Easter

People Are Leaving Us

People are leaving us.

That might seem like an odd way to start an Easter reflection but stick with me.

It’s true, people are leaving us, but this is how things tend to go at Ponce Pres. We are a metro church in every sense. We have members who live as far out as Dallas, GA and members who live right around the corner. I myself pass a number of churches on my way to Ponce every Sunday. Still, my wife and I have felt called to Ponce basically since we arrived in Atlanta, about seven years ago. I know many others who feel the same—they sense their calling to Ponce despite living in Norcross, College Park, Marietta, or Decatur.

Callings do change though.

Being a metro church has its challenges. Apart from the church plant budding from Ponce’s roots, which has drawn away some established members (God be praised!), Ponce has had the privilege of seeing people marry and have children in our church. Sometimes, for affordability reasons and needing space to breath, they head out to the suburbs. They may or may not remain members at Ponce. Some feel the natural pull of a stronger gravity the farther their orbit extends—that of their new neighborhood. This is a beautiful thing! Ponce has also had the privilege of seeing people arrive in Atlanta for their studies. Whether at GT, Emory, GSU, or elsewhere, they don’t always hang around. There’s nothing wrong with that either! It’s the same with some professionals who arrive only to leave after a couple years or relocate for other career opportunities. There’s nothing wrong with that either! God calls us to excel at our vocations.

I would be remiss not to mention that some of our members have simply died. I think of Brent or Sharon, for instance. It’s hard, harder even than losing those who move, but we can hopefully find some comfort in knowing they’re now in Jesus’s presence.

Similarly, it always seems that Ponce gets refilled in waves—by babies or by relocations. My wife and I were part of one such wave. We arrived right when several other couples and singles arrived. We bonded with some of them. One couple in particular eventually moved to EAV, where they felt called to attend a church in their immediate neighborhood. Last month I had a chance to stop in at their home. It had probably been about a year and a half since I had seen them. It felt like a beautiful reunion. I imagine I will continue to see them around town or we’ll get together here and there. Still, if I’m honest, my heart grieves the loss of their daily presence. But, this is the way we all live these days and there is nothing necessarily wrong with our movement and changing church homes. In fact, as I sense we gear up for a season of transition, I must admit that I actually encouraged a family moving out to the suburbs that they kick the tires of some churches in their new neighborhood.

I want to talk about something—grieving and celebrating those who leave Ponce.

As a church, we should be drawing closer together. It may not always be perfect. It may be entirely absent from time to time. Whether that’s on us or on others in our lives, I leave that to the individual heart to determine. We should grieve departure though. We should mourn losing the daily presence of our brothers and sisters in Christ. On the other hand, we should celebrate it too! We get to see those with whom we have shared our lives go onward into the world to serve and worship Jesus with other believers in new places, whether right around the corner or across the globe.

I was recently reading a novel about two pastors and their wives called The Dearly Beloved. One pastor is a skeptic married to an ardent believer. One pastor is a firm believer married to an atheist. The two pastors end up sharing a pulpit at a NYC church during the tumultuous 1960s. Both men and their wives make their congregants quite uncomfortable with their positions on social issues and openness to the turbulent times.

Over the course of the novel, one of the pastors and his wife have twins, one of whom is autistic. In these early days of autism research (the 1960s), parents often didn’t know how to love or live with their autistic children, and the children would end up in group homes where a lack of staff and social support meant the children simply could get the love and attention they needed. The pastor and his wife are determined to keep their son in their own home, but they are also fearful of the reactions of those around them. They begin to retreat into their family unit. The other pastor and the rest of the church notice their attempted retreat and draw closer to them, sometimes being pushed away and sometimes making missteps in trying to be helpful. Regardless of their failures at engaging, the other pastor and the congregants earnestly seek the family out. It comes to the point that the other pastor and the congregants create a school for autistic children, staffed by medical professionals and well-trained special ed teachers.  

Sometime later, the pastor whose child is autistic must baptize the newborn child of his fellow co-pastor. He looks out at the congregations and begins with “Dearly beloved.” I will let the author, Cara Wall, narrate it:

“Dearly beloved,” he began. They were the words that started weddings, not baptisms, but the people in the church were his beloved, so dear that as he spoke his heart and throat grew tight. He loved every person in this church more than he would have ever thought possible, loved them not with the automatic love of childhood or the easy love of coincidence, but with the tautly stitched love of people who have faced uncertainty together, who have stuck it out, the strong love of people who looked to their side while suffering and saw the other there.

Now, remember that this is a baptism scene. It is about young people. It is about confirming the faith of the families of those young people. It is about how they plan to raise children in the admonition of the Lord. Cara Wall continues,

Together, they [the parents] would send all of these young people out into a world they knew was full of injury and hard to bear. Somehow, they would wave and wish them well and have faith that they would avoid the worst of the darkness, live mostly in the light.

I find these words so moving. The church members, he comes to find, amidst the personal hardships of life and the ruptures in their society, have become his beloved; they are “tautly stitched” together. How beautiful an image. Still, here at a baptism, he’s compelled to reflect on the fact that they will have to send their children out into a scary world. This world contains the very brokenness he’s had to face. I love the line, “they would wave and wish them well and have faith that they would avoid the worst of the darkness, live mostly in the light.”

The first time I read these words I was moved to reflect on Ponce, but not in terms of baptisms and young people leaving home, but in terms of our departures. We have seen and will see our fair share of departures. We’ll have to wave and wish them well and have faith that they would avoid the worst of the darkness and live mostly in the light. There’s both pain and hope in this. Hopefully, we can be stitching ourselves together to this degree, that we would call each other beloved and grieve our departures. For now, I leave it to you to wonder how you do this.

What I actually want to do, however, is encourage you, not chastise you. I submit we can do better even than Wall suggests. We can grieve the losses, we can wave goodbye, and we can have faith (and pray) for their futures apart from us. These are no doubt a must. But, we can also do more—we can celebrate eternal reunion. We believe there’s a future beyond this life if we are in Christ. It involves a table where we will sit with our fellow saints and our Lord and enjoy the bountiful harvest of a world restored to glory. Regardless of whether or not I see you around town, we believe we’ll see each other again in another life. We can embrace each other now and release our grip when the Lord says it’s time to let go. After all, we will embrace each other again. Even when we fail to embrace each other well on this earth (I know many of us feel this way), we won’t fail in the life to come.

There are many reasons why people leave our church. Some with joy and celebration, some in a more disgruntled manner (for good reason or not), some because we just cannot serve them for a season or two. My hope is that regardless of how they leave, we all recognize how we will be together again someday, our joys completed, our disagreements done.

Enter Easter.

Easter is somewhat weird for us as Christians, as is Good Friday for that matter. Good Friday is, well, “good.” What Jesus did in suffering and dying for us was certainly “good,” yet we dress in black and treat it like a funeral. It isn’t totally dark though because what actually makes it good is what happens next: Easter. Easter feels like a day of new life and celebration, a breath of fresh air… Yet, it’s also kind of not when you stop and think about it. As Christians we rightly believe that Jesus’s resurrection remains the pinnacle event in human history, but still, it didn’t set the world right right now. In fact, Jesus left us.

Okay, okay. He left us with the Holy Spirit and went to prepare a place for us (in no way am I minimizing that), but we--the church--are still awaiting the full return of our bridegroom. We--arm in arm, you and I--will be together in eternity.

A future, eternal togetherness is a beautiful hope we can lean on as Christians, especially as we reflect on our struggle to maintain connections during pandemic living, as we witness members moving on, and as we turn our attention to the not-entirely-completed joys of Easter. Hopefully, we won’t abuse our future, eternal togetherness by resting on our heels in the here and now. Instead, I pray that our future, eternal togetherness may push us forward in love to such a degree that we can both grieve our departures and embrace them. Right now, let’s rest in the joy Easter brings, while realizing we’ll eventually bask side-by-side in an even more complete joy.

God’s Love Letter To The Weary Through Isaiah

Spring in Georgia is a beautiful season, filled with flowers, sunshine, and longer days. It feels like the start of something new when I see buds coming forth from my lemon tree. It is so fitting that Easter typically occurs at this change into springtime, a physical reminder of the spiritual reality that Christ came into humanity, died on the cross, and was resurrected in victory for our renewal and regeneration. Yet, this spring season feels particularly hard with separation from people and many in our lives who are suffering from sickness, loneliness, or uncertainty. While I love the sunshine, this season of lent feels heavy laden. So what does it look like to fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith (Hebrews 12:1-2), when it feels hard to see him? How can we find renewal when it does not feel like we are being renewed? How does Christ, in His resurrection, speak to the weary?

Isaiah is, to me, one of the most beautiful books of the Bible and speaks prophetically about our Lord Jesus Christ, His crucifixion, and resurrection repeatedly. Take for example, Isaiah 53:5-6 “But he was wounded for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and by his wounds we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all.”  Praise God that we are made righteous in Christ and were not left as stray sheep!  These are often quoted verses especially during Easter, and in this season I have found even more encouragement as I have understood the context of Isaiah’s prophetic words and read this portion of Isaiah as God’s love letter and promise to His people.

We find in chapters 36-39 that Hezekiah was King of Judah, and he had been one of the good kings in the sordid history of Israel’s monarchy; he “did what was right in the eyes of the Lord” (2 Chronicles 29:2). He cleansed the temple and restored the house of the Lord. He facilitated a celebration of Passover that was extended to all of Israel, bringing a moment of unity between the two kingdoms. When the king of Assyria was threatening, Hezekiah sought Isaiah the prophet’s help, turned to the Lord for salvation, and God answered with victory. And yet, after all of that, when the King of Babylon sent an envoy to visit the king, Hezekiah’s pride led him to show off his kingdom; “there was nothing in his house or in all his realm that Hezekiah did not show them” (Isaiah 39:2). In response, Isaiah issued these devastating words, “Behold, the days are coming, when all that is in your house . . . shall be carried to Babylon. Nothing shall be left” (Isaiah 39:6). The sins and persistent disobedience of the people were too great, and God would send His people into exile in punishment. These were going to be dark days for Israel.

In this season, tired of the pandemic, tired of sin and sorrow, tired of crying tears for myself and others,  tired of my own and the world’s selfishness, and struggling to see God’s hand at times, I sometimes feel like there is nothing left. Where is God? The pessimist (or maybe realist) in me expects that the next chapters in Isaiah will be more of the well-deserved burning condemnation for Israel’s sins that is often characteristic of the prophets. But God. One of the most beautiful phrases in all of Scripture (see Romans 5:8). But God is not like us; he does not leave us in our misery. God reaches into our hard and our own exile to bring His grace and love. In the next 15 chapters (Isaiah 40-55:13), Isaiah brings not judgment, but comfort. The very next words after this judgment  are, “Comfort, comfort my people, says your God. Speak tenderly to Jerusalem, and cry to her, that her warfare is ended, that her iniquity is pardoned, that she has received from the Lord’s hand double for her all of her sins” (Isaiah 40:1-2). When God has every right to pour judgment on His people, he instead brings words of comfort and reassurance that He is still their God and still for their good. These words that were spoken in advance of the exile, knowing the suffering they would ensure, knowing that they would be restored after the exile, and knowing that all of this was a part of the pre-ordained plan for Israel and the world’s ultimate restoration through Christ.

Just meditate on a few of these passages as God speaks over His people in this prophetic word of comfort (and better yet, read the whole things one day!):

“Have you not known? Have you not heard? The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. He does not faint or grow weary; his understanding is unsearchable. He gives power to the faint, and to him who has no might he increases strength.” (Isaiah 40:28-29)

“You [Israel] are my servant, I have chosen you and not cast you off; fear not for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” (Isaiah 41:9-10)

“And I will lead the blind in a way that they do not know, in paths that they have not known I will guide them. I will turn the darkness before them into light, the rough places into level ground. These are the things I do and I do not forsake them.” (Isaiah 42: 16)

“When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you; when you walk through fire, you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you.” (Isaiah 43:2)

“I formed you; you are my servant; O Israel, you will not be forgotten by me. I have blotted out your transgressions like a cloud and your sins like mist; return to me, for I have redeemed you.” (Isaiah 44: 21-22)

And then one of my favorite passages from Isaiah 55: 1-3 that says,

“Come, everyone who thirsts,

come to the waters;

and he who has no money,

come, buy and eat!

Come, buy wine and milk

without money and without price.

Why do you spend you money for that which is not bread,

and your labor for that which does not satisfy?

Listen diligently to me, and eat what is good.

and delight yourselves in rich food.

Incline your ear, and come to me;

hear, that your soul may live;

and I will make with you an everlasting covenant, my steadfast, sure love for David.”

Because of Christ’s death and resurrection, God speaks to us in our sin and suffering calling us to come to Him. Come have fellowship with Him. Come find comfort in the very dark days of life. Come not because you are worthy but because Christ suffered, died, and was resurrected out of love for you. Come to the great high priest, Jesus Christ, who through His voluntary suffering relates to our own sorrows and is interceding for us to the Father. Come listen to His word that brings life, truth, and peace. Come not only to Him, but to His body, the church, to find strength and faith in joys and sorrows.

If this Easter season you are struggling to celebrate Him in the way you would have hoped or deeply mourning losses that have happened in this life, you are not alone. Easter has never been about pretty dresses and chocolate eggs (although those can be fun!), but it was God reaching into sinful, broken, and suffering humanity through His Son, in love, to rescue us and bring us comfort. In the end, our ultimate comfort is that through Christ we will know an eternity with Him in a place with no more tears or mourning (Revelation 21:4). As 1 Peter 5:10-11 reminds us, “And after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you. To him be the dominion forever and ever. Amen.”

I end with a prayer from Valley of Vision, a collection of Puritan prayers, that focuses us on the juxtaposition of life in Christ with the challenges of our earthly existence. May this encourage and challenge you wherever you are in this season.

“Lord, High and Holy, Meek and Lowly,

Thou hast brought me to the valley of vision,

where I live in the depth but see thee in the heights;

hemmed in by mountains of sin I behold thy glory.

Let me learn by paradox

that the way down is the way up,

that to be low is to be high,

that the broken heart is the healed heart,

that the contrite spirit is the rejoicing spirit,

that the repenting soul is the victorious soul,

that to have nothing is to possess all,

that to bear the cross is to wear the crown,

that to give is to receive,

that the valley is the place of vision.

Lord, in the daytime stars can be seen from the deepest wells,

and the deeper the wells, the brighter the stars shine;

Let me find thy light in my darkness,

thy life in my death,

thy joy in my sorrow,

thy grace in my sin,

thy riches in my poverty

thy glory in my valley.”

 -Valley of Vision, edited by Arthur Bennett, The Banner of Truth Trust.