March 2014

Fourth Sunday of Lent – “A” – March 30, 2014

The story of Jesus healing a blind man who tells the Pharisees that he can now see is told in today’s Gospel from St. John. Imagine how excited the blind man must have been to see for the first time. He would no longer need to beg to survive and readily shared his joy and acknowledged the healing power of Jesus. The blind man progresses from darkness to light. The Pharisees, on the other hand, first appear to accept the blind man’s healing but then begin to doubt and finally deny Jesus’ heavenly origins. The early Christians saw physical blindness as a metaphor for the spiritual blindness that prevents people from recognizing the divinity of Jesus and following His teachings. Today’s story testifies to the power of Jesus to heal not just the blindness of the eye but, above all, the blindness of the heart.

The Gospel shows that one thing we need to bear witness to Jesus is experience of the person of Jesus Christ. Today the Church invites us to reflect on God’s love and compassion for the whole world and to be joyful because of it. God loves each and every one of us, and today we are invited to say yes to God’s love, to believe in the holiness of Jesus and to recognize God’s presence in our daily lives. We are also called to have the humility to recognize that God works in others too, sometimes through the most unexpected people. How often do we refuse to believe that we can learn from those who oppose us and disagree with us? And what areas of the Church, of society and of our culture need serious healing in our own time? Where can we recognize the light of Christ shining in the world today and in our own community? Let’s celebrate God’s love and healing power as the blind man did after encountering Jesus. God’s divine intervention helps us transform into people who live lives of goodness, generosity and justice, reflecting God’s light.

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Third Sunday of Lent – “A” – March 23, 2014

We know what drought is like. We know what is like to see gardens gradually turn brown and die. Farmers worry about their crops and livestock, conscious that their health makes all the difference to their livelihood and the future of their families. Many of us may not become thirsty,but we receive constant media advice on ways of conserving water. On the other hand, an excess of water is equally tragic. Floods also destroy life and hope.

In their loneliness, some people’s hearts are shrivelled and barren for lack of the water of love. We all need to love and be loved. With love, people grow and develop in unimaginable color and texture. Life, however hard, never becomes unmanageable. That is exactly the sort of transformation that Jesus promised the Samaritan woman. He didn’t tell her that she would never again come to the village well to draw water. Instead He offered the new life and hope that can be born of making a fresh start. However many difficulties may fill our days, we will never again face them on our own. Our hearts need not shrivel and die. Instead they can joyfully burst out into a new and everlasting life. All we need is Jesus. His love is the water for which our souls thirst.

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Frackville Ministerium Lenten Service

The Frackville Ministerium Lenten Service was hosted by our parish on Wednesday, March 19th at 7:00PM. Participating ministers included:

Pastor Sue Ketterer, First United Methodist Church,
Rev. Oliver Brown, Zion Lutheran Church,
Rev. Kerry Smart, St. Peter’s United Church of Christ,
Rev. Gene Stevenson, Trinity Evangelical Congregational Church,
Rev. Robert Plichta, St. John the Baptist, PNCC and the host pastor.

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Second Sunday of Lent – “A” – March 16, 2014

It is on Mount Sinai that Moses both experiences God and is given the commandments for his people. He first encounters God in the episode of the burning bush, and it is at Sinai again that he goes up the mountain to receive the commandments that will govern the lives of the people of Israel, spending 40 days and nights with God. After the people’s apostasy, Moses has to return a second time to negotiate with God, and Moses asks that he might see God’s glory. When Moses comes down the mountain this time, his face is so illuminated that the people cannot bear to look at him, and he has to cover his head with a veil. Elijah stands for the prophets, those whose task was to bring God’s erring people back to the faithful practice of the covenant. Elijah too experiences God on the mountain, waiting until all the storms and winds have passed. All of this Jesus brings to His disciples as He takes them up the mountain. He is the new covenant with God, but the gift of that covenant is hallowed and experienced by His disciples in an encounter with God’s glory.

We have begun our Lenten journey, following Christ into the wilderness for 40 days. Today we too are taken up with His disciples to the mountain top so that we too may be touched by His glory. We all, through different ways, need to be touched by the experience of the living God, as given to the disciples as they witnessed the Transfiguration of Jesus and in the Pascal mystery of being with God. For some people such moments become the foundation of their conversion to Christianity. Others find sustenance for their belief in their experience of prayer and worship. Others again, in moments of natural awe and wonder in the natural world, in their loving relationships, or in the world of the arts or discovery. God reaches out to touch the heart of each of us in such a way that we can journey onwards, not just through Lent but through the darker moments of our lives when faith, knowledge and our comfort zone may be challenged by life’s mysteries.

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First Sunday of Lent – “A” – March 9, 2014

In our first reading today, the book of Genesis tells us that “The serpent was the most subtle of all the wild beasts;” the serpent certainly knows how to distort the truth and make temptation irresistibly attractive. The woman and the man fall to the subtlety of the serpent’s promise that by eating the forbidden fruit their eyes will be opened and they will be “like gods.” They eat, their eyes are opened but they see, instead, that their innocence has been lost. Sin has entered the world.

Jesus fasts in the wilderness for forty days; He is hungry and the devil’s time has come. The three temptations wear masks of persuasive reason: by using His miraculous powers Jesus’ hunger can be assuaged through turning stones into bread; belief in His mission can be guaranteed by a spectacular sign; and the temporal power to achieve that mission can be assured.

The story of our salvation take us from the garden in Eden to the wilderness of the Exodus and from the Lord’s temptations to another garden, Gethsemane, where Jesus told His disciples that they should pray not to be put to the test. When the ultimate test of their discipleship came, most of them failed. What about us?

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Quinquagesima Sunday – “A” – March 2, 2014

In today’s Gospel we see how Jesus is aware of the many ways in which we all go around believing ourselves free, and in charge of life, when, in fact, we are very often trapped. We can think that earning more money will free us – that our buying power and future choices will be increased. We believe that this is where happiness lies. And, whilst ambition and earning a good living may not, in themselves, be bad things for us, they can become our “masters.” What Jesus warns is that, when this happens – when all our energies and time are given over to these masters – we are drawn away from serving God. To commit ourselves to living under God’s mastery is actually to live our lives in a radical trust, and so come to know a greater happiness and freedom. The call that Jesus makes to us today – not to worry – is a call, above else, to a relationship of trusting love in His Father and ours. God desires that we should be free from anxieties, so that we can be free for joy, love, service – and rest!

We all have things we have to do each day, to earn a living, to care for others in our families; and, in truth, we all, at some time or another, have properly worrying things in our lives. God, who knows “the secret intentions of our hearts,” knows the realities of our lives. As we live in this world, which is so often dominated by material ambition and anxiety, Jesus reaches out to us with a promise of freedom, peace, and the time, space and energy to get to know Him better, and to love and care for one another more. This is a call we can respond to, even in the real business and pressures of our daily lives. We can each ask, at the start of our day: Is there one thing I feel I must do today, which actually I could let go, without it mattering? Perhaps if we placed that time and energy we would have used, trustingly and peacefully, in the Father’s love, we might each find that we became a little freer for whatever it is God is wanting us to do. And this will make us freer, happier and better stewards of Christ’s mysteries.

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