Dry Bones Live! – The Fifth Sunday in Lent – March 22, 2026

Dry Bones Live! – The Fifth Sunday in Lent – March 22, 2026

The Adventurous Lectionary – The Fifth Sunday in Lent – March 22, 2026

Ezekiel 17:1-14, Psalm 130, Romans 8:6-11, John 11:1-45

Today’s passages speak directly to our current context, congregationally, nationally, and planetarily.  We are as a nation dwelling in a valley of dry bones, and we wonder if the bones that hold together the soul of the nation will rise again.  The nation is on spiritual life support.  Our leaders are guided by lust, power, and profit. Forsaking morality, their primary value is “might makes right,” and holding onto power, regardless of the consequences to the environment, human rights, or democracy.  We look at our struggling churches and wonder if the bones of our churches will rise up to dance and sing songs of new creation in this dark time.

Lent is a time in which we look at life, personal and corporate , without blinders and excuses, as much as possible. We try to see life as it is, in all its wondrous chaos, and tragic beauty. Lent is a season in which we confront our limitations, sin, and mortality, and their impact on our lives and the world. We are dust and to dust we return, we are finite and our finitude is the source of creativity and fear, we are sinful and sin leads to separation from God, others, and our personal destiny.  Yet, there is grace, agency, and transformation, in the midst of the moral and spiritual limitations – and intentional waywardness and  violence – we face at every level of life.

Today’s readings stagger the imagination: dry bones dancing and a dead man revived. In the midst of death, resurrection bursts forth and we are challenged to expect the unexpected and awaken to a world of wonders. In the darkness of individual and corporate life, new creation emerges, light shines, thin places reveal spiritual presence.

DRY BONES DANCING! Ezekiel’s mystical vision sets the stage for today’s readings. The picture is both serious and whimsical. Just think of the children’s song inspired by Ezekiel 37:1-14:

Ezekiel connected dem dry bones,
Ezekiel connected dem dry bones,
Ezekiel in the valley of dry bones,
Now hear the word of the Lord.
Toe bone connected to the foot bone
Foot bone connected to the heel bone
Heel bone connected to the ankle bone
Ankle bone connected to the shin bone
Shin bone connected to the knee bone
Knee bone connected to the thigh bone
Thigh bone connected to the hip bone
Hip bone connected to the back bone
Back bone connected to the shoulder bone
Shoulder bone connected to the neck bone
Neck bone connected to the head bone
Now hear the word of the Lord.
Dem bones, dem bones gonna walk around.
Dem bones, dem bones gonna walk around.
Dem bones, dem bones gonna walk around.
Now hear the word of the Lord.

Imagine dry bones dancing and singing. Imagine the cemeteries emptied of their occupants, and dead relatives showing up at dinner.  Imagine dancing in the aisles of your church.

As I ponder Ezekiel’s vision, I join the biblical scholars in the recognition it’s about the fears and hopes of the nation of Judah. Will the nation, whose leadership is exiled in Babylon, ever rise again? Will Jerusalem, the city of God, be restored or remain in ruins? But, if that’s all it’s about, a hopeful story from over 2500 years ago, why bother to read such a fanciful story? Ancient history is interesting, but it cannot transform us, and rise our dry bones.

Ezekiel speaks about the current state of Christendom and our own planet. It’s also about a nation in chaos, led by leaders who thrive on chaos and place business profits ahead of the wisdom of prophets and the well-being of its most vulnerable citizens and immigrants. Leaders whose followers see them as chosen by God, and who have come to believe in their own godlike power.  That’s our “Christian” nation today!

As we look at the national scene, in which violence, incivility, and prevarication are promoted by political and religious leaders in our land and the Middle East with intentionality and to destabilize our democracy, we ask: Will the nation as we have known it survive? Is the American spirit faltering as a result of unholy alliances of church and state, crusader consciousness, and rising Christian nationalism? Given our leaders’ obliviousness to environmental issues and the global impact of viruses, and come Christians’ fixation on a faux earth destroying Second Coming, will our planet survive?

And, on a smaller scale, though it may seem unimportant these days, will progressive and mainstream Christianity survive – and our own congregations survive – in this time of unsettledness and threat?  This certainly is the case as most churches have smaller in-person attendance and seem to have lost most of their young families and younger single members.  Will they come back?  If not, how can we respond in ways that build community and nurture spiritually in a challenging time?

The death of the old ways is apparent but will something new arise? Will these dry bones – in our churches – come back to life? Such emergence can only come through a form of spiritual CPR. The Spirit breathing in us, causing us to get up and dance around! Only God’s Spirit can revive us, energize us, and empower us!  Let the dray bones dance.

OUT OF THE DEPTHS WE CRY. The Psalmist cries out from the depths, hoping God will hear our voices. The Psalmist waits on God and so do we in our troubled congregational and national time. We want new life: we want to see growth in our congregations and in our spirits. We need God’s power to redeem and transform us.  We need God to take our hand and lift us out of hopelessness and helplessness so that we might reclaim our vocations in an unsettled time.  In the depth, there is a dazzling darkness, a subtle movement of the spiritual and moral arcs of history, which creates a way where we perceive no way forward.

BREATHING THE SPIRIT. The Apostle Paul speaks of being renewed in the Spirit. God’s Spirit breathes in all things, but we won’t receive the fullness of God’s Spirit if we’re fleshly minded. When we are in the Spirit, our cells and souls are animated; we are lively star stuff, awakening to divine energy with every breath. In contrast, focusing on the flesh; that is, being caught up in the passing world of competition, individualism, win-lose dynamism, as the sole reality, cuts us off from the divine chi or spirit. We turn from death to life. Filled with Spirit, our mortal flesh becomes what it’s intended to be: a living reflection of divine creative wisdom, moving in tune with all creation. Life emerges from death. We can dance and jump around, alive to the energy that gave birth to the universe and makes us new creations! Let the spirit dwell in you and give you life.

WHAT ABOUT LAZARUS? Jesus’ miraculous curing of the deceased Lazarus, like Ezekiel’s dry bones in the valley, takes us on a wild ride. It’s hard to take the passage literally; brain death occurs after less than ten minutes without oxygen, and Lazarus is dead for four days! But, in this 125 billion galaxy universe, there are deeper laws such that the dead can be revived, even after being brain dead four days. In the words of Walt Whitman:

WHY! who makes much of a miracle?
As to me, I know of nothing else but miracles,
Whether I walk the streets of Manhattan,
Or dart my sight over the roofs of houses toward the sky,
Or wade with naked feet along the beach, just in the edge of
the water….These with the rest, one and all, are to me miracles,
The whole referring – yet each distinct, and in its place.

There may be deeper laws of nature which emerge when our spirits and communities align themselves with God’s energy of love. When we reach out to touch Jesus or touch Jesus on behalf of others as Mary and Martha did.

The miracle to some is not just the reviving of Lazarus, but the reality that “Jesus’ wept.” They don’t expect divinity to feel our pain: they see God on high as immune from the human – and creaturely – condition. Yet, Jesus, the Word made Flesh, felt pain and grief, enjoyed friendships, and was touched by the loss of his friend. When Jesus proclaims, “I am the resurrection and the life,” he is not denying the pain of death, but placing our pain in God’s loving care. The cost of resurrection is death – the death of old ways, the death of the familiar, and the death of our previous identity.

One wonders how Lazarus’ life unfolded after Jesus raised him back to life. Was he considered a freak? Did he gain some sort of new knowledge? Was death still a threat to him? (For more on divine suffering and God’s relationship with the world, see Bruce Epperly, “Process Theology: Embracing Adventure with God,” Energion Publications and “Process Theology: A Guide for the Perplexed,” TTClark/Continuum.)

The Fifth Sunday in Lent is just a week from the celebrations of Palm Sunday and the   chaos of Holy Week and it is occurring in the chaos of NOW! We are fourteen days from the surprising resurrection of Jesus, and we can’t preach resurrection glibly this year with domestic upheaval, a government that has abandoned compassion for greed and power, state sponsored violence on all sides in the Middle East. Death will encompass our lives and is encompassing it right now. But, there is a larger reality: for now let’s dance around, breathing deeply divine energy, and rejoicing in the love that restores both the living and the dead, giving us hope for ourselves, our churches, our nation, and the planet.

We can jump up and dance, awaken to divine energy, live hopefully, and act courageously. Our congregations can sponsor spiritual dance lessons. Our congregations can embrace God’s energy of love through spiritual practices, healing prayer, and social activism.  Let the dry bones dance!

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Bruce Epperly is Theologian in Residence at Westmoreland Congregational United Church of Christ, Bethesda, MD and a professor in theology and spirituality at Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington DC. He is the author of over eighty books, including Jesus: Mystic, Healer, and Prophet; Creation Sings: Forty Days of Spiritual Wisdom from the Non-Human World; Messy Incarnation: Meditations on Christ in Process; and Homegrown Mystics: Restoring Our Nation with the Healing Wisdom of America’s Visionaries. His latest books are Creation Sings: Forty Days of Spiritual Wisdom from the Non-human World and Three Wise Wisdom: The Twelve Days of Christmas with Mary, Elizabeth, and Anna (volume seven in “The Twelve Days of Christmas” series along with the recently released Lenten devotional, Just a Little Walk with Jesus: A Spiritual Saunter with Mark’s Gospel and Whitehead and Jesus:An Adventure in Spiritual Transformation.  He is married to Rev. Kate Epperly, D.Min. and lives in Potomac, Maryland.

 

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