Sunday, April 26, 2020

“Heartburn” (Luke 24:13-35)


One of my favorite meats to grill is flank steak.  It is a family favorite with everyone at family gatherings.  My wife, Dana, marinates the meat in lots of hot and spicy herbs and spices . . . which is not something I usually enjoy, but for this cut of meat it is wonderful.  I enjoy it every time as I savor each and every bite.

One of my least favorite meats to grill and eat is flank steak.  Because it is marinated in lots of hot and spicy herbs and spices . . . it gives me heartburn.  I moan and groan the whole evening . . . I toss and turn all night . . . and, I always vow that I will never ever submit my stomach to such pain.  It is a terrible feeling, but it is a feeling that gets my attention and demands some sort of response . . . each and every time!

Well, guess what . . . I must have a poor memory because I still grill flank steak at least once a month from April through September.  It has become a “love/hate” relationship.  I guess I have come to the conclusion that it is worth the heartburn to enjoy the steak.  Maybe some day I will come to my senses, but I doubt it.

Heartburn is said to be a painful burning or discomfort in the upper chest or mid-chest—that area around the heart.  It can be caused by underlying diseases or from such things as spicy food, alcohol, overeating, or even tight clothing.  It is the stomach sending a message that it is not too happy and wants some attention.  If you have ever had it, you know what I am talking about.  So, in response we do a variety of things . . . we take an anti-acid of some sort, we lie down . . . we do something.  After eating flank steak my stomach lets me know . . . and, I, in return, just want to crawl and lie down somewhere to die until it passes.  Heartburn is a hint that something needs attention.

I think that we can have physical heartburn . . . and, we can have spiritual heartburn.  I think that we all understand, and have probably experienced, physical heartburn.  It is the spiritual heartburn that we need to consider this morning.  This morning our scripture reading speaks to this idea of spiritual heartburn.

On the same day that Jesus had his second encounter with the disciples behind closed doors, there were two disciples making their way from Jerusalem to Emmaus.  As they were walking and talking about all the things that had happened, they encounter a stranger.  The stranger begins to walk with them and asks what they were talking about.  Of course, they tell him all about the things that had taken place . . . the words of the prophets, the trial, the crucifixion, and the empty tomb.  The stranger kinds of looks at them strangely and basically says, “And, why did you not believe?”  From that point on the stranger gave them a theological discourse worthy of the world’s best seminaries.  He covered it all from the beginning through Moses and all the prophets telling what it all meant about the Messiah.

To say the least, they were enthralled with the stranger and all that he was sharing.  They had lost track of time and place as they walked, then suddenly they were to their destination.  As they stopped, the stranger kept going.  They urged him to stay.  Together they had a meal.  The stranger “took bread, gave thanks, broke it and began to give it to them.”  Suddenly their eyes were opened to who the stranger was . . . it was Jesus.  Then he disappeared. 

Astonished is probably not even a good word to describe what the two felt of their encounter with Jesus.  Excitedly they compared notes and asked each other, “Were not our hearts burning within us while he talked with us on the road and opened the Scriptures to us?”  And, there it is!  Heartburn!  The disciples had a case of heartburn . . . spiritual heartburn.

From where does spiritual heartburn come?

For some I think it came from when we were exploring and learning about Jesus and what it means to be a person of faith.  During that time, we are reading the scriptures and stories of Jesus . . . learning more about him and how much he loves us . . . of how we can come into intimate relationship with God.  It was something that grew within us until we thought our hearts were going to burst . . . and, we responded by giving our lives over to follow him wherever he led. 

I think that is probably the first encounter most of us have with spiritual heartburn . . . that desire to follow Jesus and to enter relationship with God.  And, there are other ways.  I think that the other comes, fortunately or unfortunately, as our faith grows, and we understand better and more deeply what it is that Jesus is asking us to do as we follow him.  Faith moves beyond that stage of infatuation with the beloved into the stage of living that love out.  It comes from reading and hearing the stories of Jesus and the people he encountered . . . the people he stood up for . . . the people he spoke for . . . the people who were on the outside looking in.  It comes as we realize that nothing has changed . . . those people exist in our day and age . . . they still hurt, struggle, demand justice, demand to be seen, accepted, and included.  Seeing those around us our hearts burn to reach out and love as Jesus loved and acted.  That is spiritual heartburn.

So, if heartburn is demanding attention . . . demanding action, then it makes sense that to get rid of it we must do something.  As the two disciples congratulated themselves for having encountered Jesus, they did not idly sit by and do nothing.  No . . . in their belief they hightailed it back to Jerusalem, found the other disciples, and told them everything that had happened.  But, most importantly, they let them know that they believed.  They especially believed that Jesus called them to follow . . . all was not lost, there was still a future and much to be done.

To get rid of heartburn you have to respond and do something.  For the heartburn brought upon us when we encounter those whom Jesus ministered to and loved . . . for the hungry, we feed them . . . for the naked, we clothe them . . . for the imprisoned, we visit . . . for the lonely, we sit with them . . . for the oppressed, we free them.  For whatever it is that burns within our hearts, we respond . . . we respond by believing . . . we respond through love . . . we respond through action . . . we respond as Jesus would.

And . . . it makes us feel good.  It feels right.

As we continue the Easter journey to discover Jesus in the world around us, let us be mindful of where we feel our hearts burning . . . let us be prayerful of how we respond to the heartburn we feel.  And, let us embrace the knowledge that Easter brings . . . there is a better world waiting for us.  Our hearts burn for it . . . let us respond in kind.  Amen.

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