Nancy Ferree-Clark - "Too Good to Be True?" (April 7, 1991)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| (organ playing) | 0:01 | |
| (organ playing) | 0:17 | |
| (organ playing) | 0:33 | |
| (organ playing) | 0:47 | |
| (organ playing) | 1:13 | |
| (organ stops) | 1:39 | |
| - | Good morning and welcome to this service of worship | 1:59 |
| on this second Sunday of Easter. | 2:01 | |
| Today is our annual Crop Walk, | 2:05 | |
| which leads from the steps of the chapel at 1:00 pm. | 2:07 | |
| Crop walk for world hunger and overseas relief. | 2:11 | |
| In recognition of the Crop Walk, | 2:15 | |
| all of today's offering has been designated | 2:18 | |
| for the Blanket Fund of the Crop program. | 2:21 | |
| Last year when we received an offering | 2:26 | |
| for the purposes of purchasing blankets for refugees, | 2:29 | |
| we were able to purchase over 700 blankets, | 2:33 | |
| which were sent to places of need around the world, | 2:36 | |
| and we invite you to give generously. | 2:39 | |
| Call your attention to the pronouncements and activities | 2:41 | |
| in the bulletin, particularly the visit | 2:45 | |
| of Madeleine L'Engle, the distinguished writer, | 2:47 | |
| poet, will be visiting our campus this coming week. | 2:51 | |
| Also next Sunday evening, our choir | 2:56 | |
| will be performing Mozart's Requiem here in the chapel. | 3:00 | |
| The second hymn is sung in honor of Thomas, | 3:06 | |
| who is often designated this Sunday in the scripture | 3:10 | |
| and the sermon, and we will sing verses 1 and 6 | 3:15 | |
| through 9 of the second hymn. | 3:20 | |
| Now let us stand for the greeting. | 3:23 | |
| Christ is risen. | 3:30 | |
| Audience | Christ is risen. | 3:31 |
| - | Glory and honor, dominion and power be to God | 3:34 |
| forever and ever. | 3:36 | |
| Audience | Christ is risen. | 3:38 |
| Hallelujah. | 3:41 | |
| (organ playing) | 3:42 | |
| ♪ Hail thee festival day ♪ | 4:06 | |
| ♪ Blest day to be hallowed forever ♪ | 4:10 | |
| ♪ Day when our Lord was raised ♪ | 4:15 | |
| ♪ Breaking the kingdom of death ♪ | 4:20 | |
| (choir drowned out by organ) | 4:25 | |
| ♪ Hail thee festival day ♪ | 4:45 | |
| ♪ Blest day that to be hallowed forever ♪ | 4:49 | |
| ♪ Day wherein Christ arose ♪ | 4:54 | |
| ♪ Breaking the kingdom of death ♪ | 4:58 | |
| (singing drowned out by organ) | 5:03 | |
| ♪ Hail thee festival day ♪ | 5:25 | |
| ♪ Blest day to be hallowed forever ♪ | 5:29 | |
| ♪ Day wherein Christ arose ♪ | 5:35 | |
| ♪ Breaking the kingdom of death ♪ | 5:39 | |
| (singing drowned out by organ) | 5:45 | |
| ♪ Hail thee festival day ♪ | 6:05 | |
| ♪ Blest day to be hallowed forever ♪ | 6:09 | |
| ♪ Day wherein Christ arose ♪ | 6:15 | |
| ♪ Breaking the kingdom of death ♪ | 6:18 | |
| (singing drowned out by organ) | 6:25 | |
| ♪ Hail thee festival day ♪ | 6:44 | |
| ♪ Blest day to be hallowed forever ♪ | 6:49 | |
| ♪ Day wherein Christ arose ♪ | 6:54 | |
| ♪ Breaking the kingdom of death ♪ | 6:58 | |
| (singing drowned out by organ) | 7:05 | |
| ♪ Hail thee festival day ♪ | 7:24 | |
| ♪ Blest day to be hallowed forever ♪ | 7:28 | |
| ♪ Day wherein Christ arose ♪ | 7:33 | |
| ♪ Breaking the kingdom of death ♪ | 7:37 | |
| (singing drowned out by organ) | 7:43 | |
| ♪ Hail thee festival day ♪ | 8:03 | |
| ♪ Blest day to be hallowed forever ♪ | 8:07 | |
| ♪ Day wherein Christ arose ♪ | 8:12 | |
| ♪ Breaking the kingdom of death ♪ | 8:16 | |
| (organ playing softly) | 8:32 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 8:54 |
| Gracious God, we gather, | 8:59 | |
| because you have acted in human history, | 9:00 | |
| breaking the bonds of death, | 9:05 | |
| setting the oppressed free from sin | 9:07 | |
| and death. | 9:10 | |
| You have brought new life where before there was none. | 9:12 | |
| You have acted in our lives | 9:16 | |
| and brought us forth from death to life. | 9:19 | |
| Therefore we gather, | 9:23 | |
| confident that we gather in the name | 9:26 | |
| of the risen and reigning Lord. | 9:28 | |
| Amen. | 9:32 | |
| Be seated. | 9:34 | |
| Let us pray together the prayer for illumination. | 9:44 | |
| O living God, bring us forth from death to life. | 9:47 | |
| So that as the scriptures are read | 9:52 | |
| and your word is proclaimed, | 9:54 | |
| we might be brought to a sure and living faith | 9:56 | |
| in your lordship. | 10:00 | |
| Amen. | 10:02 | |
| Our first lesson is from The Book of Acts. | 10:06 | |
| "Now the whole group of those who believed | 10:11 | |
| were of one heart and one soul. | 10:14 | |
| And no one claimed private ownership of any possessions. | 10:16 | |
| But everything they owned was held in common. | 10:20 | |
| With great power the apostles gave their testimony | 10:23 | |
| to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, | 10:26 | |
| and great grace was upon them all. | 10:29 | |
| There was not a needy person among them | 10:33 | |
| for, as many as owned land or houses, sold them, | 10:36 | |
| and brought the proceeds of what was sold | 10:39 | |
| and laid it at the apostles' feet. | 10:42 | |
| And it was distributed to each as any had need. | 10:45 | |
| This is the word of the Lord. | 10:50 | |
| Audience | Thanks be to God. | 10:53 |
| - | Our psalm is Psalm 133, | 11:01 |
| found on page 850 in the hymnal. | 11:05 | |
| Please stand as we sing responsively. | 11:07 | |
| (organ playing) | 11:10 | |
| ♪ Behold how good and pleasant it is ♪ | 11:17 | |
| ♪ When we live together in unity ♪ | 11:21 | |
| (audience singing drowned out by organ) | 11:26 | |
| ♪ It is like to dew of Hermon ♪ | 11:43 | |
| ♪ Which falls on the mountains of Zion ♪ | 11:46 | |
| (audience singing drowned out by organ) | 11:50 | |
| ♪ All glory be to you, O God ♪ | 11:59 | |
| ♪ And to Jesus Christ, our savior ♪ | 12:02 | |
| (audience singing drowned out by organ) | 12:06 | |
| ♪ As it was since time began ♪ | 12:12 | |
| (audience singing drowned out by organ) | 12:16 | |
| - | Our second lesson is from the First Letter of John. | 12:30 |
| "We declare to you which was from the beginning | 12:36 | |
| what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, | 12:40 | |
| what we have looked at and touched with our hands | 12:44 | |
| concerning the word of life. | 12:47 | |
| This life was revealed. | 12:50 | |
| And we have seen it and testified to it, | 12:53 | |
| and declare to you the eternal life | 12:55 | |
| that was with the father, | 12:58 | |
| and which was revealed to us. | 13:00 | |
| We declare to you what we have seen and heard | 13:05 | |
| so that you also may have fellowship with us. | 13:07 | |
| And truly our fellowship is with the father. | 13:10 | |
| And with his son, Jesus Christ. | 13:13 | |
| We are writing these things so that our joy | 13:16 | |
| may be complete. | 13:20 | |
| This is the message that we have heard from Him | 13:21 | |
| and we proclaim to you, | 13:26 | |
| that God is light, | 13:28 | |
| and in him is no darkness at all. | 13:31 | |
| If we say that we have fellowship with him | 13:34 | |
| while we are walking in darkness, we lie. | 13:37 | |
| We do not do what is true. | 13:41 | |
| But if we walk in the light, | 13:43 | |
| as He Himself is in the light, | 13:45 | |
| we have fellowship with one another. | 13:47 | |
| And the blood of Jesus his son cleanses us from all sin. | 13:51 | |
| If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, | 13:55 | |
| and the truth is not in us. | 14:00 | |
| But if we confess our sins, | 14:03 | |
| He is faithful and just, | 14:06 | |
| and will forgive us our sins and cleanse us | 14:08 | |
| from all unrighteousness. | 14:11 | |
| If we say that we've not sinned we make him a liar | 14:15 | |
| and his word is not in us. | 14:17 | |
| My little children, I am writing you these things | 14:20 | |
| that you may not sin. | 14:24 | |
| But if anyone does sin, | 14:27 | |
| we have an advocate with the Father, | 14:29 | |
| Jesus Christ the righteous, | 14:32 | |
| and he is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, | 14:36 | |
| and not for ours only, | 14:39 | |
| but also for the sins of the whole world." | 14:41 | |
| This is the word of the Lord. | 14:48 | |
| Audience | Thanks be to God. | 14:50 |
| - | And our gospel lesson for this second Sunday of Easter | 14:54 |
| is from the Gospel of John. | 14:57 | |
| "When it was evening on that day, | 15:04 | |
| the first day of the week, the doors of the house | 15:07 | |
| being shut for fear of the Jews, | 15:10 | |
| Jesus came and stood among them and said, | 15:12 | |
| 'Peace be with you.' | 15:16 | |
| After he said this he showed them his hands | 15:19 | |
| and his side. | 15:21 | |
| Then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord. | 15:22 | |
| Jesus said to them again, 'Peace be with you. | 15:27 | |
| As the Father has sent me, | 15:32 | |
| so I send you.' | 15:35 | |
| And when he said this, he breathed on them and said, | 15:37 | |
| 'Receive the Holy Spirit. | 15:41 | |
| If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them. | 15:43 | |
| If you retain the sins of any, they are retained.' | 15:47 | |
| But Thomas, who was also called the Twin, | 15:52 | |
| one of the 12, was not with them when Jesus came. | 15:56 | |
| So the other disciples told him, 'We have seen the Lord.' | 15:59 | |
| But Thomas said, 'Unless I see the mark of the nails | 16:03 | |
| in his hands and put my finger in the mark of the nails, | 16:07 | |
| and my hand in his side, | 16:11 | |
| I will not believe.' | 16:14 | |
| A week later the disciples were again at the house, | 16:16 | |
| and Thomas was with them. | 16:19 | |
| Although the doors were shut, Jesus came | 16:21 | |
| and stood among them and said, 'Peace be with you.' | 16:24 | |
| Then he said to Thomas, | 16:28 | |
| 'Put your finger here and see my hands. | 16:31 | |
| Reach out your hand and put it in my side. | 16:33 | |
| Do not doubt, but believe.' | 16:36 | |
| Thomas answered, 'My Lord, my God.' | 16:39 | |
| Jesus said to him, | 16:46 | |
| 'Have you believed because you have seen me? | 16:48 | |
| Blessed are those who have not seen and yet | 16:51 | |
| have come to believe.' | 16:55 | |
| Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence | 16:58 | |
| of his disciples which are not written in this book. | 17:01 | |
| But these are written so that you may come to believe. | 17:04 | |
| For Jesus is the messiah, the son of God, | 17:09 | |
| and that through believing you might have life | 17:12 | |
| in His name." | 17:16 | |
| This is the word of the Lord. | 17:19 | |
| Audience | Praise to God. | 17:23 |
| (organ plays softly) | 17:41 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 17:55 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 18:10 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 18:23 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 18:38 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 18:54 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 19:09 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:19 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:21 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:22 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:24 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:26 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:28 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:30 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:32 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:34 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:36 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 19:41 | |
| - | Do I detect this morning the look of relief | 20:01 |
| on a few of your faces? | 20:03 | |
| Now that we've made it through Easter Sunday, | 20:07 | |
| thank goodness things can settle back down to normal. | 20:08 | |
| I've been around this place long enough | 20:12 | |
| to know how a few of you at least feel | 20:14 | |
| about all those enthusiastic hallelujahs | 20:17 | |
| and those festive peels on the Caroline | 20:20 | |
| at 6:00 in the morning. | 20:22 | |
| Not to mention all the related Easter paraphernalia | 20:24 | |
| like dyed eggs and marshmallow baby chicks. | 20:27 | |
| And to be quite honest, I would have to agree | 20:31 | |
| there is certainly more than one approach to Easter. | 20:34 | |
| After all, we're talking about one of the great | 20:38 | |
| unsolved mysteries of all time, | 20:42 | |
| an empty tomb. | 20:44 | |
| How did we ever come to expect people | 20:47 | |
| to be so comfortable, so confident, | 20:49 | |
| when they talk about it anyway? | 20:54 | |
| Emptiness, as you know, | 20:56 | |
| if you've had much experience dealing with it, | 20:58 | |
| isn't all that easy to get a handle on. | 21:01 | |
| Unlike Christmas with all its familiarity, | 21:05 | |
| you cannot turn emptiness into a pageant, | 21:09 | |
| or string it with lights. | 21:13 | |
| It doesn't usually move people to give presents | 21:15 | |
| and go caroling through the neighborhood. | 21:18 | |
| In fact, emptiness is almost impossible to depict. | 21:20 | |
| Think for a minute of the thousands of paintings | 21:25 | |
| of the Nativity, not to mention the crucifixion, | 21:28 | |
| which we as church hold dear to our collective memory. | 21:32 | |
| But can you name for me three well known paintings | 21:36 | |
| of the empty tomb? | 21:39 | |
| Unlike the Easter Bunny, emptiness is not warm and fuzzy | 21:42 | |
| by a long stretch of the imagination. | 21:46 | |
| It isn't even friendly and uplifting, | 21:48 | |
| as we in the church like to think of ourselves. | 21:51 | |
| It is disconcerting, at the very least, | 21:55 | |
| and as we heard in last Sunday's sermon | 21:58 | |
| from Mark's gospel, it is even frightening. | 22:00 | |
| And so today's gospel as a continuation of John's | 22:04 | |
| account of the Easter story depicts | 22:07 | |
| what is for many of us a more familiar response | 22:11 | |
| to the empty tomb, skepticism. | 22:14 | |
| Thomas the Twin wasn't around for Jesus' | 22:18 | |
| first appearance to the disciples, | 22:22 | |
| and so he says he won't believe, | 22:23 | |
| until he touches Jesus' wounds. | 22:27 | |
| In so doing he becomes Doubting Thomas | 22:31 | |
| for the rest of time. | 22:34 | |
| Have you ever thought about how it is that history | 22:36 | |
| chooses to label a person? | 22:38 | |
| Take Thomas as an example. | 22:41 | |
| We know from earlier references in John's gospel | 22:44 | |
| that Thomas is courageously devoted to Jesus. | 22:47 | |
| Willing to confront death in order to be with him, | 22:51 | |
| and willing to ask the tough questions | 22:54 | |
| when no one else will. | 22:56 | |
| We also know that a non-canonical gospel bears | 22:59 | |
| his name and that tradition associates him | 23:01 | |
| with a mission to India. | 23:05 | |
| Still what we remember him for is this text | 23:07 | |
| and his doubt. | 23:12 | |
| Perhaps because in the midst of so many towering | 23:14 | |
| examples of faith in the New Testament | 23:17 | |
| we are encouraged by knowing at least one disciple | 23:20 | |
| who shares our moments of doubt. | 23:24 | |
| If you were too much of a skeptic | 23:27 | |
| to enjoy church last Sunday, welcome back. | 23:29 | |
| This is your Sunday. | 23:32 | |
| Especially for those of you who have been told | 23:34 | |
| by someone in the church that a faithful disciple | 23:36 | |
| never expresses doubt, let this text provide | 23:39 | |
| a bit of reassurance. | 23:43 | |
| According to John's depiction of the resurrection | 23:45 | |
| and the events that surrounded it, | 23:47 | |
| there is more than one way to become a believer. | 23:49 | |
| If we take his entire 20th chapter into account | 23:54 | |
| we find several responses to Jesus resurrection | 23:57 | |
| appearances. | 24:00 | |
| The beloved disciple believed with no evidence | 24:02 | |
| whatsoever beyond the empty tomb, | 24:05 | |
| while Peter, having witnessed the same thing, | 24:07 | |
| returned home at that point, unbelieving. | 24:10 | |
| Mary Magdalene believed because of a word, | 24:14 | |
| her name, which when spoken by Jesus, | 24:17 | |
| evoked recognition of an enduring and life-giving | 24:20 | |
| relationship. | 24:24 | |
| The ten disciples believed because they saw the Lord | 24:25 | |
| with their very eyes. | 24:28 | |
| But for Thomas, faith could come only with difficulty. | 24:30 | |
| There was too much at stake. | 24:35 | |
| He said he could be sure only after physical contact. | 24:37 | |
| But whether he actually touched Jesus is not clear | 24:40 | |
| from the text. | 24:44 | |
| Rather, Jesus told him to put his hand in his side | 24:46 | |
| and not to be faithless, but believing. | 24:50 | |
| To which he simply responded in exuberant affirmation, | 24:52 | |
| "My Lord, my God!" | 24:56 | |
| Whatever happened in Thomas' heart and mind | 25:00 | |
| in that instant we will never know. | 25:03 | |
| But what that moment does give us is hope | 25:06 | |
| that we too may transcend our self-imposed spiritual, | 25:10 | |
| emotional and intellectual limitations | 25:15 | |
| to make the leap of faith. | 25:17 | |
| Not just to the point where we can say, | 25:20 | |
| "Well, yes, there is a sense in which one can speak | 25:22 | |
| of resurrection, but to proclaim the risen Christ, | 25:25 | |
| my Lord and my God." | 25:29 | |
| Thomas' example is compelling not only for his doubt | 25:32 | |
| but for his willingness to be convinced. | 25:36 | |
| His openness to mystery. | 25:38 | |
| To proclaim Jesus as Lord meant for Thomas, | 25:41 | |
| and later for the whole church, | 25:45 | |
| not only a personal relationship with Christ | 25:47 | |
| but complete abandonment unto God. | 25:50 | |
| Something he certainly could not expect | 25:53 | |
| to always understand. | 25:55 | |
| In doing so he acknowledged Jesus as Lord | 25:57 | |
| over every power in this world, including death. | 26:00 | |
| To identify Jesus of Nazareth, the carpenter rabbi | 26:04 | |
| who died on a cross as Christ the Lord meant | 26:08 | |
| that he truly believed. | 26:12 | |
| How shallow our own convictions seem in comparison | 26:16 | |
| when we feel the need to water down the mystery | 26:19 | |
| of the resurrection to make it somehow more believable, | 26:22 | |
| turning it into a problem to be solved. | 26:25 | |
| For instance, it's easy for us to say that resurrection | 26:29 | |
| is really Christ living on in our memory, | 26:32 | |
| that his words are still among us | 26:35 | |
| and that his name will never pass out of this world. | 26:37 | |
| But can't this be said about a lot of people? | 26:42 | |
| Plato, Shakespeare, | 26:45 | |
| Thomas Jefferson, to name a few. | 26:48 | |
| Such an understanding of resurrection is so general | 26:50 | |
| it no longer has real power. | 26:53 | |
| It also is self centered to the extent that it suggests | 26:55 | |
| that Christ lives among us because we're still | 26:59 | |
| talking about him. | 27:02 | |
| He owes his resurrection to us, more or less, | 27:04 | |
| which is precisely a reversal of God's true intentions. | 27:07 | |
| St. Paul dealt with similar sentiments | 27:12 | |
| when he had to deal with questions | 27:14 | |
| regarding the resurrection. | 27:16 | |
| How are dead people raised, | 27:18 | |
| and what sort of body do they have when they come back, | 27:20 | |
| they asked him in Corinthians I. | 27:23 | |
| To which he replied, | 27:26 | |
| "We teach what Scripture calls | 27:27 | |
| the thing that no eye has seen and no ear has heard. | 27:30 | |
| Things beyond the mind of men and women, | 27:35 | |
| all that God has prepared for those who love him." | 27:38 | |
| The power of the resurrection is not a problem | 27:42 | |
| to be solved, but a gift to be received. | 27:45 | |
| Christ has revealed to us a life | 27:49 | |
| over which death has no power. | 27:52 | |
| The promise of eternal life is ours to keep. | 27:55 | |
| Why then do we persist in our hesitance | 27:59 | |
| by thinking, even if we don't say it, | 28:02 | |
| it's simply too good ti be true? | 28:05 | |
| To suggest that something is too good to be true | 28:08 | |
| is to reveal an attitude toward truth, of course. | 28:11 | |
| And it is exactly that attitude which the resurrection | 28:15 | |
| calls into question, | 28:18 | |
| and which I would like to address for a moment. | 28:19 | |
| Truth from this narrow perspective | 28:22 | |
| means what you see is what you get. | 28:26 | |
| The world is a tormented, rotten place | 28:28 | |
| full of people looking out only for themselves | 28:31 | |
| with no hope for things getting better. | 28:33 | |
| And based on what we witness around us | 28:37 | |
| day in and day out, that is to a great extent true. | 28:39 | |
| How can we live in our current state of affairs | 28:43 | |
| and not be acutely aware of the brokenness, | 28:46 | |
| the limitations of our world? | 28:49 | |
| But there are those times when, | 28:52 | |
| usually rather unexpectedly, | 28:54 | |
| we experience something right in the midst | 28:57 | |
| of our very ordinary circumstances | 29:00 | |
| which reveal another truth, a deeper truth, | 29:02 | |
| which transforms the ordinary into something | 29:06 | |
| quite extraordinary. | 29:09 | |
| Have you ever happened upon a spring rain, | 29:12 | |
| grumbling perhaps, that you forgot your umbrella, | 29:15 | |
| only to catch the smell of a world drenched | 29:19 | |
| in such freshness and beauty | 29:21 | |
| you didn't even mind the muddy ground | 29:23 | |
| beneath your feet? | 29:25 | |
| Have you ever watched the biggest Scrooge | 29:27 | |
| in the choir, that is if we have any, | 29:30 | |
| singing Lord have mercy, Christ have mercy, | 29:33 | |
| and witnessed his transformation | 29:35 | |
| into a member of a heavenly chorus | 29:37 | |
| before your very eyes? | 29:39 | |
| Have you ever read a fairy tale | 29:41 | |
| so compelling that you were suddenly transported | 29:45 | |
| beyond the boundaries of your everyday world | 29:47 | |
| and were convinced that the characters | 29:50 | |
| just might live happily ever after? | 29:53 | |
| Have you ever experienced a lump in your throat, | 29:57 | |
| a tear in the corner of your eye, even once, | 30:00 | |
| that told you you had glimpsed something truly eternal? | 30:04 | |
| Something too good to be true, | 30:07 | |
| yet mysteriously more convincing in its truthfulness | 30:10 | |
| than anything else you ever knew? | 30:14 | |
| If so, then saying, "It's too good to be true" | 30:17 | |
| isn't good enough as a way of writing off | 30:20 | |
| the reality of the mystery of the resurrection. | 30:23 | |
| After living through a period of history | 30:28 | |
| where we have sought to discount mystery | 30:30 | |
| and its relevance to the modern world, | 30:32 | |
| we are learning that mystery often embodies | 30:35 | |
| a deeper truth than our surface-level reading | 30:37 | |
| of the facts. | 30:40 | |
| Scientists speak of intelligent life among the stars. | 30:42 | |
| Physicists say, at the speed of light, there is no time. | 30:46 | |
| Doctors talk seriously about life after death. | 30:50 | |
| At last it seems we're willing to face the reality | 30:54 | |
| that we must live with, and even respect | 30:57 | |
| the mysteries of life which we are a part of. | 31:00 | |
| Whatever we do matters, say the astrophysicists, | 31:04 | |
| so tightly interrelated is the universe. | 31:07 | |
| They speak of the butterfly effect, which says, | 31:12 | |
| as I understand it, as an example that the effects | 31:14 | |
| of a butterfly being injured anywhere on Earth | 31:17 | |
| are felt in galaxies thousands of light-years away. | 31:20 | |
| Perhaps, just maybe it does make a difference | 31:25 | |
| to tell a story, to sing a song, | 31:29 | |
| to offer a prayer, all very mysterious things | 31:32 | |
| in and of themselves, when you think about it. | 31:37 | |
| While delivering the Buechner lectures | 31:41 | |
| on preaching at Yale Divinity School a few years back, | 31:42 | |
| Frederick Buechner spoke of the popularity | 31:46 | |
| and the power of fairy tales in particular | 31:48 | |
| to evoke this world of mystery | 31:52 | |
| that moves us and transforms us. | 31:54 | |
| In his lectures he suggested that somehow | 31:57 | |
| in listening to a fairy tale, | 32:01 | |
| we sense that in that world, | 32:03 | |
| as distinct from our own, | 32:05 | |
| marvelous and impossible things truly happen. | 32:07 | |
| Though it is a world where goodness is pitted | 32:11 | |
| against evil, and love against hate, | 32:13 | |
| and where it may be difficult to be sure | 32:17 | |
| who belongs to which side, | 32:19 | |
| it still is a world where the battle | 32:21 | |
| goes ultimately to the good, | 32:24 | |
| and where in the long run, | 32:26 | |
| all creatures good and evil alike, | 32:28 | |
| are revealed as what they truly are. | 32:31 | |
| The ugly duckling becomes a great swan. | 32:34 | |
| The frog is revealed to be a prince. | 32:38 | |
| And the beautiful but wicked queen | 32:40 | |
| is unmasked at last in all her ugliness. | 32:42 | |
| In these tales of transformation, | 32:47 | |
| Buechner writes, the ones who live happily ever after, | 32:49 | |
| as by no means everybody does in fairy tales, | 32:53 | |
| are transformed into what they have it in them | 32:56 | |
| at their best to be. | 32:59 | |
| The beast falls sick for love of beauty | 33:02 | |
| and lies dying in his garden | 33:05 | |
| when she abandons him until she runs out of, | 33:07 | |
| returns out of compassion and says, | 33:10 | |
| that for all of his ugliness she loves him | 33:13 | |
| and will marry him. | 33:15 | |
| No sooner has she kissed him on his snout | 33:17 | |
| than he himself becomes beautiful | 33:20 | |
| with royal blood in his veins. | 33:22 | |
| In a story known as The Happy Hypocrite, | 33:25 | |
| Buechner tells of a rake named Lord George Hell, | 33:28 | |
| who falls in love with a saintly girl. | 33:32 | |
| And in order to win her love, | 33:35 | |
| covers his bloated features with the mask of a saint. | 33:37 | |
| The girl is deceived and becomes his bride, | 33:41 | |
| and they live together happily | 33:44 | |
| until a woman from his wicked past | 33:45 | |
| turns up to expose him for the scoundrel | 33:47 | |
| she knows him to be, | 33:50 | |
| and challenges him to take off his mask. | 33:52 | |
| Having no choice, sadly he takes it off. | 33:56 | |
| And lo, the saint's mask is the face | 34:00 | |
| of the saint he has become by wearing it in love. | 34:03 | |
| One of the great masters of the modern fairy tale, | 34:09 | |
| J.R.R. Tolkien, writes of this quality, | 34:12 | |
| when he says, "The fairy tale does not | 34:15 | |
| deny the existence of sorrow and failure. | 34:18 | |
| The possibility of these is necessary | 34:20 | |
| to the joy of the deliverance. | 34:23 | |
| Rather it desires universal final defeat. | 34:25 | |
| Giving a fleeting glimpse of joy, | 34:29 | |
| joy beyond the walls of the world, | 34:31 | |
| poignant as grief." | 34:34 | |
| As Buechner interprets it, fairy tales | 34:37 | |
| offer us an acceptable way to believe in happiness | 34:39 | |
| which is both inevitable and endless. | 34:43 | |
| Let there be doubt that the world where this happiness | 34:47 | |
| happens is as full of darkness as our own world, | 34:50 | |
| which is why these stories are as poignant as grief | 34:54 | |
| and bring tears to our eyes. | 34:57 | |
| Tears to our eyes because it might so easily | 35:00 | |
| not have happened | 35:03 | |
| because there are the wicked ones to whom | 35:04 | |
| it does not happen, | 35:07 | |
| because darkness persists right alongside happiness. | 35:08 | |
| Still the tears that come at the climax | 35:13 | |
| of a fairy tale are essentially joyous ones | 35:17 | |
| because we have caught a glimpse of, | 35:20 | |
| however fleeting, triumph, | 35:22 | |
| if not of goodness, at least of hope, | 35:25 | |
| our hearts, if not our heads, are converted | 35:28 | |
| to a better way. | 35:32 | |
| Why do we let ourselves believe when we hear | 35:35 | |
| a fairy tale and hold ourselves back | 35:37 | |
| when we hear the gospel? | 35:40 | |
| How tragic when we in the church, | 35:43 | |
| stewards of the greatest mystery of all, | 35:46 | |
| are tempted to reduce the deep mystery of our faith | 35:49 | |
| to a manageable size. | 35:51 | |
| When the message of the gospel calls us to do | 35:54 | |
| just the opposite. | 35:56 | |
| Ask and it will be given to you. | 35:58 | |
| Seek and you will find. | 36:00 | |
| "Truly I say to you, | 36:03 | |
| if you have faith as a grain of mustard seed, | 36:04 | |
| you will say to this mountain, | 36:08 | |
| 'Remove hence to yonder place,' | 36:09 | |
| and it will be moved, | 36:11 | |
| and nothing will be impossible to you.' | 36:13 | |
| They who believe in me, though they die, | 36:16 | |
| yet shall they love." | 36:19 | |
| The wild and joyful promise of the gospel | 36:22 | |
| is too easily reduced to promises more easily kept. | 36:24 | |
| The faith that can raise the dead becomes faith | 36:29 | |
| that can only make life more bearable until death. | 36:32 | |
| The promise of Easter challenges us | 36:38 | |
| to move beyond our "I wasn't born yesterday, | 36:40 | |
| I'm from Missouri" attitude. | 36:42 | |
| In our heart of hearts we are also from somewhere else. | 36:45 | |
| We're from the Land of Oz, | 36:50 | |
| from Narnia, | 36:52 | |
| from Middle Earth, | 36:54 | |
| where we're free to believe more than we ever | 36:55 | |
| were allowed to dream before. | 36:57 | |
| If with part of ourselves we are men and women | 37:00 | |
| of the world who share the unbelief of the world. | 37:03 | |
| With a deeper part still, | 37:08 | |
| the part where our best dreams come from, | 37:10 | |
| it as if we were indeed born yesterday, | 37:13 | |
| or almost yesterday, | 37:16 | |
| because we are also all of us children still. | 37:18 | |
| No matter how forgotten and neglected, | 37:23 | |
| there is a child in each one of us | 37:26 | |
| who lives in a world where nothing is too familiar | 37:28 | |
| or unpromising | 37:31 | |
| to open up into a deep and transforming mystery, | 37:33 | |
| and once we've stepped into it, | 37:37 | |
| the world in which we always thought we lived | 37:39 | |
| can never entirely be home again. | 37:42 | |
| Remember Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz? | 37:45 | |
| Even after she returned to Kansas, | 37:48 | |
| she keeps coming back again and again to Oz | 37:51 | |
| in the books that follow, | 37:54 | |
| because Oz not Kansas is where he heart is after all. | 37:56 | |
| Blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe, | 38:03 | |
| Jesus said to Thomas. | 38:08 | |
| It isn't necessary or even possible to prove | 38:10 | |
| or explain the truth, for the depth of its mystery | 38:13 | |
| lies beyond our capacity to comprehend. | 38:17 | |
| Christ calls us simply to become his little children, | 38:21 | |
| hungry to hear and ready to receive the deep mystery | 38:24 | |
| at the heart of the Christian faith | 38:28 | |
| as a rare and precious gift. | 38:30 | |
| Darkness and light have met, | 38:34 | |
| and the light is the glorious victor. | 38:37 | |
| If it's a story too good to believe, | 38:41 | |
| it's certainly too good not to believe. | 38:44 | |
| Christ is risen indeed. | 38:48 | |
| Hallelujah, hallelujah. | 38:50 | |
| (organ playing) | 38:56 | |
| (organ playing) | 39:15 | |
| ♪ O sons and daughters, let us sing! ♪ | 39:25 | |
| ♪ The King of heaven, the glorious King ♪ | 39:32 | |
| ♪ Over death today rose triumphing ♪ | 39:39 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 39:46 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 39:49 | |
| ♪ When Thomas first the tidings heard ♪ | 39:55 | |
| ♪ How they had seen the risen Lord ♪ | 40:02 | |
| ♪ He doubted the disciples' word ♪ | 40:08 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 40:15 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 40:18 | |
| ♪ My pierced side, O Thomas, see ♪ | 40:24 | |
| ♪ My hands, My feet, I show to thee ♪ | 40:31 | |
| ♪ Not faithless but believing be ♪ | 40:38 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 40:45 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 40:48 | |
| ♪ No longer Thomas then denied ♪ | 40:53 | |
| ♪ He saw the feet, the hands, the side ♪ | 41:00 | |
| ♪ "Thou art my Lord and God," he cried ♪ | 41:07 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 41:14 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 41:17 | |
| ♪ How blessed are they who have not seen ♪ | 41:23 | |
| ♪ And yet whose faith has constant been ♪ | 41:29 | |
| ♪ For they eternal life shall win ♪ | 41:36 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 41:43 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 41:46 | |
| - | The Lord be with you. | 41:56 |
| Audience | And also with you. | 41:58 |
| - | Let us pray. | 42:00 |
| Be seated. | 42:01 | |
| God who speaks, | 42:11 | |
| God who listens... | 42:14 | |
| Having listened to you in word read and word preached, | 42:19 | |
| we are bold to ask that you listen to us. | 42:25 | |
| Hear us, O God, as we pray for our needs | 42:29 | |
| and those of the world. | 42:32 | |
| We're only one Sunday away from Easter. | 42:36 | |
| And yet it does not take long for Easter power, | 42:41 | |
| Easter glory, | 42:46 | |
| Easter joy to fade. | 42:48 | |
| Therefore we pray, give us that | 42:53 | |
| which we cannot have on our own. | 42:55 | |
| A sure and living faith in you | 43:00 | |
| and your love and righteousness. | 43:02 | |
| Our Lord is risen. | 43:08 | |
| He has returned to his frightened disciples | 43:10 | |
| to encourage them. | 43:12 | |
| And yet our church | 43:16 | |
| locks its doors... | 43:18 | |
| Trembles in uncertainty, | 43:21 | |
| mutes its voice. | 43:25 | |
| Therefore we pray, | 43:28 | |
| give us a church | 43:31 | |
| which is bold, | 43:34 | |
| outspoken, | 43:37 | |
| courageous, to speak and to embody your truth. | 43:39 | |
| Give us a church | 43:45 | |
| which dares to be as disruptive as you were on Easter. | 43:48 | |
| We pray for those who, despite Easter, | 43:54 | |
| continue to suffer, and who suffer this day. | 43:58 | |
| We pray for the suffering refugees in Iraq. | 44:04 | |
| We pray for the sick in body or mind, | 44:10 | |
| particularly those who are ill or under treatment | 44:13 | |
| in the Duke hospitals, who worship with us. | 44:16 | |
| We pray for victims of violence. | 44:22 | |
| Whether it be violence sanctioned and justified | 44:25 | |
| by governments... | 44:28 | |
| Or violence at the hands of spouses, | 44:31 | |
| parents or children in the home... | 44:35 | |
| Especially in this place | 44:40 | |
| do we pray this day for all students. | 44:43 | |
| Living at a confusing and exciting time in life. | 44:46 | |
| Students exposed to so much. | 44:53 | |
| Uncertain of their future, | 44:56 | |
| daily put to the test. | 44:59 | |
| Be with all those who study at this | 45:02 | |
| and other places of learning. | 45:06 | |
| One week away from Easter, O God, it amazes us | 45:10 | |
| how quickly faith begins to fade. | 45:15 | |
| We hear the Easter message of life | 45:19 | |
| and wonder if it is too good to be true. | 45:22 | |
| And so our prayer to you, O God, | 45:28 | |
| lifting up to you some of the pain still present | 45:29 | |
| in a post-Easter world, | 45:32 | |
| our prayer is prayed in the conviction | 45:35 | |
| that you are Lord of life. | 45:39 | |
| That you are God over death and sin. | 45:43 | |
| That the facts of death and sin to which the world | 45:49 | |
| would have us adjust, | 45:53 | |
| these facts do not have the last word. | 45:55 | |
| And that Easter is both good and true. | 46:00 | |
| And as witness to the reality of Easter, | 46:08 | |
| we have prayed that your Easter power | 46:12 | |
| might be released in all places of life. | 46:15 | |
| Amen. | 46:21 | |
| As a forgiven, reconciled, resurrected people, | 46:25 | |
| I remind you that all of today's offerings | 46:29 | |
| will go for the Crop Blanket appeal | 46:34 | |
| to alleviate suffering around the world. | 46:37 | |
| (organ playing) | 46:54 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 47:05 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 47:20 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 47:31 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 47:43 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 47:57 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:03 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:07 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:10 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:15 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:20 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:26 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:32 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:35 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 48:40 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 48:46 | |
| (choir singing in Latin) | 48:59 | |
| (choir singing Latin) | 49:12 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:34 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:37 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:40 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:42 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:45 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:48 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:54 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 49:57 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 50:00 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 50:02 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 50:03 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 50:05 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 50:07 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 50:12 | |
| (organ playing) | 50:19 | |
| (organ playing) | 50:32 | |
| (organ drowning out choir) | 50:53 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:03 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:07 | |
| (organ drowning out choir) | 51:10 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:22 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:25 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:28 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:31 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:34 | |
| - | Please join in the litany of thanksgiving. | 51:48 |
| Haga wandered in the desert | 51:51 | |
| with nothing to shield her child | 51:53 | |
| from the broiling sun. | 51:55 | |
| (muffled audience response) | 51:57 | |
| After the flood, God sent a rainbow of hope | 52:03 | |
| and promise. | 52:06 | |
| (muffled audience response) | 52:07 | |
| Ruth arrived in Bethlehem, a refugee with nothing. | 52:19 | |
| (muffled audience response) | 52:23 | |
| The Good Samaritan covered the wounds of a beaten man | 52:30 | |
| and took him to be cared for. | 52:34 | |
| (muffled audience response) | 52:37 | |
| After He had risen, | 52:46 | |
| Jesus returned to his followers, | 52:48 | |
| charging them to care for his sheep. | 52:50 | |
| (muffled audience response) | 52:52 | |
| Jesus' name we offer these gifts | 53:03 | |
| of healing and patience. | 53:05 | |
| Amen. | 53:08 | |
| Our father who art in Heaven, | 53:10 | |
| hallowed be thy name, | 53:13 | |
| thy kingdom come, | 53:15 | |
| thy will be done, | 53:17 | |
| on Earth as it is in Heaven. | 53:18 | |
| Give us this day our daily bread | 53:21 | |
| and forgive us our trespasses, | 53:23 | |
| as we forgive those who trespass against us | 53:25 | |
| and lead us not into temptation, | 53:28 | |
| but deliver us from evil. | 53:31 | |
| Thine is infinite power and glory forever. | 53:34 | |
| Amen. | 53:39 | |
| Now may be the grace of our risen Lord and savior, | 53:42 | |
| Jesus Christ, go with you and be with you | 53:45 | |
| now and always. | 53:48 | |
| (organ playing) | 53:52 | |
| (choir vocalizing) | 53:56 | |
| (organ playing) | 54:15 | |
| (organ playing) | 54:32 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 54:47 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 54:51 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 54:55 | |
| ♪ The strife is over ♪ | 55:02 | |
| ♪ The battle done ♪ | 55:06 | |
| ♪ The victory of life is won ♪ | 55:10 | |
| ♪ The song of triumph has begun ♪ | 55:17 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 55:25 | |
| ♪ The powers of death have done their worst ♪ | 55:33 | |
| ♪ But Christ their legions has dispersed ♪ | 55:40 | |
| ♪ Let shouts of holy joy outburst ♪ | 55:48 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 55:56 | |
| ♪ The three sad days are quickly sped ♪ | 56:03 | |
| ♪ He rises glorious from the dead ♪ | 56:11 | |
| ♪ All glory to our risen head ♪ | 56:20 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 56:28 | |
| ♪ Lord, by the stripes which wounded thee ♪ | 56:36 | |
| ♪ From death's dread sting thy servants free ♪ | 56:43 | |
| ♪ That we may live and sing to thee ♪ | 56:51 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 56:59 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 57:07 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 57:11 | |
| ♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 57:15 | |
| (organ playing) | 57:33 | |
| (organ playing) | 57:50 | |
| (organ playing) | 58:07 | |
| (organ playing) | 58:24 | |
| (organ playing) | 58:46 | |
| (organ playing) | 59:01 |
Item Info
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