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Will It Bear Fruit?

Stories
Lectionary Tales for the Pulpit
Series III, Cycle A
Melinda's heart ached. Her seventeen-year-old daughter had just gotten her nose pierced. Marcy wasn't even old enough to go to college, yet she was old enough to choose to have her nose pierced. What was to become of her? Melinda hoped this didn't signal a downward spiral to Marcy's future.

Melinda and Dan faced a big decision. Should they be honest and share their disappointment, and then end up seeing what other parts of Marcy's body she could pierce? Would people be quick to judge her? Or, worse yet, would people not be able to believe she was a "good Christian girl"? Should they confront her? Or should they choose their battles, and succinctly state that they were disappointed, and leave it at that?

They took the easy way out — and said nothing. When Marcy came to the dinner table that night, her little brother told her she looked silly with her red nose and matching red stone. "The swelling will go down, you goofball." She looked at her parents, but Melinda and Dan didn't say anything. They just glanced at her nose and then went on with their conversation. They were trying to decide which colleges they could visit with Marcy the following month. What did Marcy want, they asked her. School was out for three days, and Dan and Melinda wanted to make the most of it.

Marcy had good grades, pulling a solid B average, and was offered several small scholarships. They had narrowed the choice to three each: Melinda's three college choices, Dan's three, and Marcy's three. They weren't allowed to show each other their choices until later. Each had written down 25 strengths that Marcy had, then they would compare them with each school's academic strengths. Dan secretly wished Marcy would go to his old school: Central Lutheran. Melinda had gone there one year and then went off to graduate at State University. They had been quick to exclude any school focusing on the sciences, Marcy's least favorite subjects. Whatever the college, they hoped Marcy would love it and have a positive experience.

They had rented a fancy hotel suite for the weekend, and the family lounged around and talked about Marcy's goals in life, and they divulged their choices to each other. Melinda was a little anxious; Dan was very anxious. Marcy seemed to enjoy the excitement.

Two college names came up: Northwestern and State College. Not exactly Dan and Melinda's first choices, but they had also considered the schools for their strong liberal arts backgrounds. They prayed about it as a family and told Marcy they would discuss it and pray about it for an entire month and then let Marcy decide. Marcy ended up going to Northwestern.

Dan and Melinda were nervous wrecks that first week of college. They were constantly calling Marcy only to hang up the phone before it rang. They didn't want to be so obvious. They missed her terribly and stuck to the promised Wednesday and Sunday calls.

They were ecstatic when Marcy's first holiday break allowed her to be home for three weeks. They noticed she had an earring on her upper right earlobe. They didn't say anything. They wanted this to be a positive homecoming. They were so happy to hear about her experiences: it was so much richer than hearing it over the phone!

Marcy's college experience was positive: she met wonderful friends. She also made a deeper commitment to God. One night, she waited until her little brother was in bed before she called her parents into her bedroom to share her story. She was excited!

In a Bible study in the dorm one afternoon soon after college started, Marcy shared her frustration about being a "good Christian girl." A young man challenged her. He was a senior and he was a little brash. He told her being from a strong Christian family didn't qualify her as being a "good Christian girl". He wanted to know just what she meant by that anyway. Did that mean she was good at being Christian? Or was Marcy good because she was a Christian? What did she do to show her faith anyway?

Marcy was insulted and taken aback by the boy's frankness. The group had a good discussion, some siding with Marcy, some egging the boy on. In the end the boy shared that he was from a "good Christian home," too, but it wasn't until he was challenged to show good Christian actions that he felt called to have a closer relationship with Christ. It was the turning point he needed in his life. He went on to give his testimony of faith. One night in his freshman year, the boy was praying as he always did: a little quickly, a little distractedly, when he felt he needed to pray really in earnest. He asked God sincerely for direction in his life, and over the course of that week he got an answer: he wanted to teach anyway, but now his direction was for children in urban, secular schools where they needed a good role model. He shared that that conviction lead him to change his focus of study and lifestyle, and he became a minimalist, one who lives with as few possessions as possible in order to give generously to others.

"And you think," Marcy asked, "that just by teaching poor kids that you are going to be a better Christian?" Marcy couldn't believe his arrogance! "No," the boy said. "I believe that if I go back to my neighborhood, the kids — who know me already — will listen to me and will understand that if I can get out of such a poor neighborhood, they can too. I can share my struggles with them both with school and with having to resist gangs and drugs every day. And I can give them hope to be somebody. I didn't think I'd live to be fourteen. And then when I did, I thought I wouldn't make it to sixteen. I figured I would have been shot by then for resisting gangs or maybe I would be slipped some dangerous drugs. But with God's help, I was able to avoid it, and I went to school. I played my music, got a good scholarship, and did my best in school. If I can do it, they surely can do it! They just need God's direction like I needed it in my freshman year."

Wow! What a speech. The group was touched by his bravery in sharing his story. Marcy was eternally sorry that she thought he was arrogant. He just didn't "look" like a poor kid. "I'm very sorry," she mumbled.

"Ah, but looks are deceiving, aren't they?" he said. He lifted up his shirt sleeve to reveal an ugly tattoo of a dragon sucking on a skull. It went all the way up his arm. He lifted up his pant leg to reveal a tiger tattooed around his leg, eating what looked like a dead body. "I can never swim again without being hastily judged by these two creatures on my body. But what's inside of me — in my very being — is harder to guess. I like to call it a pleasant surprise."

Marcy was breathless when she shared this with her parents. "Wow! Can you believe it?" She kissed them both and went to bed, leaving them speechless. It was only the first of many times she shared with them what she was experiencing at college.

Marcy graduated with a degree in art history and works as a manager in a small art gallery. Her husband is a very successful diesel-engine mechanic. They have small twin boys. They are secure in their careers, and they are secure in their dedication to their faith, teaching Bible school and new adult Christians. They are also minimalists who give fifty percent of their earnings to a mission church. Because of their faith and generosity, two churches have been started from their home church. And because of their faith and generosity in sharing their life journeys, many, many people have come to know Christ in a personal way. They don't think they are better than anyone. They don't brag or belittle anyone. They simply share their faith journey.

And the boy with the tattoos? Well, Marcy still teases her husband's brother for being so forward that day, but that night led her to a closer relationship with Christ — and her future husband.
UPCOMING WEEKS
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Maundy Thursday
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Good Friday
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The Immediate Word

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Tom Willadsen
For April 20, 2025:

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John Jamison
Object: A bowl and a towel.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent

Have you ever gotten in trouble for not doing what you were supposed to do? (Let them respond.) Maybe it was something you were supposed to do at home, or maybe it was something you were supposed to do for someone else. Well, our story today is about the time Jesus’ friends didn’t do what Jesus told them they were supposed to do.
John Jamison
Activity: The Easter Game. See the note. 
John Jamison
Object: A box of Kleenex?

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent!

Today is the day we call Good Friday, and it is the day that Jesus died. What happened on Good Friday is the story I want to tell you about. It is a short story, but it is also a very sad story. (Show the Kleenex.) It is so sad that I brought a box of Kleenex with me in case we need it. Let’s hear our story together.

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Mark Ellingsen
Acts 10:34-43
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Isaiah 65:17-25
The vision of Isaiah, the new heaven and new earth, a world we cannot begin to imagine, moves us from the sorrow of Good Friday and the waiting of Saturday, into the joy of the resurrection. Isaiah proclaims from God, “no more shall the sound of weeping be heard in it or the cry of distress.” What a moment, what a time that will be. What hope there is in this prophecy? God’s promises are laid out before us. God’s promises are proclaimed to us.
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Isaiah 52:13--53:12
It’s unclear whether the original prophet is speaking about his own sufferings as a prophet bringing an unwanted word to people who want to believe all is well (and which could have led to severe physical punishment on the part of the authorities), or to the nation as the suffering servant who have suffered under the lash of a foreign oppressor, much as God’s people suffered under the Egyptians. These are legitimate interpretations, and perhaps there’s a bit of truth in all viewpoints.
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When Canadian missionaries Don and Carol Richardson entered the world of the Sawi people in Irian Jaya in 1962, they were aware that culture shock awaited them. But the full impact of the tensions they faced didn’t become apparent until one challenging day.
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What do you do on the night before God saves you? 

The children of Israel had been languishing in hopeless bondage for centuries. How many of them had lived and died under the taskmaster’s whip? How many of them had cried out to the Lord for help without seeing their prayers answered?  And so, as surely as their bodies were weighed down under the weight of their physical burdens, their spirits must also have been weighed down under years of bondage and despair.
Bill Thomas
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Exodus 12:1-4 (5-10) 11-14
It is perhaps not widely known, but the Community Blood Center has a website that contains stories of blood recipients.  I spent some time on that website as I thought about this passage. One of the stories that struck me was Kristen’s. Kristen’s time of need came during the birth of her first child. After a smooth pregnancy, she experienced serious problems during delivery, which led to a massive hemorrhage. She needed transfusions immediately, and ended up receiving 28 units of platelets, plasma, and whole blood.

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt
When she had said this, she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not know that it was Jesus. (v. 14)

Mary weeps as she comes to the tomb that first Easter morning. She weeps because her dearest friend is dead. When this friend comes up behind her she turns around and sees him, but she doesn't really see him. Do you know what I mean?

Mary thought Jesus was the gardener. She implores him, "Sir, if you have taken him away tell me where you have laid him…"  She sees him but she doesn't see him.
Peter Andrew Smith
I’m sorry but I have some bad news. John heard the words of the doctor again as he sat in the pew waiting for the service to start on Good Friday. He was at church because he was a regular and he hoped, he prayed that he could escape the rising fear and dread that had come from the medical appointment yesterday. The doctor had been sure there was no problem when John had told him the symptoms he was experiencing a couple of weeks ago. The doctor even told him to just ignore them as they were a sign of getting older.
John E. Sumwalt
In the same way he took the cup also, after supper, saying, ‘This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.’ (v. 25)

I was seven years old, the same age as my grandson, Leonard, when I asked the big communion question in the barn while helping Dad, the first Leonard Sumwalt, milk cows in 1958.

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Wayne Brouwer
When I was a pastor in rural southern Alberta, we held our Easter Sunrise worship services in a cemetery. It was difficult to gather in the dark, since neither mountains nor forests hid the spring-time sun, and the high desert plains lay open to almost ceaselessly unclouded skies. Still, we mumbled in hushed whispers as we acknowledged one another, and saved our booming tones for the final rousing chorus of “Up from the grave he arose…!” We did not shake the earth as much as we hoped.
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Gospel Theme:

Different paces and paths to resurrection faith

Gospel Note:
John here obviously mingles at least two Easter morning traditions, the one featuring Mary Magdalene and the other starring Peter and the beloved disciple. The overall effect, however, is to show three different paths and paces to resurrection faith: the unnamed disciple rushes to the empty tomb and comes to faith simply upon viewing it; Mary slowly but finally recognizes the risen Christ and believes; Peter, however, simply goes home, perhaps to await further evidence.
Pamela Urfer
Cast: Two Roman soldiers, FLAVIUS and LUCIUS, and an ANGEL

Length:
15 minutes

FLAVIUS and LUCIUS are seated on their stools, center stage.

FLAVIUS: (Complaining) What was all the hurry about for this burial? I don't understand why we had to rush.

LUCIUS:
(Distracted but agreeable) Hmmmm.

FLAVIUS: I don't know why I even ask. It's so typical of the military: Hurry up and wait.

LUCIUS:
True.

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The liturgy can start with a procession in which a child carries the Easter candle from the West end of the church to the altar at the East end, stopping at intervals to raise the candle high and cry, "Christ our Light". The people respond with "Alleluia!" All the candles in church are then lit from the Easter candle.

Call to worship:

The Lord is risen, he is risen indeed! Let us rejoice and be glad in him!

Invitation to confession:

Jesus, we turn to you.

Lord, have mercy.

Special Occasion

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