February 17, 2026

Truth is stranger than fiction

 

Ever watch the movie “When Harry Met Sally”?  At the very beginning of the movie, there are interviews of how people met each other, how they finish each other’s sentences, and some remember as clear as day how they met, some constantly correct each other on the details?  It seems like a fairy tale that only a few people ever achieve.  And yet, all but the last interview with the main characters are based on true stories.  Some of them seem wildly impossible, like the one where both people were born in the same hospital seven days apart, lived one block away from each other, even worked in the same building for six years, one on the 5th floor, one on the 14th floor, and met on a holiday in a hotel in another state.  Sometimes truth is stranger than fiction.

From time to time, we hear incredible stories that are far-fetched.  Like the girl who grew up to marry her grandma’s math teacher’s grandson in Old Strathcona in Edmonton.  Despite the girl’s dad and the boy’s dad growing up kitty corner from each other as children, the girl and the boy never met until they were in university and had no idea how close their families were.  Both sets of grandparents were very committed United Church members, but even though they lived on the same block, they went to completely different United Churches in Edmonton. (For the record, I thought his name was Jim, not Tim!) It’s an example of how truth can be stranger than fiction.  And yet they are true.

The story of the transfiguration is one of the gospel stories that seems too strange to be true.  And for those bible geeks like the Jesus Seminar in the ‘90’s who liked to dissect scripture and analyze it until it was dead and dusty, this was a scripture that they disliked unless they could look at it symbolically.  Matthew’s gospel is drawing parallels between Jesus and Moses as he writes his gospel for Christian Jews who honor and respect both Moses and Elijah as so holy they both saw the face of God.  For those of you who may not remember those old testament stories, Moses was the one who rescued the people of Israel from slavery in Egypt, defying the Pharaoh, and getting the 10 commandments from God who wrote them on stone tablets for all the people to see.  Elijah was a prophet who challenged the followers of Baal to a worship fight and dared them to get their god to burn the sacrifice on their altar, then when they failed, Elijah poured water all over the altar he dedicated to Jhwh God, and God lit the sacrifice on fire anyway.  Elijah also was the one who was described as riding a chariot up to heaven instead of dying like the rest of humanity.  So, Jesus hanging out with Moses and Elijah is a big deal.  It would be like if we ran into a friend and he or she had to take a conference call with Taylor Swift and Bad Bunny, and you knew that it was real and not a fake.  You would think of your friend very differently, wouldn’t you?

That’s what Peter, James and John thought.  All of the sudden, this wise leader was elevated in their eyes to something special, something unique, something unbelievable.  And yet he was still the humble, kind and caring man they had learned to trust while they followed him around Galilea.  And when he asked them to keep their experience a secret, they did.  It kept his followers around him from treating him any differently than just an inspiring speaker and teacher.  But for Peter, James and John, it cemented their trust in Jesus as the leader they desperately needed. The leader who would help them live at a time when their country was occupied by a foreign power, where they had little or no human rights, and didn’t know where their next meal would come from or if their jobs as fishermen would survive the competition from rich Roman fishing companies.

We struggle to know what is true and what is fiction.  Within hours of the incident at Tumbler Ridge, ugly rumors and outrageous claims were circulating.  People were demonizing a vulnerable minority of our society.  They ignored facts, going straight to paranoia and fear.  And now, with artificial intelligence producing videos that look appear real, we are going to need to on our toes.  It’s one thing to watch ninja kittens doing complex and flawless workout sessions but another thing to be able to recognize a video that has been faked so well it looks true.

Leadership that we can trust is important especially now.  When our very province is debating about staying in Canada, we need to be careful who we listen.  At a recent RCMP chaplaincy workshop, trustworthy leadership was described as authentic, purposeful, vulnerable, compassionate, empathetic and putting the needs of others before their own.  Our psalm describes what happens when leaders choose to put their own selfish agendas first.  Their power will collapse and their authority will disappear.  History shows that the psalmists are right, leaders who put their own desires ahead of God’s agenda for a peaceable, community will find that they lose all they desire.  And history shows that when we trust Jesus more than AI, more than leaders who promote fear and hatred for selfish gain, when we trust Jesus transfigured, the world changes for the better for everyone.  We come down the mountain, ready to act with compassion, justice and the assurance that God loves us all in good times and in challenging times.  Truth is stranger than fiction, because when we choose love over hate, we heal ourselves and the world.  May we all trust Jesus as our leader who transfigures our world to become a better place even in difficult times like these. Amen.

February 03, 2026

Upside Down Kingdom


There’s a puzzle I recently learned about a cat and a piece of toast. We all know that cats always land on their feet when they fall. It’s so amazing and complex that even Physicists have studied it, and discovered that cats have survived falls even from the 23rd story of high-rise buildings. We also know that toast that falls off the plate falls butter side down, and if there’s any dust on the floor, it will stick to the toast. Scientists tested to find out why the buttered side ends up on the floor so often. It turns out that 81% of the time, the toast will land butter side down thanks to physics and the aerodynamic properties of bread smeared with oil. So the puzzle is what happens when you tie a piece of buttered toast onto the back of a cat and toss them both out the window? Which will happen, the cat land on its feet or the butter land on the sidewalk?  People want to know!

Cats perform a complex gymnastics feat to land on their feet. They twist their bodies to make sure their feet are under them before they land. You can’t see it happen unless you have a stop motion camera recording it in slow motion. It’s worthy of an Olympic gymnast at their peak performance. For those of us who can’t even do a cartwheel, it’s miraculous!

The beatitudes are just as much of a miraculous cartwheel as a falling cat. Think about the people in your life that seem successful to most people. Taylor Swift, Elon Musk, Elliot Page, Connor McDavid and numerous others are measured in terms of their assets, their fame, their talents and their relationships. They are successful by all measures, they have landed on their feet and millions of people idolize and respect them.

All except Jesus. The measuring stick that Jesus used was upside down to anything anyone had heard. It was more twisted than a cat with a piece of toast tied on its back. It upended the idea that the biggest, strongest, richest or most famous people are the ones that are successful. If we look at what the word blessed means, it means fortunate, happy, lucky.

Seems like a pretty big twist in what we think of people who are happy or blessed. And it’s not just any kind of feeling of happiness, it’s supposed to be a deep-seated sense of contentment with one’s self and their place in the world. “You are fortunate when others insult you and persecute you, and utter every kind of slander against you because of me. Be glad and rejoice.”

We’ve seen a lot of persecutions over the years in our world, but it’s been especially vivid to watch the protests in Minnesota the last couple of weeks.  People are feeling blessed when they stand watch over daycares or protect teens on their way out of school or drive around following ICE trucks ready to honk, whistle and record any cases of arrest they might witness. They are feeling energized and full of purpose. They are feeling in their bones the kind of blessedness that Jesus was getting at. Jesus was mindful of Micah's teaching on living a blessed life. It’s not about getting a Nobel prize, or an Oscar or a Stanley Cup. It’s not about great sacrifices or huge gifts or deep financial generosity. Micah, writing in the midst of economic chaos, military powers and leaders who bullied their people into states of fear and apathy, said that the reason for wars and political uncertainty was not that we had to treat God like a king or emperor with an appetite that can never be satisfied. It’s not about stuff. It’s not about bribes. It’s not about bankrupting ourselves to keep a heavenly bully from looking our way. It’s not about groveling in front of a warlord in hopes that he will protect us.

Jesus says it’s not about following rules, it’s about twisting expectations. Seek justice, love kindness and walk humbly in relationship with God. Seeing the people we meet differently than the world does. The happy ones, the lucky ones, the fortunate ones are not who we think.

Jesus was pointing out that the people whom we love to look down on are the ones that God cares about. The ones who need kindness. The ones that may have no more energy for pretending. The ones who survive from hour to hour, living precariously for reasons that we don’t know. The people who we think are the last and least. The people we think don’t deserve compassion. The ones who are so fragile that they don’t care who sees their suffering. Sometimes we are the suffering, we are the ones who are starving for hope or purpose or courage or direction. The last line in these upside-down beatitudes are for us today. “Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven.” When we take these words seriously like the people in Minnesota do, we will find ourselves speaking in truth against oppression. Against the lies that try to undermine democracy, the lies that attack our human rights and demonize the meek and the poor and the sick and the grieving. The petitions that pit neighbor against neighbor, that try to make people feel oppressed when they are living in one of the most tolerant democratic countries in the world. God sees us as blessed when we speak up for those who don’t have the skills or abilities to speak out. When we take the sign out of the window that tries to pretend everything is okay when it’s not.  When we speak up against bullying attitudes and people twisting the truth because they are feeling entitled to rage and fearmonger. And God helps us, when we seek justice, love kindness and walk humbly, to land like a cat, lightly, on our feet, with grace and love and joy as we follow in the footsteps of our Jesus, the leader of our upside-down kingdom.