It's Gonna Be May
The first week of May is quite silly. Justin Timberlake’s countenance graces our newsfeeds, forever echoing the lyrics, “It’s gonna be me (may).” Star Wars fans wait with baited breath to bestow that cringeworthy pun, “May the Fourth be with you.” And millions of Mexican Americans brace themselves to explain to well-meaning celebrators that no, Cinco De Mayo is not “Mexican Independence Day.”
Whether you’re Timberlake himself wishing for a genie to grant his wish to erase that line from music history so that your May can begin in peace, or you’re that well-meaning celebrator now embarrassed over your struggle to keep international holidays in order, or you’re that student for whom May simultaneously signals the beginning of the end and the doom and gloom of semester finals, May begins in a very quirky way.
Upon the beginning of this quirky month, however, I want to remind you of how our worship service ends. At Trinity, as at most Lutheran churches, every service ends with some form of parting blessing. Usually it’s the one taken from Numbers:
22 The Lord said to Moses, 23 “Tell Aaron and his sons, ‘This is how you are to bless the Israelites. Say to them:
24 “ ‘ “The Lord bless you
and keep you;
25 the Lord make his face shine on you
and be gracious to you;
26 the Lord turn his face toward you
and give you peace.” ’
27 “So they will put my name on the Israelites, and I will bless them.” (Numbers 6:22-27)
This command that God gave to Moses to give to his brother to give to his sons (a game of Levitical “Telephone!”) comes in the middle of many ordinances describing the way God wanted the Old Testament Israelites to worship and live before him. What’s curious to me as I re-read these verses is that we are not given the time or occasion in which the priests are to bestow this blessing on the Israelites. God just says, “This is what you say,” without answering the question, “When?” And the more I think about that, the more I love it.
We choose to end our services with this so-called “Aaronic Blessing,” but we could just as well begin the service with them. We could put this text on our church sign; as a bumper sticker on our cars; we could use it as a greeting and salutation like many cultures do.
Is there ever a time when you do not need to hear it? Is there ever a time when you don’t feel the need to be reminded that God blesses and protects you constantly? Could there ever be a time when it doesn’t delight the heart to remember that when God’s face turns toward you, it shines with a bright smile of affection and grace? Could you ever get sick of hearing that God lives to give you peace through Jesus Christ? Of course not!
So whether you’re embarrassed over some lyrics you sang twenty years ago, or how for lack of cultural sensitivity stuck your foot in your mouth (as I have done more times than I can count), or you’re nearing the “beginning of the end” of your year or semester, or you’re just trying to make it to tomorrow, God bless you. God keep you. God put his loving eyes on you. God give you the peace that comes from a clear conscience because of what Jesus has done (1 Peter 3:21), the peace that transcends all understanding (Philippians 4:7).





