2021.12.19 | Merry Textmas!

Today’s worship video includes our annual Christmas Pageant. This year’s homegrown production is titled “Merry Textmas” and retells the Christmas Story of Mary and Joseph and their journey to Bethlehem as if it happened in our time, with our modern technology. Texting, Facetime, Zoom, and some old-fashioned letter writing prove (in a humorous fashion) that the medium may change but the message stays the same: Christ, our Savior, is born on Christmas Day! Many thanks to our Pageant participants who are listed at the end of the Pageant.

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2021.12.12 | Joy in Jail

The Apostle Paul wrote his epistle to the Philippians from a jail cell in Rome. The overarching theme of Paul’s message in today’s passage is joy. I find the juxtaposition of Paul’s location in jail and his theme of joy more than a little ironic. How about you? I have been to jail a few times, and haven’t found it to be all that joyful. The first time I went to jail was in Advent 1988. I was fresh out of seminary, serving as Assistant Minister at the Old South Church in Boston. I went with a woman named Denise. Her husband was the Massachusetts Attorney General. I went because she asked me to serve on the Board of Directors of an organization that she helped found called “People to People.”

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Arlene Nehring
2021.12.05 | Evoking the Best

Paul’s style reminds me of the way that my mother’s parents used to talk to my sister and me when we were children--a tone that carried over into their letter writing to us when we were in college. Their comments were always complimentary and encouraging. Their words helped us believe that we could weather any storm. They pushed us to do greater things than we could have imagined. Their confidence and pride prodded us to be better people than we might have otherwise become.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.11.28 | How Long?!

Do you remember “Pandemic Time?” You know, when we couldn’t seem to get our bearings about us at the beginning of the pandemic? I don’t know about you, but I would have to have SIRI tell me which day it was. Well, it’s hard to believe, but our liturgical calendars today have been reset. We are now back at the start of the liturgical year with the first Sunday of Advent. How would we know this without seeing this in the church bulletin or in the e-Chimes? Well, the days are getting shorter. 96.5 FM is already playing Christmas music- before Thanksgiving. There’s signs that Christmastide is coming. But you, like many, might still feel like we’re stuck in “pandemic time” and can’t quite catch up. That’s Advent for you, the here and not yet; a waiting for something almost realized, but not quite.

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Marvin Wiser
2021.11.21 A Kingdom Not of This World

Caiaphas was the High Priest, the leader of the Jerusalem Temple and the leader of the Sanhedrin, the Jewish law court. According to John, Caiaphas wanted something done about Jesus, because he contradicted the teachings and practices of the Jewish priests, but neither the priests nor the Sanhedrin had the authority to do away with Jesus. So Caiaphas turned Jesus over to Pilate.

According to John, Pilate saw Jesus as more of a religious heretic than a political threat, so he was reluctant to condemn Jesus to death. He knew that dabbling in religious matters could be tricky. Instead of making a definite decision about his fate, Pilate placed Jesus’ fate in the hands of the mob, who ultimately called for his crucifixion.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.11.14 | Hannah in her Anguish

The problem with these prototypical characters is that we don’t always recognize them in real life — or appreciate the value they bring to our lives. If I think back on the times in my life when I either hung up the telephone on someone or someone hung up the telephone on me, it was almost always because one of us was acting like Peninnah, Elkanah, or Eli. While I can only guess whether my uncomfortable, dismissive, or wrong-headed words caused someone to think differently about their own lives, I know with certainty that other people and their words have been instrumental in my own spiritual growth.

But let’s take Hannah as an example. If Peninnah hadn’t provoked her by both having children and needling her about the situation, would Hannah have expressed her sadness or just let it fester inside?

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2021.11.07 | Reconciling Suffering

Today we observe All Saints Sunday, and the culmination of a week of remembering and giving thanks for the life and witness of those who have gone to God. The original celebration of All Saints Day in the Christian tradition was established by Pope Urban IV in the mid 13th century.

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the first two hundred years that All Saints Day was celebrated, Christians observed the anniversary of the martyrs’ deaths at the place of their martyrdom. Because groups of martyrs frequently suffered and died on the same day, joint commemorations of the saints emerged. Eventually, other saints, not just martyrs, were remembered on All Saints Day.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.10.31 | Family of Choice

All Saints Day (always on Nov 1) and All Saints Sunday (which we’ll celebrate on Nov 7 this year) are occasions when we pause with Christians around the world to remember and give thanks for those who have gone to God.

As we celebrate these occasions, we also have an opportunity to reflect on our individual and collective experiences of grief and loss, how we cope, and who and how we show up for others in times like these.

My sense as a pastor is that our individual experiences of loss are as unique as our fingerprints; and yet, there are also similar patterns in how we experience and respond to death.

For example, the death of a loved one may teach us something about ourselves. We may discover strengths that we didn’t know we had, or develop strengths that weren’t evident earlier in our lives.

Likewise, we may learn new things about our families and friends as we move through the process. Some families pull together and function in very healthy ways through grief, while others unravel.

Our “best friends” may not know how to support us and we may have trouble articulating our needs. Meanwhile, friends, and even acquaintances, may draw closer, and become very dear to us.

Consider for a moment your own experience of a loved one’s death. What have you learned about yourself through that process? What have you learned about others? Were there surprises? If you are like most people, the answer is probably “yes.”

These types of ruminations are echoed in the story of Ruth and Naomi, which is the primary text for today’s message.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.10.24 | The Blind See

Figure out how your behavior is contributing to the suffering of others, and stop it. Just stop it! And, what if we acknowledged the errors of our ways? What if we learned from our mistakes, and behaved differently? Then what?

I suspect that blind beggars and others who hover at the margins and the bottom of our society would say that we were healed of our blindness.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.10.17 | Leadership Development

Some years ago I enrolled in and completed a certificate program in organizational development offered by the Business School at DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois.

The program was interesting and helpful for the work I was engaged in at the national offices, where I worked on executive recruitment and leadership development for our 475 UCC-related health and human service agencies. Many of the lessons that I learned in that program and during that job have been helpful to me in serving as your pastor.

That said, as I read and studied today’s gospel lesson, I could not help but notice how different Jesus’ approach to leadership development was and is compared with the best-practices approaches to leadership development that are taught in today’s most revered business schools.

Jesus' approach to leadership development was not only out of step with modern business approaches, it was contrary to the normative approaches subscribed to in the first century.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.10.10 | Our Empathetic God

There are, however, a few things I don’t like about this Bible story but they all boil down to how it’s been misinterpreted over time and the way bits and pieces of it are used to limit, rather than celebrate, God’s creative power and God’s intent to see and respond to human need.

For example, many have, over time and still today, decided that God wanted man to have a subordinate rather than what the text says which is a “helper as his partner.” The underlying Hebrew word (ezer) does not imply a subordinate. In fact, the word is used later in the Bible to refer to God as a helper of humans. Ideas about subordination also flow from the taking of man’s rib to make woman. But for many Bible scholars, neither the words used or the method of creation are evidence that hierarchy between women and men was intended or that God thought that the help man needed was to have someone to boss around. It was we humans who brought the power dynamic to the story ages ago and it's proven difficult to remove.


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2021.10.03 TESTIMONIES, NOT TESTS OF FAITH

The First-Century Jewish Pharisees and Nero’s loyal legion were eager to trap Jesus in a debate that would divide his followers and conquer his reform movement, but they were never successful in doing so; because Jesus knew their laws better than they did, and he understood and offered divine grace, which the world couldn’t give or take away.

Most importantly, Jesus taught that the key to salvation was not by way of judgy doctrine, but through a spiritual disposition that was humble, and vulnerable enough to receive God’s grace and blessings.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.09.26 | THE GREATEST

News flash everyone: Jesus did not define his “in crowd” by how long they had followed him around or claimed that he was the Christ. No, instead, Jesus demonstrated with his words and his deeds that his people were those who affiliated with the least, the last, and the lost.

Jesus didn’t just make this claim with his words. He gave the disciples an object lesson. He spotted a child in their vicinity, he walked up to her, and wrapped his arms around her, saying: “Whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes not me but the one who sent me.”

St. Francis of Assisi (whose feast day is Oct 4, 2021) famously said, “Preach the Gospel at all times. If necessary, use words.”

This is what Jesus was doing in Mark 9:36 when he took the child into his arms. He was providing his disciples with an object lesson. He was showing them--not just telling them--that if they wanted to be greatest in God’s kindom, they had to welcome the least, the last, and the lost.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.09.19 | Servant Leadership

Jesus affirms: Anyone who wants to be first must be the very last and the servant of all. For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve and give his life as a ransom for many.

Through this teaching, Jesus showed his disciples that serving others implies building horizontal relationships by dignifying each other in a humble spirit.

Dear friends, the Son of God is the perfect example of diakonia. Christian service requires to acknowledge that before God, there is no rule to measure who is better. We all are stewards of the grace of God. Faithful service emerges from a grateful heart that doesn't require praise or glory.

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2021.09.12 | UNASHAMED

God is not glorified by our silence. People outside this nation will never know that Christianity is not aligned with US imperialism if we do not open our mouths and counter that message.

People outside of our faith tradition will never know that there are Christians who follow Jesus, and who know that he is not the only way. As the Chinese proverb goes, “There are many paths up the same mountain.”

Our own children will not know that Jesus’ life and ministry mattered, and what it was all about unless we show and we TELL them.

To do that, we will have to come out Christian closets and dare to follow Christ’s example--no matter how queer we look to the larger culture--we will have to work through our anxiety and our religious baggages, because the alternative is not an option. Here that: the closet is not an option for us if we want this pandemic to end, the gap between rich and poor to narrow, and global climate change to reverse. It’s just that simple, and it’s just that hard.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.09.05 | Beyond Parochialism

Like other humans, Jesus had to be challenged to think outside of the box that he had grown up in. He had to be challenged to try the food, speak the language, and imagine that the ways of his people might not be the only ways to believe or to do things.

In short, Jesus had to be healed of his parochialism, before he could expand and fulfill God’s calling to be the hope and healer of all nations.

The great irony of this story is that the tables are turned twice. Instead of Jesus instantly fulfilling the Syrophonecian’s request that he heal her daughter from the unclean spirit, Jesus has to be healed of his parochialism.

He couldn’t heal himself. He needed the help of a foreign-born, non-native speaker, from a different faith tradition. So in the end, four miracles unfold in Mark 7. . .

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2021.08.29 | Moses & Mercury: Co-existing with Chaos

I’m not going to sugarcoat it. We have before us a long way to go, as did the Israelites before they made it to the Promised Land. Neither venomous snakes nor rambunctious neighbors were eradicated- despite what they would like us to think. They learned to co-exist with chaos, and so too must we. The very next verse in our reading this morning, Numbers 21:10 begins with, “The Israelites moved on.” May we learn to do so too, but not too fast, not too fast- taking as many with us and endeavoring to leave no one behind, no matter how young, how old, how same, how different. All deserve to receive good, healing news.

For just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him may have eternal life. For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life. Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him…

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Marvin Wiser
2021.08.22 | Serving God

This scripture reminds me that rivers have historically been used to create borders; an example is the Rio Grande known also as Bravo River, which divides Mexico and the United States. Even if we don’t use the expression people from the other side anymore the concept the others is present even among people from the same race and language but with different nationalities. For example, this happens between people of Mexico and Guatemala.

The scholars Hopenhayn and Bello, analyze the denial of the other as a historical root of discrimination, based on race and ethnicity and they conclude that denying the others implies separation and hierarchization: the other racial or ethnic is judged as different, and at the same time as inferior in hierarchy, qualities, possibilities, and Rights.

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2021.08.15 | Come to the Banquet

Wisdom has built her school house. She has prepared her banquet. She has gone into the highways and hedges to invite you and everyone else to her table, and she is serving up more than a middle eastern wedding banquet. Wisdom was, and is, serving up a banquet for the brain, and a smorgasbord for the soul.

She was, and is, striving to entice students of all ages to come to her banquet. Wisdom wants everyone to feast on her words--not just words in a grade school primer, but more importantly, she offers us wisdom for life.

The Divine Femine, Sophia, the Holy Spirit--she has many names here in the Wisdom Literature of the Hebrew Bible--teaches us that God wants us to not only be book smart, but world wise. She’s encouraging us to learn our lessons well, and to remember that we can get all A’s in school and still flunk life. Because life requires the application of theory to practice, and life circumstances extract moral decisions from us whether we like it or not. So it’s good to hit the books, it’s helpful to earn good grades, but it’s even more important to develop a strong moral compass and to use it wisely.

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Arlene Nehring
2021.08.08 | Taste and See

Unless a person has experienced doubt, can they claim to have faith? Unless a person has felt despair, can they really know joy? Unless a person has gone without, can they truly be thankful? I don’t think so.

That’s why Psalm 34 is so powerful. It’s tried and true. It’s been taste-tested by our ancestors in the faith.

As a consequence, we can trust the veracity of these verses, and hold onto the hope that they exude, even when we may not yet be able to proclaim the words of Psalm 34 with our whole hearts.

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