach the stranger

Is to invite the unexpected, release a new force,

Or let the genie out of the bottle.

It is to start a train of events

Beyond your control. So let me continue.”


[“The Cocktail Party” by T. S. Eliot, The Complete Poems and Plays 1909-1950 (Harcourt, Brace & World, 1952) p.306]


For now the stranger took, blessed, broke, shared the bread; and they knew: this is his Body, and we are in his Kingdom, now. And there in that place the guest became the host. He became the host, as he must always do, when we invite him in. 


When we take Jesus in, as guest, as host, we are transformed, we are enlightened.


We are at his Table, fellowshipping with him.


And he himself is the Bread; he is the Life.


As he left them, they were no longer afraid. They turned to each other and said,


Our hearts warmed

as he taught us

on the road, opening

the Word to us

to our understanding.


Word and Table –

in these they knew him –

in these we know him—

as we break the bread

and tell the tale,


of the marvelous events 

of God with us.



They returned immediately to the City and to their company, to tell their friends, to share the news, the good news, that all the world soon should know, that Christ is risen from the dead, Alleluia! That he arose, that he made himself known in the breaking of the bread.


That is not the end of the story. Like manna in the wilderness, like loaves for 5000, like bread for two disciples at Emmaus, but greater, is the gift of himself that the Lord gives us, bringing us life, new life in abundance. For the bread broken that is his body has multiplied across times and places and generations. 


As we, one body, share the one bread, we celebrate that selfsame Lord until he comes again.


And so we ask— how is Christ known among us?


Who do you break bread with? Who is it that you see at the table? Is Jesus there? Jesus, who told us, I will be with you. Jesus, who said, when I was hungry you fed me. Jesus, who said, I am the bread.


Is he there at the table?


Yes— for whenever we bless the bread and break it and share it, whenever we take the cup of wine and share it, we remember his death until he comes. And we know that he is risen— that he is alive and among us— that in this action he becomes known to us.


Do we walk with him on the way? Do we welcome the stranger? Share our table fellowship? With whom do we, now, break the bread? Do we know, in them, friend or stranger, the fellowship of Christ? Do we hear him teaching, are our eyes opened, do we see him, as we study the Scriptures?


There are several useful and specific things that people of faith, connected to traditional religions, have to offer people seeking a new church home, including seekers who are less attached to a faith tradition.


Theological understanding, spiritual practices, reliable mentors and spiritual guides, and faithful communities, are among the gifts we the church have to offer the devout and the seeker, the eager and the bereft, the occasional and ancillary member, and even the “spiritual but not religious.” 


As Herb O’Driscoll points out in his commentary on this gospel, “We live in a time when spirituality is suspicious of structure and form and institution. Yet any spirituality, if it is to last through the vicissitudes of time and history, must take on form”. 

 

What we have to offer as a church is our experience of God, not just in ourselves, but in communities, through the aid of pastors and teachers, through prayer partners and soul friends, through study and service, and in the breaking of bread and in the prayers.


Yet even more than our structures and traditional practices, whose external aspects, memories or associations may act as barriers, we have something to offer to people seeking a way to truth and sane living in an uncertain world, that is much more precious than the institutional containers we have used. 


It is the all-embracing love of God.


When I was back in Tombstone where I once was vicar, I looked for Mongo, who drove the old stagecoach. I didn’t see him. But then after all, when he met me somebody said, “Hey Mongo! He’s from your church.” And he said, “It’s my church - when I go.” “So it’s your church.” “When I go.” 


Someone who knows us as "my church - when I go!" is a member. Someone who returns to bury a family member, or seeks to be married or to be baptized, is a member. 


And someone who knocks on the door when they seek a light may find us to be a lighthouse, and a beacon, and a home.


Open our eyes to your presence,

open our hearts to your love,

that we, openhearted, open-eyed, open-handed,

may share the bread and tell the story,

that you may be present

in the midst of us,

and that we might share

that good news with all those we meet on the way.


Travel with us, Lord, show us the truth;

stay with us, Lord, show us your love;

send us, Lord, forth from this place,

newly strengthened by Word and fellowship

with the knowledge of your love,

and full of news, good news,

to share, in word and deed, with the world.


Elusive God, companion on the way,

you walk behind, beside, beyond:

you catch us unawares.


Break through the clouds of doubt,

the disillusionment and despair,

that obscure our vision,


that

wide-eyed with wonder

open-mouthed with awe

we may find our way

and journey on

as messengers

of your good news.


Amen.  


JRL+


AEaster3, Emmaus, Luke 24:13-35

Keeping the Faith with Jesus on the Road

 

Op weg naar Emmaüs, Harmen ter Borch, after Gerard ter Borch (I), 1650 [https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/]

On the last day of a Holy Land trip we visited the church commemorating the encounter “on the road to Emmaus” of two disciples on the afternoon of Easter Sunday with an unrecognized man who turned out to be Jesus. (Luke 24:13-35)


At first they thought him to be ill-informed as, while in their grief-struck flight from the city of Jerusalem they went over the events of the past few days, from Palm Sunday to Good Friday and on to the supposedly hysterical reports of the women who found the tomb empty that morning, he asked them what they were talking about and they react: “Are you the only one who doesn’t know what’s been happening?” 


Then he in turn with patience interprets the events of the past few days, not on the surface level of what’s happening but on the deeper level of what is really going on, preparing them for the deeper revelation of what is really going on in the Breaking of the Bread, that is, the revelation of the Messiah.


As they talk along the way the apparent stranger lays out for them all about the Messiah throughout the Scriptures. 


What really opens their eyes is not theological argument by itself but the experience of the living Lord, his loving presence, … as they are there with him, in conversation, their hearts burning as they hear the Word, and then their eyes, opening wide, as he takes, blesses, breaks, and offers, the Bread that is his own Body, the Paschal Lamb of the New Covenant.


What happens to us when we listen to the Word he speaks to us?


What happens when we accept the Bread that he offers us?


Yes there is sustenance, nourishment, and reassurance of his presence.


And yet there is even more going on, when we accept that bread.


We become what we receive.   


It is not only about how he is present in the bread (or how we take in that bread) it is about how we are incorporated into him. 


It is not just about getting the body of Christ into you - or how that happens - it’s about getting you (incorporated) into the Body of Christ.


When have you been on this road, away from disaster and disappointed hope, headed perhaps back to the familiar, the secure, however wise your decision to leave it in the first place?


When have you fallen in with strange company and learned something new, something that changed your perspective?


When have you received the bread, blessed and broken, that changed your life? That caused you to look with fresh eyes on the world around you, on your companions and yourself? 


How about today?


So then let us pray:


Abide with us - abide in us.


Abide with us as the stranger encountered on the road.


Abide with us as the unrecognized teacher revealing the hidden mysteries of faith.


Abide with us as the patient companion, the inquisitive fellow, who seeks us out for fellowship and a mutual opening of hearts.


Abide with us as the priest, who takes, blesses, breaks, offers… himself, that we might see him and hope anew when hope is lost.


Abide with us as the Messiah you yourself prepare us to accept, the one who is Redeemer and Salvation for all people.


Abide with us as the mysterious stranger who knows our hearts and warms us to the core.


Abide in us as the fire within, and enkindle by knowledge and love, en-flaming experience, your holy spirit. Lead us into all truth, not merely pointing the way, but being the way.


For you are the Road on which we must travel, the journey’s end at its beginning, the impetus of our movement and the welcome of our rest. AMEN.


The Rev. John Leech serves as a priest associate at the Episcopal Church of Saint Matthew, Tucson. 



Tuesday, April 18, 2023

con permiso

 Unless otherwise noted,

The Scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright (c) 1989, by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., and are used by permission. All rights reserved.

Saturday, April 15, 2023

doubt

"Or perhaps it was a croissant..."

Doubting Thomas 


The two Sundays following Easter Sunday, are still part of the resurrection message – as is everything up until the Ascension. In the Gospel of John (20:19-31) we read of disciples gathered the evening of Easter Day, anxious and afraid – at least “concerned,” as I said of myself after a real earthquake. They instinctively drew together for shelter and comfort, not knowing what would happen or what to do next. If it had been a fire in an office building, they would have gathered in the parking lot, in impromptu attire, chatting about what happened, pondering it. 


Billy Graham once in a sermon described evacuating a hotel in the middle of the night as a fire alarm woke everybody up, and as people milled around looking for someone familiar, they saw him, the one person they recognized and came over. “And I ministered unto them,” he said.  


For the disciples on the first last day it was Jesus who showed up, much less expected than Billy Graham, despite “an idle tale” they had been told but dismissed out of hand, and He ministered unto them. He reassured them. The idle tale was true. The resurrection was real. He was real.


And then one thing happened. “We have seen the Lord,” they said to one who had not been there, one who would turn a sudden 180° from disbelief to total faith: Thomas. He would not put his faith in hearsay; he wanted to see and feel for himself. 


And so a week later on the second Sunday of Easter he did. Here, go ahead, test me, touch me, feel me: what you see and hear and hold in your arms is real. Jesus is for real. 


Thomas expressed all the doubt and unbelief of the fresh first day of the new, risen Lord, and then made his exclamation of radical faith a Sunday later. 


How blessed are we who heard the news from afar and centuries later, who can yet testify, and put our faith in one who we have not seen but yet believe. 


What went on from here, what grew from here, was a community not only of those few apostles, witnesses to Jesus’ life and messengers of his resurrection, but an ongoing community that could testify to the reality of the risen Lord. He is alive, he is at work in the world, and he is at work in the world through our hands, and he proclaims the good news of the reign of God that is at hand through our voices, word and deeds. 


We continue the work that the first apostolic community began. The third week of Easter season we hear another story of the risen Lord, set in the place that once held the world record for the largest platter of hummus. That's another story. It involves bread and, like this story, discouragement and grief: grief turned to wonder and faith. 


For now, though, we join Thomas at the feet of an unexpected Jesus, and there’s one thing to say: “My Lord and my God.” (John 20:28)


The Rev. Dr. John Leech serves as a priest associate at the Episcopal Church of Saint Matthew, Tucson.



(Meditation for The Second Sunday of Easter 2023)


https://cdn.britannica.com/93/152993-050-57F2DCCE/Marcel-Proust.jpg


Saturday, April 8, 2023

Holy Saturday


"The Dead Christ with Angels" - Edouard Manet. 1864. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.


O God, Creator of heaven and earth: Grant that, as the crucified body of your dear Son was laid in the tomb and rested on this holy Sabbath, so we may await with him the coming of the third day, and rise with him to newness of life; who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. 

http://www.lectionarypage.net/YearABC_RCL/HolyWk/HolySat_RCL.html