Electricity, Memory, and Meaning - Lenten Wednesday Worship Week 1

Electricity, Memory, and Meaning - Lenten Wednesday Worship Week 1

Author: Pastor Scott Schul
February 21, 2024

Most of you know my father passed away on Sunday.  Over the last few days, I’ve found myself taking a long walk down memory lane, remembering lots of things Dad did and said.  As in any person’s life, some of those things he did and said were noble and praiseworthy.  Others, on the other hand, were a little embarrassing and comical – the kinds of things that reveal our humanness and keep us humble and approachable.

Between those two extremes – the noble memories and the not-so-noble memories – we find the ordinary stuff of everyday life.  Personally, that’s where I keep returning, to those seemingly ordinary and routine things my dad said and did.  It’s funny at a time like this how some memories that seem so commonplace keep surfacing. 

When my dad wasn’t working night shift at the factory, he did handyman jobs around town – mostly electrical and plumbing work.  When I was a kid, he often took me along on his jobs.  As you can imagine, I didn’t know the first thing about wiring or plumbing, but Dad was afraid of heights, and so I was useful if the job required a ladder or any climbing. 

I remember one particular day when he was rewiring a house.  I was helping him fish wires through the dry wall, and he regularly summoned me to fetch a tool he needed from his truck.  There was a moment when he was installing a wall switch, and I was just standing there with nothing to do.  He saw me watching, and without lifting his eyes from his work, he said to me, “You have to respect electricity or it’ll bite you.”

On one level he was just telling me something very practical.  Electricity is dangerous.  If you aren’t careful, you can get electrocuted and seriously hurt.  So take it seriously and be careful.  But many decades later, as I roll those words over in my head, I’m able now to hear a deeper wisdom in what he said.  After all, electricity is far from the only danger we face in this life.  Work, relationships, and all the choices we’re called upon to make on a daily basis can bless our lives or wreck them, just as electricity can help you cook a meal and warm your body, or literally zap the life out of you.  And so in all circumstances, respect both the opportunity and the danger that life offers you.  Respect it, or it’ll bite you.

As I’ve pondered this seemingly insignificant conversation from my childhood, I’ve realized that there are so many circumstances in life where we only manage to understand what we’ve heard or experienced after some time has passed.  We need that distance, that time for reflection, that perspective, and that wisdom which usually only springs from age and experience.  Meaning rarely comes to us fully and completely in the moment.  It’s more like a puzzle in a box.  Life pours out all the pieces on the table in front of us, and over time we assemble it and finally see the larger picture those pieces reveal.

What’s true for our lives was true for Christ’s first disciples too.  They experienced countless incidents with Jesus that in the present moment probably didn’t make sense or, at best, seemed unimportant and insignificant.  Likewise, imagine how many teachings they heard from him that baffled them, and how many stories and parables Jesus told them that didn’t make sense when the disciples first heard them.

That’s one reason the Gospels were written several decades after Jesus’s death.  The stories first had to be told and re-told orally, and then they collectively needed to piece all the puzzle pieces together to finally make some sense of what Jesus said and, ultimately, who Jesus was.  Eventually the Church figured out that every single thing Jesus taught, and every single thing he experienced, could be rightly understood only when seen in light of his resurrection from the dead.  It is only through the Resurrection – Easter –Jesus’s victory over sin and death – that we can make sense of his birth, the teachings of his ministry, and especially his betrayal and crucifixion.  Without an understanding that Jesus rose from the dead, nothing else in his life and death makes any sense. 

Our Gospel lesson is a good illustration of this.  It begins with Jesus’s baptism.  At first, it seems like a nonsensical thing to do.  A sinless person doesn’t need to be baptized.  But when you view it in the context of the Resurrection, we see that Jesus’s baptism was a symbol of the death and rebirth he would experience and that, by extension, all of creation can one day experience.  Likewise, the temptations and deprivations he would experience at the hand of Satan seem like sheer cruelty.  But when we view them in the bigger picture of Jesus’s Resurrection, we see that his wilderness experience was part of his work of gathering up all of human sin, misery, misfortunate, pain, and suffering so he could redeem it, heal it, and eventually put an end to it.

This Lent, our devotionals and these midweek services are part of a series we’re calling “Dust and Glory.”  On one level, it’s an opportunity to take a fresh look at those “dusty” parts of Jesus’s story and see how they connected to his ultimate “glory” and even made that glory possible. 

We know that being the Son of God didn’t exempt Jesus from more than his share of “dusty days.”  These were days when his heart hurt from the rejection he suffered – even from his family – as well as days when his body hurt from long miles walking and of course the pain he suffered on the cross.  But in his resurrection – his “glory,” all things were made right.  All things were filled with meaning and purpose.  And all things were healed.

We’re here today/tonight to be reminded that Jesus ensured that this very same principle also applies to us.  We too have more than our share of “dusty days” filled with suffering and sadness.  Some of it happens to us intentionally, as a consequence of human sin, but a whole lot of it just comes with being human.  Bad things happen to good people.  Accidents happen.  And no matter how noteworthy we are, or what we accomplish, or how good we try to be, each of us eventually die.

Fortunately, none of those bad or unfortunate things stand alone to define us or life itself.  Not even our inevitable death is the final word.  Christ’s glory became our glory – not on account of our righteousness, but on account of his righteousness.  And so we can be assured that in the light of Christ’s resurrection and victory over sin and death, our “dusty days” – just like Jesus’s – will be made right.  They will be filled with meaning and purpose.  And all things will be healed.

“You have to respect electricity or it’ll bite you.”  Yep – Dad got it right, both about electricity in particular, and life in general.  When working with live wires you have to be respectful, careful, and even gentle if you want to avoid a catastrophe.  It’s sort of that way with people too, isn’t it?  We would all benefit from being a little more respectful, careful, and gentle with one another.  But even then, it’s unavoidable that we will have some “dusty days.”  It’s just the cost of being human.

But when we view every moment and every day in the light of Christ’s resurrection, we see things with the proper perspective.  We see a larger story and a bigger picture.  We see Christ’s glory, which by his grace is our glory.  And that allows us to live every day – even the dusty ones – with hope and with joy.  Thanks be to God.  Amen.

GOSPEL LESSON: Mark 1:1-13
1 The beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. 2 As it is written in the prophet Isaiah, "See, I am sending my messenger ahead of you, who will prepare your way; 3 the voice of one crying out in the wilderness: 'Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight,'" 4 John the baptizer appeared in the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. 5 And people from the whole Judean countryside and all the people of Jerusalem were going out to him, and were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. 6 Now John was clothed with camel's hair, with a leather belt around his waist, and he ate locusts and wild honey. 7 He proclaimed, "The one who is more powerful than I is coming after me; I am not worthy to stoop down and untie the thong of his sandals. 8 I have baptized you with water; but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit."
9 In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. 10 And just as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him. 11 And a voice came from heaven, “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.” 12 And the Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness. 13 He was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan; and he was with the wild beasts; and the angels waited on him.

Copyright Rev. Scott E. Schul, 2024 All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission. 


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