Sunday, March 14, 2021

Healing Scripture

God Invites Us to Participate in Our Own Healing


4From Mount Hor [the Israelites] set out by the way to the Red Sea, to go around the land of Edom; but the people became impatient on the way. 5The people spoke against God and against Moses, “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? For there is no food and no water, and we detest this miserable food.” 6Then the Lord sent poisonous serpents among the people, and they bit the people, so that many Israelites died. 7The people came to Moses and said, “We have sinned by speaking against the Lord and against you; pray to the Lord to take away the serpents from us.” So Moses prayed for the people. 8And the Lord said to Moses, “Make a poisonous serpent, and set it on a pole; and everyone who is bitten shall look at it and live.” 9So Moses made a serpent of bronze, and put it upon a pole; and whenever a serpent bit someone, that person would look at the serpent of bronze and live.

Numbers 21: 4-9



[Jesus said:] 14“Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, 15that whoever believes in him may have eternal life.

16“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.

17“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.

John 3: 14-17



Few people get chicken pox anymore. And you know the reason why? God gave some men and women the talent and the wisdom to develop a safe and effective vaccine.

Diane sat at my table in 6th grade, she sat across from me. It is funny the things you remember when you start reflecting back. My sixth grade self looks at Diane one day and she had a pock mark on her face. She had one, just one, little indentation on her cheek, all smoothed over and healed but still an indentation. I pointed it out to her which she already knew, and she said what made perfect sense to me, it was a scar from a chicken pock that she had scratched off. I sometimes wonder why we don’t see more of those scars. No one really gets chicken pox any more, thankfully. Thanks to the vaccine, but that wasn’t always the case. 

Chicken pox once took out the Penn State Men’s volleyball team. They were ranked number one in the nation and gunning for their first national championship. I took an exercise science class in the same gym where the volleyball team practiced. It was spring semester either 88 or 89.  And one day in April, we were told that the floor of the gym was contagious for chicken pox. If we had not had chicken pox, we were going to get it. Right around finals. I had already had it.  The team had two starters who had never had chicken pox and they missed the regional final that would send them to the Final Four. When the team lost the regional final, the number 1 ranked Nittany Lions Volleyball team’s season ended. They missed out on their best chance to live out their dream. Today that seems like a small loss compared to what people have lost to Covid. Covid is like our venomous serpent, our serpent that attacks the faithful and the unfaithful alike. And we talked about the losses we have faced, not just the lost of health, the lost of life, but the loss of security and the loss of relationship with one another.

Every generation has their stories of pandemics and epidemics. You have heard mentioned The Spanish Flu of 1918. You may have heard those stories. with Also, Polio had an epidemic year in 1952, over 50,000 cases and 3,000 deaths. Parents feared for the health of their children. The newspapers in 1952 published photographs of celebrities like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers going to polio wards in towns and visiting those who were sick. Actually, I still remember in elementary school around 1974 or 75 going to the nurses office and taking a pink sugar cube. Apparently that sugar cube contained a polio vaccination. 

What other epidemics or pandemics have we had. When I was a little older, HIV and AIDS of the 1980s hit our psyche hard. We are still trying to right the world of the scourge. After I had graduated college, you heard about ADD and ADHD and ritilin and aderal as the medication of choice for treating attention deficits. I don’t know if it was an epidemic, or if we just finally started talking about it. The same holds true with depression and prozac along with bi-polar disease and lithium. We have always had people who struggled with mental health, but now we have medications to help them. I guess that makes it easier to talk about it—when we can do something. 

The Scripture book of Numbers gives us this frightening story about serpents, poisonous serpents,  and people died, many died. And God gave Moses a solution that made absolutely no sense. I am an intelligent well read person and I have no idea how this solution, how this cure worked. I know more about messenger RNA vaccinations and why they are safe and how they work. To be frank, I will probably do a lousy job of explaining mRNA to you, but I can make an attempt, and then joke about how I ended up with the Johnson and Johnson vaccination in my arm, which I know less about. I have no idea how that bronze serpent worked. The people say to Moses, “tell God to take the serpents away from us.” Instead God tells Moses, probably in a really calm voice, “make a serpent of bronze, place on a tall pole where everyone can see, and when they look to the serpent they will live.”  Really? I can just hear Moses asking “Really, that is the plan,” (maybe not out loud, but to himself). You want people who get bit by a serpent, to look to a serpent. But Moses did it, and people lived.

This story has two divine truths, two spiritual realities and that is why Jesus grasps ahold of the story in today’s gospel (John 3: 14-21). First truth, God intends you to participate in your own healing. That matters now, so I will say it again, “God intends you to participate in your own healing.” I have met several people who give God the credit for curing them of cancer, and almost all of them went through chemotherapy or radiation or both. Even in the earliest books of the Old Testament, God creates healing where people have to participate in their own healthiness. People said “take the serpents away,” God through Moses said, “Here is what you do, Look to the bronze serpent.”  You do not need to know why it works, just look to the serpent, and do not argue with God that “wouldn’t a bronze eagle or bronze mongoose make more sense.” Just look to the serpent, and you will live. God invites you to participate in you own healing. Read the story of Namaan and Elisha in 2 Kings Chapter 5. Elisha tells Namaan who has leprosy across his body, “Go bathe yourself seven times in the River Jordan.” And Namaan says “What?”

I got my vaccination last week. I am still wearing my mask. I still wash my hands and I can show you just how dry the skin is because I wash my hands, I wash my hands, I wash my hands. I got Johnson and Johnson because it was the first one offered to me. We participate in our own healing. We also participate in the healing of our community. You can choose not to get the vaccination, and accept that risk for yourself, but remember you also place at risk those around you who also have not had the vaccination and right now that includes every youth and child under the age of 16, because they cannot yet receive the vaccination. (Even after May 1, they will need to wait before the vaccination is authorized for them.)

I said that there are two divine truths, first that we participate in our own healing. Second, God through Moses made the serpent available to everyone, both those who complained about the miserable food as well as those we stayed faithful. They all could look to the serpent, and they would live. 

We lift up Jesus Christ for everyone to see. Those full of faith and those unfaithfull as well. Our gospel passage has a word of judgment here—a word of light and darkness—but do not get caught up in that. The Greek verb lives in the past tense, past tense with present reality. God found the world, his creation lacking. And God so loved the world, that he sent his only son that all those who believe in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not sent his son into the world to condemn the world but in order that the world might be saved through him.

You have heard me say this before: I adamantly teach that you do not quote John 3:16 without quoting John 3:17. These verses go together.

God did not send Jesus into the world to condemn those who do not look to him. Instead, Jesus sent us into the world so that when people look to us, they see Jesus. We participate in our own healing, and we participate in the healing of the community. This is about what physically ails us and is also about the sin that ails us spiritually. We participate in that healing as well when we look to Jesus. When we look to his light and walk in his life. Jesus, the light of the world, sent us into the world so that people when they look to us see Jesus. And when they believe in us, they believe in Jesus, whether they realize it or not.

After all, that is how the serpent worked. When people looked to the serpent and lived, they did not believe in the serpent. They believed in God and learned to trust God. 

We celebrate these two spiritual truths and realities. God invites us to participate in our own healing—body, spirit, mind. We participate in that healing for our own sake and for the community around us. God makes this healing available to all of his creation through Christ our Savior and his presence in us today and always. Amen.

Sunday, January 10, 2021

God With Us


Sunday Sermon from Christ Lutheran in Staunton, VA

The Festival of the Baptism of Our Lord

 Psalm 29 and Mark 1: 4-11


Whoa. What a wreck of a Wednesday we had this week—an absolute train reck for our democracy. So allow me to quickly clarify one thing as I begin this message. If you come today to hear the voice of anger, the voice of righteous indignation, then you have come to the wrong place. That said, I welcome your anger today, but I will neither echo your anger, nor counter your anger with an opposing force of righteous indignation.

Now, first, as to my thoughts about Wednesday, my quick response is to say God “Bless Mitt Romney.” I will tell you why in just a minute. 

Second, as to the question of what now? or what next? I have questions without answers. I have concerns with uncertainty. I know you do as well.

Most of all, and this is my third point and my main focus for proclaiming the good news, I have confidence in Christ Jesus my Savior. And I will approach our questions without answers, our concerns, and the anger that has boiled over with my confidence in Jesus.

I offer you those quick section headings. Now, let me say a little bit more about why I say, “God bless Mitt Romney,” share a few concerns and questions, and then tell you about my confidence in God and confidence in Christ Jesus. 


In a Society of Friends meeting, in a Quaker meeting, you sit in silence, and you listen for the Holy Spirit, and you listen to the silence. When a brother or sister feels moved by the Spirit to speak, you listen to them. The Society of Friends has this beautiful gesture when someone speaks words where you recognize truth—truth in your friend, truth in their words that echos your own heart. When this happens, you simply say “My brother speaks for me.” That is all you need to say. Mitt Romney spoke for me on Wednesday. He spoke of truth, and he spoke of the importance of truth. So, if you listen now wanting to know what I have to say about Wednesday and politics, please go listen to Mitt Romney. My brother speaks for me. You can find it on CSPAN or search YouTube.

Jesus speaks for me as well, and today I choose to focus on Jesus. Jesus said to Pilate in the gospel of John. “In fact, the reason I was born and came into the world is to testify to the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to me.” This takes place in Chapter 18, when Jesus speaks for himself before his crucifixion, before Jesus gets suffocated by an unjust crowd. Jesus gives his voice and his life to truth. “Everyone on the side of truth listens to me.”

Jesus’ invitation for us to listen to him addresses my concerns and questions without answers: I find a lot more people listening to words of anger than listening to Jesus. Also, related, I am not sure a lot of listening is happening right now. I often worry people have stopped listening. That people no longer believe in listening, unless it is the selective listening that involves seeking out those who agree with you. Even more problematic, the world has false prophets who channel their own anger and their own hate and have a knack for making scripture sound profane and ugly. And sadly some people flock to these false prophets. Also, I confess with these words in the last thirty seconds that I vent to you, and you graciously listen to me, for which I am grateful. I worry about false prophets stealing (my sheep) Jesus’ sheep. I also worry about anger stealing Jesus’ sheep. While that concern runs deep, it does not run deeper than my confidence in Jesus as he gives voice to truth.

Point # 3: If you have come today to hear a holy, divine word that gives you confidence then I encourage you to start with the Psalm. Psalm 29 sets up the voice of God breaking through the heavens at the Baptism of Jesus. Psalm 29, our psalm for this festival describes the voice of God.


The voice of the Lord is upon the waters; the God of glory thunders;

The voice of the Lord is a powerful voice;
the voice of the Lord is a voice of splendor.

The voice of the Lord bursts forth in lightning flashes.

The voice of the Lord shakes the wilderness;

Psalm 29, assorted verses


Psalm 29 describes the voice of the Lord to fuel our imagination with splendor and thunder and lightning. So you can see the ground shaking and the ripple across the waters, not in anger but in splendor. “Splendor” may just be the most important adjective in the description. Lightning and thunder could drive fear into your heart as well. But, in this passage, the psalmist describes the power of the voice of the Lord as majestic, with splendor. Imagine that you stand on a covered porch marveling at the sight over the horizon of the thunder storm rolling through the landscape. The voice of the Lord is a voice of splendor that proclaims: “You are my son, the beloved. With you I am well pleased.”

The voice of the Lord speaks a very personal message, Father to Son, but I can just imagine the earth shaking and the water rippling and the air sparking with electricity and people nearby saying “what is that?” It compares to what happens when you work outside on a bright spring day and the sudden sound of a loud crash catches you by surprise. When God speaks this word of splendor, he intends us to look up and look at Jesus, with awe and wonder and confidence.

The voice of the Lord and Jesus’ baptism by John marks the beginning of Jesus’ ministry. The voice of the Lord shaking the countryside begins the ministry of Jesus, Emmanuel, God with us. The Holy Spirit fills Jesus, and the waters of Baptism fill Jesus, and the voice of the Lord fills Jesus. When Jesus speaks, the voice of the Lord speaks, and we listen. At least God intends us to listen. Here, we have God with us, the voice of the Lord now with us. We listen for it. And wow, do we ever need God right now. God knows we need confidence as we listen for God’s voice.

The voice of Jesus, the voice of splendor, the voice of truth and justice outshines the hate and anger of false prophets out there in the world. I know this, and I have confidence in this. False prophets before the civil war tried to use scripture to justify slavery, and Jesus and his followers proved over and again these false prophets emphatically wrong. False prophets used scripture to try to justify separation of the races and to justify discrimination, and Jesus and his followers proved them wrong. Jesus and his followers will continue to stand up against the evil of white supremacy. My confidence in Jesus proclaims this truth.

My confidence in Jesus continues to grow to resound with the voice of God breaking through the heavens. My confidence in Jesus, the beloved Son, grows with ministry of truth that helps me to recognize moments of agreement with people with whom I sometimes disagree. Mitt Romney comes to my mind. I disagree with some of the teachings and practices of the Church of the Latter Day Saints, which is Romney’s faith practice. I do not agree with all of Senator Romney’s political stances, but when he stood up there on Wednesday and rebuked his colleagues for perpetrating lies and emphasized the importance of truth. When he does that, I call him brother and begin a conversation with his words about our shared spiritual heart that listens to the truth and listens for the truth. Again, hear Jesus’ words “Everyone on the side of truth, listens to me.”  The healing in our nation will happen not when we find people who agree with us, but when we figure out how to speak and listen to people who disagree with us. 

Third, I have confidence in the voice of the Lord dwelling in Jesus because, as many of you know, I have spent the last nine months daily listening to the scripture and the psalms. How have I handled the stress of the last nine months? I have handled it with the book of psalms, and sharing the book of psalms, and the routine of scripture. If you have followed along the psalm readings, you have probably noticed that some psalm readings I have filled with deep meaning and personal reflection and you have enjoyed the insights of what these words mean. But, and this is the more important insight to share, other times it has appeared as the practice of routine. I have had moments of no insight, where perhaps the psalms sounded merely repetitive. The routine serves me well, even it if is rather droll, uneventful, to watch on Facebook. The routine helps when stress rises and gets me back to scripture and gets me back to listening. You have witnessed me (not sharing with you but) just listening to scripture myself. Jesus and God and scripture does not always give me the answers. Jesus and God and scripture does not always give me insights worth sharing. Still, I believe in working at it and trusting in him for those precious moments of truth, when it is as if the heavens open up and the glory of the Lord points a spotlight on Jesus, the Savior of the world. 

Now, I will admit, I would like Jesus to give me answers. But I need Jesus to inspire confidence, and the voice of God and the blessing of God and the activity of God provides me with plenty of confidence, enough today I hope to share some with you. Jesus has overcome evil before with truth and light and life, and together with Jesus we will stand strong, united by his truth, and determined to bring peace into our hearts and our world.

Amen. 


Pastor Robert McCarty,

Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church in Staunton, VA