Written Sermon for March 22, 2026

Ezekiel 37 (2026)

Jesus said, “Come to me all you who labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest.” Trust that peace and forgiveness are God’s gift to you this day, whatever burden you carry. Be renewed by the breath of the Holy Spirit that will bring you into each new day.

 

I have with me some pasta this morning

It’s quite a common food

Most people have it in their kitchens

One of the pasta shapes, macaroni, is probably the most common pasta found in kitchens that are feeding children

Summer camps rely on Macaroni and cheese to feed dozens, even hundreds of hungry campers

Mums rely on Mac and cheese to present a meal that makes kids full and happy

Pasta in its many forms is one of those foods that most people like

It makes you feel comfortable and well fed

In order for this dry, tasteless pasta to become something good

A lot of changes need to take place

First it needs to be cooked

It is plunged into boiling water and simmered for about 10 minutes

Then we have lovely soft pasta waiting for the sauce or cheese to round it out

 

If you had no experience of cooking dried pasta you could look at it and discount it as a food source for people

You could dismiss it as hard, dry and unpleasant, something to make a hungry person feel hopeless

Similarly when you encounter disappointment or hardship in your life you may be unable to see beyond the trial

You may even begin to feel that nothing good is going to be able to happen

It can seem that everything is like the valley of dry bones that Ezekiel saw in his vision

But just as we know that this pasta can become very good – so the hard things in our life can become a lot better.

As God brought life to the valley of dry bones with the breath of his Holy Spirit – so God can give us life and hope in spite of make the worst things in our lives too.

 

Our reading in the book of Ezekiel tells of the prophet encountering a valley of dry bones

Now Ezekiel was an Israelite priest who lived in exile in Babylon

The Israelite people longed to return home.

Not that life in Babylon had been dreadful.

The Israelite exiles lived well.

They had homes and followed their professions

I used to think that life for those who were taken into captivity would be like living as a refugee who never rose out of poverty

I had assumed that those who were taken into captivity were to spend their entire lives as slaves and/or labourers

This was not always the case

Some captors in the ancient world would go out to conquer another nation, and they would transport the wealthiest and most talented people to the conquerors’ homeland

This did two things

Firstly, it removed the people with leadership skills from the conquered population, so there was less likelihood of rebellion

And secondly, the people of talent and ability were brought to the land of the conquerors to help with the local economy

Those who were seen to be people who would add to culture and community were transported to the captor’s homeland

This is how it was with the Israelites in Babylon

The Israelites in exile had become at home with the Babylonian culture; though they still longed to return to Israel.

Now Ezekiel was not only an exile, but he was a prophet in exile

The word of the Lord had come to him saying that the return to the land of Israel would not happen in Ezekiel’s lifetime

After receiving this word from the God, Ezekiel brought this word to the people of God, as a prophet should

The people did not want to hear this message, in spite of it being what God had said,

Ezekiel was not telling people what they wanted to hear, and so the Israelites living in Babylon were unkind to Ezekiel when he shared an unpopular prophecy

Ezekiel was ridiculed and scorned because his words seemed to lack national pride.

Some even suggested that Ezekiel was intentionally holding back a return to Israel when he said that the return to Israel would take time

 

Then one day Ezekiel had a vision of a valley of dry bones

He was told to prophecy to those bones

What a strange direction!

Prophecy to these dead, dry bones?

One who prophecies brings the word of the Lord to another

Sometimes the prophet foretells

But more often the prophet forth tells

A word of prophecy is not so much a prediction as a reminder of what God wants

Regardless of whether the message concerned the future or the present, why would God ask Ezekiel to prophecy to dry bones?

Dry, dead lifeless bones?

The bones were so old and dry that there was no hope

Ezekiel saw the valley of dry bones there at his feet and God said

“Prophecy to these bones”

And the bones came together

And breath came into them

From nothing came life

 

From this vision Ezekiel knew that one day the people of Israel would be gathered together again

They would return to the promised land and not be left in exile

There was hope in the face of hopelessness

With the spirit of God, there could be life in the face of human hopelessness

 

We possibly don’t think of the Spirit of God being revealed and cherished in the writings of the Hebrew prophets

We can be inclined to think of the Spirit as a gift to the people of God after Jesus returned to heaven

We remember the story in Acts of the manifestation of God’s Spirit which was shown at Pentecost in Jerusalem

As we read the epistles in the New Testament we are reminded that the Spirit has been shown in the gifts of wisdom and discernment

In Ephesians 1:17  keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better

Yet the Spirit of God has always been a gift from God to God’s people even before the ministry of Jesus

And so we see the manifestation of the Spirit of God to Ezekeil so that he has a message of hope for the people

 

The presence of the Spirit is manifest in many ways, one of them is in the gift of coming to know God better

Knowing God better can help to keep us from despair

It is easy to become so focused on the trouble that we forget to look up

Or as the minister Richard Fairchild says, we limit God

We may have no trouble saying that God is powerful, that God created, that God forgives sin and that God gives eternal life

When it comes to trusting that there is more at work than the political snarls or ecological threats with which we live, sometimes our faith falters

Fairchild is a UCC minister, and he confesses that he sometimes has doubts and worries

And then he says, that sometimes (and he is thankful for this) that out of the blue he will get a reminder from another believer that God is limitless,

Well actually he says he gets a bonk on the head from another saint,

But he readily admits that there are times that he worries that he won’t be able to afford the things that he wants and needs

In his words:

“By this I do not mean that I don’t give as much as I believe God

wants me to give.  What I mean is this – there are times when I

get anxious and worried about how I am going to be able to afford

to do this or that thing when I want to.

Lots of people have these times.

But I’m not happy with what happens when I have them.  In fact,

I’m miserable.  I let myself get into funks – funks based nothing

more than my perception that there is nothing more that I can do

to help myself get the funds I need.  I growl a bit.  I am

distracted.  I’m a pain.

Completely out of this picture that I paint for myself is the

presence of God.

That is – until someone hits me over the head with the fact that

I have never really wanted before.  And that when I have wanted –

well – God has provided.

I thank God for those reminders – because I get it – and for a

while I am much better.”

He goes on to say how he can be filled with despair over what will happen to the UCC, and he questions some areas of policy

And then the truth comes to him that even if the practise of faith as he knows it ceases, that God’s purposes can not be thwarted and will not be thwarted

Or as he puts it “even if this church is going nowhere history shows that God’s purposes are never defeated.”

Fairchild also confesses to sometimes giving way to despair when people are critical of him

One of the perplexing things about ministry is that you need both a compassionate heart and a thick skin

They are very rarely packaged together in one person, and it can be easy to take things personally

In Fairchild’s words he dreads the conflict that he imagines will arise

He says “I start thinking that the world is coming

to an end – that I am going to be involved in conflict and

dispute and that it is going to drain the life out of me and of

others.  I fret and worry and forget for a while that the real

question is not what other folk are thinking about me – but what

God is thinking about me.  Am I following him?  Am I being

faithful?  And if I am   then what does it matter what others say

or do?

[Fairchild confesses]

I limit God,

I lock God up.

I stick him in the tomb.

I travel to the valley of dry bones where Ezekiel went

and see, as Ezekiel saw,

as all of Israel saw,

only dry old bones.”

(Richard Fairchild. Unbind Him and Let Him Go. 5th Sunday in Lent Year A,  spirit-net.ca)

 

I could relate to the way Fairchild described being overwhelmed

He doesn’t stop there though

He also shared how when he gets caught up in woe, when it seems that life is like the valley of dry bones

That the Spirt gets his attention, reminding him that what he can see and experience is not all that is going on

Sometimes these reminders come from another believer

 

We find ourselves in this place where we are determined that things are not going well

There is too much change

There is too much decline

We can’t see a way out

The dry bones of despair, worry and anxiety are our daily companions

Like the word of God spoken through Ezekiel and like the truth shown by Jesus miraculous healing of Lazarus

The spirit will touch our lives and raise us above what we are able to touch, see and hear

We may not know what God is planning, but we do know that God’s purposes are greater than our fear

 

“We all need to be clunked on the head sometimes,

Like how Jesus hits the people of Bethany over the head,

by showing them that not only could he heal the sick,

which they had no problem believing that he could do,

but that he could also raise the dead.”

(Richard Fairchild. Unbind Him and Let Him Go. 5th Sunday in Lent Year A,  spirit-net.ca)

The spirit of God gives life and hope

The spirit that came sweeping through on Pentecost

Can sweep through our lives

Blowing away what is not needed

Giving direction

Pointing us to God

When things are hard and unpalatable in our lives

Like uncooked pasta

Remember God gives us a spirit of discernment, that helps us see beyond what we are experiencing.

 

Breath on me breathe of God

Fill me with life anew

That I may love what thou dost love

And do what thou wouldst do

 

 

 

PRAYERS OF THANKSGIVING AND INTERCESSION

God of the loving heart,

thank you that in Christ, you call each of us by name and unite us in his body, the Church.

Give us love enough to make a difference in your world,

and trust enough to follow even when the way ahead us is a challenge.

 

God of peace and promise,

in Christ you call us to love our enemies and to be peacemakers in the word you love.

We pray today for people and places divided by ancient bitterness and current hostility, (especially we remember … adding places in the recent news…)

 

 

O God of the bruised and broken,

we are grateful that, in Christ, you have taken up the cross

and know by heart the things that bring us suffering and pain.

We pray today for all those in need of healing and comfort,

whatever the source of their pain….

(Keep silence for 10-15 seconds)

 

O God of the lonely and sorrowing,

in Christ you faced the loss we know

when loved ones die or when friends let us down.

We remember before you those who grieve the loss of their beloved

and those who face a lonely future….

(Keep silence for 10-15 seconds)

 

O God of hope and new possibility,

in Christ you opened the way into the future for us through the power of your redeeming love. Give us the courage we need to face our future,

assured of your presence and power to sustain us.

We offer all that we are and all that we hope for through Jesus Christ in whose name we pray. Amen

 

COMMISSIONING AND BENEDICTION

As we move toward Holy Week and turn towards the Cross, remember the words of Jesus:

“I am the resurrection and the life.

Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live,

and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.

So may the tears of the Lord Jesus wash over your sorrows,

the Spirit of God dwell in your hearts,

and God’s promise of new life lead you through each day ahead