Calvary “Virtual” Chancel Choir, Michael Conley, conductor/editor
Ding Dong Merrily on High. Chancel Choir
Michael Conley • May 21, 2021

At the start of Lent, the children 'buried' an alleluia in worship. We put the word away during a season. On Easter, we bring it back.
On the first Easter morning, the women went to the tomb, assuming their alleluias were going to stay buried forever. Their rabbi was dead. Their hopes and dreams, buried with him.
An encounter with the angels in the empty tomb makes them reconsider what they thought they knew of death, of endings.
Maybe you've buried a lot of your hopes and dreams recently too. What might the Easter story have to say to us anew this year?

As Jesus enters Jerusalem, he is greeted by raucous crowds. It is a celebration of him. It is also a counter protest to Rome. The crowds have gathered and are crying out "hosanna", which means "save us".
Save us from injustice. Save us from cruelty. Save us from crushing poverty.
Jesus does not silence the crowds. And he responds to their cries by weeping over Jerusalem and by turning over tables in the Temple.

It is easy these days to say who we are against. Maybe it has always been easy to do so.
What is harder is to create space for people to change their minds, change their views, change their behavior.
As Jesus approaches Jerusalem, he stops in Jericho and accepts an invitation to eat at the home of someone who society wanted to cancel.
How can the story of Zacchaeus help us give space for each other?

The story of Mary and Martha is often painted as a story where one does right and one does wrong. We know, however, that life is often more complicated than that.
We know that faith is embodied through being present and taking action—and everything in between. Join us on this second Sunday in Lent as we consider, how can we live along the spectrum of faith and works.

Stay woke! Or we might miss the glory of God (at least according to Luke's gospel). The Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke all record the story of Jesus's transfiguration on the mountaintop. But only Luke records that the disciples witnessed this amazing transformation because they had stayed awake. In a time when we are tired and overwhelmed with exhausting news, how can we stay awake to witness what God is doing in the world and in our lives?