Tags
confusion, Easter, Emmaus, fear, gather, glorious, Jesus, joy, listen, renewed, resistance, Sermon
In 2015, Jamil sat in a hospital room distraught. His newborn daughter, Alma, had suffered a stroke during childbirth, and had been whisked away to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. Doctors and nurses had been tending to her around the clock. And then, in the haze of the hospital stay, at about one o’clock in the morning, a doctor came into their hospital room and shared some difficult news about Alma’s treatment plan. And here’s where the story gets interesting: “‘…instead of just delivering the news compassionately and leaving, [the doctor] just pulled up a chair.’ The two men talked for about 90 minutes — a wide-ranging conversation in which the doctor told Jamil about his own struggles as a new father, and shared his thoughts about parenthood.” Jamil recalls of Dr. Petersen, “It was as though he hit the pause button on this torrent of pain and anguish that we were feeling.” [i]
Sometimes we have a hard time remembering what the first Easter and Eastertide felt like for the followers of Christ. We read Luke’s gospel today, but in all the gospel narratives of that first Easter, we discover not a sense of victory and responding alleluias. We find fear, confusion, and resistance. In Luke’s gospel today, the women have already discovered and reported the empty tomb, and Peter even had run to confirm the amazing news. Today we pick up the story as Cleopas and another disciple of Jesus have packed up and are heading back home to Emmaus. They do not believe the women and the inability of Peter to see the risen Lord makes them even more incredulous. As they unknowingly talk to Jesus along their walk to Emmaus, they express their despondency acutely, “…we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel.”[ii]
We too get trapped in post-Easter uncertainty. We had a glorious Holy Week and Easter Sunday here at Hickory Neck, and even enjoyed a healthy crowd last Sunday. This past week we started our Gratitude Gatherings, which have been full of joyful pondering about all that the Holy Spirit is doing among us. As we turned our conversations to our hopes for Hickory Neck, I have heard a similar thread: a longing to know what is next. We have walked through all sorts of identity changing years of late: from new leadership, to welcoming, nurturing, and then sending on the Kensington School, to wading through a pandemic and becoming a hybrid community, to the promise of a sabbatical in just a month’s time. As we have talked about our hopes for the future, we have many dreams and desires; but it also feels like we are standing at a precipice. We have that feeling of goodness and blessing, and also that unsettling feeling of wondering where God is taking us next.
When Jamil sat with Dr. Petersen for an hour and half in the midst of his grief and anxiety, he says, “‘I just felt like I couldn’t control anything…I was feeling this loss of autonomy, of agency. And then I just remember [Dr. Petersen] not leaving.’ Petersen’s honest conversation about the ups and downs of fatherhood reminded [Jamil] that he wasn’t doing this alone.” Jamil says, “Afterwards I stopped thinking about the suffering that we were going through and started thinking about, OK, well, what do we do for Alma next?”[iii]
Jesus does not leave Cleopas and the other disciple in the despondency. He walks with them. He listens and he shares the salvation narrative with them. And as if that were not enough, Jesus “leaves them free to continue on without him.” Like he always does, he gives his followers free will. And when Jesus is invited to stay on, Jesus does. Only then – in the sacrament of breaking bread, blessing bread, and distributing bread – only then are the disciples’ eyes opened.[iv] Jesus tarries with the disciples until they can ask the question that the followers in our Acts narrative ask today, “What should we do?”[v]
That is our invitation at Hickory Neck in these coming weeks and months. We are invited to sit with Jesus – to not let him depart, but to continue walking, talking, and eating together at his table. We are invited in these weeks of Easter and sabbatical, to keep gathering together, to listen in the midst of our busy lives, to be open to how Jesus is warming our hearts with his presence. That is where our hopes and dreams become redefined. That is where we become renewed and delivered from our fears and anxieties. That is where we can let go of what has been and take up what we are to do next. Jesus is with us – and his presence is a glorious promise for warmed hearts and renewed spirits. Amen.
[i] Laura Kwerel, “Jamil was struggling after his daughter had a stroke. Then a doctor pulled up a chair.” My Unsung Hero from Hidden Brain, NPR, April 17, 2023, as found at https://www.npr.org/2023/04/17/1167802053/jamil-was-struggling-after-his-daughter-had-a-stroke-then-a-doctor-stepped-in on April 19, 2023.
[ii] Luke 24.21
[iii] Kwerel.
[iv] Cynthia A. Jarvis, “Homiletical Perspective, Feasting on the Word, Yr. A, Vol. 2 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2010), 423.
[v] Acts 2.37.