Sunday, April 11, 2010

Random thoughts on the sunday after Easter...

While it is often a "low" Sunday, I cherish the Sunday after Easter for a couple of reasons:

+ First, the lectionary reading is always about the doubts of Thomas, and doubting has taken a bad rap over the years. For some reason, doubt has never been one of my charisms - for most of my life (except about a year of a true dark night) I have been grounded in the gift of faith - which I have gathered is not the norm. Not that my "faith" is particularly strong or unique - most of the people in my church are far more faithful that me - it is just that I have almost always had an organic, abiding trust that God was in loving control so I need not worry about too much. So this Sunday gives us all a chance to celebrate and explore what doubt might mean in our journey in faith. It is also a time to affirm that doubt can also be another path towards faith - the questions being as important as any answers - or the emptiness being as true as any thing else.

+ Second, most of the time the folks who turn out for the first Sunday after Easter are those who REALLY love church. I am a church geek - I have almost always experienced church as a true and loving community of hope and grace - and I think those who show up on this Sunday have come to a similar conclusion. Not that church is always right - it isn't. And not that church is the ONLY place to find/build community - that isn't true either. But for those seeking a connection with the love of Christ in Jesus.... church often feels like home. And on this Sunday - just like the Sunday after Christmas - those who gather are mostly "just folks." Simple sinners and wounded ones who find some solace and healing in Christ's grace.

+ And third, after the drama and high pageantry of Holy Week and Easter, going to church on the Sunday after feels grounded, simple and true. Don't get me wrong I love the boldness of the high holy days - but I don't live most of my time in those places - so I mostly cherish the low Sundays as part of the real journey of faith. I give thanks for the "mountain top" celebrations, but prefer to dwell down in the valley.

So, at the end of a "low" Sunday - after I have mostly rested during the week after Easter and am preparing a humble pot roast for my honey who is worn-out and taking a nap - I return thanks for the ordinary blessings of these times. Like Mary my prayer is:

Sing out my soul, sing of the holiness of the Lord,
who has delighted in a woman,
lifted up the poor, satisfied the hungry,
given voice to the silent, grounded the oppressor
blessed the full-bellied with emptiness
and with the gift of tears those who have never wept;
who has desired the darkness of the womb
and inhabited our flesh.
O sing of the long of our God: sing out from deep within my soul.

credits: Jan Richardson @ http://theadventdoor.com/2008/12/16/mary-magnifier

3 comments:

Dianne said...

I was just thinking the other day that our band should resurrect that song...

RJ said...

I am so with you, my dear.

Peter said...

Guess that depends on how you define a "low" Sunday, man. You're right: the good news about the people who show up on "low" Sundays is that they're there because they want to be.

trusting that the season of new life is calming creeping into its fullness...

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