Tear Off the Roof

Let’s start here.  I want you to think about the most important friends in your life.  Take a minute.  See if you can assemble the list.  I want that list to include not just the most obvious choices—your “hall of fame” friends.  Those folks make the list because it seems like they’ve been your friend for your whole life or because the impact they had whenever they entered your life was so profound that they could not be missed.  Push deeper, though.  There were plenty of moments in your life when you ran into the right person at the right time.  Although they may not have been a friend for life they were a critical friend at a crucial time.  They were a gift.

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Mark Hindman
Who Are Our Lepers?

One of the inescapable truths about Jesus is that he cared deeply about people who were marginalized, people who were the victims of injustice, people whom everyone was convinced were worthless.  As we think together for the next few weeks, I want us to challenge ourselves to hear the stories of Jesus caring for such people.  I also want us to close the loop with the present by asking who those people are in our own world and how we, as followers of Christ, are being called to care for them.

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Mark Hindman
The Truth Will Set You Free (Part Three)

In my preaching time this month (with one Sunday off for work trip), I have addressed two issues that I think are timely: first, the question of the relationship between church and state and second, the focal concerns for people of conscience (in the church and well beyond) in preserving our democracy.  In short, we are not a Christian nation, either in our design or in our lived behavior.  The best relationship between the church and the state is marked by separation and a constructive, creative, prophetic tension.  The state needs a conscience and, collectively, people of all faiths and people with no faith but a deep sense of justice and compassion and concern for the common good can hold the state accountable.  Finally, no matter where we fall in our partisan views, we should be able to work together to preserve and protect the constitution, to honor the rule of law, and to follow the will of the people in our elections.

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Mark Hindman
The Truth Will Set You Free (Part Two)

Last week, I tried to tell the truth about the long history that Christianity of being co-opted by political powers.  Whether it was the Roman Empire or the King of England or the pro-slavery forces in American history, savvy politicans have understood the potential for using people’s faith to manipulate and control them.  Nothing says, “I get to keep my power,” quite like convincing people that God gave me that power in the first place.  Everyone wants God on their side when they fight the next war or when they identify their God-forsaken enemies or when they have a stance on some question of the day that needs to be sanctioned.  

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Mark Hindman
The Truth Will Set You Free (Part One)

For a long time now, I’ve been making the case that Jesus didn’t come to start a church.  There were plenty of temples and churches and other holy places to visit.  There were rituals and sacrifices and feasts and fasts that were all about getting right with God.  I don’t think Jesus came to change where we went to worship.  I think Jesus came to show us how to actually live differently. 

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Mark Hindman
Greater Love

When Tracy first took her job at the First Presbyterian Church in Lake Forest, we moved into a very small house in the middle of the parking lot area next to the church.  The house had two rooms downstairs, two rooms upstairs and a bathroom.  We thought it was the most amazing home ever!  The house also had a detached greenhouse which came…believe it or not…with a master gardener.  He and his wife had lived in the same house we were in as the “servants” of the folks who lived in the adjacent mansion.  He was retired but still gardening.

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Mark Hindman
The Rush of the Wind

So, back in January, on Epiphany Sunday, I offered you ten epiphanies.  During Easter, I’ve offered you a take on each of the four Gospels.  This morning, I want to offer six insights into Pentecost.  Let’s start counting…

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Mark Hindman
"Mary!"

So, we’ve looked at Matthew, Mark, and Luke’s perspectives on Easter and the events following.  Here’s what you need to know as we begin today.  New Testament scholars refer to Matthew, Mark, and Luke as the “synoptic” Gospels.  That sounds complicated but it’s really not.  We’ve all been asked in an English class somewhere along the way to provide a “synopsis” of what we’ve read.  We provide a description of the plot.  To say that these three Gospels are “synoptic” is to say that they share a common plot.  Scholars have long believed that they even shared a common source which is called “Q”—not “Q Anon,” just “Q.”  No one has ever found “Q,” but scholars have been writing about it for a long time. 

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Mark Hindman
Grateful, Loving, and Helpful

When I was in confirmation class, my father was my teacher.  One day, he had us read the parable of the prodigal son and discuss it.  You know the story—the younger son cashes in on his inheritance and runs away and blows it.  Eventually, he makes his way home but before he can get there his father runs out to meet him, hugs him, and declares that it’s time to party.  The older son sees this and resents it all.  However, we see the grace and forgiveness and love of that father and we think, “What if God loves us like that?”

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Mark Hindman
"Why are you looking for the living among the dead?"

For a few years after Jesus died, there were people alive who had heard Jesus preach and teach and heal people.  For a little while, there were people who could tell stories about Jesus, first-hand:  This is what I saw and heard and what I grew to believe.  For a brief period of time, there were even people who had experienced the presence of the risen Christ—just a handfull of people, but eyewitnesses, nevertheless.  Eventually, those people died off.

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Mark Hindman
Let the Mystery Be

The 24/7 news cycle distorts our world.  How many times a day does this ticker land on the bottom of the screen:  “Breaking news!”  I remember days when that ticker was justified:  the explosion of the Challenger space shuttle; planes crashing into the World Trade Centers; the events of January 6th.  However, that ticker is up all the time, every day.  The truth is that earth-shattering news doesn’t happen constantly.  However, if the networks keep telling us it is then, for a while, it feels like it might.  You’ve got our attention, which of course is the goal for the network.  Eventually, though, after stressing every time we see that ticker—“Oh no! What now?”—we end up jaded:  “Ya, right…”

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Mark Hindman
"And yet..."

Scripture has been used throughout history to justify terrible things:  slavery, prejudice, misogyny, vengeance, homophobia. Choose a hateful action.  Find a verse that supports it.  Take that verse out of context.  Make those few words your foundation.  Christian preachers have preached hate this way for centuries.

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Mark Hindman