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							I have a confession. My hope is that it won’t be too 
							much for you. That you won’t think any differently 
							of me. Okay, here it goes:
 I love Jesus.
 
 No, like, I really love Jesus. Not in some 
							sentimental or superficial “Jesus is my homeboy and 
							my personal Lord and savior.” Nothing like that 
							because that makes Jesus mine when Jesus is actually 
							ours.
 
 In fact, despite what some think, Presbyterians 
							confess Christ as sovereign of all! Personally, I 
							confess Jesus as Lord and Savior. But I love Jesus 
							because of his compassion.
 
 The compassion he has for others and his compassion 
							for me is unlike anything I’ve ever heard or even 
							seen. I love Jesus because he Jesus sees me for who 
							I am: Adam.
 
 Did you know compassion comes from the Latin word 
							compassio, meaning “to pity, sympathize with, or 
							suffer with,” and is related to the Greek word 
							sympatheia, denoting “fellow feeling, community of 
							feeling?” Quite literally, ‘compassion’ means to 
							endure with another person, to experience another’s 
							grief or suffering or need.
 
 Which leads me to another confession: I love the 
							church.
 
 I love it because the church is the body of Christ, 
							a place where we share life with one another. In a 
							season of great difficulty for me, you all offered 
							me great compassion, sitting with me as an 
							unexpected ending came and went. You all, not only 
							in this occasion, but on numerous occasions 
							throughout the years, have extended compassion to 
							each other.
 
 This is what Jesus meant when he said to “love your 
							neighbor.” He meant that we have compassion for one 
							another, especially the stranger and our enemy. 
							Remember that Jesus summed up his own teaching on 
							compassion, the practice of ‘withness,’ by 
							proclaiming that whatever was done to the poor, the 
							marginalized, or the outcast was, in reality, done 
							to him.
 
 Lent invites us to look again at the world and to 
							see how with it we are.
 
 For me, Lent is a reminder of how Jesus’ compassion 
							overflowed outside his tribe. He did not let his 
							love, his mercy, or his withness be confined only to 
							James, John, Peter, and the other twelve. Instead, 
							he considered all he encountered to be his neighbor.
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							Compassion is hard, though. Not only does it 
							require us to see the world through more gentle, 
							loving lenses, but it is about caring for one 
							another.
 
 And this is why I love Jesus. He loved. He didn’t 
							only teach or preach or use words to tell of God’s 
							love. But he actually loved those he shared life 
							with. Especially those he wasn't supposed to be 
							with.
 
 The hard truth Lent often confronts us with as we 
							wander into the wilderness and wade out of the 
							waters of baptism is that sometimes, we as a church, 
							both locally and universally, neglect loving our 
							neighbor as ourselves. We lack compassion for 
							ourselves and for one another.
 
 Yet Lent is also the season we remember that Christ 
							sees us with eyes full of compassion. That what we 
							are examining within ourselves, what we are 
							confronting outside of ourselves, Christ is with us 
							every step of the way.
 Compassion then is best understood when we play 
							together, when we eat together, when we share our 
							stories, and when we act on behalf of each other. 
							These are the things we human beings do when we are 
							at our best and our most courageous; especially when 
							we recognize that God is right here with us, our 
							partner in renewing this journey we call faith!
 
 As we sit and watch the snow fall, remember that 
							God’s love, Christ’s compassion, and the Holy 
							Spirit’s company is with us this day and every day.
 
 May God help us let go of that which prevents us 
							from being compassionate to the world and to 
							ourselves.
 
 Jesus loves you. And so do I. Shalom,
 
 [Adam Quinn, pastor of First Presbyterian Church 
							in Lincoln]
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