One More Thing with Pastor Tim Burchill 4.2.2023

     It’s easy to forget that Jesus was fully human.  He loved his disciples but he needed good friends that weren’t front and center in his ministry.  Most folks agree that Lazarus, Mary and Martha were Jesus’ BFFs.  In fact, before he processes into Jerusalem he is attending a family reunion in Bethany with his friends.  Jesus had just reunited Mary and Martha with their brother Lazarus, who by the way had to be brough back from the ’great beyond’.  The following is from the writings of Frederick Buechner, one of my favorite authors.

 

     Though none of this was the subject of Pastor Matt’s excellent sermon Sunday, it does set the stage for Holy week worship: Holy Thursday (6:30 in the FLC), Good Friday (6:30 in the sanctuary), and Easter morning (our regular worship times).  


     Hope you enjoy it. (posted below)

 

  

     “LAZARUS AND HIS TWO SISTERS lived in a town called Bethany a couple of miles outside Jerusalem and according to the Gospel of John were among the best friends Jesus had. He used to drop in on them whenever he was in the neighborhood, and when he made his entrance into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, it was from Bethany that he took off, and it was also to Bethany that he went back to take it easy for a few days before his final arrest.  

 

     “When Lazarus died, Jesus didn’t arrive on the scene until several days afterward, but he found the sisters still so broken up they hardly knew what they were saying. With one breath they reproached him for not having come in time to save their brother and with the next they told him they knew he could save him still. Then, for the first and only time such a thing is recorded of him in the New Testament, Jesus broke down himself. Then he went out to where his friend’s body lay and brought him back to life again. 

 

     “Recent interviews with people who have been resuscitated after being pronounced clinically dead reveal that, after the glimpse they evidently all of them get of a figure of light waiting for them on the other side, they are very reluctant to be brought back again to this one. On the other hand, when Lazarus opened his eyes to see the figure of Jesus standing there in the daylight beside him, he couldn’t for the life of him tell which side he was on.” 

     John 11:1–44

 

Buechner, Frederick. Beyond Words (Buechner, Frederick) (p. 223). HarperOne. 

Archived Posts

 

What Jacob Marley Would Do,

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Power Without Conscience?

          I ran out of room for this vignette in Sunday’s sermon.  Remember the quote that could be the headline for Ahab and Naboth:  “All that’s needed for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing.” The following reinforces that truth.

The Cars Are Looking for A King

          I don’t have a thing to add to Pastor Jessica’s excellent sermon this last Sunday.  The fable/parable she shared has been one of my favorites for all the lessons she pulled from it in her message.  I was playing around with my friend Chat GPT and after several abortive attempts, we came up with the following modernized version of Judges 9:7-15. 

The Lost Benediction

          Depending on the length of the sermon, I try to add a little something extra in my benedictions.  This week I wrote up a benediction but then realized we’d be singing and waving our umbrellas to some New Orleans jazz.

Change of Focus This Week

       Instead of sharing with you about yesterday’s sermon I’d like to invite you to do some background reading for next Sunday’s “Only Murders in the Bible.”  Seeing that it is All Saints Day this Sunday, we are going to look at the very first Christian martyr, Stephen. 

You Might Be Thinking It’s All About You If…

In working on Sunday’s sermon I asked my computer’s AI if she/he could come up with a few suggestions in answer to the above: "You Might be thinking it’s all about you, if…."