HMCdigital Tuesday 10AM Devotional – April 21

Jesus Enters in the Midst of Fear

John 20:19-20, 24-29

Begin by quieting yourself. Then read the text slowly, pause, and then read the text again

Read: John 20:19-20

Now imagine you are one of the 10 disciples get it in the upper room – What is it like for you to see Jesus alive?

Personally: Where have you seen Jesus alive/active in your life? What was that like? Who did you share these moments with?

Read: John 20:24-29

Now imagine that you are Thomas. How do you feel when Jesus appears and offers you exactly what you said you needed in order to believe?

Personally: what do you need from Jesus in the midst of life today?

Sunday Live Stream – Two Daughters

Sunday, April 19, 2020; Luke 8:40-56; Pastor Kristina Dyck

Today I want to share with you a story that has been lingering on my mind about a year. Another great “upside down kingdom” story. This has been the story/passage that I keep going back to. It is a familiar story but it is full of depth that most of us do not stop and think about. I think it is particularly timely now.

This story is found in three of the four Gospels. Matthew 9:18-26, Mark 5:21-43 , and Luke 8. We are going to look mostly at the account in Luke 8 today.

Jesus heals two women

40 When Jesus returned, the crowd welcomed him, for they had been waiting for him. 41 A man named Jairus, who was a synagogue leader, came and fell at Jesus’ feet. He pleaded with Jesus to come to his house 42 because his only daughter, a twelve-year-old, was dying.

As Jesus moved forward, he faced smothering crowds. 43 A woman was there who had been bleeding for twelve years. She had spent her entire livelihood on doctors, but no one could heal her. 44 She came up behind him and touched the hem of his clothes, and at once her bleeding stopped.

45 “Who touched me?” Jesus asked.

When everyone denied it, Peter said, “Master, the crowds are surrounding you and pressing in on you!”

46 But Jesus said, “Someone touched me. I know that power has gone out from me.”

47 When the woman saw that she couldn’t escape notice, she came trembling and fell before Jesus. In front of everyone, she explained why she had touched him and how she had been immediately healed.

48 “Daughter, your faith has healed you,” Jesus said. “Go in peace.”

49 While Jesus was still speaking, someone came from the synagogue leader’s house, saying to Jairus, “Your daughter has died. Don’t bother the teacher any longer.”

50 When Jesus heard this, he responded, “Don’t be afraid; just keep trusting, and she will be healed.”

51 When he came to the house, he didn’t allow anyone to enter with him except Peter, John, and James, and the child’s father and mother. 52 They were all crying and mourning for her, but Jesus said, “Don’t cry. She isn’t dead. She’s only sleeping.”

53 They laughed at him because they knew she was dead.

54 Taking her hand, Jesus called out, “Child, get up.” 55 Her life returned and she got up at once. He directed them to give her something to eat. 56 Her parents were beside themselves with joy, but he ordered them to tell no one what had happened.Read full chapter

Copyright © 2011 by Common English Bible

A little background:
This story takes place during Jesus’ second tour of Galilea, probably about midway through his ministry on earth. He had already done many miracles in Galilea, that is where his ministry had begun and where he was from. He was well known there.

By this point in is ministry he had traveled down to Jerusalem a few times as well and met the woman at the well in Samaria. He was well known and his reputation for valuing those that society deemed less important was well know.

Jairus
On one side of this story we have an important and wealthy man. The leader of the synagogue. His twelve year old daughter is near death and he comes to Jesus seeking help for her. He cuts through the crowd, he is important so he could do that easily, and he pleads with Jesus to come and heal her.

As a parent, I can imagine the franticness of his mission to get to Jesus and to get Jesus back to his daughter. I think any parent can imagine the panic of one last hope to save your child.

I imagine Jairus dressed in expensive clothes but looking rumpled from days of fear and sitting beside his little girl’s sick bed.

He fell at Jesus’ feet, probably out of breath from having run here as fast as he could.

He begs Jesus to come heal his twelve year old daughter.

On the other side of the story we have a woman who has been dealing with twelve years of abnormal uterine bleeding. Now for those of aren’t doctors or nerds about women’s health, let’s add a layer of understanding to this. This kind of condition is a symptom of something that is going on. So while it was unpleasant in itself, it was likely caused by something that would have had other symptoms that the Gospel writers do not mention. She may have had fibroids, PCOS, endometriosis, or even cancer. It is likely that she was in pain on top of everything else and obviously weak from constant blood loss.

She had spent all of her money trying to find a cure and the result was that she had only been made worse. (Ancient near east doctors had some pretty bizarre and sketchy “remedies” for things like this so it is no wonder they made her worse. These remedies could have easily given her food poisoning or e coli.)Her condition would have meant twelve years of being unclean. Twelve years of no one touching her. Twelve years of shame. Twelve years of isolation.

This woman is at the opposite end of the social, economic, and religious spectrum from Jairus. While he is a male leader, she is a nameless woman; while he is a synagogue official, she is ritually unclean and thus excluded from the religious community; while he has a family and a large household, she must presumably live in isolation because of her condition; while he is rich, she is impoverished by payment of doctors’ fees

While Jairus was able to come right up to Jesus and ask, this woman was not able to do that. Maybe shame stopped her, or the customs of the day.
Instead of falling at Jesus’ feet and pleading as Jairus had, she sneaks up and just barely touches a tassel or hem of his clothing. She may have reached through the packed crowd for whatever part of Jesus she could just barely reach.

Her healing was instant.

“Think of it!  The Mosaic Law is reversed here:  rather than the Lord Jesus becoming unclean and contaminated by her, she is healed and purified by the holy power that resides in him!  This is who Jesus is, he is the Holy One: the Healer.”

But the story doesn’t stop there for her. Jesus could have let her slip away into the crowd maybe thinking that magic had healed her. This was a common thought in the day. But he had more to teach her, the crowd, and us. Matthew says that Jesus turned and saw her. Luke and Mark say that Jesus asked who had touched him.

In the pressing crowd, Jesus recognized her touch. He stopped. Despite being on the way to heal a dying child, he stopped. He addressed her personally. He asked her to tell her story. He listened. He told her that it was her faith that had healed her. It wasn’t magical clothing, the power came from Jesus because of her faith.

Back to Jairus
As a woman, and one who has always been a bit passionate about injustice, I automatically side with the woman in this story. The pain and sorrow of her life, her isolation, even the culture that made her feel like she could not approach Jesus directly.

But when I stop to consider Jairus-the-dad, not Jairus-the-wealthy-priviledged guy, I am hit by the anxiety, frustration, fear, even anger that Jairus must have felt throughout this. His only child was moments from death and Jesus was asking about someone touching his clothes. Who cares?!

I think, no matter how old we are, we often tend to think of ourselves as king of the centre of the universe. The things that matter most to me are clearly the most important things in the world. Or maybe that is just me.
My children are obviously more important than some random person in a crowd. We might not like to admit this, but I think it is true. Jairus most likely felt this way. What could possibly be more important that saving the life of his only child?

As he is dealing with these feelings, someone he recognizes comes into focus. “I’m sorry Jairus. It’s too late.”

The anguish that must have struck him at those words. If Jesus had only hurried up this wouldn’t have happened.

“Jesus heard this, he responded, ‘Don’t be afraid; just keep trusting, and she will be healed.’”

Jesus calms him, reminds him to keep trusting. He promises healing. Then Jesus finally goes with him.

The house was already mourning. Of course those who loved her were already mourning. It seems as though they already had hired mourners there as well. Jesus kicked them all out only allowing her family and three of his disciples in. No faithless-rubber-neckers allowed.

They were all crying and mourning for her, but Jesus said, “Don’t cry. She isn’t dead. She’s only sleeping.”

53 They laughed at him because they knew she was dead.

I don’t think this was a “haha” kind of laugh. I think this was the borderline insane laugh of someone who has lost everything and is devastated, maybe even furious with Jesus for not coming sooner.

54 Taking her hand, Jesus called out, “Child, get up.” 55 Her life returned and she got up at once.

We are told in Numbers 5 that touching dead bodies defiles a living person.  But again, the holy power differential flows the other way with the Lord Jesus.  He not only has authority over nature and over demons, he has authority over death! 

He directed them to give her something to eat. 56 Her parents were beside themselves with joy, but he ordered them to tell no one what had happened.

I think that before this moment, Jairus would not have been able to be happy for the woman who had been healed earlier. It is pretty hard to be happy for others when we are in the midst of trials. Honestly, my natural tendency is to be annoyed that God took away their struggle instead of mine. But when God does come through for me suddenly my eyes are open to all of the wonderful things he has done for others as well.

They were beside themselves with joy.

I think that some of Jairus’ joy came also from the sudden realization that Jesus had not only healed his own daughter but also his neighbor. The full awesomeness of God struck him at that moment and he was beside himself with joy.

Applying it:
There are so many cool tidbits in this story which is why I keep coming back to it. Both of these women needed Jesus and Jesus really saw them both, took time for them both, healed them both, called them both “daughter.”

One was twelve and the other had suffered for twelve years.

Both of these women were unclean, one because of her illness, one because of her death. Both of these transferred their uncleanness to Jesus and were cleansed by him. Both found hope in Jesus when there was no possible human hope left.

Now, there are a few ways to identify with this story. Maybe you feel like the woman. You feel isolated and alone. That is not uncommon in this isolating time. Maybe you have suffered for a long time and found no help. Jesus sees you. Jesus offers you hope.

Maybe you identify with Jairus. You are used to getting what you want, you have worked hard and your life is good. But now you find you have lost control. Maybe you lost your job. Maybe a loved one is sick. Whatever it is, life is suddenly turned upside down and you can’t seem to get your barrings. It seems like everyone around you is finding help and hope but you are still struggling. Jesus sees you. He has not forgotten you.

Maybe you actually identify with Jesus in this story. It seems like everyone wants something and you are exhausted. That is definitely a legitimate feeling these days. Jesus offers you rest. He is in control and although this time has brought a tremendous amount of extra work for you and many other, God offers you rest. Bring your burdens to him.

Maybe you feel like someone in the crowd, just watching the insanity all around you. Not really able to help. Not really feeling anything miraculous happening to you. Just sort of coasting by, unnoticed, maybe bored. Jesus is there for you too! If he had let the woman slip away the crowd would not have benefitted from what happened to her. He cares about you just as much as he cared about her.

No matter where you find yourself this week, Jesus calls you sons and daughters. He cares about you and the things that are going on in your life. And we do too, Feel free to contact me, or Amos, or Dave, or Lyndsay. We are here for you guys anytime you want to talk about big stuff or small stuff.

Cooking with Kristina – Ice Cream Dessert


Kristina’s favourite dessert (aka Ice Cream Dessert)

Chocolate sauce layer
1 can evaporate milk
2 c chocolate chips.
Melt over med heat. Boil for 4 minutes. Stir so it doesn’t burn. Turn off heat and add 1 bag mini marshmallows.
Cool.

Other Layer
4 T butter
1 and 1/3 c coconut (shredded)
toast until brown. turn off the heat. add
2 c rice krispies

1 2L of ice cream. (I generally use vanilla but have tried other flavours as well. You do you.) Open the box and slice the ice cream.

Layer in 9 by 13 pan (or whatever) coconut mixture, then ice cream, then chocolate, then ice cream, then chocolate, then coconut.
Cover. Freeze for a few hours. Slice and enjoy.

Big Ideas & Family Challenges: Tidy Your Neighbourhood

Spring is here and the snow has (mostly) melted, leaving behind a bit of a mess. This happens every year and is especially noticeable along the ditches on country roads.

Hopefully you’re taking time to get outside every day. Consider bringing along a trash bag on one of those days and taking a walk around your neighbourhood. Pick up the garbage you see and help make your neighbourhood and more pleasurable place for all who live there.

Make sure you wear gloves and wash up really well when you get back home. Don’t bring the garbage into your home. Leave it outside or in your garage in a sealed bag or bin with a lid until you can put it out to the curb on garbage day.

BONUS CHALLENGE: Consider creating a little thank you note to put on your trash bin on garbage day to let the essential sanitation workers know how much they are appreciated!

REIMAGINE WEEK THREE

download & print a PDF version of this curriculum

REREAD the big story

NUMBERS 13-14 (Previous bedtime story: Spies in the Land! Characters: YAHWEH, Moses, Joshua, Caleb – son of Jephunneh, the Spies, Giants of Canaan, the Israelites

REVIEW the context

The dream had almost come true! After receiving the Law at Sinai, the Israelites were poised to become an actualized theocracy. A God-led nation! All the ingredients were there: a population (the 12 tribes), religious and governmental organization (the Levites and the priestly class), and a constitution (the Torah). They only needed physical land. But at the edge of Canaan, God’s plan was stalled. The Israelites refused to enter for fear of the giants and, in judgment, God pronounced forty more years of wilderness!

REENTER through the 2nd story

a REIMAGINING of Numbers 14:39-45

Moses! Moses!’ A voiced called. ‘Moses – you are needed!’ The voice was calm and familiar. ‘Yahweh?’ Moses whispered, as if in a dream. ‘Moses, your presence is requested.’ The voice grew desperate. Moses’ eyes opened. ‘Hmph!’ he grumbled. ‘Of course! Those Israelites. What could it be now?’ Moses threw off his blankets, tied his sash, and opened the flap of his tent. It was early morning. The sun was hiding behind the distant mountains and the sky was alit with the morning stars. Joshua stood before him with a dim torch in hand. ‘I apologize to have awoken you, sir,’ Joshua said. ‘But I didn’t know how to handle this… situation.’ Moses looked out. Surrounding his tent were hundreds of Israelites. They were standing silent, swords and shields in hand. Their faces were grieved and tear-stained but certain. ‘What is the meaning of this?!’ Moses asked. ‘You look to overthrow me in my undergarments?!’ A man stepped forward. ‘No, nothing like that,’ he said. ‘We are ready!’ Moses paused and scratched his head. ‘Ready for what?’ Moses asked. The man stepped closer. A grim smile came over his face. ‘We sinned. We know that now. We complained against God. But we are ready to take the land!’ The crowd murmured in agreement. ‘We are ready to attack this very moment!’

‘What?!’ Moses blasted. ‘Are you serious? You woke me only to prove your disobedience to God – again? You cannot attack the Amalekites and Canaanites without Yahweh fighting by your side! They’ll kill you!’ The crowd began to stir. ‘God will be with us,’ the people replied. ‘We will take our best fighters and possess the land God promised Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob!’ Moses shook his head. ‘No, you won’t. I don’t know how else to tell you. We sent spies into the land. They returned. You got scared and complained against me, and against God. And so God called your bluster! You refused Yahweh’s plan – so He refuses you! Your children will see the promised land. But you will not! It is over! Go back to bed.’ The crowd grew restless. ‘We don’t need you or your blessing!’ they shouted in anger. ‘Storm the hill! To victory!’

The makeshift army rallied and ran from their camp and into the land of Canaan. They disappeared over the hill. There was a sudden sound of clinks and clashing swords. Silence quickly followed. The people below waited for the horn of victory but none came. ‘We are defeated.’ Joshua pointed. A handful of Israelites returned from the hilltop. ‘God was not with us…’ the soldiers said on entering camp. ‘We cannot take the land… We will die in the wilderness.’

RETHINK in sacred sharing

Spend some time in sacred reflection, conversation, and listening. Use the following questions as a guide.

Q: Have have you ever been given a promise?

Q: Have you ever been given a promise you had to wait for?

Q: KIDS: what was God’s dream for the Israelites? What was their role in fulfilling God’s promise?

Q: Describe the feelings the Israelites must have had, being so close to the Promised Land – and yet so far away. Be as descriptive as possible.

Q: Have you ever done something you regretted – apologized for – but still experienced the consequences?

Q: Are there any dreams that Jesus is giving you now? Or any ways you can be a part of His unfolding story?

Q: What steps can you take towards the dreams Jesus has given you?

RECREATE in sacred play

Spend some time in sacred play recreating the Sinai scene! Use materials from within your home to recreate the wilderness, Israel’s camp, and Mt. Sinai. Below are a list of props ideas, characters, costumes, and a general flow-of-the-story. Remember – play is spontaneous and child-led! Use the scriptures as a reference but let the children lead!

COSTUMES/PROPS: Cardboard swords, balloons as grape clusters, ‘milk and honey’ fun-foods (or literal glasses of milk and honey if you are brave!) to be hidden in the ‘Land of Canaan’.

CHARACTERS: The characters should be divided. KIDS: Moses, Joshua, Caleb, and the spies of Israel. ADULTS: the Giants of Canaan.

SPACE: Set up the space into two sections: one side as the wilderness, the other as the ‘Land of Canaan.’ A mountain (couch, bed, or table) separates the two.

FLOW: Moses sends out the spies. The spies are to bring back milk and honey from the ‘Land of Canaan’ but must be careful not to be caught or thrown into prison by the Giants. If the spies snatch the milk and honey, and return to their side safely, they may eat the food they grabbed. Swap roles & characters. Reset! And play!

REMAKE in a sacred meal

When the spies returned after forty days in Canaan it was all bad news – except for the food! The land was ‘flowing with milk and honey’ which meant: lots of good food everywhere!

CHALLENGE: Have a milk-and-honey feast! Fill the table with a spread of delicious local foods, the bounty of the land! Cheese. Meat. Fruit. Veg. Pastries! Get the milk flowing and lay out a jar of honey (honeycomb if you have it – as that is what the Israelites would have eaten). Feast! Enjoy God’s bounty!

RESPOND in sacred prayer

Dreams are often vague and difficult to articulate. Yahweh’s dream for Israel was so extraordinary that metaphor was used to express and carry it forward: ‘As many people as the stars in the heavens.’ ‘A land flowing with milk and honey.’ These descriptions painted visual hope that endured generations.

Find a quiet spot in your home to reflect and pray. Express and summarize your dream with poetry, metaphor, or symbol in a way that will endure life’s hardships – especially in these uncertain times.

My family will be filled with colour and purpose.

My life shine in dark places in Jesus’ name.

download & print a PDF version of this curriculum

Sunday Live Stream — He is Risen

A reading of John 20:1-18 by Pastor Kristina for Easter morning.
Filmed by Mark Ducommun

Easter 2020: The Hope of the Saviour
LUKE 24:13-35
April 12th, 2020

Have you ever really hoped for something, only to be disappointed or let down? I think we all can, can’t we? Maybe even today, some of you are feeling some disappointment or loss of hope. For weeks you have been looking forward to having that Easter dinner with family and now you can’t. Or maybe a vacation you were looking forward to was cancelled. I think we can all fill in the blanks for our own situations.

It is Easter Sunday, a day where we celebrate hope because of what Jesus did for us. But that first Easter Sunday, almost 2000 years ago, didn’t begin for everyone on a hopeful note.

Luke 24:13-16

  • i. Introduced to two people: Cleopas, and a fellow traveller (could be his wife, could be Luke, we don’t really know).
  • ii. They were ‘disciples’ of Jesus – they were not the inner 12 we regularly think about, but part of a larger group who followed Jesus as He taught.
  • iii. Coming home from Jerusalem, likely from the annual, mandatory Passover celebrations. It was a 7 mile trek to a place mentioned only here, Emmaus.
  • iv. Intently engaged in a deep conversation with passion about everything that just happened, the Passover celebration, Jesus’ death, and likely what the prophets said in OT regarding the Messiah.
  • v. Jesus suddenly shows up and walks alongside them, listening, like a stranger who is on the periphery.
  • vi. They have no idea that it is Jesus as for some reason, God kept them from recognizing Jesus. We are not completely sure why, but we can assume that God needed them to go through the coming experience to teach them an important lesson.

Luke 24:17-24

  • i. Jesus says (paraphrased) “hey, what’s up? What are you talking about?”
  • ii. It catches them off guard completely. They actually have to stop walking. They feel the heaviness and lack of hope from the weekend. It is written across their face.
  • iii. They respond by saying (paraphrased) “have you been asleep all this time? Where you been at? How could you not know what we are talking about? How could you not hear?”
  • iv. Jesus prompts further by asking “what things – what you talking about?”
  • v. They then unload all their disappointments, their discouragement, and hopelessness, their failed expectations. To them:
    • a. Jesus was a good man, prophet, miracle worker, good teacher. But He was condemned to death.
    • b. He was the same guy who they hoped would rescue them from Rome (as evidenced by Palm Sunday and the triumphal entry) but was now dead.
    • c. On top of that, there is news that Jesus’ body is gone. The women saw angels who said He was alive, but no body was found later. And the two aren’t satisfied. They don’t know, or believe, and are still feeling like the wind knocked out of their sails.

Luke 24:25-27

  • i. Jesus speaks a correction: “Do you not know what has been written in the Scriptures you know so well? Don’t you understand it? Don’t you get it?”
  • ii. Jesus spends the rest of the journey (likely a long time as the whole journey was 7 miles) with captive audience. He shares from the entire Hebrew Scriptures, which they likely knew well (right from the beginning – writings of Moses to the end – prophets) about who the Messiah was and what was to happen to Him. All the of the Old Testament speaks to His death and new life.
  • iii. Important as He was speaking (from the writings they would have known well) about who He truly was, not just a ‘king’.

Luke 24:28-35

  • i. As they are sitting and having a meal, Jesus breaks the bread (reminiscent of the last supper), and instantly their eyes are opened to who this stranger was. They then look around to see He is gone.
  • ii. They realize that as He taught them, their hearts were burning within them. Something was resonating.
  • iii. In excitement, they go back to Jerusalem 7 miles to find where the 11 were gathered. Hear that Jesus had appeared and was risen. And they backed up that news from their experience. They had just experienced the hope of the Saviour.

SO WHAT?

Can you imagine what it would have been like to be Cleopas and his companion in that moment? To feel so full of despair and hopelessness, completely heavy from everything they had hoped in to come crashing down, to have their world be completely different and disappointing. Yet in a moment, a split second they had their hope, astonishment, and joy come flooding in as they see Jesus alive! As they put together the words Jesus spoke with recognizing who this stranger really was, they saw Jesus to be more than just a revolutionary leader. They saw Him to be the promised Lord and Saviour.

Important to remember that Jesus returned to them hope – but not in the way they expected or initially wanted, but in the way they needed. They didn’t need freed from Rome. Jesus offered freedom from the religious system of the day (with all of its restrictions and requirements), a real and personal relationship with God that had been restored, a message of spiritual healing and life, and a message of purpose and future in a world filled with chaos and unrest.

Picture today that you are Cleopas or his travelling companion. Where today are you feeling hopeless, discouraged, disappointed, depressed, heavy, weighed down, with the wind knocked out of your sails? What is written across your face? Where do you need the Hope of a Saviour?

The heart of the Father pursued you with love, an unconditional, all encompassing, overflowing love. Enough so that God Himself, in the person of Jesus, came down to Earth to physically die for you, and then rise to life again so that today, you can have the Hope of the Saviour. Because of Jesus, we can be invited into a personal relationship with God, where regardless of what we face, we don’t have to feel alone and hopeless. Where we can experience the love of God in a personal way that is bigger than any circumstance, pain, or failed expectation we face. Where, because of this relationship, we can experience His strength, His peace, His joy, His comfort, His presence. And we can know that whatever we are facing, because He lives, we also can live too. We can live beyond the here and now. We can live facing tomorrow, we can live facing eternity. We can know that whatever we face, we have the Hope of the Saviour who is bigger than all of it, and who promises us a life beyond this mere mortal life that is beyond compare. That is perfect, that is the way God originally designed us for and completes our story. Because He lives.