Welcome to my blog page! Here you will find some videos, pictures, reflections and essays on living life through my eyes as a pastor in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. I hope you find something that gives you hope and inspiration to live out the faith, ask more questions, and to rest in the certain knowledge of God's great love for you. TO RECEIVE VIA EMAIL fill in the window on the Web Version below.(Not visible on Mobile version).
Friday, November 29, 2013
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
He is Risen! Indeed! Alleluia
Today was our last day in the Holy Land. Tomorrow I'm flying out at 5am back to Istanbul. I strange day in some ways. We had a late start so for the first time in almost two weeks I actually went through emails and did some work. Then it was time to put this aside again and go out for our final day--a look at the Garden Tomb and the Holy Sepulcher...as well as the Via dolorosa (the way of the cross) and some time in the old city.
I confess I am a Holy Sepulcher junkie. I just love this church. IT is most likely --even the Oxford Archeological guide agrees--the place of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus. Some people hate it because it has all the trappings of human need to try and make something holy---smells, bells, candle sticks that are about 20 feet tall--but I love it. I find great peace inside this wondrous church and I find the people to be not a distraction but a reminder of why Christ came. The key to the Sepulcher is to go beyond the place of the crucifixion and the resurrection and head deep into the recesses of the church. IF you keep going down, and down and down, you see that the church is indeed built into the side of a huge quarry...the hill of which Jesus was crucified upon. If you go far to the other side you see the examples of other tombs that were found in the area from the first century.
I admit, I found my way to the Holy Sepulcher 3 different times...once with the group and twice by myself.
The garden tomb, which is what many Americans love because it looks the part is most definitely not the place. But each time I go there I have more and more respect for the place. Because while it does not represent the actually place, it helps one imagine what it may have looked like. It's quiet garden setting is easier on the senses than the trappings of the Holy Sepulcher. And as always the message that the Garden Tomb gets right each time....spot on...is that HE IS NOT HERE! HE IS RISEN! The point is that the tomb is empty and this is brought home beautifully in this place. We had communion there today, one last time as a group.
I'm reminded of the words of the angels at the resurrection...'he goes ahead of you....' how beautiful that promise still remains. He goes ahead of you. Christ Jesus goes ahead of you, ahead of me, leading and encouraging us to follow him. I do love coming to the Holy Land to recharge my spiritual batteries and to remember these simple truths. Here's the pix of the day!
I confess I am a Holy Sepulcher junkie. I just love this church. IT is most likely --even the Oxford Archeological guide agrees--the place of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus. Some people hate it because it has all the trappings of human need to try and make something holy---smells, bells, candle sticks that are about 20 feet tall--but I love it. I find great peace inside this wondrous church and I find the people to be not a distraction but a reminder of why Christ came. The key to the Sepulcher is to go beyond the place of the crucifixion and the resurrection and head deep into the recesses of the church. IF you keep going down, and down and down, you see that the church is indeed built into the side of a huge quarry...the hill of which Jesus was crucified upon. If you go far to the other side you see the examples of other tombs that were found in the area from the first century.
I admit, I found my way to the Holy Sepulcher 3 different times...once with the group and twice by myself.
The garden tomb, which is what many Americans love because it looks the part is most definitely not the place. But each time I go there I have more and more respect for the place. Because while it does not represent the actually place, it helps one imagine what it may have looked like. It's quiet garden setting is easier on the senses than the trappings of the Holy Sepulcher. And as always the message that the Garden Tomb gets right each time....spot on...is that HE IS NOT HERE! HE IS RISEN! The point is that the tomb is empty and this is brought home beautifully in this place. We had communion there today, one last time as a group.
I'm reminded of the words of the angels at the resurrection...'he goes ahead of you....' how beautiful that promise still remains. He goes ahead of you. Christ Jesus goes ahead of you, ahead of me, leading and encouraging us to follow him. I do love coming to the Holy Land to recharge my spiritual batteries and to remember these simple truths. Here's the pix of the day!
What the Garden Tomb does do is help you 'feel' what it would have been like and this is important |
Linda and Marlene in front of the tomb that serves as a great way to understand how Jesus was placed in a similar tomb |
Here's where the Garden Tomb hits a home run....He is not here! Alleluia! |
This is the place which commemorates the cross and the death of Jesus. IF not right here... it would have been close. |
I took this picture upstairs in the Holy Sepulcher looking past the candles into a side chapel below.... |
If you keep moving to the right and going down three separate sets of steps from the top, you reach where the church was obviously built into the side of the quarry. |
The Way of the cross....via delorosa |
A great painting that is above the door to the 3rd or 4th station of the cross reminding us to take up our crosses too; but to follow him. |
Marlene knelling down to reach her hand to touch the rock of Calvary/Golgotha |
Here's Linda waiting her turn to kneel before the cross of Christ |
Another great dinner....salads followed by the main course. |
The old city of Jaffa or Joppa. Here is where Jonah tried to run away from God, where Peter was told all food is clean and where the HOly Spirit was working overtime. |
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Walking the mount of Olives and eating Arab style
Today we started on the Mount of Olives the place of Jesus' ascension into heaven and the starting point of his ride into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday. It is a wonderful walk that starts with the great view of the city, goes past several beautiful churches and ends at the Garden of Gethsemane were Jesus was betrayed by Judas. To pray in the church of all nations at the garden of Gethsemane is quite a special privilege. I prayed today for all of you back home, for our church, and for all our ministries.
We walked up from the Garden of Gethsemane to the Lion's gate of the old city or Stephen's gate. Here the first martyr died for his faith in Christ--they dragged him outside and stoned him. Inside the gate is the Crusader era church of St. Anne (mother of Mary) and the Bethesda pools where Jesus healed the man who could not walk. He asked the man: "Do you want to be well?" That is a great question isn't it? So often we hang on to those things that keep us trapped in sorrow, guilt or despair.
We had an Arab style lunch then off to the upper room where Jesus had his last supper and of course where the resurrection appearances happened (not to mention the Pentecost event of the Holy Spirit), then to the church built on the ruins of Caiaphas' house where Jesus was brought after he was arrested.
Side note...when we got back to the hotel I went into the old city and prayed in the church of the Holy Sepulcher...no place like it on earth!
Here are the pix:
We walked up from the Garden of Gethsemane to the Lion's gate of the old city or Stephen's gate. Here the first martyr died for his faith in Christ--they dragged him outside and stoned him. Inside the gate is the Crusader era church of St. Anne (mother of Mary) and the Bethesda pools where Jesus healed the man who could not walk. He asked the man: "Do you want to be well?" That is a great question isn't it? So often we hang on to those things that keep us trapped in sorrow, guilt or despair.
We had an Arab style lunch then off to the upper room where Jesus had his last supper and of course where the resurrection appearances happened (not to mention the Pentecost event of the Holy Spirit), then to the church built on the ruins of Caiaphas' house where Jesus was brought after he was arrested.
Side note...when we got back to the hotel I went into the old city and prayed in the church of the Holy Sepulcher...no place like it on earth!
Here are the pix:
I don't think I'll ever get tired of this view from the Mount of Olives. Jesus would have seen the Temple instead of the Dome of the Rock Mosque |
All kinds of pilgrims walk this way of Jesus. Here some Franciscans are looking at the Jewish graves which are all along the Mt of Olives |
Such a view |
Marlene and Linda at the church of Dominus Flevet...Jesus wept |
Pastor Roger reading at the Garden of Gethsemane |
One of the tricks if finding time to pray, even in a busy church like here at the Garden of Gethsemane |
Here in the Church of All Nations, the quiet moments to your self are often the best. But you have to be disciplined to make time for them |
Marlene walking beside the Olive trees in the Garden of Gethsemane |
Hoofing it up toward the Old City...88 degrees |
The Lions gate or St. Stephens gate to the old city |
Linda looking at St. Anne's church a Crusader Church still standing |
The ruins of the pools of Bethesda where Jesus healed the man who had been lame almost 40 years |
Looking up at the Mount of Olives |
A Christian symbol of the Pelican sacrificing herself in the upper room |
Marlene in front of the church built on Caiaphas' house (The high priest who condemned Jesus) |
Linda and Marlene in the church of St. Peter in Gallicantu (The cock crowing) where Peter denied Christ |
First century steps that Jesus would have used. |
Marlene with the city behind her |
Looking out over the South end of Jerusalem |
You make a difference in the Holy Land: Augusta Victoria Hospital
Lutheran aren't supposed to feel too much pride, but let's break that rule and give a big Hooray for the work of the Lutheran World Federation and Augusta Victoria hospital. Part of our benevolence dollars that come from your offerings make this ministry possible. Imagine you live in Gaza or Bethlehem or East Jerusalem and your child has cancer; if you are a Palestinian there is only one hospital that will care for your child---Victoria Augusta. They have mobile mammogram clinics that go out and help educate about breast cancer and offer dialysis to those with kidney disease. Ann (or was it Amy) was our guide. She is from Iowa and works here for the LWF at the hospital. She began her interest by signing up with the ELCA program for young adults to go out into foreign missions. Here are some pix: First check out their website: http://www.avh.org/
The sign out front gives you a bit of pride, to know we are doing such good work in the world |
Here is Ann (or Amy) from Iowa telling us about the work of AVH and the hardships that happen for those needing care. |
AVH is also on the highest point of the Mt of Olives and has a beautiful Church of the Ascension. Here our guide is explaining some of the 'Lutheran' particulars of the church |
The beautiful dome above the alter commemorating the ascension of Jesus |
Monday, June 24, 2013
Jerusalem scandals to Bethlehem's miracles!
Well, I don't know how to inform everyone back home, but a certain member of our party whose initials are LH was detained by the decency police at the Dome of the Rock for being way to revealing in her choice of clothing. I know, I am scandalized as well! She can tell you all about it, but thankfully some quick thinking on her own prevented what would have been known as "LutherIslamagate." There is no more to be said. We spent time on the Temple Mount, went to the Western Wall (wailing wall so called), toured the ruins of Jesus day, traveled to Bethlehem and had a side stop at the pools of Siloam were Jesus healed the man born blind---John 9.
Let me tell you why I love the Holy Land. At the pool of Siloam, again where Jesus healed the man born blind, there was an older Palestinian man who was watcher of the gate---basically made sure folks didn't enter past a certain point. He began to strike up a conversation and told us that indeed, he had lived here for 60 years and this was the pool of Siloam. He said, some way behind is also but they are wrong. Myself and another traveler just nodded. Then he said, "Come here, I'll show you." So we left the group for a few minutes (hoping they would not leave without us) he opened up a locked door and showed us what was obviously his home and the ruins of a byzantine steps from a fountain that was used to water the animals. He even gave us the name, but I have forgotten. Then I admired his grapevines and grapes. To which he said, "What a minute." He then returned with figs that he had picked from his tree there behind the pool of Siloam. We thanked him and left just as the group was leaving. I love that kind of hospitality you find in the folks who live here. So pure, so inviting, so happy to share a little knowledge with two Americans whom he'll never see again. I didn't even get his name...but Salem to you my friend...Salem...Peace! Here are todays pix:
Let me tell you why I love the Holy Land. At the pool of Siloam, again where Jesus healed the man born blind, there was an older Palestinian man who was watcher of the gate---basically made sure folks didn't enter past a certain point. He began to strike up a conversation and told us that indeed, he had lived here for 60 years and this was the pool of Siloam. He said, some way behind is also but they are wrong. Myself and another traveler just nodded. Then he said, "Come here, I'll show you." So we left the group for a few minutes (hoping they would not leave without us) he opened up a locked door and showed us what was obviously his home and the ruins of a byzantine steps from a fountain that was used to water the animals. He even gave us the name, but I have forgotten. Then I admired his grapevines and grapes. To which he said, "What a minute." He then returned with figs that he had picked from his tree there behind the pool of Siloam. We thanked him and left just as the group was leaving. I love that kind of hospitality you find in the folks who live here. So pure, so inviting, so happy to share a little knowledge with two Americans whom he'll never see again. I didn't even get his name...but Salem to you my friend...Salem...Peace! Here are todays pix:
The Iconic picture you have to take. The Dome of the Rock, 3rd holiest site for Islam It is here that "LutherIslamagate" almost happened. |
I don't want to 'throw stones" but you can see how revealing LH is dressed..blue shirt, khaki capris, hat... looking for trouble |
Here's a picture of the three of us at the corner of the Western Wall. We are actually standing on the street that Jesus would have walked on. A great excavation and very moving to be standing there. |
Linda and Marlene are sitting on the steps that Jesus would have used to sit and teach from on the south side of the Temple. You can see these are original steps carved from the rock. Very cool. |
Marlene and Linda over looking the OLD city of David...where Jerusalem was first settled by David around 1000 BC |
The church of the shepherds fields. Made to resemble a shepherds tent, this is where the angels would have come to the shepherds...well nobody really knows where...but somewhere close by |
Marlene in deep prayer inside the "Shepherds Grotto" under the church. She is so pious! |
Eating lunch outside Bethlehem at a great little restaurant called the Grotto. |
Linda going in, The door is purposely made small to keep soldier/knights from bringing there horses into the church. It is one of the oldest churches in the Holy Land 6th century |
Preparing to go to where the 'star of Bethlehem' marks the spot of Jesus birth. see the old processional crosses above. |
Here's Marlene touching the star that pilgrims have come to visit for over a 1700 years |
Listening to our guide inside the church of the Nativity |
These mosaic floors are from the original church built by Helen in 300's AD...OLD Floor...the craftsmanship it took just for the floor...amazing. |
Marlene and Linda in the Church of the Nativity Bethlehem |
Outside the church in Bethlehem |
Politics and religion are mixed in the Holy Land |
Unknown tourist being detained at the Palestinian Police station in Bethlehem |
Political graffiti on 'the wall' that cuts off Bethlehem from Israel |
The Pool of Siloam where Jesus healed the blind man John 9...such a great place and story |
Here's the backyard that I told you about above and the byzantine steps in the back ground |
You can see the door he opened for us and the grapes that are hanging...before he gave us figs...great place |
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