1. "Fellow travelers, on the way that leads to life. I know I've talked about this before, but I've been thinking all week as I've reflected on this passage from John 6, a very provocative kind of story that is easy to miss. The tension is easy to miss. And I've been thinking all week of a phrase that my dad used when in 2015 he hiked for five months. He hiked the Appalachian Trail from end to end."
[33:23] (32 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

2. "So he calls me up one day in North Carolina. He was somewhere in the mountains of North Carolina and he had a hernia. And there was a couple that was hiking with him. They were called the Hiking Vikings. And they said, you got a hernia, you need to see a doctor. It was sort of the end of this journey for him or seemed like it. Mom, my mother was in the area at a church conference. And so, you know, I got on Google satellite. I felt like I was kind of in a some sort of military control complex, you know, getting this rendezvous set up."
[35:34] (35 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

3. "And I offer that to you as a way of a kind of a parable. To think about life, our life-life, you know, the one we live in the flesh, the one we live in spirit, and the kinds of things that no one can help us with. The kind of things we have to do alone, and the kind of things that we can, can joyfully and gracefully anticipate and expect and celebrate others to join in the doing and the experiencing with us."
[40:48] (34 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

4. "So Jesus, if he was measured by the numbers of friends was, you know, and followers was doing pretty good. And just about all of them deserted by the end of the chapter. These aren't just frivolous crowds gathering around. These are his disciples, the ones who sat at his feet. The ones who are part of the movement. And the story almost gets a little pathetic. Now one of the things that I noticed and I want to point out is that Jesus doesn't do something here that you might expect him to do. He doesn't curse the people who left."
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5. "And whenever someone ghosts you in some way, whether it's on the internet or in person but no longer in person, a little bit of you has gone away with that person and a little bit of them. And the little bit of them kind of remains with you. Do you know what that's like? I'm not going to ask for a show of hands. I think that's common to what it means to walk through life hiking our own height but blessedly, gracefully together."
[44:03] (32 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

6. "To whom can I go as I experience my hike alone in this journey of life? A little bit later on, before he gives himself up to be sacrificed for love of the world, he tells these twelve and perhaps others, others by then who were gathered with him at the last, where I go, does anyone remember what he said? You cannot follow. Okay, that's the bad news. We're alone. What's the good news? Well, the good news is, it seems like in this life, hiking our own hike, wherever we turn, there's someone, there's some kind of grace."
[45:30] (50 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

7. "We may be hiking our hike on our own, but we are not alone doing it. And here's where some of the weird part of all that talk of bread, and eating, and flesh comes in. We call ourselves, and I think this goes beyond the boundaries of the church, the body of Christ. And if that means anything, it means that we are truly bound together in some profound and miraculous way by love, by the creative, and generous, and graceful power of God at work in all humanity, all living things."
[48:34] (42 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

8. "We say at Epworth, it's one of the interesting things we say, we say, explore, faith, I was waiting for you, that was a test, and experience community. And one of the things about exploring faith is that that is a separate journey for us all. A lot of times when we start trying to talk to one another about how that exploration is going, once we get beyond the churchy words, those words that are supposed to mean everything, well, words like love perhaps, and even words like Jesus Christ and our experience of what it means to be in relationship, with Christ, then suddenly we can find nuances that maybe kind of set us off balance."
[49:57] (40 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

9. "And what about those global Methodists? You know, the folks who left because they're like, well, we don't think you're being holy enough, and we think gays and lesbians ought not be part of the church, and you know, that sort of thing. Are we ever going to get back together? Well, who knows? If and when that happens, I'm sure that we'll be distinct, and we'll still be emphasizing that all truly does mean all. And perhaps we will be able to, you know, for a time, we worshiped and wept and ministered together, and we're ministering in separate places."
[56:08] (35 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

10. "Look around. You are surrounded by love. You are part of that surrounding. And that's good news indeed. Amen. Amen. There's no school like the old school. It's so nice to be able to hit your knees in the prayer closet, so to speak, and feel a surrounding of the Spirit. But it can get a little lonely in there sometimes. So, I told you I'd get back to that question about Peter. And I want to just kind of include it as the blessing of the today. To whom can we go? Look around. Everywhere and anywhere, a member of the body of Christ waits with open arms for you along this journey of life. Amen."
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