ougomonitsya--
inner stillness: when everything is all the same to you, and you live for the day, and you are not dreaming and waiting
John R. Harrison, Pastor

jrharr@lycos.com
Pomme de Terre United Methodist Church
Hermitage, Missouri
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Some Books I'm
Trying to Read
Seeds of Sensitivity: Deepening Your Spiritual Life by Robert J. Wicks


May I Have This Dance?
by Joyce Rupp


Jesus, the Gift of Love,
by Jean Vanier


Communion, Community, Commonweal: Readings for Spiritual Leadership by John S. Mogabgab


The Cloud of Unknowing,
edited by William Johnston


The Ascent of a Leader,
by Bill Thrall, Bruce McNicol, and Ken McElrath


Handbook for the Soul,
by Richard Carlson and Benjamin Shield


Loyalty to God: The Apostles' Creed in Life and Liturgy,
by Theodore W. Jennings, Jr.


Thursday, March 2, 2006

Deuteronomy 30:15-20

Luke 9:22-25

Nobody is beating around the bush today. Moses is telling people to choose life, not death, and Jesus says everybody that wants to follow him must take up his cross every day!

The Cross is so holy for us, the impact of these words is easily missed. We haven't actually seen somebody crucified in real life. But in Roman Palestine, it was a common occurrence.

Given its gruesomeness, to lie down calmly and voluntarily on a cross and then let somebody hammer nails into your hands and feet would have been an utterly horrifying thought to the Jews and the Gentiles of Roman Palestine.

We aren't so different. Sure, we'll take up the cross, as long as it is pretty, and perhaps made of gold or silver to wear around our neck. But big, grubby, wooden crosses, that are heavy to bear and fraught with trouble? We will go to great pains to avoid seeing such. We put on our special invisible spectacles that allow us to evade sights we really don't want to see. We define away to nothingness unpleasant truths, unwanted sights, unwelcome sounds.

Social problems are not for us to concern ourselves. They're the problems of somebody else.

Meanwhile back at the Jordan River, Moses lays it right on the line for the nation. Life and prosperity or death and doom. Those are your choices. There is no column "C." There is no "all of the above are acceptable."

If you obey God's commandments, fine. If not, how many different ways can you spell trouble? We think that some issues are pretty clear-cut, but then there are others that we would like to hide from. We look for rationalizations and excuses.

And today, all across the world, we are paying the price for ignoring God's principles.

It is not too late to turn things around. We can choose life and reject death.

We can follow Jesus, even if that means doing something as unpopular as taking up a really big and particularly grubby cross, that perhaps is disguised as some thorny social issue.

These aren't decisions that we can make "once and for all" and then we don't have to worry about them anymore. Jesus said, "take up his cross daily." It's a call to becoming more intentional about life, the universe, and everything.

As if, your life has purpose and meaning, because it does, derived from the purpose and meaning of our very existence as human persons, children of the most high God.

The work of following Jesus very often is a heavy cross to bear, both for those who bring the Word and for the communities who are called to receive the Word. But Moses and Jesus, both of whom love us dearly, tell us the plain unvarnished, non-rationalized truth. There are no other alternatives! Life or death? Blessing or cursing? Survival or annihilation?

And what's the point to anything if we gain the whole world, but lose our souls?

Posted by John at 12:01 AM CST
Updated: Thursday, March 2, 2006 12:45 AM CST

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