8-12-22 - The Cloud

You can listen to this reflection here.

I once saw a cartoon which showed a little boy at a funeral asking his mother, “Mommy, is Pop-Pop in the cloud now?” As we end this week, let’s touch on one more reading for Sunday, the great passage from the New Testament letter to the Hebrews. It explicates the writer’s definition of faith: “… the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” The passage lists a host of God’s people who persevered in faith despite persecutions and trials, never seeing the fruit for which they worked. The writer suggests these departed heroes and heroines of dogged faithfulness constitute a cloud of encouragers to inspire us to righteousness and Christ-centered living:

...since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight and the sin that clings so closely, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith, who for the sake of the joy that was set before him endured the cross, disregarding its shame, and has taken his seat at the right hand of the throne of God.

Faith can sometimes feel like heavy work in the face of the world’s ills and evidence of human destructiveness – but remember, faith is not a solitary undertaking. Faith is to be practiced in community, and our community stretches beyond what we can see, even beyond the breathing. Episcopalians, with other Christian traditions, affirm the communion of saints, those alive today and those who have gone before us. How might it strengthen your faith to cultivate a greater awareness of that cloud of witnesses surrounding you, upholding you in prayer?

I want to be clear – the cloud of witnesses is not about ghosts. Whatever ghosts may be, they seem to be spirits not yet at rest. The spirits to which the writer to the Hebrews refers are saints in light, existing in the presence of God, emanating love, not direct communications with the living. When we get messages from the heavenly places, it is from the Holy Spirit. If we think a person is communicating with us from beyond, that is a different matter, and one I do not consider spiritually healthy for Christ-followers to engage with. The Spirit of Christ is the only spirit we need.

When we undertake God’s mission in the face of uncertainty, and when we face setbacks in ministry, we can call to mind that cloud of witnesses and set our successes and failures in the light they shed. We can even, in prayer, invite strength from that holy number, and draw on their store of faith when ours feels insufficient. God invites us to believe the impossible; the communion of saints helps us do that.

Sometimes, when facing a church with way too many empty seats, I remember there are others worshiping with us, filling the air and every available place, our space thick with their faithfulness and love. That is a “cloud-based resource” at the highest level, and it’s absolutely free, forever and ever.

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