Archive for September, 2008

OINK! OINK! SPLASH!

Monday, September 29th, 2008 by mswora

That could be the sound of markets tanking as the greed-fest winds down and those who never got a chance to pig out at the trough are left with the bill.

 Or it could be the sound of a legion of militaristic spirits taking their discipline to extreme and charging, like Pharoah's charioteers, into the sea to their deaths.

It was certainly the sound of panic in response to the first ever Christian mission to the Gentiles, after Jesus and his disciples stepped out of the boat and onto the Gentile side of the Sea of Galilee (Mark 5: 1-20). But in the sounds of porcine panic can be heard overtones of militarism and greed, as I bring out in the attached drama, "Two Kinds of Spirits; Two Kinds of Possession," accessible at Download gerasene_demoniac.opd and in the message delivered at Emmanuel Mennonite Church, Download gerasene_demoniac.doc, delivered on Sunday, September 28. As strange as this gospel story might strike a 21st Century audience, I find elements about it that are current events, or at least a way to interpret them. I'd be interested in knowing if you see the same.

In Christ,

Mathew Swora, pastor

IF THIS BOAT FLIPS…..

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008 by mswora

don't panic," I told my daughter, Emily, fighting a rising wave of panic in myself. Its one thing to face big waves and the chance that our canoe could be flipped. Been there/done that, on purpose even (for my Boy Scout Canoeing merit badge). Its another thing to have your daughter along with you on big water,ion big waves.

So how did we do? Check it out in last Sunday's message (September 21) on Mark 4 and the storm that Jesus stilled, at Download big_bad_storm.doc

Mathew Swora, pastor

THAT HARDLY SEEMS FAIR!

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008 by mswora

"..that they may ever see, but never perceive, and ever hear, without ever understanding, lest they turn and be forgiven…." (Mark 4: 12, quoting from Isaiah 6: 9-10)

Hunh? These mysterious words of intent serve as Jesus' explanation about why he speaks of the mystery of the Kingdom of God in parables: precisely so that some people will not understand. "Let those who have ears to hear, hear." Those who don't, can just tune out. And this after he has told the parable of the sower (Mark 4:1-20), in which it seems that the word is meant to be sown liberally, indiscriminately, like seed sown over rocks, pathways, among weeds, thorns and hungry birds, as well as on good soil. In which case we should be handing out ears to hear right and left, transplanting them or drilling them into people's heads.

So what gives? And how might the parable of the sower apply to any of us who have already taken the word to heart so that it has borne fruit in a living faith? For a few attempts at answering these questions, check out last Sunday's message (September 14, 2008) at Emmanuel Mennonite Church, at

Download parable_of_the_sower.doc

 In Christ,

Mathew Swora, pastor

A NEW CHRISTIAN EDUCATION YEAR

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008 by mswora

During worship on Sunday, September 7, we asked our new and continuing Christian education workers and teachers (a third of our whole church, practically) the following questions for their commissioning:

  • Will you now commit yourselves to the spiritual nurture of your students, offering yourself and your time, your prayers and your love on their behalf, that they might catch from you a love and knowledge of the Scriptures? If so, please say, "I will."
  • Will you also go the extra mile on behalf of your students and your fellow teachers, not only to prepare and deliver lessons in the Bible and the Christian life, but to go the extra mile whenever possible to share your faith and your life with God in all joy and honesty? If so, please say "I will."
  • Will you also devote yourself to the continual renewal of your spiritual life, the broadening of your biblical knowledge and the maturing of your character so that you may share with your students out of a full spiritual well? If so, please say, "I will."

They all said, "I will." Bless them.

If you share our church's passion and commitment to Christian education (with thanks to our Christian Education Commission leaders Tammy Lundquist, Mary Harder and Nathan Zerbe), may you find challenge, encouragement and inspiration in the message that followed that day on Psalm 119: 33-40, "The Disciple's Prayer," at Download christian_education_08.doc.

Mathew Swora, pastor

THE FOLLOWING IS A PAID POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT…..

Saturday, September 6th, 2008 by mswora

 ….paid for by Emmanuel Mennonite Church, through its TypePad subscription (about $5 a month). It is political in that it has to do with our public, as well as personal, lives. Any other similarity to the recent political events in either Denver or St. Paul is either unintentional or rhetorical. It is brought to you by a party that will not, and cannot, be represented on this November's ballot. Any party or politician who tells you otherwise, overtly or subtly, is either lying or sincerely mistaken. That party is the Kingdom of God, and its standard bearer is Jesus of Nazareth. No human political party, no worldly government, and no office holder, however noble, honest and self-sacrificial (and there are many) can fully represent the platform of the Kingdom of God, nor take the place or do the job of the Prince of Peace in bringing us true justice, security and peace. Yet we of the Kingdom of God party applaud and support the efforts of any party or politician who seeks honestly to do so in ways similar to those of Jesus, the Prince of Peace. But do not let the mythic, almost messianic, language emanating from either Denver or St. Paul, or from any other political convention this year, fool you into thinking otherwise.

The platform of the Kingdom of God party, as stated by its standard-bearer, is “to preach good news to the poor….proclaim freedom for the prisoners….recovery of sight for the blind….to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor (Luke 4: 18-19) until God makes “all things new” and the “kingdoms of this world have become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ.” Jesus of Nazareth, our party's standard-bearer, has already won the election by voice vote outside Jerusalem, when he rode humbly and peacefully into town on a donkey, to the acclaim of the poor, the powerless, of children and infants. He was enthroned in the glory of self-sacrificial love on the cross of Calvary, was coronated by God at the empty tomb, and took his throne at his ascension to heaven. We're awaiting the final inauguration celebration when he returns, at which point, we expect all human governments to give way to his.

In the mean time, we of the Kingdom of God party declare and demonstrate our primary loyalty to Jesus and his government by living and loving as he did. While some governments may consider this primary loyalty to be treason of the highest sort, the expression and fruits of this loyalty should give no government or leader any reason for fear, unless their rule depends upon our acquiescence to, or participation in, violence and evil. In which case, we will resist and witness to the kingdom of God by continuing to live nonviolently in love, peace and justice, whatever the cost to ourselves.

As for all the other human parties and politicians, we wish them well inasmuch as they seek to align their policies and platforms with those of the Kingdom of God, even while we understand and expect that human institutions can only approach the platform and policies of God's Kingdom in the crudest and most conflicted ways. Why should they do any better than we who claim this allegiance? And why should we, who claim this holy allegiance, expect the world to do our jobs? To them we offer our prayers, our blessings and a loving respect that is identical for the most powerful president to the poorest pauper, a loving respect which is based not on ideology but on our common humanity, as creatures made in the image of God.

To all parties and candidates we issue also this warning: Do not invoke the name of God without also genuinely seeking to do the will and the work of God (see the Kingdom of God platform above). Otherwise, you are using God's name in vain, a commandment with a terrible price for breaking (Exodus 20: 7). In the spirit of the prophets of ancient Israel, it would be better to be secular and godless in your rhetoric, while seeking to do justice and mercy, than to use religious and pious rhetoric, while seeking war and exploiting the poor.

As for the ballot this November, we issue no endorsements, knowing that our candidate and his policies can never be fully or fairly represented by any human political institution. We will simply pray for all the parties and persons involved, and, after the election, will respect, love and pray for whoever takes office. We will also cooperate with every policy and platform that conforms with the Great Commandment, to “love your neighbor as yourself (Mark 12:31),” and will take any such law and regulation as the starting point of our obligation to love our neighbor, and not the end of it. But be fully aware that, for us in the Kingdom of God party, the neighbors whom we are to so love includes our enemies.

We will not expect of any office holder or government the full measure of things which they and their parties have promised, and which only Jesus has demonstrated the ability to deliver. We accept, with some sorrow and grace, that all efforts to do good within our worldly kingdoms, however much they accomplish, are also fraught with bedeviling blindness, dilemmas and contradictions. We all are only human in a fallen world.

Therefore, we will trust your choice, and each other's choice, when it comes to dealing with the difficult dilemmas of whether to vote, and who to vote for, this next November, and will not limit our citizenship in this or any other nation to the pulling of a lever on Election Day. Instead, we will strive ever “to do justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with our God (Micah 6:8),” every day, before and after November 4, 2008. That is our political platform in this time of transition, between the day of Christ's ascension and the day when all the world, and even his enemies, have become his footstool.

Mathew Swora, pastor

Emmanuel Mennonite Church, St. Paul, MN