May My Heart Always Be Open by E.E. Cummings and Luke 24:13-35
April 19, 2026
I have been thinking about this a lot lately, with the sight of so many people given their blind devotion in exchange for feeling protected, for feeling like winners, for feeling in charge. As we watch so many who claim to be in support of life, give their support to death and the war machine, I have been pondering how it comes to be that so many don’t see it, what it’s right in front of us.
Early in college, still operating in the paradigm handed to me, but albeit with new questions, I decided to volunteer to get engaged in politics. As a passionate 19-year-old infused with new ideas from reading I was soaking up like a sponge, I found the College Republicans and a man named James Kolbe. He was born in the Midwest and moved to Arizona when he was 5.
He served in the Navy, including a year in Vietnam. He went to Northwestern and then went onto Stanford for graduate school. When we met, he was running again for Arizona’s 5th congressional district, a lifelong Republican. But he didn’t check their boxes perfectly. He was mixed. He supported women’s reproductive healthcare but just the year before I showed up in Tucson, he had voted in support of the Defense of Marriage Act, which was a law passed in 1996 arguing that marriage should be only between a man and a woman. The problem was that this Navy Veteran, who was a businessman, and a staunch Republican, it turns out Jim Kolbe was gay. When he voted the way he did, he was outed by the news magazine The Advocate, who was furious at him for not advocating for LGBTQ rights. When asked how in the world a gay man could vote the way he did, his argument was that states should decide. But what in the world was the Arizona Republican Party going to do with this guy who didn’t fit their ideas of a conservative man?
And I think that is one way to understand this post-Easter story. We only get this story fleshed out here in this Gospel and it’s rich with symbology and meaning- 7 miles, the journey ends in Jerusalem, women are making statements that not everyone is sure of… and the group walking doesn’t recognize what is really going on. Isn’t that an agent problem? Women not being believed…. They are grieving. They can’t see what is happening.
“When he was at the table with them, he took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized him…”
How is this happening? But then they see it. Somehow it’s as if their eyes were opened to a whole new way of looking at it all.
And I think of how true this is, in life, in many situations, how often it is only when we are face to face with something, when we doing something so intimate as sharing life and hearing a story or having an encounter, that totally challenges how we were thinking about something.
In a commentary on this passage, Molly Marshall says that “we need others to change our narrowness.” And that has been my experience. It’s easy to claim to be someone with an open mind, if we are never in places where we hear our perspective probed or our way of thinking challenged. In my opinion, one of the most important things we do as a church, investing in being together in our weekly gatherings is the spiritual growth that emerges in sharing life with people who have different perspectives than us. In the United Church of Christ, we value theological freedom and prize unity not conformity, we see the variety as a gift. We do need each other to change, to have our eyes opened and we need that out in the world too.
I believe it is part of our commitment as people of faith and conscience to always remain open. May we be open to hearing from and being changed by even the non-human creatures that speak beyond words. As we heard from e.e. cummings, may our hearts always be open to little birds who are the secrets of living… may our minds stroll about hungry and fearless and thirsty and supple.
May our eyes keep being opened. May we see our need for one another in challenging our narrowness. May we accompany one another in finding that some of the strangers we encounters will lead us straight to something Holy.
May it be so. Amen.