Monday, April 21, 2014

Bible Stories You Should Know 6. Resurrection

Bible Stories You Should Know: 6. Resurrection
John 20:1-18; 24-25   |   4/20/2014
The Church of the Wayfarer
Norm Mowery, Pastor

          There are four principal characters in today’s scripture—
                   John, Thomas, Peter and Mary.
          It’s likely that each of us represent one of these four people.

          1. John: He saw and believed.
          Period.
          He saw the empty tomb. He got it immediately. He knew that Jesus was the risen Lord! He is referred here as ‘the other disciple’.

          2. Thomas: He didn’t see, and he didn’t believe.
          He didn’t get it.
          He could not get his head or his heart around an alleged resurrection without some kind of concrete evidence.

          3. Peter: He saw the empty tomb, but was confused.
          He had no idea what it all meant.
          But, oh well, it wasn’t going to stop him from getting on with his life.

          4. Mary: She saw the empty tomb and, like Peter was confused, but was totally immobilized.
          It was hard to think about how she was going to live without Jesus in her life. It is she who, when Jesus calls her by name, is able to utter the great resurrection affirmation: “I have seen the Lord.”
          One believed. One didn’t believe. One was confused. One was immobilized.

          1Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the entrance.
          2So she came running to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one Jesus loved, and said, "They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we don't know where they have put him!"
          3So Peter and the other disciple started for the tomb.
          4Both were running, but the other disciple outran Peter and reached the tomb first.
          5He bent over and looked in at the strips of linen lying there but did not go in.
          6Then Simon Peter, who was behind him, arrived and went into the tomb. He saw the strips of linen lying there, as well as the burial cloth that had been around Jesus' head. The cloth was folded up by itself, separate from the linen.
          8Finally the other disciple, who had reached the tomb first, also went inside. He saw and believed.
          9(They still did not understand from Scripture that Jesus had to rise from the dead.)
          10Then the disciples went back to their homes, but Mary stood outside the tomb crying. As she wept, she bent over to look into the tomb and saw two angels in white, seated where Jesus' body had been, one at the head and the other at the foot.
          13They asked her, "Woman, why are you crying?"
          14"They have taken my Lord away," she said, "and I don't know where they have put him." At this, she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not realize that it was Jesus.
          15"Woman," he said, "why are you crying? Who is it you are looking for?"
Thinking he was the gardener, she said, "Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have put him, and I will get him."
          16Jesus said to her, "Mary." She turned toward him and cried out in Aramaic, "Rabboni!" (which means Teacher).
          17Jesus said, "Do not hold on to me, for I have not yet returned to the Father. Go instead to my brothers and tell them, 'I am returning to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.'"
          18Mary Magdalene went to the disciples with the news: "I have seen the Lord!" And she told them that he had said these things to her.

          24Now Thomas (called Didymus), one of the Twelve, was not with the disciples when Jesus came.
           25So the other disciples told him, "We have seen the Lord!"
But he said to them, "Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe it."

          A Sunday school teacher asked her class to write one sentence on “What Easter Means to me?”
          One pupil wrote: “Egg salad sandwiches for the next two weeks!”

          This scripture raises many questions. That’s life.
          Life leaves us with many questions that keep us awake. Questions such as:
          Which is worse, failing or never trying?
          Are you doing what you believe in, or are you settling for what you are doing?
          Are you more worried about doing things right, or doing the right things?
          Have you been the kind of friend you want as a friend?
          At what time in your recent past have you felt most passionate and alive?
          If not now, then when?
          What is the difference between being alive and truly living?
          Questions of life.
         
          And, this is from a list of 25 of your most pressing questions:
                    Is it "duct tape" or "duck tape"?
                    (Even though the tape is commonly used on ducts, the original name       is "duck tape." It was developed during World War II for soldiers to use to waterproof their ammo cans. Soldiers called it "duck tape" because it forced     moisture to flee "like water off a duck's back.")

          Mary had questions. Jesus had questions. The angels had questions.
                   Did you notice that in the scripture the same question is repeated?
                   The angels ask Mary, “Woman, why are you weeping?”
                   And Jesus asks Mary, “Woman, why are you weeping?”

          On Easter Sunday it’s still the question before us: “Why are we weeping?”
          Why is there still such fear in the world?
          Why are we living as though there has been no resurrection?

          Last fall, an even bigger question arose: Can Google solve death?
          Time magazine told us about this story (September 30, 2013) in its cover feature on how the Internet giant is launching a venture to extend human life.

          Maybe we shouldn't be surprised. Google is already in the business of making driverless cars.

          Now they're launching a new company called Calico, which will focus on health and aging. Many expect Calico to use its skill with handling data to make new discoveries about age-related illnesses.
          Here's the deal.
                    Jesus not only solves the death problem.
                    He solves the life problem!
          Mary Magdalene and the other Mary go to see the tomb of Jesus.
          The women had watched Jesus die on the cross, so they expected to see nothing but a tomb containing a corpse.

          Suddenly there's this huge earthquake.
          Not only that, an angel of the Lord descends from heaven, rolls back the stone of the tomb and sits on it.
          The angel then anticipates what the women are wondering. He gives them an answer to the biggest question of all time: Where is Jesus?
          - We wonder the very same thing in the days after a loved one has died.
          - Where is my wife after her long and painful bout with cancer?
          - Where is my husband after the shocking heart attack that took his life?
          - Where is my brother who was killed by a drunk driver?
          -Where are the ten people killed in the bus accident in California, where are the teens that died in the ferry accident in Korea, where are the 239 people on board flight 370?
         
          "Do not be afraid," says the angel to the women; "I know that you are looking for Jesus. He is not here; for he has been raised".
          The women wonder: Where is Jesus?
          The angel answers: He is not here.

          And why not?
          He has been raised.

          This angel provides the answer to our biggest question. Following the loss of loved ones, he tells us that they are not trapped in graves; they have been raised.

          Speaking personally I do not argue about the resurrection. I just believe it.
          You ask me how I know he lives, the song asks,
                   “He lives within my heart!”
          And!
                “He walks with me, and he talks with me, and he tells me I am his own.”
          As your pastor—
·        I have many questions about death and I don’t know what happens at death.
·        I wouldn’t say that I fear death but I certainly don’t want it today!
·        Death to me is a mystery and I really don’t much care about eternal life.
·        But, I do care about living now! 
·        Death to me will take care of itself. I leave that to God.
·        I know this much! I experience resurrection every day, every moment!

          Yesterday I received a text from Dr. Mark Bollwinkel. Mark will be the new pastor of this church starting July 1. He wanted to let me know that his father died Thursday night. Let’s surround him in prayer right now as he is preaching an Easter message at the Los Altos Church.

          On Easter morning, we discover that the solution to death is not found in new technology.
          Instead, it is discovered in an empty tomb.

          And then, to demonstrate that the resurrection is not just wishful thinking, the angel invites the women to come and see the place where Jesus lay.
          The tomb is empty.
          He is not there.
         
          In other words, Jesus not only answers the death question, but answers the life question as well. And so, to answer that question, the angel says to the women,     "Go quickly and tell his disciples,
          'He has been raised from the dead, he is going ahead of you to Galilee; there you will see him'".

          The question of death is resolved and the question of life is engaged:
                   Jesus is God with us in life, death ... and life."

          The women believe what the angel says, so they leave the tomb quickly with fear and great joy. They run to tell the disciples and suddenly Jesus meets them on the road.

          Just as the angel predicted, he's ahead of them ... always ahead of them. Jesus greets them, they worship him.
          So often, when a loved one dies, we focus on the past.
          We remember the good times,
                   we struggle with our regrets,
                   and we wish that we could have handled certain situations differently.     With the resurrection, the focus is always forward, always toward life.

          Easter is a day of big questions and even bigger answers.
                   Where is Jesus? Where is he now?
                   What is the future going to look like?

          We know that Jesus goes ahead of us into the future;
                   that resurrection life answers not only our questions about death,
                   but our questions about life.
          Through the resurrection of Jesus, we are given the promise of a marvelous future, both in this life and the next.

          Google may extend the human life span, but only Jesus can offer abundant—and eternal—life!

          The president of Google sees death as a puzzle.
                    Perhaps death is a puzzle.
                    But it's a puzzle that has been solved.
          Easter is Solution Day in that sense.
          It is the day death lost its sting, the day when death ceased to be a puzzle because we know that it is going to be okay.
                   
          The resurrection is unknowable in the way we like to know things.

          The writer of the Gospel of John was different:
                   he was willing to have his life changed before he understood fully                                what was changing it.

          Actually, this is the only way life ever really changes.
          You won't understand marriage until you've been hitched for a while—maybe not even then.
          You're not going to know what it's like to have a baby until you have one.        You don't even know your profession until you've been in it a while.     Nothing in life is obvious immediately.
          It all grows on us.

          This is how we must approach the resurrection, as well.
                    No, you don't understand it.
                    You don’t argue about it.
                   Let it grow on you.

          I like to think that Christmas is the Promise, and Easter is the Proof.

          I’m afraid that today we are attracted to:
          • A Jesus who taught about love,
                   but not a Lord who commands us to love our enemies.
          • A Jesus who helped the unfortunate,
                   but not a Lord who challenges us to give the money to the poor.
          • A Jesus who was a friend of tax collectors and sinners,
                    but not a Lord who asks us to embrace the people we feel are beneath               us.
          • A Jesus who accepted people as his disciples,
                   but not a Lord who challenges us to lose our lives for his sake.

          The great theologian Karl Barth, quotes Nietzsche saying: "Only where graves are, is there resurrection."

          As a child we were taught to pray:
                   Now I lay me down to sleep
                   I pray the Lord my soul to keep
                   If I should die before I wake
                   I pray the Lord my soul to take.

                   But ‘What If’ we should die before we live?

          Is there a rock that blocks us from living?
          Mary and Mary expected to find the stone in place.
          Like us they had already stumbled through a field of rocks.
                   -- the rock of unbelief
                   -- the rock of misplaced enthusiasm
                   -- the rock of worldly possessions
                   -- the rock of confusion
                   -- the rock of disappointment...

          When they arrived at the tomb they discovered that the rock had been rolled away and was positioned just as it had been before Jesus' burial.

          This is the final message in a series that I have titled: Bible Stories You Should Know. As Christians we should know the Resurrection story as well as the:
          Great Commandment—Love the Lord with all your heart, soul, mind, soul and strength and your neighbor as yourself.
          The parable of the Least of These—When you have done it to the least of these you have done it unto me.

          The Great Commission—Go into all the world to preach the gospel to every creature.
          The Last Supper—the cup and the bread of life—communion.
          The Palm Sunday Triumph—the Alleluias and Hosannas.
         
          Now, your homework till next Easter! I challenge you to go home today and write a personal mission statement. Put in writing your purpose for living a life of triumph and resurrection for the rest of your life.

          One of the best ways to begin formulating your personal mission statement is to ask yourself some questions:
          1. What do I believe?
          2. What is my passion?
          4. What needs exist in the world that I would like to meet?
          5. How could my story and God's larger story connect?

          Go ahead! Try it. Put it in writing and share it with one other human being!

Pastoral Prayer
          Holy God, we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ today.
          It is a day of joy,
                   of singing and dancing,
                   of feasting and proclaiming that Christ is alive
                   and that we are set free from the power of sin and death.
          We rejoice that because he was raised to new life,
                   we also experience new and resurrected life.
          That which has held us back need no longer define or limit us.
          Those fears and anxieties that have kept us captive
                   need no longer hold us in their grip.
          That which differentiates us from one another
                   need not continue to separate us.
          Your resurrection power, O God, frees us to choose
                   love over fear,
                   reconciliation over division,
                   forgiveness over hatred,
                   peace over violence.
          By your Spirit, embolden us to live
                   courageously and faithfully
                   to the truth of the empty tomb.

          It is for the sake of the Christ who taught us to pray saying……

Monday, April 14, 2014

Bible Stories You Should Know: 5. Triumph

Bible Stories You Should Know: 5. Triumph
The Church of the Wayfarer
Norm Mowery, Pastor
April 13, 2014 Palm Sunday
Luke 19:28-38

          Would you like to hear about my week?
          Bet you can’t wait!

          On Monday I went for a long bicycle ride.
          I felt like I needed to do something fun.
          It was a beautiful day and I was riding on the bike trail behind Rancho Canada Golf course.
          Suddenly I stopped because just a few feet from me a cow was giving birth to a calf!
          I don’t know why I am sharing this with you other than the fact that it was pretty awesome.
          The cow was walking around eating grass and leaves from the trees giving birth to a baby.
          So, how many of you saw a calf being born last week?
          I wish I could be that relaxed about life—eating grass and having a calf all at the same time!

          Last Sunday was a terrible horrible no good very bad day for me!
          I don’t know if you noticed but while I was speaking last Sunday I could smell something hot.
          Did you?
          It smelled like burnt bread so I kept going with my sermon but I know that I was rambling.
          It was actually egg rolls for the fellowship hour getting too well done but it scared the heck out of me.
          We have been having some electrical issues in the building so I was super on edge and I thought that I was going to have a heart attack.

          Or, a calf!

          Friday of this week we had the memorial service for a saint! Ruth Hobar was truly a special gracious and generous person with a deep faith. The service was a celebration of life but, even so, a part of me as your pastor dies when one of my church family dies.
         
          On Saturday, yesterday, I had a wedding.
          It was unusual in that the couple asked at the rehearsal that I not mention Jesus.
          Okay! What do I do now?
          I prayed that even if I didn’t mention Jesus’ name that they would see Jesus in me. I thought, Jesus is going to be here whether mention him or not.
          I’m glad that at least they choose to get married in a church by a pastor. I truly felt God’s spirit as we closed with the Celtic Alleluia.

          Joy and sorrow.
          Life and death.
          Conflict and triumph.
          All a part of my life last week.

          My guess is that you experienced much the same feelings last week even though you didn’t have the same experiences and you didn’t see a calf being born!

          Jesus must have had the same mix of feelings during his last week of life.
                   Hurt and hope.
                   Anger and love.
                   Fear and peace.
          All mixed up in what we call Holy Week.

          What a week Jesus had during his last week of life—not unlike ours!

          How does Jesus triumph over the mix of emotions?

          He does it with humility. He begins by entering Jerusalem on a colt instead of a war horse.

          He does it by laying down his life. His journey to the cross shows just how far Jesus will go to show how much he loves us. The good news of Palm Sunday is that Jesus came to make peace between us and God.

          He does it by inviting us to join him. The impossible becomes possible when we join with Christ to participate in his saving work.

          He does it through resurrection. The multitude said, "Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven, and glory in the highest heaven."  Resurrection is what I felt at Ruth Hobar’s service.

          Although the Palm Sunday crowd cannot see beyond the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem, we know that Christ's work will continue throughout the week that follows, and even beyond the sacrifice of Good Friday.

          Jesus was a king, but no ordinary one. He was
                   the king of fishermen and tax collectors,
                   Samaritans and harlots,
                   blind men and demoniacs.
          Those who followed Jesus were a ragtag bunch.

          That's us—a ragtag bunch.
          And on Palm Sunday we welcome him with triumph, because we, too, have ‘stuff’ we're dealing with—the ‘stuff’ of life.

          I have ‘stuff’ taking place in my life right now.
          I have never journeyed this way before as I face retirement.
          Jesus had never journeyed his way before, either.

          The message this morning is that Jesus is with us as we experience
                   a pastoral transition
                   unemployment and guilt,
                   poverty and bitterness,
                   a critical spirit or a feeling of being unloved,
                   a sense of aimlessness and meaninglessness.
          We need Jesus who has already triumphed over it all to do the impossible.

          On this Palm Sunday, we praise him and ask him to do the impossible for us.  

          A few weeks ago Linda and I toured Air Force One at the Reagan Presidential Library. It was truly impressive to see how presidents travel.
          In the cabin everything is appointed with comfort and workability in mind.       • The president’s cabin suite is located near the nose of the plane and has couches that fold out into beds.
          • There are workspaces and conference rooms with leather chairs, plus a cabin just for the press corps.
          • There is a medical room on board stocked with a pharmacy, an X-ray machine and an operating table.

          Contrast that with life in Jesus day.
                  
          A Roman leader would have ridden in a chariot pulled by magnificent white stallions...
          Jesus entered the city on a donkey, and a borrowed one!

          A political leader would have been surrounded by security guards...
          Jesus was surrounded by his disciples and rode into the midst of the people, almost at their height.

          A military leader would have galloped along the road, passing the crowds...
          Jesus on a donkey moved slowly with the people.

          A religious leader in priestly robes would have prevented anyone who was unclean from touching him...
          Jesus, dressed in his usual attire, moved humbly through the crowds.

          We have to note certain things about this entry into Jerusalem.

          1. It was carefully planned.
          Jesus did not leave things until the last minute.

          2. It was a glorious defiance.
          It is a breath-taking thing to think of a man with a price upon his head, an outlaw, deliberately riding into a city in such a way that every eye was fixed upon him. It is impossible to exaggerate the sheer courage of Jesus.

          3. It was a deliberate claim to be king.
          Jesus by this action came as the king who comes to his people in love and in peace and not as the conquering hero.

         4. It was one last appeal.
          Jesus, by this action, came as it were with pleading hands outstretched. Before the hatred of the people engulfed him he confronted them with love’s last invitation.

          The Palm Sunday story is a Bible Story you should know along with the                              Great Commandment—Love the Lord with all your heart, soul, mind, soul and strength and your neighbor as yourself.
                   The parable of the Least of These—When you have done it to the least of these you have done it unto me.
                   The Great Commission—Go into all the world to preach the gospel to every creature.
                   The Last Supper—the cup and the bread of life.

          Let us pray:
          Focus right now on your feelings from last week.
          Give them to God.
          They are over.
          Accept forgiveness.
          Thank God for the joys.
          Think now about the week ahead.
          It’s Holy Week!
                   How will it be holy for you?
                   Will Jesus come anew to you?
                   Will Jesus be King Jesus?
                   Will you accept Love’s Last appeal?

          Amen.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Bible Stories You Should Know: 4. The Last Supper

Bible Stories You Should Know: 4. The Last Supper
The Church of the Wayfarer
Norm Mowery, Pastor
April 6, 2014
Mark 14:22-25

          Last Monday night Linda and I ate dinner at the Cachagua General Store in Carmel Valley. It was a memorable evening. The setting is quite rustic to say the least (some of the curtains are made out of butcher paper) but the food is gourmet.

          Have any of you been there?
         
          Think about your most memorable meal ever.
                    Has anyone ever been invited to dinner at the White House?
                    Has anyone had a meal with a famous person?
          When we were at the President Reagan Library recently we saw china that was used for state dinners with world leaders.
          That is the closest that I will ever come eating at the White House!

          Meals are important.

          I have to confess that I enjoy watching food programs like ‘Anthony Bordain—Parts Unknown’ and ‘Andrew Zimmerin—Bizarre Foods’.

          Many dinners have been depicted in movies.
          Remember the movie ‘Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner?’ This is the 1967 comedy about an interracial couple’s efforts to bring their families together for a meal.

          The Sacrament of Holy Communion is a serious occasion and should be approached with reverence each time it is observed.
          But it is also a feast that we are invited to celebrate.

          This is the fourth in a series of messages I have titled, “Bible Stories You Should Know.”
          The first one was the Great Commandment—“Love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, soul and spirit; and your neighbor as yourself.”
          The second Bible story you should know is the parable of the ‘Least of These’—Jesus said that when you have done it for the least of these you have done it unto me.
          Last week I talked about the Great Commission—“go into all the world and share the gospel with every creature.”
          Today we look at the Last Supper—this is a Bible Story you should know.

          Throughout his life, Jesus attended parties.
          Wherever he went, curiosity and excitement followed and often Jesus was invited to join others for food and fellowship.

          It is hard to imagine that these occasions were a bore; otherwise Jesus and his disciples would have been dropped from the guest list!
          I like to think that Jesus had a contagious laugh!

          With these parties in mind, it's appropriate that Jesus left us with a feast to remember him by. It’s the Last Supper.

          To understand the situation, we need to know that when the Lord’s Supper was celebrated in the first-century church, it was done differently from how we usually do it today.
          In the early church, the Lord’s Supper was observed as part of an actual meal that believers ate together.
          They ate to satisfy normal hunger;
                   they shared some bread and wine,
                    to make the symbolic connection to Jesus’ last meal.
           I surmise that the meal was something like a Methodist potluck dinner.

          I like to eat.
          According to the Gospels, so did Jesus.
          One of the criticisms leveled against Him by His adversaries was that He was always eating and drinking with "the wrong kinds of people."

          The dinner table is an intimate, holy, transforming, mysterious place—you've got to be careful whom you eat with because when you eat with someone you are likely to set aside differences.
         
          Oscar Wilde said, “After a good dinner, one could forgive anybody, even one's relatives."

          In the Bible, eating has special significance.
          The Biblical story begins with the eating of the forbidden fruit in the garden, and ends with sitting down at banquet in heaven.
          In the Bible, eating and drinking have meaning far beyond what appears on the surface—which is to say, these experiences are "sacramental" that is, they point beyond themselves to something greater.

          When you were a child did you have a favorite grace that you said?
          Perhaps it was, "God is great, God is good, let us thank Him for this food."

          In the twenty-third psalm, the psalmist joyfully sings, 'Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of my enemies.'

          The psalmist sings of this act of hospitality as an act of great friendship. The person who invites you to dinner is the person who will stick beside you through thick and thin.

          Jesus often used the imagery of a banquet to describe the Kingdom of God!
          When the so-called "prodigal son" returned home, the father celebrated by killing the fatted calf and throwing a party.

          So we can see what a wealth of tradition Jesus was drawing upon when He gathered His students together in that Upper Room for The Last Supper.

          The meal had many meanings and memories:
                   deliverance from slavery to freedom,
                   a feast of joyful celebration and commemoration,
                   an offering of thanksgiving,
                   a sign of divine hospitality and friendship.
.
          When Christ invited his disciples to the table he,
                   blessed the food,
                   broke the bread,
                   and shared the bread and the cup,
          the meal became a visible sign of God saying to them:
                   "I am your God. You are my people."

          The Christian experience was never meant to be a solitary one with each person content to work on his or her own spiritual relationship apart from others.

          A tourist tells of something he saw when traveling in India that helped him understand better the idea of the true church.
          He was visiting a Christian community where people were suffering from leprosy.
          When it came time for lunch, he headed for the central dining room.
          On the way, he heard the sound of laughter behind him.
          Turning around, he saw two young men, one riding on the other’s back. Pretending to be horse and rider, they were thoroughly enjoying themselves.        Then the tourist noticed that the man who was carrying his friend was blind, and the man he was carrying was lame.
          The man without eyes used his feet; the man without feet used his eyes.   Together they fetched their food and shared it.

          That’s the idea of the church. We all serve each other.

          Years ago, there was a penal colony in Port Arthur, Tasmania, the island off the southeast tip of Australia. Tasmania is where Linden Brown was raised and where his 100 year old mother still lives.

          The prison closed long ago, but the prison chapel still stands. Inside, it consists of many little cubicles in which convicts were secured singly during worship services.

          The separate cubicles prevented inmates from seeing or communicating with one another. The chaplain who conducted the services there would have seen not a congregation but 50 or more individual faces peering at him from the cubicles. Perhaps this was a useful way of controlling violent offenders, but in the biblical sense, this was no church at all, for there was no possibility of community.

          The church isn’t solitary Christians in our own cubicles; it’s a fellowship of followers of Jesus Christ.
         
          Port Arthur is now an open air museum. Here is a picture.



                This is an interior picture of the prison chapel.


          Writer Nancy Mairs tells about what communion came to mean to her when she came to her present church during a serious illness.  She was not a Christian.

          “The model I experienced at that church was one of inclusion rather than exclusion.
          Instead of being denied communion unless I converted, I was given communion until I felt strong enough to convert.
          The nourishing quality of the Eucharist, freely offered, has always been a central metaphor for me.
          I don’t partake because I’m a good Christian.
          I partake because I am a bad Christian riddled by doubt, anxiety and anger: fainting from severe hypoglycemia of the soul.
          I need food.”

          Notice how she talks about the nourishing quality of receiving communion as part of a community. “I was given communion until I felt strong enough to convert.”

          It’s always important for us to feed our spiritual lives at home, through private prayers and Bible reading. That’s eating at home.
          But when it comes to the life of faith, we also need to dine out, in company with other Christians.  As we eat together we all get involved.
"Tell me, and I will forget.
Show me, and I may not remember.
Involve me, and I will understand."  -- Native American proverb

          In Arlington cemetery there is a monument which we call "The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier." It was erected not in honor of one person, but in honor of all those unknown persons who sacrificed.
          Viewing the tomb, a small girl once said to her father: "It's not right, is it?"
                    "What's not right, my dear?" said her father.
                    "The name they give to this place.
          It's not right. That soldier is not unknown.
          Look at what it says on the tomb: 'KNOWN ONLY TO GOD.'
          The soldier is not unknown. He is known to God."
          And so he is.
          And so are you.

          As you come forward to the Lord’s Table today, know you are welcomed by a Loving God.
          Come if you have sinned.
          Come if you have lapsed in your faith.
          Come if you have had difficulties in marriage.
          Come if you feel good about yourself or yucky about yourself.
          Come!

                    Taste and see.