Be Inspired - A Guided Meditation for Pentecost

Today we celebrate the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost Sunday but this isn’t the first time the Spirit of God appears.

In John’s Gospel, chapter 20, it says that when Jesus first appears to his disciples following his resurrection that he breathes on them and they receive the Holy Spirit (John 20:22). And, in the first chapter of Genesis, the creating Spirit of God sweeps over the primordial waters (Genesis 1:2). So the story we tell today, the story of Pentecost and the birth of the church is when the Spirit, already active in history, inspires a group of people.

I want to invite each of us today to go back to that day in our minds...to imagine ourselves as the first followers of Jesus in that upper room…

These are difficult times and in difficult times Christians turn to God for solace and for direction. This morning’s scripture readings provide exactly that. Our Epistle from the 1st Letter of John tells us that: “God is love and those who abide in love abide in God, and God abides in them…”

In our reading from John’s Gospel, we hear Jesus tell his disciples, “Abide in me”. Abide? What does it mean to abide?

We just recently finished up the Parish Lenten Bible study and as we were reflecting over the past little while, we had a conversation about how as we get older we aren’t the same person as we used to be…the things that happen in our life, the good, the bad, and all the in-between…they change us. They change the way we look at life, they change the way we interact with others and how we see the world.

You are in Good Company.

Sermon for the Second Sunday of Easter (Year B)

By Archdeacon Peter Crosby

Don’t be a “Doubting Thomas!” You’ve likely heard that expression. Maybe you’ve said it yourself, or had it said to you. The attitude that many of us have received about faith and doubt is that they are like oil and water; or Leafs, Habs and Sens fans; they just don’t mix; and that there is no room in faith for doubt. When doubt is demonized, even questions can become suspect; too many questions can lead to doubts!

Thomas may have been the most famous doubter; but he was far from being the only disciple with doubt. Last week, at our virtual “Day in the Wildwood,” we prayed “The Stations of the Resurrection.” In hearing again, the stories of the Risen Christ, I was struck by how many are stories of faith and doubt, both together. When the Risen Christ appears to his disciples in the Gospel of Luke, the Lord says, “Why are you frightened and why do doubts arise in your hearts?” And in the Gospel of Matthew, the evangelist writes that, “The 11 disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. When they saw him, they worshipped him; but some doubted.” And yet it was to these same disciples, with both their faith and their doubt, that Jesus gave authority to make new disciples, baptize, and teach; assuring them and us, that he is with us until the end of the age.

I am convinced that doubt needs to be rehabilitated and questions welcomed and valued. The opposite of belief is often presented as atheism; in the Bible, the opposite of faith is fear. In our society today, I would suggest that the opposite of Christian faith is indifference; a blank; not on the radar screen. If something matters enough to a person to have doubts about it; or to poke at it with questions; that suggests to me that there is fire there; some passion; some interest. In fact, having big questions about the big answers in life is often essential to spiritual growth and maturity in faith. Questions and unsettling doubts can be the catalyst we need; even if it means a necessary time of feeling like we are wandering in the proverbial wilderness.

I grew up at St. Stephen’s Anglican Church in the west end of Ottawa. The words of our liturgy were imprinted on my consciousness: our God is a Holy God of power and might. But as I journeyed into adulthood, I had difficulty reconciling God’s power with all the wrong, and harm, and downright evil I was becoming aware of in the world, and in history. It was necessary for me to become unsettled and uncertain about my understanding of God, in order to “make space” for a deeper understanding, that was more life giving, and empowering to my adult faith. I had absorbed the world’s understanding of power as control, domination, coercion, and manipulation. I needed to doubt a God of this kind of power, in order to appreciate God’s authentic power of sacrificial love, in whose service is perfect freedom.

So, if you are living with questions about faith, that won’t go away; or doubts that come and go, and return; you are not alone. You are in good company. The Apostles upon which Christ built his Church, were people of both faith and doubt. The Church of the Twenty-first century needs to be a place where the Creeds are taught, and where questions are honoured. We need to be a safe place for people to explore the “big questions.”

When the Risen Christ invited Thomas to see and touch the marks of Crucifixion, “Doubting Thomas” is also “Believing Thomas.” The glorious Risen One is willing to be known in his wounded humanity, for it is in our humanity that Jesus meets us, in all our faith, and in all of our doubts and questions; in our joys and in our sorrows; in the crosses we suffer, and in the grace of new life. May we too be like Thomas, confessing of Jesus, “My Lord and my God!”

"When I say so, Floor it!"

"When I say so, Floor it!"

… But as much as we see Maundy Thursday, the Last Supper, the Crucifixion, the agony of the garden, the crowds, the chief priests, the Romans, and everything else flying towards us at 100km/hr, and we want to slam the brakes, or pull out our swords to “protect” Jesus, or run away in fear that we’ll be next, that voice of Jesus seems to echo through everything, and gently, but confidently says, “when I say so, floor it.”

Journey to the Cross

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit us back in 2020, the Church was in Lent, getting ready for Passion Sunday. It feels like we have been in one long continuous Lent ever since! A year ago, I would not have believed that our buildings would be closed to public worship two Easters in a row! Few of us understood then, that COVID was not a sprint, but a marathon; not a short trip, but a long journey.

“Get up and do not be afraid.”

JESUS MAFA. Transfiguration, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. http://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=48307 [retrieved February 6, 2021]. Original source: http://www.l…

JESUS MAFA. Transfiguration, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. http://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=48307 [retrieved February 6, 2021]. Original source: http://www.librairie-emmanuel.fr (contact page: https://www.librairie-emmanuel.fr/contact).

“The disciples first respond to the Transfigured Christ with fear. In our global time of crisis, this is where many of us are today. The disciples mirror the itinerary of the spiritual journey: we start out with many concerns, fears, and worries. Our minds and hearts are all over the place. But Jesus comes, touches them, and says, “Get up and do not be afraid.” When the three disciples raise their eyes, they see nothing but one image: Jesus. Their lives have become fully focused and simplified on the one thing that is good, the one thing they desire, and the one thing that is necessary. What a moment of grace and encouragement!”

From a Homily by Richard Rohr, called “Life coming to a focus”

Editor’s Note: In our eagerness to get ahead of the “posting game” we posted the reflection for Transfiguration Sunday a week early. Our apologies for any confusion.