Bible Study

“For Lent, rather than giving something up, I’m taking something on. Here is what and why…”

Although change is ever-present, during Lent it gets put a bit more in the spotlight. One original description of Lent is “a Christian season of spiritual preparation before Easter, focusing on Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross and the miracle of His Resurrection.” Along the same lines, Christians give up something as a form of penitence or repentance. So, in simple terms, making a sacrifice to request forgiveness for our sins.

Makes sense, but I have always struggled a bit with the logic. Not asking for forgiveness, as I need to do that daily, but how giving up chocolate exactly helps me ask.

A few years ago, I read about adding something versus giving something up, to take extra time for reflection and to draw closer to God. That felt much more like getting prepared for our Savior than feeling guilty over chocolate. So, since then, I have taken that route.

This year, before Lent started, my husband and I came upon the series “The Chosen”, about Jesus and his ministry with the disciples. If you haven’t watched it, I highly suggest you do, as it really brings the Gospel into a very relatable and relational focus. Since Jesus and the disciples were Jewish, they spend much of their interaction discussing the Torah and Jewish law, and how Jesus’ teachings differed yet aligned with them. Honestly, I have never been a real fan of the Pentateuch (the first five books of the Hebrew Bible) as I didn’t really get the lineage and rules and really don’t have much overall recall of the entire Old Testament, to be truthful. (Ever so thankful, however, for all SUMC’s Bible studies, as they have been my real education over the past few years!). However, after watching this show, I was suddenly more aware that Jesus and the disciples only had the Old Testament; and if I wanted to get closer to Jesus, I needed to understand where he was coming from when he set out on his change of the world. So I decided to read the Bible for Lent!

Okay, I probably won’t get through it all by Easter, but I have finished Genesis! I curl up in bed at night and read a few chapters. To help me along, I am following the Bible App (You Version), and they have a “365 days for reading the Bible” plan — well, they have many plans actually; but I am following the one with the Bible Project because it really helps simplify and summarize the various books of the Bible with discussions and wonderful drawings. (I finally figured out how the tribes got to Egypt and why book 2 is Exodus from there –- I know, pretty sad at my age to just figure that out.)

Regardless of my slow Biblical progress, I already feel much closer to Jesus. I think this Lent will be different, and I am hoping with all my heart that it is, as I can think of nothing better than understanding Jesus, so I can “walk close to thee”.

-Jen Rockwell

Easter’s Promise

I sure could use some Easter right now.

Sorry to be histrionic, but it feels like this past year has been the worst of times… Ukraine, Gaza, climate change, the great American culture war. A lot to keep us hoping for things to get better.

While many of us pause in our busy lives to pray… it feels like right now we are unheard and unanswered. It’s easy to spiral into thoughts about why our prayers aren’t working … yes, all things in God’s time, but it’s pretty bad right now. That’s when I know I need to take a deep breath, sit quiet as Pastor Leigh has us do each Sunday, and remind myself that God is listening.

By getting to church and paying attention to the Word, the Sacraments and the music, I am reminded that God’s promises are true and bigger than my thoughts and concerns. Easter is a time of renewal, not just because the New England winter is ending, but because Easter and Christ’s ascension are full of hope and new life. Faith is hard, but I can’t imagine living without it.

I hope this upcoming Easter brings you a comforting embrace. I’m betting that in dark times, the promise of Easter and the power of renewal are reminders of the strength that can be found in these moments.

-Vikki Jacobson

Taking On the Old Testament

[Editor’s Note: here’s a response to one of our writing prompts for this year: “For Lent, rather than giving something up, I’m taking something on. Here is what and why…”]

Although change is ever-present, during Lent it gets put a bit more in the spotlight. One original description of Lent is “a Christian season of spiritual preparation before Easter, focusing on Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross and the miracle of His Resurrection.” Along the same lines, Christians give up something as a form of penitence or repentance. So, in simple terms, making a sacrifice to request forgiveness for our sins.

Makes sense, but I have always struggled a bit with the logic. Not asking for forgiveness, as I need to do that daily; but how giving up chocolate exactly helps me ask. A few years ago, I read about adding something versus giving something up, to take extra time for reflection and to draw closer to God. That felt much more like getting prepared for our Savior than feeling guilty over chocolate. So since then I have taken that route.

This year, before Lent started, my husband and I came upon the series “The Chosen”, about Jesus and his ministry with the disciples. If you haven’t watched it, I highly suggest you do, as it really brings the Gospel into a very relatable and relational focus. Since Jesus and the disciples were Jewish, they spend much of their interaction discussing the Torah and Jewish law, and how Jesus’ teachings differed yet aligned with them. Honestly, I have never been a real fan of the Pentateuch (first five books of the Hebrew Bible), as I didn’t really get the lineage and rules, and really don’t have much overall recall of the entire Old Testament, to be truthful. (Ever so thankful, however, for all SUMC’s Bible studies, as they have been my real education over the past few years!) However, after watching this show, I was suddenly more aware that Jesus and the disciples only had the Old Testament, and if I wanted to get closer to Jesus I needed to understand where he was coming from when he set out on his change of the world. So I decided to read the Bible for Lent!

Okay, I probably won’t get through it all by Easter, but I have finished Genesis! I curl up in bed at night and read a few chapters. To help me along I am following the Bible App (You Version) and they have a “365 days for reading the Bible” plan (well, they have many plans actually); but I am following the one with the Bible Project because it really helps simplify and summarize the various books of the Bible with discussions and wonderful drawings. (I finally figured out how the tribes got to Egypt and why book two is Exodus from there -– I know: pretty sad at my age to just figure that out.) Regardless of my slow Biblical progress, I already feel much closer to Jesus. I think this Lent will be different, and I am hoping with all my heart that it is, as I can think of nothing better than understanding Jesus, so I can “walk close to thee”.

-Jen Rockwell

Entering God’s Presence

“Rejoice in the Lord always; again I say; rejoice. Let your gentleness be made known to everyone. Do not worry about anything but with prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be known to God. And the peace of God which surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.”

Philippians 4: 4-7

This is a favorite Bible verse of mine. Lent can be a time to evaluate our relationship with God, and to think about what we need to change in our lives to please God. We might ask: Does God have a plan for my life? Am I living out that plan? What hinders me?

I tend to be a worrier. I often see the possible problems in given situations or circumstances, rather than the possibilities or positives. This verse tells me not to worry, but to trust God and turn over my concerns to Him. Prayer is that tool for doing this, but my/your prayers should not just be requests and cries for help. They should be punctuated with thanks for my/your blessings (which are many). And then a peace that surpasses understanding will come. I’m still working on that feeling!

Belonging to a faith community for fellowship, support, and understanding of God’s word has always been important to me. I have been part of a faith community since childhood. My dad helped start a church in our lake community in New Jersey. I went to Christian overnight camp. In college, I attended chapel each morning. I was a member of SUMC for 45 years and now of a UCC church in Plymouth. I taught Sunday School, served on Commissions, was in a Women’s Circle, and enjoyed Bible studies and many retreats. Some of my best friends I met through the faith communities I belonged to.

I think God put into my heart to enter His presence every day and to share my faith with others. Jim and I spend time each morning to pray together and read several devotions. I was part of a Covenant Group at SUMC, and Jim and I started one at our church in Plymouth.

There are so many ways you can enter into God’s presence daily. This pleases God. Gratitude for God’s creation, reaching out or visiting someone who is ill or hurting, thanking God for blessings rather than complaining, attending and participating in worship, and encouraging others are just a few of the ways that please God.

What will you do this Lent and beyond to please God and enter into God’s presence?

-Nancy Sweeney
[former SUMC member, now living in Plymouth, MA]

Herzliebster Jesu

Historically, Christians have looked to blame others for Jesus’ crucifixion. While Jesus himself spoke words of forgiveness from the cross, we are tempted to look for a scapegoat. Centuries of antisemitic violence springs out of the gospel accounts of Jesus’ passion and the words of the Jewish leaders before the Roman authorities.

That’s one of the reasons that I appreciate the Holy Week hymn “Ah, Holy Jesus.” This moving hymn was written by Johann Heermann in 1630 out of the Pietistic Lutheran tradition – a strain of Lutheranism that especially valued emotional resonance with the Christian faith. Heermann places all of us who sing his words into the crucifixion story: instead of blaming Romans or Jewish leaders, we confess “I crucified thee.” Instead of wondering how Peter could claim that he didn’t know Jesus, we sing “I it was denied thee.”

Lent, and Holy Week in particular, may feel like a depressing time. This is an occasion every year to take a long, hard look in the mirror. Lent calls us to self-examination, and if we’re honest, we won’t like everything we see. This can be hard in our society: we live in a world where people put filters on their pictures to look younger, where we compete to show our “best lives” on social media, and where we may not feel safe admitting that we’re less than perfect.

But it’s only when we confess that we can hear that we are forgiven. As part of our communion ritual each month, we confess our sins: “…we have rebelled against your love, we have not loved our neighbors… “ Then we hear the Good News: “Christ dies for us while we were yet sinners – that proves God’s love toward us.” God loves us as we are, forgives us of our sin, and gives us infinite second chances to live out our faith.

Heermann’s beautiful hymn text gives us words to offer a Lenten confession to God:

Therefore, kind Jesus, since I cannot pay thee,
I do adore thee, and will ever pray thee,
Think on thy pity and thy love unswerving, not my deserving.

Set to Johann Cruger’s plaintive, solemn hymn tune, we sing our confession to God each year during Holy Week. We know that God is full of pity and love, that God hears us and forgives us. We celebrate the scope of that forgiveness and love on Easter Sunday and throughout the Easter Season. But just like the debtors in Luke 7:40-43, we love God with greater depth when we understand the size of our own debt. So like the debtors in the gospel of Luke, and like Peter who denied Jesus, let us face our sin and confess it to God this Lent. Letting go of our shame, guilt, and hurt will free us to celebrate all the more joyfully when Lent is done.

-Heather Cranson

Fast

[Editor’s Note: below is a response to the writing prompt “Here’s a Lenten sacrifice I made and what I learned from that choice…”]

“And the Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness.  He was in the wilderness forty days, tested by Satan, and he was with the wild beasts, and the angels waited on him.”

Mark 1: 12-13

In 1974, Ash Wednesday fell on February 28. My United Methodist youth group had committed to fast, not only on Ash Wednesday, but every Wednesday during that forty-day season of Lent. Each Wednesday evening, we met at the church after sunset, read scriptures, sang hymns, and prayed. At the end of the service, we would break the fast when we took communion.

The tradition of a Lenten fast is primarily observed in the Catholic Church, where fasting on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday are obligatory, and abstinence, usually from meat, is practiced on Fridays (hence the ever-popular Friday fish fry!). Although I had a lot of Catholic friends, I had never fasted before, and I had no idea what to expect. But when you are a teenager, and lots of your friends in youth group decide to fast, well, there are worse choices you might make.

At first it was fairly easy to avoid eating on Wednesdays, but as the weeks went on, it became more and more challenging to wait for that morsel of bread and shot of grape juice on Wednesday evening. At school, I would sit with my youth group friends during lunch lest any of us were tempted to eat solid food.

The choice not to eat from sunrise to sunset on Wednesdays was a spiritually and psychically formative time for me. I still remember it as a season of sacrifice, but one that was chosen and shared. The experience of shared denial was one that forged strong relationships as we all came to know and understand just a wee bit better the sacrifice of Christ in the desert for those forty days and nights.

I have practiced many spiritual disciplines during the seasons of Lent that have transpired since then. Some have been the practices of letting go, others the experience of taking on something new. All of them have taught me things about myself that were edifying. However, the decision to fast during that Lenten season of 1974 became a touchstone experience, one that I recall with gratitude whenever Lent arrives.

-Leigh Goodrich

A Poem for this Ash Wednesday/Valentine’s Day

by Maren Tirabassi

If I speak in tongues of justice or spirituality,
but do not have ashes,
I am a self-congratulating vigil,
a Sunday service inspired by itself.

If I have social media outreach,
a labyrinth in the church garden,
Bible study in the brew-pub,
and if I have a capital campaign,
to remove pews, put in church chairs
and even add a coffee shop,
but do not have ashes, I am nothing.

If I give to church-wide offerings,
and go on mission trips so that I may boast,
but do not have ashes, I gain nothing.

Ashes are awkward; ashes are dirty;
ashes, like love,
are not envious, boastful, arrogant or rude.
Ashes do not insist on a perfect Lent;
they do not even need to be in church
or be a gimmick getting folks to church;
they do not inventory wrongdoing,
especially the wrongdoing of others,

but rejoice in the precious now,
the very fragility of life.

Ashes bear love, believe in love,
hope in the possibility
of forgiveness for everyone,
endure even times of lovelessness.

Forgiveness never ends.
As for spiritual practices,
they will come to an end;
as for precious old hymns
and passionate praise songs,
they will grow quiet;
as for theology and faith formation,
believe me, it will shift and change again.

For churches are always reaching
for a part of things,
while those who flee church
reach for another part,
but, when the full forgiveness comes,
it will look more like Valentine’s Day.

When I was a child, I said “I love you,”
I cut out pink and red hearts,
I sent them to everyone, even the bullies,
but when I became an adult,
I decided to make it more complicated.

Now in our churches and lives
we have become too fond of mirrors,
but some day we will see each other
face to smudged face.
Now I love only in part;
then I will love fully,
even as I have been fully loved.

Today ashes, dust,
and a child’s pink paper art abide, these three;
but the greatest of these is the heart.

-[submitted anonymously]

Schedule Conflict

“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. 35 By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

John 13:34-35

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Also, hello Ash Wednesday.

Of course, while doing my due diligence and planning for Lent as a choir director, I wondered, “goodness! When was the last time THAT confluence of events occurred? I can’t remember!” Since there are a finite number of days upon which the beginning of Lent may fall, it has to have happened before … but when? WHEN??

I scrambled to my local laptop and looked that up, like a good little journalism major.

Um, 2018.

Six Lents ago. Only.

Huh. Clearly I can’t remember.

Similarly, a number of news outlets sent their cub reporters on missions to track down the answers to this breathless question: Can You Celebrate Valentine’s Day on Ash Wednesday?

For its part, the National Catholic Register is very, very clear on this point: um. no. No discussion, no debate, not a shred of doubt about it, thank you and good night. You want to have a lovely romantic night out? That’s what Fat Tuesday is for.

(Not to miss an opportunity, many online articles on news websites were punctuated with dynamic ad insertions along the lines of: “Lent 2024: Calling all fish lovers! Here are 17 must-try local restaurants to get fish”. The ads seemed a rather jarring intrusion.)

Given that Valentine’s Day, in all likelihood, is a more recent invention than Ash Wednesday… yeah, at the very least it’s a “who got here first?” issue, a liturgical playground-banter “nuh-UHHH” question. Fair is fair.

Also, yes, as a wise person once said, “if you fail to plan, plan to fail.” Given the dogged determination of people to celebrate Valentine’s Day ON Valentine’s Day, a February 12th or 13th dinner reservation might not have been that difficult to score. Two birds, one stone.

Anyway, there’s not a lot of historical proof to suggest that St. Valentine was anything remotely like a hopeless romantic, worthy of a hearts-and-flowers holiday. So, like an unwelcome interloper, that idea is properly grabbed by the upper arms and hustled out of the room, struggling and protesting.

And why should we support that big ol’ Enforced-Romance-Industrial Complex anyway? I mean really.

These are, of course … excuses.

Ash Wednesday, as the beginning of Lent, represents the start of the journey that brought Jesus to the cross, to death, and resurrection … a journey undertaken out of love for humanity, and a love that clearly cannot be adequately expressed by boxes of chocolates, bouquets of roses, or nights out on the town.

Hmm. Seems obvious, now that I write it out.

And, for the next thirty-nine days, you will get to read more Lenten devotions, written out by members and friends of Sudbury UMC.

Hope you love them.

-Rob Hammerton

[Editor’s Note: If you enjoy these Lenten Devotions, why not consider writing one of your own? Send Rob an eMail at rhammerton@charter.net and ask how!]