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Showing posts with the label communion

On the Mountain with God (Exodus 24:1-11)

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There are moments in life that are so full of emotion and promise they feel almost too big to trust. A couple standing at an altar making vows. Watching the birth of your child. A child hears a parent say, “I will always love you.” A friend says, “I will be there.” These moments are holy, but they can also feel fragile. We know how easily promises can be broken. So when we hear about covenant in scripture, it can feel both beautiful and risky. Maybe you have sat at a table with someone and realized that something deeper was being formed, something rooted in commitment and care. Those moments help us understand what is happening in Exodus 24 . In this passage, God invites Moses, Aaron, and the elders to come up the mountain. There is both nearness and distance. “Worship at a distance,” God says, and yet Moses is drawn closer still. This reminds us that God’s grace is always reaching toward us before we reach toward him. Even when we feel far away, God’s grace is already at work, invitin...

Easter Evening: On the Road with Christ

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Sometimes the longest journeys happen in the shortest distances. The road to Emmaus is one of those kinds of walks . Two disciples, hearts broken and dreams shattered, wander down a road trying to make sense of all they’ve seen. They are confused, hurting, and unsure of their future. Jesus begins to walk with them, but they can’t yet see the hope standing right beside them. They do not recognize him. Luke tells us that as they walked, “beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them the things about himself in all the scriptures” (Luke 24:27). Christ meets them right where they are and gently opens the scriptures so they can see the thread of grace woven through the whole story. This is a tremendous gift of grace at work: Christ coming alongside us long before we recognize him, guiding our steps and stirring our hearts. Later, when they sit down at the table, something shifts. “He took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened, ...

Holy Thursday: We Remember

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We remember the night Jesus gathered his closest friends in an upper room. Around a shared table, amidst the weight of what was coming, he took bread. Matthew tells us: “While they were eating, Jesus took a loaf of bread, and after blessing it he broke it, gave it to the disciples, and said, ‘Take, eat; this is my body.’ Then he took a cup, and after giving thanks he gave it to them, saying, ‘Drink from it, all of you; for this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.’” (Matthew 26:26-28, NRSVue). The room was full of Passover memories—stories of deliverance, promises of God’s faithfulness, reminders that God never gives up on his people. Yet Jesus takes this holy meal and gently reshapes it around himself. He offers bread and cup as signs of a new covenant, a new Exodus, a new way of life shaped by self-giving love. In this simple act of breaking bread and sharing the cup, Jesus poured out the deepest meaning of his life and impending sa...