May 15, 2008

AVAILABLE FOR COMMUNITY EDUCATION

  Pb210001_2 GEORGE SAWYER

George Sawyer is currently a rogue scholar and free-lance instigator.  In the 1990's he founded and directed The Tomb which served as an educational and evangelistic ministry to alternative-culture and neo-Pagan youth in the Twin Cities.   During that same time he also served as volunteer Intervarsity
staff at Macalester College.  George holds a B.M. in music history, an M.Div. from Bethel Seminary, and is currently working on an M.Th. in Patristics at Luther Seminary.  His academic interests include the Petrine and Johannine literature, early Christian church/state relations and notions of citizenship, the Radical Reformation, and the Neo-Pagan Revival.   He is survived by three perfect children; George IV, Sarah, and David (although, in spite of the choice of the word "survived" I can assure you that George was quite alive the last time I saw him, on Sunday--Mathew Swora).  When the evil of money becomes a necessity George is a computer instructor for Executrain and North Hennepin Community College.  When not teaching or studying George is at home aboard his houseboat on the Mississippi River or out hiking and backpacking.  Living extensively in the outdoors, George is an active environmentalist and experiments with simple living in an urban setting.  He has converted his diesel truck to run on vegetable oil and is now remodeling his houseboat to be less dependent on the grid and more
environmentally positive.

George is qualified and available to speak about: Johannine and Petrine Literature (Gospel and Letters of John, Revelation, 1 Peter); Gospel of Matthew; Patristics (i.e. early Christian literature before A.D. 600); Christian relationships with the State to c. 450; Christian understandings of citizenship and Kingdom of God to c. 450; Christian understandings of pacifism and nonviolence to c. 450
The Radical Reformation (origins of Anabaptism in the 16th century); Patristic Christology and Pneumatology (Understandings of Christ and the Holy Spirit in the early Church); Ministry to alternative-culture youth; Ministry to neo-Paganism and Nature-based spirituality (Wicca, Paganism,
magic, witchcraft)

KIM VU FRIESEN

Km1 Kim Vu Friesen is a counselor with the Minneapolis School District (South High School), and served, with her husband, Philip Friesen, as a missionary with the former Commission on Overseas Mission of the General Conference Mennonite Church in Taiwan. In addition to English and her native Vietnamese language, Kim also speaks  Mandarin Chinese. Kim and Phil are the parents of Josiah and Michelle. She also heads up the ConneXions program of Stadium Village Church, Minneapolis, a non-profit ESL agency.

Kim can speak on topics relating to Asian Cultural Characteristics; SouthEast Asian Refugee Experience, Mental Health and Treatment among SEA Refugees and Immigrants, Cross-cultural communication and Counseling, Family dynamics issues: marriage, parenting, etc. and faith-related topics such as witnessing and international student ministry.

MATHEW SWORA

Blog_portrait The pastor of Emmanuel Mennonite Church, he talks a lot already, and you can read his bio elsewhere on this weblog. But if you would like to hear from him, in English or French, he would be glad to speak with groups about Mennonite/Anabaptist history and theology, Anabaptist and biblical peace theology, pastoring, servant leadership, his recent sabbatical travels through Africa, fishing, and why he's now learning Spanish.

PENTECOST: AS BIG AS CHRISTMAS

Christmas celebrates the fact that Christ came.

Easter celebrates the fact Christ came back from the dead.

Pentecost celebrates the fact that Christ stayed and remains with us through the gift of His Holy Spirit. We know what a difference that made on that Pentecost day after Jesus' resurrection. But what about now? Does the Spirit have to show up in the exact same dramatic ways? Check out last Sunday's Pentecost sermon (May 11, 2008) to see and celebrate what the Spirit of Jesus is still doing in the world and the church, at Download Pentecost2008.doc

Mathew Swora, pastor

May 06, 2008

FOR ALL THE 'GRILS' AMONG US (and within us)

Last Sunday's message (May 4, 2008) from Mark 2: 1-12 is for all the GRILS among us. And within us. Anyone of us who was ever the last one picked, as a kid, for the soccer team, or for sandlot baseball, or for dodgeball during recess. Anyone who ever felt unwanted, excluded, not accepted or welcomed, or who felt stuck, for no fault of your own, on the outside looking in, on the back side of a ring of cold shoulders, tried, judged and exiled with no chance even of defending yourself, because of your color or your income or your language or your weakness or an error, a failure, faults, or your newness, sentenced to permanent exile with no chance for appeal. Like the paralytic on his mat.

Sunday's message was also for any one of us who did the choosing for the dodge ball team, or for soccer, and who worked hard to make sure that that scrawny, gangly weakling with the thick glasses ended up on the other guys' team. And for the self-designated enforcers of very exclusive standards who made sure that you-know-who didn't get into the inner circle, the protectors of a proper sense of who's "in" and what constitutes "us." Like the teachers of the law, seated in Jesus' crowded little home in Capernaum, who were watching over the teaching, preaching and healing, to give it their official seal of approval. Or not.

And for any of us who prefer to stay stuck in either role, or both (for both persons are within us), Sunday's message is good news, and bad news. First, for the good news, at Download paralyticword.doc

April 28, 2008

PRAYER AND THE KINGDOM OF GOD

You would almost think, just from reading the first few chapters of Mark's Gospel, that Jesus was constantly as busy as we are today, rushing nonstop from one healing and teaching and deliverance to another. But then, toward the end of the first chapter, we find that Jesus has slipped out before sunrise for a time of personal prayer. The reasons for this, and what it teaches us about the place of prayer in our lives and in the reign of God, I sought to spell out in yesterday's message (April 27) at Emmanuel Mennonite Church, which was itself an answer to prayer. Check out the message here: Download kingdom_prayer.doc  to find out why.

Mathew Swora

April 23, 2008

SO FEW AGAINST 120,000 MENNONITES!

A HOPELESS FIGHT TO THE FINISH!

I was stunned yesterday when Tony Schrock brought to my attention the following quote from an article in yesterday's Minneapolis Star-Tribune ("Defendant: God 'wants me to get rid of' the judge"-April 22, 2008):  "God needs us to be like Gideon against the Mennonites-- 300 vs. 120,000 men. We rise up and God will take care of us." I was stunned that our tiny denomination was even mentioned by a big ticket newspaper. Then I was stunned that we were mentioned in connection with tax evasion, potential murder for hire, intimidation, citizen's courts and sentencing against duly elected and appointed civil officials, and all in the name of God. We're about anything but all that. And, to be fair, the person who said it placed us in the opposition category. But what he meant to say, or should have said, was "Gideon against the Midianites," unless Judges chapters 6 and 7 are mistaken. As would be all the church historians who find no record of Mennonites and Anabaptism before 1525. Our unsought publicity (at least it was free) spurred the following letter to the editors of the Star-Trib, which has so far not been published (along with the other 2,378 other multi-volume tomes I have sent them--not).

Dear Editor,

As pastor and member of Emmanuel Mennonite Church in St. Paul, I was taken aback this morning to find myself in the news, when Robert Beale was quoted as saying, “God needs us to be like Gideon against the Mennonites [sic], 300 versus 120,000 men,” (“Defendant: God Wants Me To Get Rid of the Judge” April 22, 2008). I wasn't aware of ever having had a controversy with Gideon. His beef was with “the Midianites, in chapters 6 and 7 of the Old Testament Book of Judges. Was Beale mistaken, or the reporter who quoted him, or am I, in not having known that there were fellow Mennonites that far back? If so, I'd very much like to meet all 120,000 of us, since our average Sunday morning attendance is around 65, and our particular denomination (Mennonite Church USA) is not quite as big as the Midianite army. Nor can I figure out why Gideon would go forth to battle against us since we are a historic peace church. Gideon's army would find us praying, preaching, doing humanitarian service, sewing quilts, baking pies and building cabinets to raise money for mission and world relief; that's our way of fighting. Sorry we can't live up to our billing in an otherwise white knuckle front page article. But seriously, we'll pray for everyone named therein, the judge, the accused and all their friends and family. May they all know peace.

Respectfully,

Mathew Swora, pastor

Emmanuel Midianite Church

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

I was rather surprised when I ordered my favorite meal at the restaurant a few months back, and found it had changed. And not for the better. This was at the only restaurant I knew that served beef enchiladas with an authentic Mexican molé sauce. To die for! And the molé sauce was as good as I remembered. But inside the enchiladas I found ground beef, and a rather bland, institutional type of ground beef, like what you get out of a 45 ounce can, rather than the spicy shredded beef that they used to fill it with. Why the change? Then I remembered, the restaurant was under new management. And one change the new management was making was from gourmet shredded beef to cheaper ground beef, probably to cut costs. It didn't surprise me too much when that restaurant went out of business recently. That's what you get for skimping on real shredded beef.

In the stories of healing and exorcism of Mark chapter 1, things are happening that tell us the whole world is coming under new management. Unlike my former favorite Mexican restaurant, this time, for the better. In effect, the long-promised and prayed-for kingdom of God is drawing near through the healing ministry of Jesus. For more on what the healing ministry and miracles of Jesus mean from an Anabaptist Christian perspective, check out last Sunday's message (April 20) atDownload healingword.doc

April 15, 2008

"Follow Me"--A CALL TO FRIENDSHIP

Burkina_faso_021_2 Samuel Traore (age 9), of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, made such good friends with our daughter, Emily Swora, that he wasn't about to let her get into the bus to leave for Bobo-Dioulasso and points west without a struggle (summer, 2004).

In some times and cultures, it is the very reason for living, and the one thing that always makes it worthwhile, the one enduring sweetness, given all the sufferings and losses we sustain. No, not Mexican food(though it comes close)! I mean Friendship! Consider the ancient Greek story of Damon and Pythias, who.....well, read the attached message (below) from Emmanuel Mennonite Church for Sunday, April 6, to find out what they did for each other.

But in this day and culture, friendship is something of a lost art as relationships come increasingly to be seen in the service of the market and money, rather than vice versa. Our church and movement (Anabaptist/Mennonite) make a big thing out of "discipleship." But sometimes we make that out to be simply a matter of strenuous rules and high expectations, forgetting that Jesus' call to four fishermen along the Sea of Galilee, to "follow me," was essentially a call to share their lives in love, to the point even of being willing to give them in exchange for each other. And there you have friendship.

Or did I miss the point? Check out the following message at  Download friendships.doc and let me know what you think.

Your friend,

Mathew Swora, pastor

March 31, 2008

SO, WHERE IS THIS 'KINGDOM OF GOD?'

("If the buzzard still won't eat grass?")

A certain question has haunted me ever since it was first put to me, some twenty years ago. It was put to me by Abdias Coulibaly, the pastor of the Mennonite Church of Orodara, in Burkina Faso, who visited us at Emmanuel Mennonite Church in March of 2006. He put it to me while I was visiting with him one afternoon in his bookstore while we lived there in Burkina Faso. I was talking with him about a new Jula language translation of Mark's gospel that some linguists were working on in the nearby city of Bobo-Dioulasso.

Although this new translation of Mark's gospel reflected quite well the Jula spoken in the streets of Bobo-Dioulasso and Orodara and much of northern Ivory Coast, I had a major theological problem with it. I barely got into Mark chapter one, verse 15, and found Jesus quoted as saying, “The time has come; God is king, repent and believe the good news.”

Now, most of your Bible translations, if they're anything other than a paraphrase, translate Jesus' first recorded message as, “The time has come; the kingdom of God has drawn near, repent and believe the good news.”

Here were my problems with that particular translation, that "God is king," instead of "the kingdom of God has drawn near": For one thing, it leaves hanging the phrase, "the time has come." The time has come for what? God has always been, and ever will be, king. But more importantly, the phrase “God is king” says nothing new or revolutionary in that society, not for Christians, Muslims or traditionalists. Its even something of a stock phrase used in daily speech, in songs and in sermons in Jula down at the mosque. There are even proverbs like, "God is king; therefore the buzzard will never eat grass." In other words, Don't expect the world to never change much from the way it is. Because God made it so. But Jesus' first message, that "the kingdom of God has drawn near," says quite the opposite. Get ready for major regime change.

So, when I told Abdias about my concerns over this new translation, he asked me, “Well, what would you prefer?”

That “The kingdom of God has drawn near,” I said.

“But that will leave people wondering just where is the kingdom of God, if it has indeed drawn near,” Abdias said. “People here may take it literally. Is it as near as the border with Mali, fifty kilometers to the west? Or a little further away, like the border with Ivory Coast, 70 kilometers to the south? If Jesus preached that God's kingdom has come, but things don't look all that different, then where is this kingdom of God, and how can we tell that it is near?” he asked.

In other words, what difference does Jesus' central message make, if, after he preached it and lived it, the buzzard will still never eat grass, and the world continues on as it did before? I highly respect Pastor Abdias and his insight into both the Bible and his culture. As a cultural and linguistic consultant for me, and as a brother in Christ, he saved my hide a number of times as I tried to learn the ropes there. And he posed a very important and perceptive question.

How would you answer it? Here's my attempt, twenty years later, as we take up again the theme of the Kingdom of God in Mark's Gospel, at Download KingdomofGod1.doc .

In Christ,

Mathew Swora, pastor

March 24, 2008

THE SPIRITUAL EQUIVALENT OF A LIGHTNING BOLT

If the people you hang out with, and the effect you leave upon them, tells us something about yourself, then what does Mary Magdalene and her role as "apostle to the apostles" tell us about Jesus. That's what I attempt to get at in this meditation for Easter Sunday, 2008, at Download Easter2008.doc .

He is Risen!

Mathew Swora, pastor

March 20, 2008

"In Memory of Her"--A Maundy Thursday Meditation

Mark 14: 1Now the Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread were only two days away, and the chief priests and the teachers of the law were looking for some sly way to arrest Jesus and kill him. 2"But not during the Feast," they said, "or the people may riot."  3While he was in Bethany, reclining at the table in the home of a man known as Simon the Leper, a woman came with an alabaster jar of very expensive perfume, made of pure nard. She broke the jar and poured the perfume on his head.  4Some of those present were saying indignantly to one another, "Why this waste of perfume? 5It could have been sold for more than a year's wages[a] and the money given to the poor." And they rebuked her harshly.  6"Leave her alone," said Jesus. "Why are you bothering her? She has done a beautiful thing to me. 7The poor you will always have with you, and you can help them any time you want. But you will not always have me. 8She did what she could. She poured perfume on my body beforehand to prepare for my burial. 9I tell you the truth, wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her." 10Then Judas Iscariot, one of the Twelve, went to the chief priests to betray Jesus to them. 11They were delighted to hear this and promised to give him money. So he watched for an opportunity to hand him over.

Jesus told me what to talk about tonight. Not that I had a vision of him or heard his voice telling me what to say. I didn't. I'm simply going on his instructions, that “wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her.” You have entrusted me to preach the gospel, so I should talk about this woman and what she did from time to time, as part of preaching the gospel.

And I have spoken about her, more than once, in this church. As I don't remember exactly what I said back then, hopefully I'll come up with something new. Those of you who remember, let me know if I did. Or not.

The gospel comes to us as a story, a story about God and humanity meeting in Jesus of Nazareth. Including, in Jesus on a cross. This story affects us like a stone dropped in the water: it leaves a widening ring of ripples. Where they stop we can't say, and we probably shouldn't. This part of the gospel story, about the woman anointing Jesus, leaves some ripples in my life that deal with hope. But more about that in a minute, if I remember. I hope.

Why did she do what she did? That's what some of the apostles asked, but in a mean-spirited manner, as in, “Why this waste of expensive perfume? The money could have been given to the poor.” But since Jesus put the kabosh on that kind of question, that's not what I mean when I ask, “Why did she do it?”

At the time, anointing with precious, aromatic oil could have meant at least three things: 1) an extravagant gesture of hospitality toward an honored, esteemed guest, as in Psalm 23, “you have anointed my head with oil.” So as long as the guest lingers, and wherever the guest goes, as long as the perfumed oil persists, you'll just know by the smell that he is an honored, highly esteemed guest, deemed worthy of such extravagant luxury; 2) anointing with aromatic oil is for the installation of a king (the word “Christ” means “anointed one,” or “king”); the act of anointing and embalming a dead body, out of respect, or to combat the smell of decay.

That last one, anointing a body for burial, is the one which Jesus ascribes to her actions. If that's what she had in mind, then her action was very perceptive. Here are these monstrous forces gathering around the Christ, seeking to destroy him, and the disciples seem clueless and in denial about it, all the way up to the moment of his death, it seems. But not Jesus, nor this woman. If she intended to anoint him for burial, then she was very perceptive and honest.

Or maybe she meant to anoint him as king. How's that for ironic? Because it was up to the high priest to anoint Israel's kings. But we know what he's up to. Israel's promised king is anointed by a woman un-named in all the gospels but one: John identifies her as Mary of Bethany, the sister of Martha and Lazarus. If Christ's kingship is what she meant to convey, then her action is very political, and its courageous. Its political because certainly Jesus' enemies will see it that way. Its courageous because, when they come for him, they won't stop with him.

But whether she intended to anoint Jesus for burial, or to express his value and honor as a guest, her action is one of love. Or if she intended this to be his one and only anointing as her rightful king, then her action is one of great faith. And to the extent that she had to overcome fear of being identified with Jesus the peaceful rebel, and to overcome any despair over the sheer size and power of Jesus' opposition, and the tiny size and relative unimportance of her actions, then what she did was also an expression of hope. Hope against all apparently justifiable hopelessness.

And there you have, in her actions, the three most direct ways in which we experience God: in the gifts of faith, hope and love. “The greatest of these is love,” because without love, any hope or faith we have are misguided and destructive.

I want to focus most on the hope implied in her actions. Given the monstrous size and nature of all the forces and people and powers lining up against Jesus, it would have been so easy for this woman to simply stay home and hide in despair. I don't know what she hoped would happen as a result of her anointing Jesus. Probably not a popular uprising that would sweep away their common enemies. But she must have decided that, whatever happens, whether Jesus lives only another day or another week, it would still be worthwhile to express her love for him, and her faith in him, even if only because its the right thing to do, whatever the consequence. Hers is but the slimmest margin of hope, at least for anything in this world or in this life. But compared to what they're up against, she has displayed hope of the highest order.

She reminds me of two Jewish women hiding out during the Nazi occupation of Russia, living in the forests near Minsk with the partisans. They were captured one day by a German military patrol. Their captors threw them into a prison for interrogation, hoping to find out from them where other Jews and partisans might be found. That night they were served a weak excuse of a soup, that had a few pieces of fat floating in it. One of the women took out the fat, wrapped it in her handkerchief, and began polishing her shoes with it.

“What are you doing that for?” her fellow prisoner asked?

The woman replied, “Like my father always said, take care of the little things you can handle, and don't despair over the big things that you can't. Polishing my shoes is the one thing I can do right now, and it makes me feel better, for the moment at least. Besides, I am not going to appear before the interrogation officer tomorrow looking like a hobo with dirty, scuffed-up shoes. Whatever happens, he'll know, as soon as he sees me, that he's dealing with someone who has some self-respect and care for herself, even if he doesn't.” So the other woman did the same thing with the pieces of fat floating in her broth.

The next morning they were brought before an officer for interrogation, who looked them over, head to foot, and told the soldier who had brought them in, “I thought you fools knew that our enemies live in the forest, they're constantly on the run, and its not long before they look that way. But you can tell just by looking at their shiny new shoes that these women are not partisans or rebels. Let them go and bring me some real resistance members.”

That is a picture of the hope that often motivates and sustains our efforts for God, goodness and the gospel. Its hard to say what a particular action or ministry will accomplish today, tomorrow or in the short run. At times, the acts of discipleship we are called upon to do must seem like spitting onto a raging forest fire, or an attempt to empty the ocean with a teaspoon. But since they seem to be the right thing to do, we do them anyway. At least in the hope that God will know and remember, and that one day “we will reap what we sow,” even though we don't know what the harvest will look like. I know I'm preaching to the choir here when I talk about such hope. If we let the stubbornness and the size of the opposition and the obstacles we face affect our response to things like hunger, war, or the worship of idols, we wouldn't be so involved with Ten Thousand Villages, Christian education, the Relief Sale, Urban Ventures or our other ministry connections. There would not be the gracious acts of care and support for each other as we have experienced them of late. If we let the small size of our congregation and of our resources determine our enthusiasm or our hope for affecting any of these things, I dare say we would all have stayed home tonight, and every Sunday morning.

In spite of all the darkness gathering around them, this woman does the one and only thing she can do: she ministers to the Body of Christ. And she does so compassionately, generously, extravagantly, even artistically, with a flair and a flourish for one of our most powerful senses, the sense of smell. And that is the one thing surely and always before us, today and every day: the opportunity to minister to the Body of Christ today, the people gathered here and around the world this night, to commemorate Christ and this woman who ministered to him. All our worshiop, prayers and ministries come down to this, ministering to Christ through the people we are given to love and to serve.

That is how this woman's story affects me. Her slim margin of hope was enough to make her do something that will always be remembered, which will always bear fruit, which will always inspire others, which did make a difference. For that particular moment, yes, but also for now and forever and whenever and wherever the gospel is preached. Her part of the gospel story gives us all hope that even the littlest, most fleeting and momentary things we do for Christ and his body are worthwhile, that they are enduring, and that they will be remembered and rewarded. Indeed, they are their own rewards.