These letters from Pastor Harry and church leaders explore the challenges we face as people of faith in a complicated and fearful world, not unlike the world that Paul faced, and not unlike the world that Dr. King faced down.
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April 26, 2025
Dear Saints in Santa Fe, and other far-off places:
Greetings in the name and spirit of Jesus Christ!
The Seven Mile Walk.
I remember reading a story years ago about a young high school football player who ran 82 yards for a touchdown. It was a Friday night game under the lights in front of his hometown fans, his parents, and his girlfriend. Eighty-two yards! He was on top of the world that night and he expected his life to be filled with more accomplishments like this. It never was.
How sad to me. Nothing would ever be as good as that Friday night on a football field, that life would never get to the eighty-third yard.
So, two disciples took a walk (Luke 24:13-27). They were traumatized and in despair. An Empire and a cross took Jesus away from them, their friend and teacher, and they walked and talked on the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus, about seven miles.
One thing they said has stayed on my mind since 1982 when a New Testament professor at Yale Divinity School expounded on it for an entire class: “But they had hoped.” He talked of the political assassinations of the 1960s, two Kennedy’s and a King. But we had hoped they could bring about a different, better world.
It’s far too easy to think that the best days are behind us and that hope is in the past tense.
Monday we heard the news that Pope Francis had died. But we had hoped. We had hoped he would live long enough for his words and convictions to become reality for all people, and the world.
The violence and war in Gaza and the Ukraine. But we had hoped. We had hoped it would be resolved by now, the bloodshed and horror ended and the long-suffering people able to live and breathe again.
The way we treat people different than us. But we had hoped. We had hoped that we would finally learn to see all people as our siblings, our sisters and brothers.
So, we take a seven mile walk. Long enough to meditate on what Easter means in such a “But we had hoped” world. An 82-yard world where the eighteen yards to get the goal line seem impossible.
So I say Alleluia. That’s the Easter word. That’s the story found in the New Testament. Rome may have thought they took care of their Jesus problem once and for all, but they were sorely mistaken. His followers still had the unmistakable sense that Jesus was still alive, present with them, giving them power and strength they thought they never had. And they went on to do amazing things, even to this day. With more to come.
Eighty-two yards? Let’s go the eighty-three, then more. Alleluia! Seven miles? Let’s go eight, then more. Alleluia! The old is gone, the stone is taken away, the culture of death is exposed for what it has done to people, and in its place is this beautiful idea and promise that the best is yet to come.
With Easter we change the past to the present. “But we have hope.” Alleluia! Yes we do.
Grace and peace,
Harry