Faith Works 5-23-15
Jeff Gill
Memorials throughout the Bible
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There are many memorials in the Jewish and Christian  scriptures, the Old and New Testaments of the Bible.
Memorials are often stones put up as a marker, or piled  together to stand out in a place. Stones were easy to come by in the Holy Land,  milk and honey being a dream and a promise, but rocks were always right there.
On the journey from Egypt to the Land of Promise, in the  wilderness, there were memorials placed by Moses and the people Israel to honor  manna's appearance to feed the people, or to mark a revelation of God's word to  the people.
Joshua had the twelve tribes mound stones from the streambed  of the Jordan River to mark where they crossed, dry shod, into the new  countryside. Altars, places of worship or assembly, all had their memorial  observances.
Passover, itself, grew in the life of the people as a  memorial in time, the date and circumstances of the event they did not want to  forget, when the Angel of Death struck Egypt but spared the Hebrews. The  Jerusalem Temple was meant to mark where Abraham was prepared to sacrifice  Isaac, an association Muslims still connect with the Dome of the Rock on the  same spot.
For the disciples, they came to the Mount of Transfiguration  (some say it was Mt. Tabor, others Mt. Hermon) and the appearance of Moses and  Elijah was so striking to them flanking Jesus that they said to him "we should  build something" to mark this event, a suggestion Jesus mercifully ignored.  1900 years later, Mussolini went ahead anyhow and put up an edifice to honor  and remember Christ and Moses and Elijah, a church building now atop Mt. Tabor  that leaves everyone a bit uncomfortable.
The Roman Empire was all about memorials, but they weren't  quite sure how to respond to Jewish ones; just before the time of the Gospels  they had tried to add their symbolism to those of the Temple, and found  themselves with a revolt on their hands. Memorial meanings are tricky across  cultures, and trying to validate or rewrite memorials through later changes can  provoke angry responses. Adding a memorial of one people to those of another  almost always ends badly.
The most enduring memorial, though, in the Bible is one that  by definition cannot endure. It's a memorial made of the loaf and the cup, the  memorial given by the hand of Jesus himself, the meal of which he said "This do  in remembrance of me."
What lasts is the meaning, even as the body and blood are  seen and shown and shared in the memorial of that meal in an upper room on the  edge of Jerusalem. "This is my body, broken for you . . . this is my blood,  shed for you." It vanishes through being consumed, but it endures in not just  the memory but the behavior, the actions of those who by eating and drinking  together come to see how they are now "one body" themselves.
Today we have memorials which are deep-set V shapes in the  earth with reflective marble walls, glass panels with etched images, online  guestbooks and holographic videos. They are not just a heap of stones standing  out in a wilderness place, asking the passer-by to wonder "what happened here?"  They aren't simply standing stones, although we still place them in our  cemeteries and memorial parks, unhewn and towering above their plots and  pavements.
Memorials can take many forms today, but they all still call  us to remember, and perhaps more to the point on Monday, to take action based  on those memories. To not stand so much as to be moved.
May you be moved this Memorial Day weekend; through your  meals shared in remembrance whoever you eat them with, and in those places where  markers make us think. God be with us to act in accordance with the memories we  would honor.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking  County; tell him what you would remember at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow  @Knapsack on Twitter.
 
 


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