Jesus, Not Jesús: Finding The Divine In The Space Between Us.
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Church And Radical Love.

4/19/2026

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What was the thought behind replacing this model for what we have today: institutionalized religion.

When you start a house church there are so many things you have to get used to.

For example, strangers wandering into your backyard. Or worse, no one showing up.


When you add in the online component, you also have to get used to being on camera. Or not being on camera depending on how the wifi is behaving.

You have to get used to the leaf blowers, car alarms, and a dog who barks if a squirrel is nearby.

Then there’s that “look” people give me when I tell them what I do. You know the one, that dead-eye, head-tilted expression we give a toddler who says they want to be a dinosaur when they grow up.

Hardest thing to get used to, however, is not taking offense to those colleagues who don’t believe what we do every week on Sunday is a real church. Some have accused me of being a heretic for offering communion online.

As we are about to discover,  gathering in someone’s home to worship God wasn't heretical. It was necessary for survival. In the beginning, that first church was so dangerous to the way things were done that it had to meet in secret, in private homes.

What made them so dangerous? The answer might surprise you. Picking up where we left off from last week, we take a front row seat as the infant church begins to take shape.
They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. Awe came upon everyone because many wonders and signs were being done through the apostles. All who believed were together and had all things in common; hey would sell their possessions and goods and distribute the proceeds to all, as any had need. Day by day, as they spent much time together in the temple, they broke bread at home and ate their food with glad and generous hearts, praising God and having the goodwill of all the people. And day by day the Lord added to their number those who were being saved.
                 
​                 ​                 ​                 ​                 ​                 ​  ​- Acts 2:42-47
In this passage, we get the perfect portrait of community, as I believe Jesus intended. People sharing meals and holding space for one another. They’re reading and praying together, and actually doing the will of God. It kinda makes me wonder what happened?

What was the thought behind replacing this model for what we have today: institutionalized religion.

Walk into almost any church building, and I doubt you’ll find what Luke just described. Yes, there are similarities. But where’s the awe?Where are the people being blown away by what God is doing? Church has become more of a routine than a revolutionary movement. We come and go through the motions. But are we really being transformed? I’m not saying we’re doing it wrong.  But asking, “can we do it better?”

In the early days, people weren't in awe because of a polished sermon or praise band. They were in awe because of what they were seeing. You had slaves and free people, Jews and Gentiles, the wealthy and the broke, all sitting at the same table, sharing the same bread.

There was no judgment or "cancel culture." Just Christ-like love where no one was without because everyone gave. Shane Claiborne writes, "The church was never meant to be a building you go to; it was always meant to be a movement you belong to. A living, breathing, risky, messy movement of people following Jesus."

That’s what Rev. Dawn and I set out to do with Anamesa. We wanted to build the kind of community that leaves the world in awe despite our physical distance. We wanted to create a sacred ecosystem where the only rule is the rule of love. A space where we care for one another, welcome the stranger, and offer the kind of grace that keeps Jesus’ wisdom alive.

I think we are slowly moving closer to realizing that vision. But we can’t settle if we want to be like this Acts 2 community.

In this passage, Luke uses the Greek word ‘koinonia’ which is usually translated as "fellowship." Today, that sounds like drinking bad coffee in a basement hall after service. But it actually means, "participation in a shared life." That is, everyone showed up to share life, to love God, love each other, and serve both.

They didn't just preach the gospel; they lived it out loud. They believed Jesus meant what he said, even though most had learned about him second hand. They didn’t need to see Jesus, or touch his scared hands to be sure. They knew him because they could recognize his Way, his love and compassion, in those they shared life with.

As I’ve said before, which often gets me labeled a heretic, Jesus didn’t come to get us into heaven when we die. He came to get heaven into us, so we can live. He said “the Kingdom of Heaven is within you” (Luke 17:21).

His disciples actually believed him, taking him at face value and living ‘Kingdom lives’ centered on what God wanted rather than what their egos wanted. They practiced the Way of Jesus so deeply that the Kingdom of God became a reality, and God added to their lives.

This is not a matter of devotion, but a matter of practice. As I noted last week, the gospel isn’t a script to recite—it is a testimony of the heart carried out by our hands. Unless it moves from our lips to our lives, it isn't truly preached. Our call is to practice the Way of Jesus over and over again until people are left in awe of the way we live, not just the things we say.

We are the Body of Christ. A living, breathing, thriving organism. Our call is to be the visible and tangible part of God’s love just as Jesus was.

Think about his teachings. Jesus never used stagnant metaphors. He told us to be seeds that grow. Stones that build. Yeast that makes the whole loaf rise.  Salt that brings out the flavor in others. Light that illuminates the world.

This isn’t about being a religion or institution. This is about being little Christs building up God’s kingdom in every space we enter.  At the end of the day, a church’s success isn't about how many people are sitting in the pews; it’s about how many people we’ve blow away with love.

An authentic church is an ethic that loves the unlovable and forgive the unforgivable.  It’s an economy feeds the hungry and heals the sick. It’s a culture that welcomes the stranger and stands with the marginalized.

It’s not about pettiness, or politics, or positions of power. It’s about taking the name Christ seriously. To believe Jesus meant it when he said: "If you love me, love one another."

Love is the math of God. Love begets more love. It never divides, it multiplies.

So when everyone else is busy dividing, we have to be bridges that unite. When others are hoarding, we have to open up our hearts and share what we have. When the world is being rude and hateful, we have to be compassionate and respectful; lifting others up when they’ve been knocked down.

As Rainn Wilson once pointed out, this first house church movement was the first time in human history where people from all different races, nations, classes, and genders all gathered together to share a common purpose: to worship God and remember the legacy of Jesus.

To live this way is still dangerous, and to some, it seems heretical. But in our current, hyper-divided world, the church must stay revolutionary. We have to be a people who realize that if we can’t find Christ in the person struggling at our front door, then we aren't going to find him in our pews or pulpits.

The first church changed the world because they opened their hearts to the people the rest of the world had left for dead. In doing so, they proved to us that it’s actually possible to live like Jesus, in accordance with the will of God, right here and now.

So, the question is: Can we do that? Can we reclaim the spark that set the first church on fire and be revolutionary again? I think the answer is deceptively simple.

First, we must remember that God is not a set of beliefs. God is the love that happens between us.

Second, spread that love by creating joy, waging peace, and serving the poor. To be a people who don’t offer "answers," but sit in the uncomfortable silence with a neighbor who is grieving. Be the voice online that chooses grace instead outrage. Live with a heart so open that your life becomes a sanctuary for the ignored.

In other words, just imitate Christ. Remember what Jesus did, and go and do that. Be the living, breathing incarnation of God’s love right where you are.

Because when the Gospel moves from our lips into our lives, the world won’t just hear the message—they will stand in absolute awe of the One who first ignited this revolution.
Work Cited
Originally published as From Resurrection to Proclamation Pt.2 on April 30, 2023.
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What if Acts was a movie?

4/12/2026

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​The most powerful testimony you can offer, isn’t your words. It comes through your heart and hands. ​

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You might not know this about me, but I love movies. Dark comedies are my favorite genre, a passion that grew out of my early love for film noir from the 1950’s.
​
There is a famous opening scene in Billy Wilder’s classic film Sunset Blvd. where the protagonist, played by William Holden, is seen floating face-down in a swimming pool.

He’s dead, staring blankly into the camera underwater. As the police start to fish him out, our dead hero begins to narrate the story of how he got there.
It’s a classic cinematic "hook"—starting at the finish line and working backward to reveal the truth. The lectionary cycle for Eastertide does something similar with the Acts of the Apostles.

Our readings start after Pentecost, when everyone is filled with the Holy Spirit. Each week we "rewind" the tape to discover exactly how the Christian Church was born on that fateful day.

So let’s imagine our reading today is a film that opens on a busy marketplace in first-century Jerusalem. It’s loud, dusty, and chaotic. Tented stalls line the streets; merchants shout over one another, each barking for you attention.

The camera follows a teenager weaving his way through the crowd before turning down a narrow, shadowy alley. As he runs, the camera follows him frantically. His heart races. His feet pounding on the cobblestones. And then, he bursts into a sun-drenched plaza, … and the screen is suddenly flooded with light.

There, standing before a massive crowd, is a young, charismatic Peter. He isn’t the trembling fisherman who denied Jesus by a charcoal fire. Now he’s a man on fire himself.
“Fellow Israelites, listen to what I have to say: Jesus of Nazareth, a man attested to you by God with deeds of power, wonders, and signs that God did through him among you, as you yourselves know--this man, handed over to you according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, you crucified and killed by the hands of those outside the law. But God raised him up, having released him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for him to be held in its power. ...“This Jesus God raised up, and of that all of us are witnesses. Being therefore exalted at the right hand of God and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, he has poured out this that you see and hear. . . . . Therefore let the entire house of Israel know with certainty that God has made him both Lord and Messiah,this Jesus whom you crucified.” Now when they heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and to the other apostles, “Brothers, what should we do?” Peter said to them, “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ so that your sins may be forgiven, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is for you, for your children, and for all who are far away, everyone whom the Lord our God calls to him.” And he testified with many other arguments and exhorted them, saying, “Save yourselves from this corrupt generation.” So those who welcomed his message were baptized, and that day about three thousand persons were added. They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.     - Acts 2:22-42
This is "Pentecost Peter." He and 120 other believers have just been doused in the promised power of the Holy Spirit. And they cannot contain it at all. The atmosphere is a strange, beautiful cocktail of joy and utter confusion. People are speaking in a kaleidoscope of languages, yet every listener hears the message in their mother tongue.

The cynics are there, too. They see the ecstasy and assume it’s just a morning bender. But Peter stands up, debunks the insult, and lays out the cornerstone of our Christian faith. He wasn't the first to tell the story, though.

Last week, we watched the prequel. The story of Mary Magdalene at the tomb, where, in the final scene, Jesus tells her to go and let the others know what she has witnessed. And her testimony—“The one who was dead is now alive; where there was weeping, there is now joy”—would launch a great franchise. And set the foundation of the church for Peter and the others to build upon.

In our "movie," the camera now pans across the faces in the crowd. It’s a sea of humanity. Men, women, young and old. All awe-struck. You have pilgrims from every corner of the Roman Empire.

Some are hearing the name "Jesus of Nazareth" for the very first time. Others were there on Friday; they saw the cross, they heard the rumors of an empty tomb, but they haven't connected the dots.

To all of them, Peter gives an Oscar-worthy monologue: "Listen! This Jesus—the one you crucified—is more than a teacher. He is the Messiah. He is the Holy One promised by the prophets."

As he speaks, there is a mixture of emotions in the crowd. But filled with the Holy Spirit, Peter continues to profess: “We are witnesses to this truth that this Jesus we are talking about … God has raised up from the dead …everyone here today is now a witness to this truth.”

Scripture says the Holy Spirit “pierced their hearts” with his words.

Then from the crowd, a  voice cries out from the back: "Brothers, what do we do?"

Peter’s face softens as the camera pushes in for his close up. He answers, "Change your direction. Return to God. Be baptized. Let Christ be your Lord. And let His grace be your joy."

​More than a 5-step plan; Peter gives them the way to a whole, new life. The crowd erupts in a loud, riotous roar.

From this one impromptu sermon, we are told three thousand people were baptized that day. Let’s pause the film for a moment. Think about what that says to the power of testimony?

From Peter’s public proclamation, the Church and her faith was established.

How, then, can your story help change the direction of someone’s life? You might think you have nothing important to say. But here’s what I’ve learned.

The most powerful testimony you can offer, isn’t your words. It comes through your heart and hands. For compassion always speaks louder than doctrine. Tenderness lasts longer than platitudes. The way you show love has the power to change someone’s life forever.

Now, back to the movie.

The film transitions to a montage: this crowd moves toward the Jordan River in numbers so vast they seem to stop the flow of the water. With hearts aglow, these pilgrim people return to their homes in Egypt, Mesopotamia, Crete, Arabia, all over the Roman empire, carrying the message of Christ with them to their communities.

The opening credits roll over a montage of the unlikely: rich and poor, free and enslaved, Jew and Gentile. It’s a visceral reminder that God’s love is a wildfire that refuses to be contained by a single city, a single building, or a single heart.

We know from our journey through Lent that Jesus started with twelve ordinary people to build a Kingdom. Those twelve—plus a few hundred "extras"—rose above their own flaws to become not just the voice of God, but the hands and feet as well. This is important for us to remember, today, as we face deep divisions within the church.

This story in Acts, reminds us that with our powerful testimony, we are given a great responsibility to carry the gospel out into the world - not just with our words, but in our deeds as well. We are called to manifest God’s love in all that we say and do.

The cynics are out there. People are watching us. But what do they see? Christians in name only? Or Christ followers? A community who intentionally live the Way of Jesus? People who will put aside their ego, and care for the least of these, so no one is without.

It doesn’t matter what we say on Sunday, if our actions are silent the rest of the week.

I’ve spent decades speaking in front of people. That might seem terrifying to you. I get that. But my words don’t mean anything if I don’t practice what I preach.

You may not have the right words, but you’re willing to sit with a friend going through a break up. That says more than any sermon I could give.

You might not understand church doctrine, but that doesn’t stop you from organizing a clothing drive to help single mom’s who are struggling to make ends meet. That’s testifying.

Like Meister Eckhart famously said: Go preach the gospel, using words only when necessary.

Scripture tells us that Peter eventually steps down from the pulpit to serve others, just as Jesus did. He shared the good news by loving God, loving others, and serving both…just as we are called to do. This is how the first church lived out the gospel. Their way would go on to inspire others to do the same.

Think about St. Francis who gave up his family fortune to care for the poor. Or St. Catherine of Siena who risked her life caring for victims of the plague. And St. Teresa of Calcutta loved those the world had left for dead.

Then there are the "Everyday Saints" in our communities. My friend Kerry shows up every Monday at the food pantry to handout groceries to those suffering with food insecurity. Julie Garcia, a great-grand mother who walks the hallways of her retirement home, praying for her neighbors.

God uses ordinary people like you and me to be everyday saints. To proclaim Christ’s glory and love.

One of the last things Jesus taught his disciples was, “Love one another as I have loved you.”That’s the gospel. That’s it. Two thousand years later, love still remains the best way to proclaim Jesus as Lord and Christ. But we have to be willing to do it.

After the opening credits and montage of people having their lives transformed, the camera settles in a great room of a private home where many have gathered for a meal. The camera focuses on a Roman soldier. His eyes are wet with tears. He unbuckles his sword, hands it to Peter, and falls to his knees. Peter doesn't look down on his former enemy; he reaches down, pulls him up, into a loving embrace.

Here the gospel is proclaimed without a single word spoken.

In that hug, Peter shows him what the resurrection looks like in real-time. He repeats the message of the empty tomb. "The one who was dead is now alive. Where there was weeping, there is now joy."

In that sacred space—somewhere between mercy and grace—the Church comes alive.
Work Cited
Originally published as From Resurrection to Proclamation Pt.1 on April 16, 2023.

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Easter. In The Garden.

4/5/2026

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What if resurrection wasn't "Plan B," but God's plan all along? What if the answer isn't in the tomb but in the garden whose roots go all the way back to the first garden in Eden?

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Easter will always be a special day a for me. Nine years ago, on Easter Sunday, this church began right here in our backyard. The garden was our sanctuary. The grass, our pews.

While we’ve graduated to actual chairs since then, we still hold tight to that first spark that ignited it all. A simple question of curiosity: “What if?”

What if Jesus meant what he said? What if living this way could transform the world, or at least help us discover our purpose within it?

​What if we could be a community that actually loved God, loved others, and served both? Those two words - what if - have led us here today.
Outside of my own family, nearly everyone from that first Sunday is gone. According to the books on church growth, that might look like failure. But what if this church was meant to grow exactly like the garden it was planted in? Always evolving, always shifting from one season to the next.

​
In our garden, some plants bloom for a season then die off, leaving behind nutrients for whatever comes next. Others scatter seeds in the wind, that take root in fields we may never see.

​There’s a sacred truth found in the soil beneath our feet. A holy reminder of our Easter hope: In the darkness of the earth, God is constantly bringing new life from seeds buried long ago.

Our Easter reading comes from the gospel of John. This is the second part of the story. The stone has already been rolled away. Peter and John have already raced to the tomb and discovered their friend’s body is gone.

When everyone else returns home, one brave soul stays behind in the garden searching for answers to a mystery that has echoed throughout time.
 But Mary stood weeping outside the tomb. As she wept, she bent over to look into the tomb, and she saw two angels in white sitting where the body of Jesus had been lying, one at the head and the other at the feet. They said to her, “Woman, why are you weeping?” She said to them, “They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him.”  When she had said this, she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, “Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you looking for?” Supposing him to be the gardener, she said to him, “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away.” Jesus said to her, “Mary!” She turned and said to him in Hebrew, “Rabbouni!” (which means Teacher). Jesus said to her, “Do not touch me, because I have not yet ascended to the Father. But go to my brothers and say to them, ‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.’ ” Mary Magdalene went and announced to the disciples, “I have seen the Lord,” and she told them that he had said these things to her. 
​                                                                                                             John 20:11-18
Each of the four gospel offers its own unique perspective on this story. But the empty tomb is always the main focus. It's what Easter is always about. Somewhere along the way, though, the narrative shifted from a “divine mystery” into something more like a "holy rescue mission."

The assumption was that there was a cosmic design flaw in humanity, that forced God to go into emergency mode to "save" us.

 
This atonement theory, as it’s called, argues human beings are sinful by nature because of what happened in the Garden of Eden. And the only way to fix this “mistake” is to appease God with a sacrifice that only God could make. Enter Jesus and the cross.

This is what I was taught as a kid. But as an adult, it always troubled me.  Why would God need something that only God could give God’s self?

But what if that wasn
’t the purpose for the incarnation or crucifixion? And what if they killed Jesus simply because they didn’t like what he had to say.
 
I mean, how well do we care for the widows and orphans, muchless the strangers who live among us? Never mind being gracious and merciful and forgiving to our enemies. I think if Jesus were here today, the results would be the same.
 
So what if Easter isn’t about giving God a sacrifice, but about God giving us unconditional love? What if resurrection wasn't "Plan B," but the plan all along? We always look for the answer in the tomb, but what if it’s in the garden whose roots go all the way back to the first garden in Eden?
 
There’s a reason Richard Rohr calls Eden "Original Goodness." Here, God looked at the physical world—the dirt, the trees, the skunks and stars—and called it all good. And where God declared human beings “Very good.” This pronouncement was God’s “Yes” to life, stamped into creation from the get-go. From that Divine “Yes,” all things evolved.
 
Fast-forward to another garden. The garden of Gethsemane, where Jesus was arrested. This is where the "No" of the world collided with the "Yes" of God. In this place of anguish and surrender, Jesus shows us how the "old self" must be released so the "new self" can emerge.
 
Which takes us to this unnamed garden, where Mary Magdalene mistakes her beloved teacher for the gardener. It’s an honest mistake. Dead people are supposed to stay dead. That’s the law of nature.
 
But what if Mary wasn’t mistaken? What if she is revealing the same truth the soil has been whispering since Eden? That resurrection doesn’t defy the laws of nature, it fulfills it. Creation has been teaching us this for eons.
 
A sunflower knows it must die so her seeds can rise and multiply. A mighty tree knows that it will one day fall, decompose, and return to the soil so it can be reborn into something new. From the earth mountains arise and erode.
 
As science has proven, every carbon atom in our bodies comes from something that died before us. And when we die, those atoms continue on, transforming into something new. Death and resurrection. That is the pattern of creation. It’s the template baked into the earth.
 
What if Easter is no more a mystery than the Big Bang? I mean, if everything that exists was once compressed into a single point, then something had to die for this garden to be born.

In the context of our faith, if God can turn the death of stars into galaxies filled with life, then surely God can make Easter out of Good Friday.

 
As Rowen Williams writes, “There is no situation in the universe in the face of which God is at a loss.”
 
God’s not demanding a sacrifice or scrambling to fix a broken plan. Resurrection is God’s “Yes” knitted into life itself, so death never has the final word. God does. I think this aligns with what Jesus said, "I have come so that you might have life, and life abundant."
 
Maybe that’s what incarnation is about. God in flesh and blood, walking among us, showing us how to live fully and faithfully, without the fear of death getting in the way.
 
When Jesus greets Mary, he doesn’t say, "Behold, I have paid your debt!"  No. He simply says, "Mary." He calls her back to her original goodness. He doesn’t see her as a "fallen creature" in need of fixing. He sees a beloved child who God already declared “Very good.”
 
These are the same words God pronounced over you and me. The very words our world has trouble believing. Which might explain why after calling Mary by name, Jesus doesn’t demand to be worshiped. Instead, he sends her to “tell the others.”
 
That is still the Easter call. Our purpose for this life. To go and scatter the gospel like seeds in the wind so it can produce the fruits of love, joy, peace, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
 
That’s exactly what Jesus did with his life. Because that’s what divine gardeners are called to do. They cultivate and tend to the always-evolving, always-blossoming garden of life.

So what if Mary was right to see Jesus as the gardener? The one sent to till the soil of our lives so something beautiful can grow.

 
Just as Jesus cultivated a life of compassion and mercy,  we are sent to do the same: tilling this soil with kindness, nourishing this life with grace, and bearing the fruits of love in all the ways we care for one another.
 
This feels much closer to what Jesus taught. And what the gospel is all about. Easter isn’t a repayment. It’s a reminder that God’s love is life. Love always produces a bountiful harvest, even out of death.
 
So, when something in your life dies—a dream, a relationship, a version of yourself you thought you needed—ask yourself: “What if God is using this moment as compost for a new spring?”
 
While that first church we planted in this garden no longer exits, something new and wonderful has risen in its place. A new community, knitted tightly together in love, where our little lives and our little deaths quietly reveal the mystery of Easter.
 
Because every act of compassion we offer, whether it’s intentional or not, is a tiny resurrection, where something new comes to life.

Every time a heart opens, forgiveness is offered, mercy extended, Christ rises again and again.

Every time you show love to someone who may or may not deserve it you show Jesus, the face of God
’s love incarnate. That’s our purpose, the call of the church. Make love grow.
 
So what if we take Jesus at his word? What if we leave this garden today not as people saved from something, but as people born for something. To love God, love others, and serve both. Like Jesus said, “it’s in the way you love one another that the world will know you belong to me.”
 
This wild, generative love God set into motion at the very beginning is the very thread that knits all things together: to God, to Christ, and to one another.

God
’s Love cannot be contained in us any more than a body can be contained in a tomb. This Love is still expanding, still creating, still calling us to give it meaning.
 
This might prove to be challenging in a world that is broken, divided, and in deep dark pain. So instead of asking “what if” maybe a new question is in order. Maybe it’s time to start asking “how to.”
 
How to be a gardener like Jesus. How to sow mercy, compassion and grace into this wild and the beautiful tapestry called life. How to shine a light into the darkness, how to be salt that enhances the flavor of the world.
 
In other words, how to practice resurrection with everything we have, so God’s love can bloom again and again.
 
Amen.
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Coming Home

3/29/2026

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As Jesus makes his way into Jerusalem, with desperate people pleading for his power, his eyes aren’t fixed on the city gates, but on the "House of the Lord."  ​

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Yesterday, tens of millions of Americans hit the streets, across the nation, for the No Kings March.

It was a powerful reminder of who we are as a Republic, and that we humans are wired to resist the heavy hand of tyranny.

I also thought it was appropriate that this march happened the day before Palm Sunday. A day we remember the throngs of people who lined the streets of Jerusalem, longing for a king to take down a very powerful empire.

However, what they didn
’t realize was that Jesus is a different kind of king.

​One who traded a warhorse for a donkey. And a gaudy crown of gold for a humble crown of service.

 While the world’s "kings" spend their lives pursuing power, status, and control, our heavenly King pursues us.

This brings us to the final week of Lent, and the conclusion of our journey through Psalm 23.

We’ve been walking this wilderness for weeks now. We started in green pastures where we discovered the Lord is our Shepherd. And we always have what we need.

This shepherd led us to still waters where our souls were restored and refreshed. As we moved on, we found the courage to walk through the Darkest Valleys and to sit at a table with our enemies.

All of that happened in the wilderness. And a table in the wilderness is still a table in the wilderness. It’s a rest stop, nothing more. Not a place of permanence, but a place we pass through.

​Today, as we reach the final verse of this masterpiece, we find ourselves on the home stretch. Literally. We’re moving out of the wilderness, and toward the front door. And when we get there, this promise greets us: 
“Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.”
           ​           ​           ​           ​               ​           ​           Psalms 23:6
Now, many of you know, we often take care our friend’s dog, Daisy.  I’m happy to help, and Cali is happy to have her friend to play with. But the two of them together?

They constantly follow me. From the bedroom to the office to the kitchen and bathroom, if I
’m there that’s where they want to be.

This psalm suggests something similar. Wherever I go, goodness and mercy are there, following me like two pups looking for treats.

But the Hebrew verb translated as “follow” suggests something much more intense. In almost every other context in the Old Testament, the word ra-daph (רָדַף) is defined as pursuit, hunting, and even persecution. This is
 what an army does to a fleeing enemy. Or what a predator does to its prey.

But in this passage, it
’s God’s goodness and mercy chasing after us!

It’s such a powerful yet soothing image. It inspired Charles Spurgeon to write, "Goodness and Mercy are the Shepherd
’s dogs, fetching in the wanderers and guarding the feet of the saints."

When I started this sermon series, I didn’t realize how fitting this last verse would be for Palm Sunday, the ultimate expression of a "holy pursuit.

Picture the scene. The streets are lined with people pursing a king to take back their country. As they shout “
Hosannah, God save us!” another kind of pursuit is unfolding. The religious elites and the Roman authorities are tracking and hunting Jesus. Both groups know if the crowds get behind him, a bloodbath will ensue.

But Jesus neither runs or hides from his pursuers. He knows that while the world is hunting him with fear and hate, God is chasing Him with goodness and mercy. Jesus follows the Shepherd toward a cross and calls us to follow him toward a promise. He lets death catch Him so that life could catch us.

As I’ve said each week, I don’t believe this psalm is talking about Jesus. But the parallels are beautiful.

In John’s gospel, Jesus describes himself as Good Shepherd. He says,
“My sheep know my voice and they follow me” (John 10:27-28).

What a Shepherd he is. In the rolling green pastures, Jesus feeds the people, giving them more than they can eat until their cups overflow (Matthew 14:13-21).

He calms the turbulent waters so the disciples can rest (Mark 4:35-41).

He walks through the dark valley of Gethsemane, with the long shadow of the cross looming in the distance (Matthew 26:36-56; Mark 14:32-50).

​And he sits at the table and shares a meal with his betrayer (John 13:26-27).

As Jesus makes his way into Jerusalem, with desperate people pleading for his power, his eyes aren’t fixed on the city gates, but on the "House of the Lord."  

I believe that as Jesus enters the final week of his ministry, he does so knowing the cross isn’t the end of the road—it
’s a doorway. It’s the threshold He must pass through.

In just a few days, most everyone at that crowded march will abandon him. But those sheep who know their Good Shepherd’s voice, they stay close by his side, and follow him inside this holy house, into the very heart of God from where they first came.

Again, this psalm is personal and purposeful. It invites us and welcomes us to follow the Shepherd into his home, where we will dwell with him not just in the good days, but all the days of our lives.

In the boring, mundane, doing-the-laundry days. In the days of gut-wrenching grief, and spectacular failure. In the days we feel abandoned. And the days we are enlightened. All of which implies more than a holiday or weekend visit.

You see, “to dwell” is more like a permanent change of address, grounded in that deep sense of hospitality we talked about last week.

In the ancient world, to dwell in someone’
s house meant you were under their absolute protection; you slept under their roof, ate their food, and even shared their family name. If you ask me, this is the whole point of this psalm. 

In this beautiful poem, we began as sheep in a flock. But now, at the end, we discover we are so much more. We are part of a holy and everlasting family. And our true home is in the very heart of our loving Creator, whose goodness and mercy is with us all the days of our lives.

Jesus drives this point home on the night of his arrest. He tells his sheep, those who still remain with him, “Abide in me and I will abide in you” (John 15:4-5). This is more than just following Jesus. To quote Athanasius, an early church father, "Jesus became what we are, that He might make us what He is."

Scripture tells us that are made in the image of God. We are filled with the same Sacred Spirit, the very breath of God, as Jesus was. We are one with him. Not as sheep but as what Paul will describe as a “holy body.” The same assurance Jesus offers them, is the same that flows to us. He says, “In my Father’s house are many rooms... and I am going to prepare a place for you” (John 14:2-3).

Think about the irony in this statement. Our homeless king, the One who once said he had 'no place to lay His head,' offers up his earthly life so we can have an eternal home. He became one of us, so we could become one of God’s beloved.

As we move into Holy Week, the story doesn’t end on the cross, or in the tomb. Easter reminds us that death is not stronger than God
’s love for you. Love is a very foundation this holy house was built upon. And as Rob Bell stated so wonderfully, “Love Wins” because “God always gets what God wants.”

On Friday, Lent will come to an end. Because the wilderness isn’t our final destination. It
’s a threshold to that space between our heart and God’s. 

I like to think Good Friday is called that because on that day the door to God’s heart wasn
’t just opened, it was kicked off its hinges never to be closed again. Jesus walks through it before us. Just as he did through the wilderness. Through suffering. And even through death itself.

No earthly king, no human law, no empire at its strongest could ever do that. But our Christ King can.

He is our Good Shepherd, the incarnate goodness and mercy of God, who came to gather the flock. And he refuses to enter the door unless every last sheep is right there beside Him.

Because here’s the thing about this Shepherd King. God did not become one of us to overthrow Rome or redraw borders on a map.

When Jesus marched into Jerusalem, he came to defeat something far more ruthless. And love was victorious. Once Paul recognized the power of God’s holy pursuit, he mocked, “O death, where is your sting?”

So whatever valley you’re in right now - spiritual, mental, physical, financial - this is not where you live, it
’s just where you are.

Our shepherd is on the move. Goodness is on your heels. Mercy is chasing you down. Together, they are leading you home, where the table is set and your room is ready.

From green pastures to dark valleys to the threshold of God’s heart, keep your eyes on Jesus, who is leading the Way.

Keep walking.

Keep following.

And we will dwell in the House of the Lord together…all the days of our lives.


Work Cited
Spurgeon, Charles H. The Treasury of David. Vol. 1. London: Marshall Brothers, 1869, commentary on Psalm 23:6.


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A View From Behind The Tail

3/28/2026

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I know I write about my dog, Cali, quite a bit. Maybe it’s because I’m her primary caregiver or simply because I spend so much time with her.

​Either way, she has a knack for inspiring me; she is truly a lifetime of joy and a constant source of sermon illustrations.

Our latest trip to the park offered yet another wonderful lesson to ponder as we enter the final stretch of Lent.

Ignoring the sign that read “dogs must remain on leash,” I happily unhooked her tether so she could run free. Then I watched her embarked on a frantic, zigzagging journey, chasing crows and sniffing out squirrels.

​All with the biggest smile on her face.

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She was on a mission, and all I had to do was keep up—keeping a vigilant eye on her and her, well, “business.”

No matter how far ahead she ran or how often she veered off-path, Cali always paused to check on me. It made me think about this wild, forty-day journey we’ve been on.

​As we navigate the space between Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, our spiritual lives often mirror that off-leash run. We start with disciplined intentions, but frequently find ourselves distracted, zigzagging, and doubling back.

It’s easy to feel like we are navigating the wilderness in isolation. However, just as I followed Cali, God follows us with a patient presence, walking the same uneven ground we do. Even when we don't look back, I can trust my "Owner" is there, watching over all of us as we do our own
“business.”

Tomorrow, we conclude our Lenten journey through Psalm 23. It has been a meaningful series for me, and I hope for you as well. It’s a reminder that in our personal wilderness, we have a Shepherd who follows us and leads us to the green pastures and still waters. But we don
’t stay there. Like Cali knows when the leash gets hooked back onto her harness, eventually it will be time to go home.

As I learned from both Cali and the psalm, true freedom isn't found in the absence of the leash; it’s found in the unwavering presence of the One whose
“goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.”

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God's Table

3/25/2026

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This psalm is a quiet reminder to us  to show grace and love to everyone today, before God makes us do it tomorrow.

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Last Tuesday was St. Patricks Day.  But we celebrated it two nights ago, with our 15th annual Céilí, a Celtic celebration of friends and family, gathered to tell stories and sing songs.

The table was set with a traditional Irish feast of Corned Beef and Cabbage, homemade soda bread, cookies, cheeses, and so much more.

But on the actual St. Patricks Day’s, something funny happened. Just as Kathleen and I were getting ready for bed the doorbell rang. 

​I rushed down the stairs to discover one of our friends with a bewildered look on his face wondering where everyone was.
​Of course we were just as surprised as he was because, again, the party wasn't until Friday and it was Tuesday. He was three days early. 

​Since he made the trip, and it was St. Patrick’s Day, we invited him in, poured him a Guinness and fed him a late dinner. That's what good hosts and good friends are supposed to do, right?


Over the last month, Psalm 23 has been our roadmap for Lent. We’ve rested in "green pastures" and navigated the "dark valley." And, of course, leaned on God’s guidance every step of the way. 

Today, the scenery shifts. The metaphor matures. God stops being just a Shepherd, and becomes a Host. We aren't just sheep anymore; we are Honored Guests. Instead of leading us places, God welcomes us home, cracks open a Guinness, and invites us to sit at the table.

But here’s the thing, God’s banquet isn't happening in the back deck with friends. Here's what the fifth verse has to tell us:
"You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows."         
                                                                                                ​Psalm 23:5
Again, this psalm is personal and hopeful. It tells me that no matter what kind of darkness I am going through, God is with me, leading me to a holy table where all my favorite foods will be served.

It sounds great, doesn’t it? Until you realize who’s at the table with you. The very people you’d rather not share a meal with. This is where this psalm gets interesting.


When the poet says, "You prepare a table," he uses the Hebrew word ʿārak—a military term used for arranging troops for battle. Think about the irony there.

While we’re "arranging" for war, God is "arranging" a five-star meal. While our "enemies" are sharpening their swords, God is polishing the silverware.

It’s like God looked at where your enemies are camped out and said, "This looks like a perfect place for a banquet."


For the last four weeks, we’ve been trusting this Shepherd. But what would you do in this situation?

During our time in Michigan, I ate breakfast every Monday with some guys from our community. I knew one of them was part of a small group of people at our church who saw me as an enemy. I also knew anything I said around him, would be quickly reported back to the group.

Still, I showed up every Monday. Not because the food was good. But because that’s what Jesus would do.


Jesus made this verse literal every single day. He was constantly "arranging" tables for the people who most considered “enemies.” Tax collectors, zealots, and even the man who would go on to betray him.

When the Pharisees complained that he was eating with sinners, Jesus reminds them … in God’s Kingdom, the guest list is much longer than we’d like it to be.


We see this most profoundly at the Last Supper. Jesus knew what was happening. He knew Judas already made his move to betray him. Instead of calling down fire and brimstone, or even verbally confronting him, Jesus picks up a loaf of bread, He blesses it and breaks it, and then hands it to his enemy.

This is the "Jesus-way" of dealing with the Judas’ in our lives. He doesn't destroy them; He out-loves them. And he expects us to do the same.

It’s easy to pull out a chair for a friend who stops by unexpectedly 9:30 at night. But what about someone you simply can’t stand being around? Someone who has made your life difficult, maybe threatened you emotionally, or harmed you physically.


Kindness can be hard enough. But sitting at a table and looking them in the eye? Why would our Good Shepherd do this to us? After all we just went through to get here.

Well, in ancient culture, hospitality was a sacred law. It didn’t matter who you were hosting, the people at your table where your personal responsibility. More than simply saying, “Mi casa su casa” the safety and wellbeing of your guest rested on you.

God pushes this notion to the limit. After all, it’s not our table. It’s God’s. And just like God’s grace and love, there’s a seat for anyone who wants it.

This psalm is a quiet reminder to us  to show grace and love to everyone today, before God makes us do it tomorrow. Perhaps that was what Jesus was hinting at when he says, “Love your enemies, pray for those who want to harm you.”

It’s a not so subtle way to say, we are all God’s beloved. And one day, we’ll all be sitting at the same table, breaking the same sacred bread. At this table we discover God’s love is always bigger than our hate. And in that love, the psalmist declares, "You anoint my head with oil."

I love this metaphor. For a sheep, oil was medicine the shepherd used to clean their wounds and soothe irritations. It was also rubbed on their heads to keep the pesky flies away. (Remember earlier I said sheep couldn’t truly rest if they were in pain, or being irritated by something. And a tired sheep was a vulnerable sheep.)

To humans, anointing a guest's head with fragrant oil was the ultimate "welcome home" gesture. Not only was it a balm for skin cracked by the desert heat, it was a public sign that you’re a person of high honor, someone worthy of this valuable gift.

Think about what this says about God. You’ve just come out of the valley. You’re bruised, tired, and probably smell like sheep. And what does God do? Rubs oil on your wounds. And makes you the Guest of Honor. More than a gesture of kindness, it also reveals who God is.

We see a similar revelation in the gospels. Jesus is reclining around the table when an unnamed women comes in and begins pouring expensive perfumed oil over his head. While the 'enemies' in the room criticized her, Jesus welcomed her.

In this symbolic gesture, she reveals who Jesus truly is. Not just a teacher. Not just a friend. But the Messiah—which literally means 'The Anointed One.'

The beauty of this is that anointing didn’t stop with Jesus. The same Spirit poured over Jesus is the same Spirit that flows into us.


Whatever difficulties you are dealing with, no matter how challenging the wilderness might be, the God is always with us because God’s Spirit is within us. And "My cup overflows."

The Hebrew word used is revayah. Which means "saturated" or "soaked." Like a honeycomb in the peak of summer, where every single cell is so packed the honey oozes out because the physical hive can’t hold it all in. That’s revayah.

I imagine, God pours this Spirit of love into our lives like a three-year-old trying to fill a tiny cup from a heavy gallon jug. It’s glorious, and it’s messy. It spills over the counter and onto the floor. And seeps into the tiniest spaces.

Isn’t that our call? To spill love into every nook and cranny of Anamesa. We live in a time of deep distrust and anger that’s widening the divide between us. It’s easy to make everyone and anything our enemy.

Once we recognize the abundance given to us, we begin to realize I have more than enough to share. Enough grace. Enough patience. Enough forgiveness. Enough love. Enough of. God’s glory for everyone. Even for the people across the table you’d rather ignore.

If we take the time to be honest with ourselves, we also realize our enemies are not always people. Sometimes they’re ideas, belief systems, anxieties, betrayals, loneliness.

So, as we move into the final weeks of Lent, I would invite you to look at the "enemies" in your life. Offer them a seat at your mental table. Then pass them Christ, the bread of life.

It doesn’t matter how late they show up to the table. What matters is that they are there, and so are you. God has knitted us all together in love. Family, friend, or foe we all belong to God.

​So let us make ourselves willing to be welcomed, anointed, and blessed until God’s glory begins pouring out of us; spilling over the brim and into every broken space we enter.
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In The Valley

3/15/2026

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So when the shadows are pressing in on you, remember: you’re not lost. You’re exactly where the Shepherd is leading you.

Now that we’re deep into this Lenten series, perhaps it’s a good time to confess why I hardly ever preach on this particular, popular psalm.


The reason is simple. It seems like whenever it shows up in church life, it’s at a funeral.

I guess you could say that the 23rd psalm is the official "go-to" for people who learned scripture from movies and television shows.
The first time I was asked to read it just so happened to be the first funeral I officiated. It was for a women whose children described her, quite joyfully, as a "hedonist." Having survived the horrors of Hitler’s Germany, she decided life was too fragile and short for anything but pleasure.

My second funeral, I got the same request. Psalm 23. Only this woman had it written into her will that it be read because held such deep meaning in her life. Two different women. Same reading.

But here’s the thing. Psalm 23 wasn’t written for the dead. It was written to the living. It’s not a farewell poem. It’s a survival guide.

​Which makes it perfect for getting through a funeral. Or a long, boring sermon. And we see why in today’s passage:
Even though I walked through the darkest valley, I fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comforted me.
 
                                                                                                ​Psalm 23:4
As I’ve been saying all along this Psalm is intensely personal. Any one of us could write our name into. It could be talking about the person in the casket or the pews, and the weight of this promise holds true.

I believe the power and beauty of this psalm is that it offers us a bridge of hope when the ground beneath us has completely given way.


Now, some translations call this space, the “valley of the shadow of death” while others call it, “the darkest valley.” Either way the geography is familiar. We’ve all hiked that terrain. The dark night of the soul where the shadows feel more substantial than the shepherd.

The landscape the poet describes is the wadi. This is an Aramaic word for the narrow ravines that cut through the Judean wilderness where the rock walls tower so high they literally squeeze the light out. If you’ve ever hiked "The Narrows" in Zion National Park, you know what I’m talking about.

The Narrows (pictured above)  is a cold, meandering canyon where the shadows are heavy and the footing is treacherous even for a skilled hiker.

That’s the wadi. A dark, narrow, dangerous space the Shepherd takes us to on purpose.  Not as a detour or divine mistake. It’s part of the right path to the next pasture.

So when the shadows are pressing in on you, remember: you’re not lost. You’re exactly where the Shepherd is leading you.

Now, despite the countless times I’ve read this at a funeral, it wasn’t until this week that I noticed a grammatical shift that occurs. The first three verses talk about God.“He makes me lie down…He leads me…He restores my soul…”

When the darkness fall, the grammar shifts. The poet starts talking to God. “For you are with me.”

In the sunny green pasture, God is a caretaker. But in the dark valley, God becomes my closest companion.

The shift from “He” to “You” is the heartbeat of this psalm. You might be tempted to argue this poem was pointing to Jesus. I don’t know about that, but I suspect it was not the intent of the poet.

But there’s something comforting to know that “You” takes on flesh and blood. It becomes incarnate. And walks among us, leading us down the right path, home to where we first came.

That’s what love does. It comes to us, and walks with us. It cares for us, and protects us.

Perhaps that’s why Jesus uses this metaphor. He says,“I am the good shepherd…who has come so you might have life, and have it abundantly.” He tells his disciples, “My sheep know my voice, and they follow me.”

You see, Jesus knows the terrain of human suffering. He knows betrayal. He knows grief. He knows fear. But he also knows the way.

When we walk through the darkest valley, we walk a narrow path worn smooth by the feet of the One who says, “I am the light of the world, whoever walks with me will not walk in darkness.”

Now, here’s the thing about shadows. They only exist because there is a light source nearby. They are created when that light is being blocked by the very thing that scares you.

We can let all the darkness in our world today paralyze us. The fear of war, the fear of gun violence in our schools, the fear of losing all our savings because the lunatics have taken over the asylum.

We can give into the fear. Or we can trust to follow the right path of the Good Shepherd, who is our guiding light, whose rod and staff protect and lead the way.

Which brings up another, more personal reason I have avoided this psalm until now.

When I was young, this particular verse was used against me by teachers who believed corporal punishment was somehow holy. They used it as a license to hit me and other students for simply being kids. It was an abusive 'spare the rod' mentality that twisted a beautiful promise into a source of fear.

For most of my life, this verse didn’t bring comfort; it brought anxiety.

Maybe you know that feeling. Maybe you still carry the scars of a harsh, celestial headmaster waiting for you to mess up. I think it’s time we take back its original intent.

You see, a shepherd’s rod was used for defending the flock from threats. And his staff wasn’t for striking sheep. The curved hook was used to gently pull them back from danger.

The rod protects. The staff guides. These are tools of care, not punishment. They are part of God’s grace, not wrath.

Which means the Shepherd’s power is about protection, guidance, and a love strong enough to keep us safe and close. A love so powerful we can all declare, “I will fear no evil.”

I have my shepherd. And I have my flock. These two things matter. They give us hope. And remind us that we are never alone.

When the dark shadows creep over you, it’s easy to feel isolated, like you’re the only one suffering. I know what that’s like. I've walked that wadi more than once.

Remember the parable about the lost sheep?

How the shepherd goes looking for it, even if it means leaving the others on their own, in the wilderness. Jesus reminds us that the Shepherd never leaves a single sheep behind. But the parable also tells us that we have a flock to lean on.

Isn’t that the whole point of church?

You see, when the wadi gets narrow, sheep huddle so closely that one’s strength becomes another’s stability.

When your faith feels thin, someone else’s faith carries you. When I’m tired or my strength gives out, someone else steadies me as “I walk through the valley…”

We don’t walk into the wadi. We walk through it. These long, dark shadows aren’t our final destination. We don’t stay here.

Which is why I chose this psalm for Lent. A season where we willingly enter the valley to examine the parts of ourselves that need healing or transformation.

But we don’t dwell in the wilderness. The shepherd is leading us to where a table and feast await.

So, if you find yourself in a dark valley, whether it’s a personal crisis, spiritual drought, or emotional shadow—don’t fear. You’re not alone. God is with you. And so is this flock.

​So lean into the wool of the person beside you. Let their prayers and presence hold you up when the ground below gives out.

I know this trek is daunting. The walls of the canyon are high. The path can feel restrictive.

​But God isn’t just watching you from a safe distance.

Our Shepherd is right here in the ravine with you, leading you safely home to a table that has been prepared just for you.
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slow down

3/13/2026

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I didn’t intend to slow down the other evening, but walking my friend’s elderly dog made it unavoidable. Every few steps required a pause to catch her breath and sniff.

​Had we been moving at my pace, I probably would’ve missed the art exhibit unfolding above us.

​A sky brushed with bright oranges, fiery reds, and cool, deep indigos. There was something holy in that sunset that soothed my soul and gave me peace of mind.

St. Francis used to say that nature is one of God’s great sanctuaries. I think he was right.

There’s a reason many of us feel restored in the woods or calmed by the sea. It’s good therapy. The earth moves with a rhythm that our busy and anxious lives rarely see.

​Walking the dogs, with that slow and steady pace, I could hear the heavens whisper, “This is all for you.”

As we finally made our way home in the fading twilight, I took notice of the giant redwood that towers beside our house (pictured above). In its silhouette, I noticed a couple of its massive branches had grown outward.

If you squint your eyes a little, the tree seems to be in the shape of a cross. How apropos for a house church! This was another startling reminder that the symbols of our faith are not just cold artifacts. They’re woven into the very fabric of creation.

Moving slowly through the wilderness of Lent, we are able to remember that we are also moving closer to the cross of Good Friday. That cross, considered to be one of the most brutal ways the Roman Empire controlled their subjects, tells us something remarkable about how God, humans, and nature are interconnected.

Think about it, one beam is rooted in the earth as it reaches up to heaven. The other beam stretches outward across the horizon, holding that space between you and me. In the middle is Jesus with his arms wide open, pouring God’s love out upon all of creation.

While you might want to rush through your 40 day fast and feast, I hope that you’ll give yourself permission to slow down a little. Spend some time out in nature, in what I like to call “God’s therapy room.”

​Step outside. Wiggle your feet in the grass. Dig your fingers into the soil. Sit back and notice the sky, the trees, the small holy moments happening all around you. Listen to the birds, the wind, and the sweet, soft voice that whispers, “This is for you.”
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The Right Path

3/8/2026

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We create 'desire paths' in our spiritual journeys all the time. We want the shortcut to success. The quickest route to happiness. We want to bypass the pain. And go directly to inner peace.

My wife and I have a cousin named Brian. He’s a gypsy nomad. An amazing fellow who wanders in and out of our life.  

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Of all his great qualities, there’s one I try emulate. That’s being present, in the here and now.

When Brian’s around, he gives you his all. But when it’s time to move on, he goes; following wherever the wind blows him next.

​We’ve spent the last two weeks learning how to follow a Shepherd, who knows our wants. But here’s the thing: We can’t stay in these green pastures forever.
​Eventually, the grass will be eaten down. The sun will move. The season will change. And like Brian, we need to know when it’s time to move on.

During Lent, we spend 40 days in the wilderness. And just as we’re getting the hang of things, the wind blows. Our Shepherd taps his staff on the ground and says, "Time to move."

This brings us to the third verse of Psalm 23: 
"He restores my soul; he leads me in paths of righteousness for his name’s sake."
                                      Psalm 23:3
As we’ve been learning, this psalm is personal. And has a purpose. The Lord restores my soul.

To understand how the Shepherd does this, all we need to do is look at how the world’s greatest treasures are rescued from the slow decay of time.


Take the Birth of Venus, a masterpiece painted by Sandro Botticelli (shown here).

Over the centuries, it collected layers of soot and dust. The varnish yellowed, making the vibrant colors fade to a dull gray.
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Birth of Venus by Sandro Botticelli
The painting was still there, but its essence and beauty was buried.

To bring back the color, the restorers carefully and meticulously peeled back the grime until its original brilliance returned. No paint was necessary. Just the removal of what didn’t belong.


The poet declares, "He restores my soul."  The Hebrew word, shub, literally means "to return,” and “to bring home." The shepherd brings my soul home. Returning me to God who restores me back to my original beauty.

Isn’t that our intent for our Lent fasts? To remove what isn’t needed. I think God uses this time to restore us back into the masterpiece we were created to be.

But what makes restoration so difficult isn’t the years of grime we’ve collected. It’s our ego that refuses to let those layers go. We get comfortable in our muted grays; forgetting how vibrant we are in living color.

We might think God adds a little extra paint to restore our beauty. But really, all God does is gently peel away what’s unnecessary.  The shame, the guilt, the burdens we carry with us.

And that’s the pattern. The Shepherd doesn’t return us home until the soul is restored.

So many of us try to walked the right paths, hoping God will fix us. As if God needs a down payment and  a signed contract before committing to care for us. That’s not how grace works.

Just as mercy is the Shepherd’s decision not to leave us in our comfortable mess, God’s grace is the gift of being made whole when we’ve done nothing to earn it.

Grace is the solvent God uses to peel back the grime of shame and guilt that linger over us. Once the soot is cleared, we can see where to step. The path of righteousness.

The psalmist calls this path a magal—a word that bears no resemblance to a paved sidewalk or a manicured trail. A magal is a "well-worn track" or a "circuit." A small, narrow path carved into the limestone by the weight of a thousand steady sheep.

Magals often hug the steep sides of mountains, holding the space between the rocks and ravines. But the Shepherd knows they’re the way to the next green pasture.

While the poet Robert Frost invites down this “road less traveled,” we tend to take, or make, a different kind of trail. Urban planners call them ‘desire paths.’ These are those diagonal dirt tracks cut into the grass by people taking shortcuts to where they want to go.

We make them because we’re always in a hurry. Always rushing without a care of where we’re stepping, or who we’re stepping on, until we find ourselves stuck in a dark ravine.

We create these 'desire paths' in our spiritual journeys all the time. We want the shortcut to success. The quickest route to happiness. We want to bypass the pain. And go directly to inner peace.

​We don’t want to do the hard work of restoration. We want the easy way, not the righteous way. I mean, let’s be real, how far does being morally upright get you these days?

But here’s the thing, to the psalmist, a 'path of righteousness' isn’t about being a good Boy Scout. It simply means “the right path.”

This isn't always the fastest way, and it’s rarely the easiest. But it’s the only one that actually leads you to where your heart belongs. That space in God’s presence where you find your rest and restoration.

Jesus says, "I am the way" (John 14:6). Not just because knows the right path back to God’s heart. But because He fully embodies God’s heart.

Whenever we’ve lost our way, or have no idea where we’re going or how we got into the mess we’re in all we have to do is look at Jesus. And follow the way of our Good Shepherd, whose “yoke is easy” and whose “burden is light” (Matthew 11:30).

During his time in the wilderness, Jesus traded his own 'desire paths' for God’s narrow magal. 

He allowed God to strip him of the layers of grime that naturally come with being human in an inhumane world. Jesus says, “Anyone who wants to follow me must deny themselves, and pick up your cross, and follow.”

But do you trust him enough to do the hard work of letting go of your ego, and allowing God to restore you back to the Divine essence you were created from.

If we are honest with ourselves, we know our own shortcuts have only led us into a briar patch of exhaustion and anxiety. They have trapped us in dark shadows of fear and shame.

But here’s the good news. Our Shepherd never abandons the sheep. With a patient nudge of the staff, we are moved back onto the right path 'for his name’s sake.'   

We must not forget that as personal as this psalm is, it’s not about us. It’s about the shepherd. In the ancient world, a shepherd’s reputation was tied entirely to the condition of the flock. A shepherd with thin, diseased, or lost sheep was a failure. But the one with a healthy and safe flock was honored.

This Psalm tells us that God doesn't tend to us because we are good. God does all this because God is good. It’s not our reputation on the line. It’s God’s.

Which should take the pressure off us entirely. We don't have to perform or prove our way into righteousness. We simply have to stay close to the One whose name is at stake.

Jesus spent his entire ministry showing us how to do this. But he warns us that the way is narrow and the path is hard. Because genuine, sacrificial love will always challenge us. Our ego will always seek the 'desire path' of least resistance.

If we are to believe the gospel—to truly trust the path it reveals—then we must take the difficult steps forward, knowing the Shepherd walks beside us down this well-worn track of grace.

This week, I want you to look at the magals in your life—those small, repetitive tracks you walk every day. Ask yourself: Where are they leading me?

When you choose to pause before a sharp retort, you are stepping onto the magal of peace.

When you choose to give from your "enough" rather than your "extra," you are following the track of generosity.

Every time you refuse to justify a shortcut at someone else's expense, you are resisting the 'desire path' of the ego and trusting the Shepherd’s slower, surer route.

Don't wait for a grand invitation to change your life. Restoration happens in the steps you take, in the tight turns, when the ledge feels narrow between the rocks and ravines.

You do not walk this path alone. We walk it together. Not as sheep but as a community knitted together in love.

The track is already there, carved by the One who knows exactly where the green pastures lie. Let’s walk it. Let’s trust the groove instead of trying to out-walk the One who created it.

Because the Shepherd’s name is on the line. And so far, He has never lost a single sheep.
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He Leads Me

3/2/2026

1 Comment

 

The Shepherd knows an exhausted sheep is a vulnerable sheep. So, God makes us lie down. 

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​I’m began this second week of Lent by turning 60. A lot of people last night told me 60 is the new 40.

But one honest friend reminded me it’s the beginning of a "Golden Age." An age of aches and pains I’ve never had before.


But if I’m being honest, turning 60 felt like a deadline I was hoping to miss. Instead of embracing a season with grace and calm, I decided to outrun my own mortality.

​Which brings me to my Lenten goal.
Originally, the plan was to take twenty minutes of intentional, silent rest every day. Instead, I replaced that with forty push-ups and forty sit-ups. I literally turned a command to be still into a military-grade calisthenics routine.

What’s that old saying? “I’ll rest when I’m dead.” I’m not so sure God thinks that’s such a good idea. Which takes us to our reading from the 23rd Psalm. 
“The Lord is my shepherd, and I shall not want. 
He makes me lie down in green pastures; he leads me beside still waters.
               
               ​               ​               ​               ​​Psalm 23:2

Of all the Ten Commandments, taking a day of Sabbath rest is one most of us break with little remorse. We are a culture of workaholics. We tell ourselves if you’re not busy, you’re not important.

I am guilty of working on my days off. We all do, because you got to get things done while you got the time.

I’m not complaining but I actually spent my birthday cleaning the house and doing some serious yard work to get everything ready for our party. It didn’t seem like a lot, until the next morning I woke up with a back ache. I could chalk it up to age. But really, I should’ve jus taken the day off and chill like I had planned.

We live in a world that treats exhaustion as a status symbol. It’s that “No pain, no gain” mentality we’ve built ourselves on.

I think there’s a part of all of us that’s addicted to the grind; even when it’s grinding us into dust. I wonder what this poet was going through to write this psalm about a shepherd whose job is to make sure the sheep are cared for.

Was he inspired by the Belgian Shepherd, a breed used by Navy SEALs … because their drive never shuts off. 

Commonly known as a Malinois, this dog doesn't just "go for a walk"; it patrols. It doesn't "play fetch"; it executes a mission. Left to their own devices, these dogs will run until their heart explodes believing world will collapse if they aren't on high alert.

I have a friend who has a Malinois  named Bree. When she gets too wound up, they have to put her in her crate and cover it with a blanket to calm her down. They call it “enforced rest.” Which feels like what this psalm is talking about.

Notice it doesn’t say God’s sending us a calendar invite to kick it in green pastures. It says God leads us there. And makes us lie down. Enforced rest! Without it, we’d work ourselves to death.

Now there are four conditions that must be met before a sheep will lie down:
  • They must be free from fear.
  • Free from friction with others in the flock.
  • Free from nagging pests and parasites.
  • And free from hunger.

If even one of those is off, the sheep will stay on its feet—tense, alert, and eventually exhausted. Does that sound familiar?

Many of us have trouble sleeping because the news has you constantly on-edge. Maybe there’s unresolved anger keeping your up at night. Or maybe you’re being eaten alive by those small but relentless pests; like the constant buzzing of notifications, the biting fear of missing out. Maybe you’re physically hungry because food is becoming too expensive.

The Shepherd knows an exhausted sheep is a vulnerable sheep. So, God makes us lie down. Enforced rest.

I’m starting to believe God uses our “stressors" to bring us to the end of ourselves, until the only thing left to do is collapse into the pasture of God’s peace. And be refreshed in the still waters of God’s grace.

In Hebrew, that phrase, still waters, literally means, "waters of rest." Growing up around water, I learned to swim at an early age. Part of that training was learning not to panic if you accidently fall in. Not so with sheep. If you’ve ever gone swimming fully dressed, you’d know why. Wool soaks up water like a sponge. So sheep avoid the rapids and fast moving water, because if they accidentally fell in, they could drown within minutes.

Sheep know their limits. They need the water to be calm and the space to still before they will kneel down to drink. We, on the other hand, are always trying to drink from a firehose. And we wonder why we’re always thirsty!

Here’s the thing, there will always be strong rapids and white-water trying to pull us down. God doesn’t promise us a storm-free life. Even Jesus faced the wilderness, temptation, and chaos.

But when we find ourselves at the end of our rope, when we can no longer keep our heads above the white-water, our Shepherd leads us to rest, makes us lie down by the quiet pools where we can safely be refreshed without being swept away.

Now, there’s one more thing I want to mention about sheep. A danger they face called “casting.”

This happens when they nestle into a little hollow in the ground. As they move around to relax, their center of gravity shifts. And it’s common for them to roll onto their backs and unable to get up. The weight of their own wool traps them. If the shepherd doesn't find them and physically flip them over, they will  suffocate themselves and die.

Have you ever felt spiritually cast? We settle into our hollows of achievements, approval, or addictions then suddenly find ourselves stuck, looking at the sky, paralyzed. And like sheep, all we can do is cry out for help, hoping the Shepherd hears us before it’s too late.

Maybe you’re in one right now, wondering if God hears you, or  paying attention to your distress.

Jesus tells a parable about a shepherd who owns a hundred sheep. When one goes astray, this shepherd leaves the 99 to find it. Upon finding it, he rejoices.

Like Psalm 23, this parable highlights God’s immense love, care, and willingness to seek us out and bring us home. But there’s something more amazing hidden in this parable. The shepherd leaves the others in the wilderness, on their own,  trusting the sheep are exactly where they need to be.

The wilderness is where God leads those who dare to follow. It’s a time we spend in the grace and mercy of the Shepherd. That is the season of Lent, the 40 days we spend being refreshed and renewed.

Now the Judean wilderness isn’t like the lush, rolling green pastures of Scotland. The place is more like small patches of grass hidden in rocky shadows. The only way a sheep will know how to find them is to follow someone who knows where they are.

Jesus says, “I am the Good Shepherd. My sheep know my voice. They follow me.” This is still true today. To follow Jesus, is to learn to trust the One who went before us, who knows how God provides for us, and where true rest actually exist.

So, if you’re in a season of distress right now, feeling the weight of all that you carry, if your heart is pounding and your soul feels waterlogged, remember this: God isn’t asking you to "tough it out." God is inviting you to lie down. And when we ignore that invitation, God will find ways to make us rest.

We might think we can keep pushing ourselves to achieve more, to keep moving and keep straying out on our own until we drop. When we are only focused on proving our worth to others, we can’t hear God saying, "Stop. Rest. You’re just a thirsty sheep in a wet sweater. Lie down before you fall down and never get up."

Now one last thing about rest that is important for us to remember. When you allow yourself to be refreshed and restored by God, you become someone who can lead others to these green pastures and still waters. We become living testimonies to God’s goodness and glory. That’s the goal.

The Church shouldn't be another rushing torrent of noise or busyness. We are meant to be a place where people can come and actually lie down and find rest for their souls.

To quote Henri Nouwen, “Without solitude it is virtually impossible to live a spiritual life.” We need it. And we the church should be the first place to provide an oasis in the wilderness that God leads others to.

This week, I invite you to identify one area in your life where you are overwhelmed or anxious. Then imagine the Shepherd’s hand on your shoulder, gently pushing you down into the grass.

Don't fight or resist it or make an excuse to stay busy. Just accept God’s tender embrace, and lean into mercy and grace.

I think this is what Jesus means when he says, “Come to me, all who are weary, and you will find rest.”

​May you go to him, our Good Shepherd, The one who lays down his life for his sheep.
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    Ian Macdonald

    An ex-copywriter turned punk rock pastor and peacemaker who dedicates his life to making the world a better place for all humanity. 

    "that they all might be one"  ~John 17:21

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