Finding hope to hold on to – Pastor Thoughts

Mark is my favourite Gospel. This year we are in the Lectionary year of Mark.

As we begin hearing the stories of Jesus’s teaching and ministry, particularly stories around Jesus calling his first disciples and Jesus beginning to minister in the region of Galilee, I cannot help but think about how our world has rapidly become similar to that of the folks of the first century. 

Around the lifetime of Jesus, the Roman Empire had crept up around Israel, eventually occupying and conquering several areas including Jerusalem. King Herod and the Great and his sons – the Herodian Dynasty – were puppet rulers of the area kowtowing to Rome, exploiting the people and abusing their power. The Sanhedrin, the religious authorities were often more concerned with maintaining their power than fulfilling their duty of assuring that the people had access to God and God’s righteousness. (Oh, we will get deep in these weeds this year!)

All the authorities, systems of power and institutions of Jesus’ day were failing and corrupt, unable to offer much help or protection to people living in Judea and Galilee as they were supposed to. The powers of the day seemed incapable of dealing with the problems that their world was facing.

I think back in our own history to around the time of the election of Barack Obama in 2008. Even with a global financial crisis to deal with, we seemed on track to deal with most of the issues we were facing. Maybe racism would end with a black US president? Climate change didn’t seem that serious. 9/11 was solidly in the rearview mirror, politics didn’t feel that divisive and there were these new things called ‘iPhones’ taking the world by storm.

Fast forward to 2016 and the election of another US president. Then to 2020 and the outbreak of a certain virus. And there have been protests and convoys, inflation and shipping backlogs, and more economic troubles. War in Ukraine, war in Israel and Gaza. And that same guy from 2016 is back again. 

Similarly, the powers, authorities and institutions of our day don’t feel up to the task of dealing with the problems that felt manageable 15 years ago.

In and through all the turmoil, Mark found something to hold on to. The first followers of Jesus found something to keep them going forward. Our forebearers in faith were able to run the race and fight the fight despite everything seeming hopeless.

If there was ever a message that speaks to us today, it is the hope that Mark found in the life and story of Jesus. Even as the troubles of the world seem to overwhelm us, there is something to hold on to, someone who comes and holds on to us.

I am looking forward to hearing that story again and anew with you this year.

Pastor Erik+

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