Grace Traces
One pastor's prayerful attempt to notice God's grace in his life.
Friday, April 24, 2026
Thursday, April 23, 2026
What Creation Preaches
The unfathomable cosmos came into being at the word of the
Eternal’s imagination, a solitary voice in endless darkness. The
breath of God’s mouth whispered the sea of stars into existence.
God gathers every drop of every ocean as in a jar, securing the ocean depths
as God’s watery treasure.
Let all people stand in awe of the Eternal; let every man, woman, and
child live in wonder of the Creator/Gardener/Composer of the symphony of
life. Psalm 33
Creation is God’s
first testament. Before there was a
Bible, there was creation. The world
around was alive with the glory of God.
Before people read the Bible, birds preached through songs, while the
stars above drew people’s attention to the vastness and unknowingness of the
world. Before people gathered around a book
with leather binding and tiny print that is getting harder for me to read, it
was a campfire under starlit nights that called people to ponder the meaning of
life. To be sure, I can be lost in
wonder, love, and praise while gardening or mowing my grass or hiking in a
forest. This is not my everyday
experience. Too often, I am sheltered
(and I think I am shielded) by cars, roofs, and walls. Too often, this constant disconnection from
the earth leads to disorientation and even dis-ease within me. I can be lured to believe that rain, which is
needed and necessary, is an inconvenience to my plans. I can be lured to think that I can weather
and withstand every storm ~ but some are stronger than a
hurricane or hurt worse than baseball-sized hail. I can be lured from interacting with the
world, which continues to be how God shows up and sings out each day.
Today, I invite
you to go outside. You can go for a
walk. You can wade in the water. You could sit on a chair on your
porch/lanai/under a tree. The invitation
is to pay attention to what you are
seeing/smelling/hearing/tasting/experiencing.
Let your five senses be open to the One who can be encountered in more
ways than we can explore or exhaust in one life. Let your mind, heart, and soul find alignment
with the world that is mysterious and marvelous. Let Creation connect to you, because you are
part of creation. Rev. Barbara Brown
Taylor says, “The body is a great focuser, whether the means is pain or
pleasure. The body is a great reminder of where we came from and where we are
going, on the one sacred journey that we all make, whether we mean to or not.” Today, connect with the creation with which
we are caught in a web of mutuality. You
cannot exist without water, or the nutrients of the carrots that grow in the
dirt, or the oxygen invisibly floating around you/yet sustaining you, trees to
absorb your carbon dioxide, and the sun that warms your skin. Listen to our original Gardener, who is still
tending the garden of your soul. Amen.
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Earth Day and Easter
Happy Earth Day ~ consider the soil in your soul ~ the good earth from which God
fashions and forms you into being.
Consider the water that renews and re- stories you. Pause ~ how can water help you write another
story that is soaked by the sacred of God’s baptismal promise to you? Consider the birds singing, the tree of your
life growing in the forest of others. Slowly
read these words:
God’s glory is on tour in the skies, God-craft on exhibit across the
horizon.
Madame Day holds classes every morning, and Professor Night lectures each
evening.
Their words aren’t heard, their voices aren’t recorded,
But their silence fills the earth: unspoken truth is spoken everywhere. Psalm 19
Day and Night
have something to teach and tell us. Too
often, we are tripped up and trapped by an either/or view of the world. We classify and compartmentalize
everything (and everyone). Yet, day
and night each preach and proclaim truths for our life, the Psalmist says. Day can teach us to notice and name what we
might miss when the sun sets. Daytime
can help expand our gaze beyond the intimate and immediate ~ to the horizon. Daytime is when the subtle, even subversive,
details come into focus. And daytime can
blind us if we stare at the blazing sun too long. Daytime can lure us into complacency,
especially when the surroundings are familiar.
We can push our bodies too far during the day, thinking that “we’ve
gotta make hay while the sun is shining.”
Such overstimulation from over-caffeination causes our souls to grow
weary and worn down.
Night can teach
us to slow down and focus our attention on the next step, because we cannot see
for miles and miles. Nighttime reveals
the stars that are always there, but are shut out because of the
brighter sun. Nighttime invites the body
to reset, renew, and rest. Night
sharpens our hearing. Night can also be
when all the things we said and did that day come back for a visit ~ not always
in a way we welcome or want. At night,
we can rehearse and replay a meeting where our jaw was set on edge or face the
uncertainty of a medical condition.
What else would
you add to the above lists? What are the
blessings and brokenness of day and of night?
What causes your soul to leap in joy in day and at night? Ponder what Madame Day and Professor Night
are trying to tell you? Listen. Lean in.
Learn from the power of every hour, for each moment is saturated and
soaked with the Sacred. Amen.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
What Tree Would You Be?
Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked
or stand in the way that sinners take or sit in the company of
mockers,
but whose delight is in the law of the Lord, and who
meditates on his law day and night.
That person is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields
its fruit in season. Psalm 1
I often wonder if
the Psalms were written while the prophet/poet was wandering in the wilderness
of the world. Psalm 1 draws on the image
of creation ~ God’s creativity seen in clouds and heard in birds and felt in
breezes with the sun on our face, which in turn can infuse and inspire our
imaginations of faithfulness. When we
read the Psalms inside under the hum of fluorescent lights and the breeze from
air that has been filtered and conditioned with chemicals to keep us cool, we
might miss the metaphor. Please don’t
hear me complaining, I couldn’t live in Florida without air conditioning! Yet, the Psalmists lived closer to the earth,
soil, dirt, and dust from which we are all made. The soles of the Psalmist's feet touched the
sandy soil of the earth, felt the fear of storms raging in their face, and knew
the beauty of a starry night where no light pollution could drive away the
darkness. The Psalmist was intimately
interwoven with creation. The very first
Psalm draws on the image of your life being like a tree. This gives the reader pause:
What kind of tree would you like to be?
A redwood? A sugar maple
producing delicious syrup? A dwarf
willow that creeps on the ground rather than reaching for the sky? An ordinary tree that blends into the
background? A palm tree waving in the
salt sea air?
What would the bark of your tree feel like, look like, taste like?
What about the rings of your tree?
Have there been years of tremendous growth when the circle in your soul
is wide and years of scarcity where the ring is narrow/tight, trying to
conserve energy?
Today, go out and touch a tree, listening to the wisdom of creation
~ absorbing the holiness of this part of God’s creation. Consider what is nourishing your soul?
Where are your
roots twisted and tangled with others in the forest of life? Your tree is connected to those in our
church, neighbors, friends, family, and people whose path you cross now and
again.
What fruit comes
from your tree? Is your fruit sweet or
savory or maybe you are in winter right now, where there is no fruit, as your
roots are conserving energy? Is your
fruit ready or still slowly ripening?
Let this metaphor
infuse and inspire your imagination, deepening your faith in these days. Amen
Monday, April 20, 2026
Resurrection and Creation
As we celebrate
Earth Day this week, I love how the resurrection mystery and marvel happen
outside the confines of air conditioning.
Resurrection doesn’t happen in cramped and confining buildings, but in
the beauty of God’s creation.
Consider John 20,
which we heard on Easter, where the setting is a garden, echoing Genesis 2 and
3.
Consider Luke 24,
which we heard on Sunday: Jesus appears to Cleopas and his friend, partner, or companion
on a dusty road of life.
Consider Matthew
28, The Great Commission to the disciples (who let’s face it had serious doubts
about the resurrection ~ which can give us hope) happens on a mountain, echoing
the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7)
Consider John 21,
where Jesus cooks breakfast on a beach for the disciples, trying to process the
pain and promise of being an Easter people.
Creation amplifies
one of the formational and foundational truths of Easter because creation displays
and helps us discover/discern the cycle of birth, life, death, and resurrection
each year, called “The four seasons”.
During Lent, I
invited you to ponder the season of your life connected to the image of
a grape vine. I offered a brief
description of how a grapevine goes through the seasons. Here is a reminder:
In Winter ~ the grapevine is pruned. It is common to remove 80-90% of the biomass
during pruning. But great care is used
not to cut the buds that will be next season’s growth. It takes a prayerful, careful eye and skill
not just to whack randomly on the vine, but to notice the small green shoots
that need the nourishment of the winter resting to begin to grow.
In Spring ~ the buds now burst and break
forth in growth. The bud swells and
reveals new leaves. There is a flowering
that happens. The vine continues to
absorb water and nutrients through the roots as the leaves undergo
photosynthesis ~ note there are no visible grapes yet.
In Summer ~ the grapevine flowers begin to
bring forth young grapes that will swell, ripen, and gain color and
flavor. Vine growth slows down as the
focus shifts to sending all the energy, nutrients, and resources to the fruit. There is a slow ripening on the vine that
cannot be sped up.
During
Harvest season, it is
all hands on deck ~ trying to get the fruit off the vines ~ note that this is
the busiest time. And note, this is
where modern life tells us to live all the time!!
In Autumn ~ the grapevine begins to rest,
the vine slows down to conserve energy.
The leaves change colors and fall away.
This is a dormant state of rest for the next season.
Do not forget
that there is a weathered and worn fence that supports the vine. This is what holds you up every season. The fence may look different. Your fence is made up of friends and family,
authors who give us new ideas, and the church as a safe space to be who you are
and what you are. The fence can also be
out in creation, breathing in God’s love next to a tree that has weathered many
storms and sunny days.
Today, consider
how resurrection happens outside and venture out to stand in the sun,
soaking in the vitamin D that we all need ~ because our souls are solar-powered. May the One who wrote the truth of life into
the seasons be felt, experienced, seen, and encountered this day and this Earth
Day week. Amen.
Friday, April 17, 2026
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Beyond Certainty
11 Now Mary stood
outside the tomb crying. As she wept, she bent over to look into the tomb 12 and
saw two angels in white, seated where Jesus’ body had been, one at the
head and the other at the foot. 13 They asked her,
“Woman, why are you crying?” “They have taken my Lord away,” she said, “and I
don’t know where they have put him.” 14 At this,
she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not realize
that it was Jesus. 15 He asked her, “Woman, why are
you crying? Who is it you are looking for?” Thinking he was the gardener,
she said, “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have put him,
and I will get him.” 16 Jesus said to her, “Mary.” She
turned toward him and cried out in Aramaic, “Rabboni!” (which means
“Teacher”).
Part of the mystery of being a resurrection people is
not only the tension that the beauty and brokenness, the grief and good news,
sit side-by-side, but that Jesus is there too.
Note that initially, Mary doesn’t notice Jesus. Mary has come to her own conclusion, and the
jury in her mind has reached consensus: Jesus’ body was taken by tomb thieves
or some cruel Roman trick or some other nefarious reason. Oh, I have concrete conclusions too! I know, just know, that those
people are evil, don’t try to tell me differently, I shout. I know, just know, that
if we could all value diversity, the world would be a better place. I know, just know, that
if people would really practice their Easter-ing faith and see each person as beloved,
I would be out of a job because who would need church!?!
Easter disrupts and disturbs my certainty. Easter surprises my concrete
conclusions. Easter messes with what I
think is true beyond a shadow of a doubt by telling me something I never
considered to be true: death can still be emptied of its fear; love can rule
even alongside the free will to choose evil.
Pain and praise are both moments to encounter the Holy in Easter-ing
ways. Christ is there in the grief and
good news, saying your name.
Speak aloud your name right now. Go ahead, say it, and may you also hear
Christ saying your name this morning.
Christ is so close you can feel his presence, and your skin can feel the
wind of angels’ wings. You, like the
disciples, can still feel Jesus bursting and breaking into the walled-off rooms
in your mind, heart, and soul, breathing on you, and saying, “Peace”. Your life is infused and inspired by a grace
that will never let you go, especially in the weeping before realizing what the
empty tomb fully means. Because we never
fully know what we don’t know, we never fully exhaust all that Easter can mean. Faith is mystery and marvel and meaning
always evolving toward the One who knows and calls your name. Do you hear it? Do we dare to live this way? Amen.
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Like yesterday, today, we are going to chew on a big bite out of the Sermon on the Mount. Like yesterday, check in with yourself. If i...
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God of words and wisdom that stretch us, sometimes in ways that help us grow and other times like a sweater that can’t return to its origi...
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Read Psalms 13-15 I love Psalm 13:2, How long must I wrestle with my thoughts and day after day have sorrow in my heart? It feels ...

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