Holy Wednesday Community Service
First Baptist Church, West Jefferson
March 27th, 2013
Hebrews 12:1-3
I’ve joked that
during Holy Week I’m always happy to make it through this week alive and one
piece. Never before have the words been so true than this week. Will you pray
with me?
God of Holy Week,
May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be
pleasing in your sight, Oh God, our strength, and our redeemer. Amen.
This past
Sunday, as I was planning to sing the glorious hymns of Palm Sunday and hear
the wonderful choir here at First Baptist lead us in worship during their
cantata, I was on my way down 221, the snow started to come down and the roads
got slick, I was in a car accident with another vehicle and I ended up in a
ditch. My leg was pinned in the vehicle and I suffered a pretty rough
concussion, as grim as that sounds I am thankful. When we phoned the towing
service that had my car they were astonished that someone had survived such an
accident, this, as it should has put things in perspective.
The text from
Hebrews that we heard today is the Epistle lesson for Holy Wednesday, and let’s
be honest, it’s not a text that we hear during Holy Week. It’s really not
gloomy enough. It speaks of a great cloud of witnesses and frankly all of us,
myself included find it easier to preach on betrayal, on death, on despair. But
this text, this text challenges us to look at Holy Week in a different context,
a context that points beyond today, what some countries call Ugly Wednesday.
I think on a
cursory level this text is perfect for those of us who live in the Blue Ridge
Mountains. We all who have driven the roads in Ashe and Watauga County have
been through a cloud. That enveloping experience of being consumed in something
really big, the somewhat terrifying encounter with low visibility, we’ve all
been through a cloud. So to imagine being enveloped by a cloud of people,
people who witness to their faith and to our hopes. Those are the types of
clouds we all need to experience.
Fred Rogers, the
man known better to us all as Mr. Rogers said something incredibly profound
during his lifetime. Allow me to share it with you now, “If you could only
sense how important you are to the lives of those you meet; how important you
can be to the people you may never even dream of. There is something of
yourself that you leave at every meeting with another person.” So great a cloud
of witnesses, this week I have experienced that cloud. With all your phone
calls, your texts, your Facebook messages, your kindness and prayers. You all
have inspired me, in a way that I hadn’t yet thought possible.
You see, us
Christian folk sometimes get in this idea that we need to be more like Jesus than
Jesus was. We always need to minister to the people; the people of faith are waiting
for us to visit them in the hospital, to call them, to email them, to console
them. But as I was so roughly reminded this week, ministry is a two-way street.
Even Jesus, the one who was preparing to celebrate his last Passover meal with
his friends allowed them to minister to him throughout his life. I can’t help
but think of the stories that weren’t recorded in the Gospel accounts. Using holy
imagination I imagine Jesus after crying in Gethsemane, and these big burly
fishermen, tax collectors and manly men trying to console their leader. (I'm almost positive Mary Magdalene was there too, so she might have helped.) I
imagine Peter and Andrew’s friendship with Jesus being strong. Little did they
know that it would take them to their own respective crosses.
Now mind you
these are only my thoughts. But Mary Button, a modern day theologian puts it
this way, “We can only begin to understand the meaning of the crucifixion when
we take away our polished and shiny crosses and try to locate the cross in our
own time, in our own landscape.” Friends we come to this Holy Week as people in
search of the resurrection. I find it all too often that we let our Holy Weeks
define our Easter instead of letting Easter define our Holy Week. For our time,
and our place, we are on the side of the resurrection that allows us to let
Holy Week know who is boss. That death doesn’t have the final say, that a meal
with friends is a holy occasion to be celebrated and thankful for. We have the
unique opportunity as people this side of the resurrection to surround
ourselves with a cloud of witnesses to that resurrection.
By many
accounts, I shouldn’t be here, standing before you all today. The reality of
life is that we are faced with death. Now, don’t get me wrong I’m blessed and
thankful I am able to be here to preach, but more than that I am incredibly and
forever thankful for those witnesses to the resurrection that tell me that no
matter what happened this past Sunday, as Julian of Norwich said, “all will be
well, and all matter of things shall be well.” We have confidence in the
resurrection even in this holy yet gloomy week in our liturgical calendar. We
have confidence not only in the resurrection of the body and the life of the
world to come, but also in resurrection right here, and right now.
We can have
confidence in the resurrection of a friendship, a relationship, a marriage. We
can have confidence in the resurrection that some day we as a nation and a
world will be at peace. We can have confidence in the resurrection of church
members who are willing to call you when you are at your worst and say, “I get
what’s going on, and I’m here if you need me.” That’s why we all join together
this week as a community. We join together in a remembrance of the pain and
despair and depression of the past, but we like those disciples joined in an
upstairs room stand in wonder that sometimes we just forget the resurrection.
Oh, how badly I wished that just one of the disciples would have thought about
what Jesus was actually saying, how the resurrection was coming. But I think we
need the disciples to be naïve and ignorant in this account because we find
ourselves in that exact same situation. We wonder why we lost that job, when in
reality something else is weaving its way into your life. We wonder why a
parent or grandparent is dying of cancer, when God is ultimately accomplishing
healing work even in the last moments of life. We sit in cars that are totaled
and crushed around us and cry out to God asking to help us when in reality God
is right there allowing resurrection to occur.
Friends we come
to this sacred place as products of the resurrection, whether we realize it or
not. Look back into your life, your time, and your place. Where was God rolling
away the stone for you? Now this may sound like I’m ignoring this week of
holiness and darkness. I assure you that to reach any Easter, you have to go
through this time. You cannot reach resurrection in whatever form it presents
itself with out some sort of death, some sort of mortal reminder that this
isn’t all.
This past
Sunday, when I was in the hospital, I had some visitors come and see me. One of
my friends from Appalachian, Stephanie brought these flowers. These flowers
were gorgeous; they were orange and yellow, the colors of spring that
brightened my spirits amidst such a terrible situation. Little did I know what all
Stephanie went through to get these flowers. You see it was a Sunday morning,
and Stephanie first went to a florist only to realize they were closed. Then
she went over to one of our grocery stores but no one was in the floral
department to put the flowers in the vase. She finally had someone from produce
come over who had never done anything with any sort of flowers to help make the
bouquet look the way it did when I finally saw the flowers. It was complete
with a bow and the flowers were for me, perfect.
So what do
flowers and what my friend Stephanie had to go through to get me those flowers
have to do with this Holy Week? Holy people of God we are caught in the
mentality when we forget what happens before our resurrections. We want the
immediate, the fast, and the easy. We want the end product, the flowers in the
hospital that took little to no effort to make them arrive. We’re all guilty of
wanting Holy Week without Easter. But Easter will be so much more meaningful
for us this year, if we sit a little while longer here in the midst of Ugly
Wednesday, the flowers are more meaningful to everyone if it takes us a little
while to get them. So now, whenever you receive
flowers from a friend, when someone calls, emails or texts you, or simply says
hello to you on the sidewalk, let it be for you part of this resurrection
process. For we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, witnesses to
the resurrection, people who remind us of the grace of God, and the beauty of Easter. Thanks be to God, Amen.
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