March 26, 2023
St. John’s United Church of Christ, Union, Illinois
John 11:1-45[1]
Three years
ago, the pandemic reminded us that we are fragile. We like to think we’re
self-sufficient, until the underlying systems we rarely think about start to
fall apart. With our health and our lives at risk in new ways, we worry more
now, about our own health and about loved ones who may be even more fragile than
us. Even though things have returned to something resembling normal, they are
different. We have experienced loss and change.
Loss and change
are part of the cycle of life. It can be good at times. Losing what has been
hurtful is a positive change. Renewal and new beginnings are positive change.
But loss and change can also be negative; and certainly, the anticipation of
loss and change increases our anxiety. When we are experiencing the negative
aspects of loss and change, it can be helpful to name that experience as grief.
I have found it
helpful to remember that God is familiar with loss, change, and grief. God has
been with us through the pandemic, is with us in this moment, and will be with
us in the coming months as we say goodbye and begin to plan for what is next.
God knows our sorrow, receives our fears, and soothes our hearts and minds. In
the valley of dry bones, in front of the tomb of Lazarus, God holds hope for us
who struggle to hold on to hope. God gives life, and God renews life even when
death seems to have won.
We made it
through the crisis of COVID, and you will make it through this new season of
change. It will be difficult at times. As I depart and others stand in this
place, as you miss what was, you may feel like your bones are drying up. You
may feel that you are losing hope, that the church can’t go on.
You will go on,
my friends, as a community of faith. St. John’s is a family of strong,
faithful, generous, and kind people. You have fed the hungry, sheltered the
homeless, and welcomed strangers and friends. There is a warmth here that the
cold winds of winter can’t diminish. Pastors come and go, yet you remain
committed to the Word and will of God, empowered by the grace of the Holy
Spirit.
God brought
Ezekiel to the valley of dry bones to give him a message of hope. “Thus says
the Lord God to these bones: I
will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live.”[2]
This is not the end, not for Israel, and not for you. Even as you cry out, “Our
bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are cut off completely,”[3]
God reassures you that you will rise again, that even death does not have the
last word. “I will put my spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will
place you on your own soil; then you shall know that I, the Lord, have spoken and will act, says the
Lord.”[4]
God asks, “Can
these bones live?” Ezekiel answers, “O Lord God,
you know.”[5]
God knows because this is the God of Israel, the God who created the world and
all that lives, who gave children to Abraham and Sarah who was thought to be
barren, who set free the Hebrew people from slavery in Egypt and made the
covenant to be their God, who called on them through the prophets to seek the
way of life. This is God who gave Ezekiel a vision of dry bones coming to life
in order to give hope to the people in exile, to revive their spirits and
breathe life back into them. This is God who, in the midst of a global pandemic,
breathed life into us, and held on to hope for us.
The breath of
God, the Holy Spirit that brought life into the dry bones, is the same breath
that filled the lungs of the crucified Jesus, raising him to life in the
resurrection. That same breath caused Lazarus to come out from his tomb. That
same breath filled our lungs in the moment of our birth and as we rose to
newness of life in our baptism. The breath of God brings life, and new life
even in the midst of loss, change, and grief.
In the
incarnation, the breath of life in the flesh, we find that God truly enters our
humanity. Jesus was a fragile human like us, who knew joy and pain, friendship
and grief. In this scene from John’s gospel, as Jesus makes a risky trip to
Bethany, we see him in one of his most human moments. “When Jesus saw her
weeping, and the Jews who came with her also weeping, he was greatly disturbed
in spirit and deeply moved.”[6]
“Jesus wept”[7]
is shortest verse in the King James Version of the Bible, translated slightly
differently here, and one of great significance. As one scholar writes, “This
is an emotionally profound testimony to the truth of the incarnation itself, of
Jesus being truly one of us to the point of sharing our human need for
friendship and our grief at the loss of a friend.”[8]
Jesus knows what it is to grieve. Jesus wept at the tomb of Lazarus, and Jesus
weeps for every life that ends. Even knowing that he had the power to reverse
death and bring Lazarus to life, Jesus stops to mourn.
You are faced
with a change, but not the end. You are faced with loss, but not death. You will
make it through this transition to a new day. It will be difficult, but trust
that God will see you through. “I will put my spirit within you, and you shall
live”[9]
says the Lord. “Jesus said to [Martha], ‘I am the resurrection and the life.
Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who
lives and believes in me will never die.’”[10]
May the hope that God holds sustain you through this change and all the changes
to come. Amen.
[1] The
scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard
Version Bible, copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of
the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
[2]
Ezekiel 37:5.
[3]
Ezekiel 37:11.
[4]
Ezekiel 37:14.
[5]
Ezekiel 37:3.
[6]
John 11:33.
[7]
John 11:35, The Holy Bible, Authorized Version (King James Version).
[8] John
Rollefson, Homiletical Perspective on John 11:1-45 in Feasting on the Word:
Preaching the Revised Common Lectionary, Year A, Vol. 2, David L. Bartlett
and Barbara Brown Taylor, General Editors (Louisville: Westminster John Knox
Press, 2010), p. 141.
[9]
Ezekiel 37:14.
[10]
John 11:26.
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