Sunday, March 26, 2017

Lord of the Hogwarts Art

Last month some friends introduced me to Draw with Jazza.  Jazza's an Australian animator and does a bunch of how to videos, challenges, and other fun stuff.  For his March Challenge of the Month, the theme was Lord of the Hogwarts.  Anybody who knows me, knows that this is perfect!  ...Now I just had to remember my high school art classes :-/


So, I started out sketching some different ideas.  My initial idea ended up also being the one I went with, although I did seriously consider thestrals rescuing Sam and Frodo at the end...maybe another time.


Then I set about sketching out the scene


and laying down base colors.  During this whole process, I lost count of how many times I watched Jazza's How to Shade with Colored Pencils video (among others).

Getting the colors down nice and strong.



And my final picture (taken with a camera on the left, scanned on the right).

It was really fun to try my hand at art after all this time and I really like what I came up with.  The ent, Treebeard, is doing a great job mending up the Whomping Willow after Ron and Harry's unfortunate crash.

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Courtship to Faith: Lent 3a

One reading was Romans 5:1-11.

The gospel was John 4:1-42.

As we begin today’s gospel reading, we’ve jumped from last week’s encounter between Jesus and Nicodemus in Jerusalem over some time that Jesus and John spend in the Judean countryside baptizing folks.  In this part that we miss, John reminds some of his followers that he is not the Messiah, but instead has been sent ahead—to cultivate the field, sow the seeds, as it were.  Then we pick up the story today.

1Now when Jesus learned that the Pharisees had heard,
      “Jesus is making and baptizing more disciples than John”
            2—although it was not Jesus himself but his disciples who baptized—
         3Jesus left Judea
            and started back to Galilee.
                  4But he had to go through Samaria.

Jewish people like Jesus and Samaritans, living in Samaria, were linked through their ancestors.  According to Jewish New Testament Scholar Amy-Jill Levine, “Samaritans are descendants of two distinct groups: the remnant of the ten tribes associated with the Northern Kingdom of Israel who were not deported when the Northern Kingdom fell in 722 BCE, and foreign colonists from Babylonia and Media brought by the Assyrian conquerors of Samaria.” Typically, though linked through their ancestors, Jews and Samaritans were not on good terms and would avoid each other whenever possible.  So for Jesus to be compelled to go through Samaria, it’s a bit scandalizing.

            5Jesus came to a Samaritan city called Sychar,
                  near the plot of ground that Jacob had given to his son Joseph.
                        6Jacob’s well was there,
                        and Jesus,
                              tired out by his journey,
                                    was sitting by the well.
                                          It was about noon.

Wells in biblical tradition have a special role: they are a place of courtship. In Genesis Abraham’s servant finds Rebekah at a well as a wife for Isaac, their son Jacob then finds Rachel at a well.  These stories and this tradition would have been very familiar for the first hearers of the gospel, so this encounter would be filled with visions of courtship. 

Unlike Nicodemus, a named man who is a religious leader, who seeks Jesus out in the hidden anonimity and mystery of night, this chance encounter happens in the bright heat of the noonday sun—in the open for all to witness.  And it happens, as we will soon find out, with an unnamed woman who is a Samaritan.

7A Samaritan woman came to draw water,
      and Jesus said to her,
            “Give me a drink.”
                  8(His disciples had gone to the city to buy food.)
9The Samaritan woman said to Jesus,
      “How is it that you, a Jewish man, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?”
            (Jewish people do not share things in common with Samaritans.)

As we know, Jews and Samaritans come from the same lineage, at least in part, yet like many half-siblings, there is a great distrust and even enmity between these cultural groups—an understood divide that no one expects to be bridged.  It no longer feels like there is anything in common between these peoples.

10Jesus answered her,
      “If you knew the gift of God,
            and who it is that is saying to you,
                  ‘Give me a drink,’
            you would have asked him,
            and he would have given you living water.”
11The woman said to Jesus,
      “Sir, you have no bucket,
      and the well is deep.
            Where do you get that living water?
                  12Are you greater than our ancestor Jacob,
                        who gave us the well,
                        and with his children and his flocks drank from it?”

Jesus, as he did with Nicodemus, brings the conversation to a level deeper than either Nicodemus or the woman are ready for, bringing confusion to them both.  Jesus brings up the gift of water and life from God and we can hear the incredulity of the Samaritan Woman, who can’t figure out how this Jew without a bucket is going to get her any sort of living—or flowing—water. 

Owning her lineage, tracing her ancestry back to Jacob, the common ancestor of Jews and Samaritans, the woman, seeks to understand this bizarre thing that Jesus is saying even as she embraces the cultural perspective she brings to their conversation.

13Jesus said to her,
      “Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again,
            14but those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty.
                  The water that I will give will become in them a spring of water
                        gushing up to eternal life.”
15The woman said to Jesus,
      “Sir, give me this water,
            so that I may never be thirsty
            or have to keep coming here to draw water.”
As Jesus dives into the living water—floods of God’s mercy and grace that we encounter in baptism, the Samaritan Woman hints at her reluctance in coming to this communal place to draw water.  For most women in the community, gathering water in the morning before the sun gets too overwhelming at midday is also a social affair—a time to catch up on each other’s lives and the goings-on of the community.  Yet this woman comes at the heat of the day, when she is almost guaranteed not to encounter anyone—and is pretty eager for a way to avoid this well altogether.  What is it that makes her avoid the crowd?

16Jesus said to her,
      “Go, call your husband,
      and come back.”
17The woman answered Jesus,
      “I have no husband.”
Jesus said to her,
      “You are right in saying, ‘I have no husband’;
            18for you have had five husbands,
            and the one you have now is not your husband.
                  What you have said is true!”
19The woman said to Jesus,
      “Sir, I see that you are a prophet.
      20Our ancestors worshiped on this mountain,
            but you say that the place where people must worship is in Jerusalem.”

Over the years as we’ve heard of and read about this encounter, we’ve wondered many things about this woman.  In following the custom of engaging with a male head of household, Jesus names her reality.  She has had five husbands and the current one is not her husband.  So often this fact has been used to denigrate her—to call her promiscuous, to condemn and dismiss her, but that is not what Jesus does.  Jesus knows that women have virtually no say in marriage or divorce—that these five husbands could be due to death, an inability to have children, domestic abuse, adultery, or even boredom. 

Jesus doesn’t place any moral or ethical judgment on this woman—those judgments are only from us and our own theological—and patriarchal—ancestors.  But what if her last statement points to the reason she is an outcast in her community?

Rev. Allison Unroe points out that this woman bravely names the metaphorical elephant in the room.  Some traditions name this Samaritan Woman Photina, which means “the luminous one” or “light bringer”—she brings into the light of the noonday sun, the conflict that goes unnamed between these cultures and people that once were one people and now feel so far apart.

What if her community has cast her out for her willingness to tell the truth about their reality?  Not only to name openly the divide between Jews and Samaritans, but to name the other problems that they face as a community?  What if she is ostracized precisely because she persisted in truth telling?

21Jesus said to her,
      “Woman, believe me,
            the hour is coming when you will worship the Father
                  neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem.
            22You worship what you do not know;
                  we worship what we know,
                        for salvation is from the Jewish people.
                  23But the hour is coming, and is now here,
                        when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth,
                              for such worshipers the Father seeks.
                        24God is spirit,
                        and those who worship God must worship in spirit and truth.”
25The woman said to Jesus,
      “I know that Messiah is coming”
            (who is called Christ).
            “When he comes,
                  he will proclaim all things to us.”
26Jesus said to her,
      “Here I am, the one who is speaking to you.”

Here Jesus acknowledges the divide that this woman has brought to light and points to the third way—the way that leaves neither Jews nor Samaritans to claim triumph over the other.  Jesus’ hour—his time, God’s time—is now here.  The new Way of worship—through the living waters of baptism into new and abundant life—is coming to be in Jesus who is, as he reveals to the woman, the Messiah (who is called Christ).

Then as this encounter, this courtship to faith, builds, it is abruptly cut off.
27Just then Jesus’ disciples came.
      They were astonished that he was speaking with a woman,
            but no one said,
                  “What do you want?”
                  or, “Why are you speaking with her?”
28Then the woman left her water jar
      and went back to the city.
            She said to the people,
                  29“Come and see someone who told me everything I have ever done!
                        Can this be the Messiah?”
                  30They left the city and were on their way to him.

The disciples return, presumably with food, and a LOT of awkwardness.  Their silent astonishment speaks volumes.  The absurdity of encountering Jesus, this Jewish Rabbi—leader—talking casually with a Samaritan woman at a well silences the disciples—they know the stories, they know what wells are for.  Though I can imagine the scandalized looks passing between themselves as the woman leaves her water jar behind.  So caught up with the new life, the living water, Jesus offers, she is filled with a new and different purpose that compells her back into the community she had avoided.

The very bluntness with which she names reality and which has pushed her out of the community becomes her key tool for witness as she preaches the Good News of how Jesus knows her—everything she has ever done!  The suffering she has endured in her exclusion from community is being transformed, as Paul states in today’s reading from Romans, into hope, “5and hope does not disappoint [her], because God’s love has been poured into [her heart] through the Holy Spirit that has been given to [her].”

While last week Nicodemus’ big question was one of logistics, asking Jesus “How can this be?” the Samaritan Woman asks of her community, with hope and longing in her voice, “Can this be the Messiah?”   

And in response to perhaps the shortest, most effective sermon ever, the crowd goes with her, returning to the well and to Jesus.
31Meanwhile the disciples were urging Jesus,
      “Rabbi, eat something.”
32But Jesus said to them,
      “I have food to eat that you do not know about.”
33So the disciples said to one another,
      “Surely no one has brought him something to eat?”
34Jesus said to them,
      “My food is to do the will 
            and accomplish the work
                  of the one who sent me.  
            35Do you not say,
                  ‘Four months more, then comes the harvest’?
                  But I tell you, look around you,
                        and see how the fields are ripe for harvesting.
                              36The reaper is already receiving wages
                              and is gathering fruit for eternal life,
                                    so that sower and reaper may rejoice together.
                                          37For here the saying holds true,
                                                ‘One sows and another reaps.’
                        38I sent you to reap that for which you did not labor.
                              Others have labored,
                                    and you have entered into their labor.”

While the Samaritan Woman is preaching the Good News to the community, Jesus is reminding the disciples of the work—the ministry—they were just doing with John before this in the Judean countryside.  God was at work sowing seeds for the harvest through John and his disciples—laying the groundwork so that Jesus and his disciples can reap what was sown—gathering the fruits of the labor.  And as evidence of what Jesus is saying, we read on.
39Many Samaritans from that city believed in Jesus
      because of the woman’s testimony,
            “He told me everything I have ever done.”
      40So when the Samaritans came to Jesus,
            they asked him to stay with them;
                  and he stayed there two days.
                        41And many more believed because of Jesus’ word.
42They said to the woman,
      “It is no longer because of what you said that we believe,
            for we have heard for ourselves,
            and we know that this is truly the Savior of the world.”

This encounter in the brightness of day between one Jewish man and one Samaritan woman, two people who have every reason to not even talk to each other, let alone engage in deep, honest conversation, leads to a new faith for the whole community of Samaritans.  This woman’s courage to name what others may have avoided is both a curse, casting her out of her community and the exact gift that God uses.  

Jesus shares with her the gift of God’s loving grace and the Holy Spirit runs with this preacher, bringing new life to the whole community through her one witness.  In this one day, the Holy Spirit works in her new life—a radical change—that she never could have imagined when she woke up to begin her day.  That is the power of the Holy Spirit in her life and in yours.  Are you ready?