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March 26, 2023 — Fifth Sunday of Lent
Ezekiel 37:1-14; Psalm 130; Romans 8:6-11; John 11:1-45
By Rev. Dr. Gary Armstrong
The lessons from the Hebrew Scriptures and the Gospels for the Fifth Sunday in Lent cause me to pause and reflect on some of the most sobering memories of places I have visited. Ezekiel’s vision comes from a “valley of dry bones”. It is a vision of a “grave-yard” where burial has not happened. The Gospel lesson is of a burial chamber where there are tears and anguish, but where the grave gives up its dead in the raising of Lazarus by Jesus.
Memories of places I have been in ministry and in travel experiences are also of graveyard hopes As a pastor I have preached at approximately five hundred funerals over the course of fifty years in ministry. Consequently I have been in many sanctuaries and graveyards and reflected on resurrection faith in those places. Prayers lifted and scriptures shared have been reminders of the Christian hope that the last word is not in the graveyard.
Sobering experiences at different places where I have traveled have taken me back in time and yet cause me to hope for the future at the same time. Visiting and worshiping at the catacombs outside the original Rome wall took me to places were early Christians had been buried, and where they worshiped with an awareness of their environment and with a hope for their future, which they trusted was in God’s hands. Visiting the Peace Memorial at the site of an atomic bomb blast in Hiroshima, Japan, meant visiting a mass grave where the burial of ashes of persons who lost their lives in August of 1945 put me in a place where people expressed a hope that such a tragedy would never happen again. Visiting the Dachau Concentration Camp near Munich, Germany, meant standing outside the crematorium, and walking in (and on) an area where the ashes of countless people who had lost their lives had been spread. Though each of these were somber places, they were each places where hope was present. The hope was in the people who have a commitment to a future epitomized by peace and not tragedy.
The question put to Ezekiel in a vision of a valley of dry bones (probably a battlefield) was “Mortal, can these bones live?” In other words “Is life/hope possible here.” At the tomb of Lazarus Jesus hears the cries of anguish of Martha and Mary “If you had been here he would not have died.” In that place Jesus speaks of present reality as well as future hope “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live.”
At the graveyards of hope the message is the same. “I will put my Spirit within you and you shall live (Ezekiel 37:14a). Jesus said “I am the resurrection and the life.” He also said at that tomb “Lazarus, come out” (John 9:43).
Thinking of resurrection on this side of the grave reminds us that eternal life does not start when we through with our bodies. If God can bring life when you are done with your body imaging what God cand do now! – with your body – and with this body of Christ we call the church.
With the challenges we face as individuals and as a church in these times the question is present for us “Is life possible here?” “Can these bones live?” The word put to Ezekiel was “I will put my spirit within you, and you shall live.”
May we all be receptive to that Spirit of God and make choices for life.
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26 marzo, 2023 — Quinto domingo de Cuaresma
Ezequiel 37:1-14; Salmos 130; Romanos 8:6-11; Juan 11:1-45
Por Rev. Dr. Gary Armstrong
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