It’s been an interesting past few weeks. Everything as we knew it, changed with the Coronavirus. Some of have been massive adaptations while others are simple adjustments.
I am privileged to work from home, and I know that is not the case for everyone. Some are facing the daily threat of the virus in their workplace. Others have lost their sources of income because of it. The losses are everywhere and in many different ways. Personally, what looked like another summer, with trips to favorite haunts, has now potentially turned into visiting different areas of the yard and wondering if I should create yet another garden.
We are all walking in loss.
Two of my favorite people in the Bible are Cleopas and his friend from the road to Emmaus story in Luke’s Gospel. They are so relatable to everyday life. They are followers of Jesus who, a few days before we meet them, are excited by what the future holds because of how things are going. He might very well be the one who will restore the Jewish people to power. He heals, restores, welcomes, and offers grace to all people.
And then it happens. In less than 24 hours, everything changes. I can’t help but wonder if the disciples initially thought that Jesus might get off with a few lashings or prison time. That it would be a painful setback but not enough to destroy what had been building. Then Jesus is crucified and one of their first thoughts had to be that it’s all gone. All the plans, the trips, the community, the ministry. It is finished.
Then Sunday comes and what happens with Cleopas and his friend is why these two people are so important to me. As they leave what had become the norm for them, they are walking in loss. Who they were, what they were doing, how it was being done, is gone. It’ll never again be what it was.
In this season of life, we are just like them. When this pandemic started, I figured I was homebound for a couple of weeks and then life would return to normal. Inconvenienced but not too bad. But then reality set in. Life has a new norm that is being formed during the Covid 19 season of ministry.
You see, for Cleopas and his friend, they knew things were finished as they knew them. Without that, what good could the future hold? And then a stranger appeared to them along the road. A stranger who knew their story, who knew the “rest of the story”, and who offered through his words, the gift of remembrance, celebration, and anticipation. Even walking in loss, this stranger, Jesus the Christ, offered a way forward that would be different than what they had known but would still bring them to God, the creator in the midst of chaos.
In this midst of our walking in loss from this pandemic, where has Christ entered your life and spoken similar words? Where have you been called to be the living and loving presence of Christ for others during this ministry season within the pandemic? How are you telling the Story to bring hope, healing, and wholeness?
It’s been amazing to watch pastors and faith communities adapt to what was proclaimed as the end of church as we knew it, or at the least, a big bump in the road. People are accepting the change they’ve talked about or fought against for years because the new situation requires it. Some have done it very well while others took some time to get going. As I’ve watched, those who knew their ministry context, as well as the gifts of their community, have adjusted very well to this new way of ministry. It didn’t matter how they adjusted but because of their knowledge, they knew who to call on.
I’ve also noticed that those who have been willing to risk, are also finding new ways to minister. There have been more than a few “oops” in technology use and communication but it hasn’t stopped folks from exploring better ways. No more waiting for the new camera purchased with money from a church supper or the online giving the Finance Chair has wanted or the Ad Council meeting where only a few people attended. Their approach has been to figure it out along the way. And I hear that those congregations have been more patient, not to mention more willing, to give these new things a try.
In the story of Cleopas and his friend walking from Jerusalem to Emmaus, there comes a time when in a moment, Christ is revealed to them. They rush back to Jerusalem to tell everyone what they’ve seen and heard. Please notice that they aren’t going back to tell them to get things back to the way things were, but rather to share that beyond the loss that they all knew, Christ is alive, Christ walks with us, and Christ is waiting to continue the journey with us. Christ is Risen! Alleluia!!
So, how are you celebrating that in this perceived walk of loss, Christ is indeed with us? What are you hearing as you are in Christ’s presence? When this “shelter at home” journey ends, will you go back and proclaim the promise of the risen Lord? Will you call everyone forward on the journey? What will you do?
It is the challenge that Cleopas and his friend give to us as Christ’s followers in the 21st century. We aren’t called to go back to what we’ve known but rather to have the confidence and promise that Christ is with us as we move forward in our new reality. May these two individuals be a symbol of how we as individuals and faith communities respond, to the loss of what was and what we always thought would be, and to our own understanding of Church. May we remember the loss, but let us choose to live in Christ’s love. To do so is healthy stewardship.