"Can these dry
bones then live?" Ezekiel 37:3
After the fall of Jerusalem to the Roman army in 70 CE, a
group of extreme Zealots (Sicarii) overtook the
Roman garrison at Masada, a tabletop mountain overlooking the Dead Sea,
where Herod the Great had built a fortified palace complex including a
synagogue. Besieged by the Roman troops, the Sicarii and families watched as,
bucketful by bucketful, stone and dirt were used to build a ramp up the west
flank of the mount. (Imagine building a dirt ramp up the side of Devil's Tower
in Wyoming…) When the Roman army breached the walls on April 16, 73 CE, they
found every one dead, except a few hiding women and children. Among the
artifacts excavated from under the synagogue at Masada is a scroll fragment:
Ezekiel's vision of the Valley of Dry Bones. Overlooking the wilderness around
the Dead Sea, we hear these words again, "Can these bones then live?"
The Sicarii responded to the violence of the Romans with violence and died by
more violence. One could wonder: was this the new life for Israel the prophet
had declared? What is the new life God desires for each one of us?
Breathe your Spirit
upon these dry bones, O God, and make us new. Amen
- Start
making Ukrainian eggs for your Easter celebration3
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