Sunday, April 19, 2020

Receive the Holy Spirit. April 19, 2020. The Rev. Kathleen M. Sturges




John 20:19-31

It is Easter evening and then it’s a week later, the Sunday after Easter, when on both occasions in the gospel of John we encounter the disciples holed up together in a house because of fear. Things are uncertain. It’s not safe to go outside so they lock the doors and stay home. Sound familiar?

Yet even as the disciples shelter in place the resurrected Christ Jesus comes to them. Even though the doors are locked, Jesus finds a way to enter in, stand among, and bring, “Peace.” It’s the very first word that the Risen Lord speaks to his disciples - peace. A peace which, as Jesus explained to them just days before on the night that he was betrayed, is not the world’s peace. It’s not the kind that depends on circumstances being just right. God’s peace is the kind that is present and real and experienced no matter the threat, the fear, the struggle or the pain. It’s the kind of peace that the disciples really needed in that moment. It’s the kind of peace we really need in our moment too. The peace that only God can give.

And God gives it freely. But there is a part that we play. “Receive the Holy Spirit,” Jesus says. That word, “receive,” is the same word that Jesus uses during the last supper when he gives the bread. But in that case the same word is translated a bit differently with the word “take.” As in, “Take, eat: This is my Body, which is given for you.” In that context, we naturally understand that in order to receive the bread, the body of Christ, there are some things we must do - like open our mouths, chew, and swallow. In the same way, the gift of peace and life in the Spirit calls upon us to participate in by actively taking, receiving. And perhaps a clue of how we are to do that begins with how it is given, that is, through breath. Jesus comes into the disciples’ home and comes into our homes, stands among us and breathes onto us the Holy Spirit. We, in response, are not to stay closed, holding our breath, but open, breathing in the Spirit - over and over and over again.

The other day I heard someone comment, “I know it’s Easter, but it still feels like Lent.” And I get that. When we were sequestered in our homes during Lent that made more sense. But now that Easter has come it feels incongruous that we are still holed up inside. Yet perhaps we can take some consolation in knowing that we find ourselves in the very same place as those first disciples. They didn’t rush out of their homes on Easter day or even the following week. Figuring out how to receive and live into the good news of God’s resurrection life took time - a lifetime, really. So Jesus kept coming among them, meeting them where they were - just as he does with us - offering his peace, breathing his life, and calling us to take, to receive. For it is that life and peace of the Risen Lord that empowers us to meet and live through the circumstances of our days - one day at a time, one breath at a time. Because whether it feels like it or not, it is Easter. Christ is risen. The Spirit is moving. Which means that no matter what we face we will always make our song, “Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia!”

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