JR. Forasteros - May 31, 2020

Pentecost vs Racism

Winds of Change

In the last month, violence against Black Americans has once again been undeniable. How ought the Church to respond to racism in our day and time? Pentecost Sunday – the birthday of the Church, and the day we celebrate receiving the Holy Spirit – is the perfect day to consider these questions. God makes us one body that is united but not uniform. As a spiritual family, when one of us hurts, we all hurt. So how can we stand together?

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A lot of you know I’m a huge astronomy nerd (and nerd in general). When I was in second grade, I had read all the books in my little elementary school’s k-3 half of the library. It took some wheeling and a good bit of dealing, but I convinced the school librarian to let me check out books from the 4-6 section of the library. The first one I got was a book on the moon.

Do you know how the moon was formed? The most popular theory is called the Impact theory. Essentially, something like 3-4 billion years ago, when our solar system was still coalescing, a planet the size of Mars collided with Earth. As you can imagine, such a collision was cataclysmic for both planets. The other planetoid shattered, and its fragments became the moon.

And poor Earth – the collision set Earth on a trajectory to develop oceans, and oxygen. And life.

That’s right – without our moon, life would look very different here. We wouldn’t have tides (or werewolves!).

This cataclysmic collision actually created the conditions under which life could emerge on earth.

I want to talk about what happens when people collide today. We’ve all probably had some people come into our lives, relationships that felt cataclysmic. And, especially if you’ve had one or two of those encounters, it’s easy to become inward focused. Protective.

We’re going to talk today about the risk of remaining open. Even in the face of difficult, challenging relationships. Because the truth is: cataclysm isn’t the end of the world. It might just be the beginning of something new and beautiful.

God created us to need each other. God created us to need relationships with each other to open us up.

Choosing to remain open helps us to know ourselves, our neighbors and our God better.

Join us Sunday as we learn to find God in our disruptions this year.

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