Archive for February, 2017

World Mission Begins At Home

February 28, 2017

We conclude the great missionary season of Epiphany today. I say “missionary” because this season has been all about the light of Christ shining into the whole world, making it clear that the Good News of God’s love was not to be limited to the people of Israel or any one,  ethnic group, but was always intended to be shared throughout the world to all people.  Because of that, the Last Sunday after The Epiphany every year has been designated “World Mission Sunday” by the Episcopal Church. Our mission to the whole world!

One of the ways we do “World Mission” in our church is by a network of Companion Dioceses. We pray every week for our long-term relationship with the Diocese of Brechin in Scotland and our one with Swaziland which was established during my time as Bishop of Iowa. And, of course, we now have an even newer companionship with the Diocese of Nzara in South Sudan.

They especially need our prayers these days as their country descends even more deeply into chaos and war. Please remember Bishop Samuel Peni and his family. He actually studied for the priesthood right here in our diocese, in Dubuque, at one of the seminaries there, and his family received financial support from the people of Trinity Cathedral. They are our companions in World Mission!

And we always read the Gospel story of the Transfiguration on this Sunday because it was one of the formative experiences for Peter, James and John as they were present at a powerful mountain-top experience of Jesus. And they realized –quite literally “in a flash” – that Jesus was the embodiment of the Law (represented by Moses) and the Prophets (represented by Elijah). This realization left them silenced for a time, but it didn’t take long for them to regain their voices and to be about their mission as apostles…as those who are sent.

Well, you and I are the “sent ones” today. We’re the ones who are sent to share with our families, friends, and neighbors what we’ve discovered about God through Jesus and the church, and to continue to let God’s light shine in our dark world today. Our Prayer Book Catechism says that “the mission of the Church is to restore all people…to unity with God…and each other…in Christ.”

But that’s a pretty sparse definition, so the Anglican Communion has tried to flesh it out a bit, by adopting something called “The Five Marks of Mission.” It’s a kind of check-list for us to see if we are being about the mission of the church. I’d like to share them with you this morning:

Mark #1 is “to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom.” Obviously, it all starts there. We are to witness, by our words and our deeds, the extremely good news that God is in charge of this world, and that we are not! That’s what it means to live under the king-ship, the reign, the sovereignty of God…and to begin doing it right now! That’s one reason good preaching is important. It’s typically done by an ordained person, but more and more licensed “lay” preachers are being trained and commissioned for this important ministry.

Since Susanne and I moved to Iowa City, we’ve been attending New Song and I’ve been mightily impressed with the several lay preachers I have heard. They bring a unique and different perspective to the pulpit and to the proclamation of the Gospel that never fails to move me.

Mark #2 is “to teach, baptize, and nurture new believers.” So, Christian education is important for a congregation as well. If we have young people, then of course Sunday school and such newer programs like Godly Play and Journey to Adulthood need to happen. But, our formation as Christians doesn’t stop when we grow up and get confirmed!  Bible studies, Education for Ministry, and the kind of ministry formation programs we hope you will get involved in here at St. Alban’s help keep us alive and growing in our faith, instead of just stagnating and sort of “treading water” in our spiritual lives.

Mark #3 is “to respond to human need by loving service.” St. Francis famously said, “Preach the Gospel always…if necessary, use words!” And, by that, he meant that serving other people is also a way to demonstrate that they are valued and treasured by their Creator, and that God, and God’s people, want only the best for them. That’s why we’re so proud of you for the outreach you do in this community by hosting the various recovery groups, by the feeding program, the underwear ministry, the gift bags, and by the faithful jail outreach which emanates from your gathered life here as the People of God.

Mark #4 is “to seek to transform unjust structures of society, to challenge violence of every kind, and to pursue peace and reconciliation.” Some people are uncomfortable with the church speaking out in the public square, but the “separation of church and state” doesn’t mean that the church has no role in society. It means that the state may not establish any one religion in this country. The church should never be “partisan” but Jesus does call us stand with the poor and the marginalized, and to challenge structures that oppress and hurt people.

Sometimes, you can either keep pulling people out of a raging river one at a time, or you can go upstream and find out who’s throwing them in…and try to make them stop! The work Grant Curtis and others do to make our community a more accepting and welcoming place for recent immigrants and new citizens of the United States is a good example of this Fourth Mark of Mission.

Finally, Mark #5 is “to strive to safeguard the integrity of creation and sustain and renew the life of the earth.” It has to be said that we Christians have not always taken our responsibility to this planet very seriously. And while it’s true that the first Creation story in Genesis says that we are to “be fruitful and multiply, to fill the earth and subdue it,” (Genesis 1:28), the second account of Creation says that God put us in the Garden of Eden “to till it and to keep it” (Genesis 2:1):  in other words, to be good stewards of the earth. Like a good farmer is to be a good steward of the land – so that it will bear fruit for years to come.

I hope that your vestry keeps that responsibility in mind as you make decisions in this congregation about how you care for this beautiful piece of property you are stewards of, whether that’s in how you conserve energy or how you re-cycle or how you take care of the land.

Well, we enter the holy season of Lent this week. This Wednesday is “Ash Wednesday.” Lent is a time of self-examination and repentance, of prayer, fasting and self-denial. I hope you’ve been thinking about something to give up for Lent or something new to take on…or both! But it’s not only a time for self-examination of our personal lives. It can be a time for the church to do some self-examination of our own –corporately.

Are we carrying out the mission of the church here at St. Alban’s, are we willing to make the kind of changes necessary to make sure we can continue carrying out that mission for years to come? Are we proclaiming the Good News? Nurturing our young people? Serving the poor? Speaking out against violence? Being good stewards of this beautiful world God has given us?

If not, there’s still time to repent. Still time to turn around and go in a new direction. Still time to heed the voice from the cloud which spoke to Peter, James and John on the Mount of Transfiguration: Look: “This is my Son, my Chosen; listen to him!”

 

 

 

The Compassion Deficit

February 23, 2017

And so, steadily and surely the civil and human rights fought for under the Obama administration continue to erode under the fledgling Trump regime. Transgender bathroom rights may not seem like a huge issue, affecting as it does, a relatively small percentage of the population. But it speaks volumes about the “compassion level” (or, rather “lack of compassion level”) of Attorney General Jeff Sessions and others who are now in power; to say nothing of their ignorance concerning matters of sexuality and gender identification.

In some ways, even more tragic is the Donald’s decision to overturn Barack Obama’s order concerning the necessity of further investigation of the harmful effects of the Dakota Access Pipeline. It is now full speed ahead on this ill-considered project, signalling that the use of fossil fuels will “trump” every concern about clean water and the environment. Trump promises “thousands” of jobs for this project — the vast majority of which are extremely short-term. It will take literally a handful of people to run it once it is in place.

And it says clearly that this Administration’s concern for “religious liberty” will extend only to adherents of the Judaeo-Christian traditions upon which this nation is believed (falsely) to have been founded. The fact that this pipeline will invade the sacred Earth in which the bodies of generations of Native Americans rest is of little interest to the insensitive man we have elected to the presidency.

I am proud of the hundreds of Iowans who turned out recently at town hall meetings of our two senators, Charles Grassley and Joni Ernst (what embarrassments!). Predictably the Administration has sought to depict these contentious and angry gatherings as attended mainly by paid, “outside agitators.” Fortunately, those of us who live in Iowa recognize the farmers, teachers, union members, and young people who were in the room and who do indeed actually live here and are increasingly concerned and even frightened about the direction Donald Trump and his minions on Congress seem to be taking us.

Our task must be continually to hold our elected officials accountable for their decision and to be willing to stand in solidarity and to assist those who will be increasingly affected by these actions. Now that we know that the Trump “jobs program” has been initiated by the hiring of 10,000 new ICE agents as his promised “deportation force” we will need to be especially sensitive to the undocumented immigrants in our communities and, whether we use the term “sanctuary city” or not, to be prepared to shelter the sojourners in our land as the real Judaeo-Christian tradition to which many of us belong actually demands.

Susanne and I spoke last night about the possibility of our guest room being added to the list of such places of refuge in the developing New Underground Railroad.

Who would have thought it would come to this?

Well, some of us were pretty certain that it would.

Bonhoeffer…Benedict…Or…Gerald Ford?

February 14, 2017

New York Times columnist, David Brooks, asks this question this morning, “How Should One Resist the Trump Administration?” Interesting first of all, from this conservative voice, that the question is not “Why” but “How” to resist. Brooks uses some interesting metaphors in wrestling with the issue.

If “the primary Trump threat is authoritarianism,” Brook opines, the U.S. may not slide into full fascism, but become a kind of “repressive kleptocracy” where democratic rights slowly disappear, federal contracts go to the oligarchs, and the media and judiciary are complicit. In such a case, what is called for is a “Bonhoeffer moment,” using street protests, disruptive tactics and fiery rhetoric against the Administration. (I note that Brooks would not recommend following Bonhoeffer in participating in an assassination plot!)

Alternatively, we could simply be in for a time of stagnation and corruption which would call, in Brooks’ estimation, for a “St. Benedict moment.” Following this founder of monasticism who fled into the desert to form alternative communities, then activists simply ignore Washington, put their heads down, and commit to making change happen at the state and local levels. And, presumably, wait for better days to come.

Or, David Brooks’ third possibility is that the main threat from a Trump Administration is “a combination of incompetence and anarchy.” In which case, it will collapse of its own weight and the task will be a “Gerald Ford Moment” which will eventually call forth a decent, experienced public servant who will rebuild the fabric of government and restore the trust of the people. Predictably, as a completely establishment conservative, Brooks thinks the third option is where we are headed and hopes for “a new establishment, one that works again.”

While one can wish that this scenario may indeed play out, my take is that our diagnosis of the current situation depends a lot on where we sit in society, the perspective from which we view this disastrous election and its aftermath. If you are wealthy and secure, like Mr Brooks, you can afford to see things calling for a “Ford Moment.” If you are middle-class and largely secure, like me, you can choose the luxury of opting for the “Benedict Moment” and hunker down, working to effect small changes locally. (I even wrote a blog recently entitled “Think Globally, Act Locally).

But if you are poor. Or if you are a woman. Or if you are a person of color. Or if you are an immigrant. Then you may well see this as a “Bonhoeffer Moment” and resist with every fiber of your being and by every means necessary.

Hopefully, not with the despairing last resort of Dietrich Bonhoeffer to the horrors of Nazism.

Hopefully…not that.

“Home”

February 11, 2017

It’s interesting how a sense of “place” gets embedded in one’s soul. I’ve discovered that kitschy, fairly run-down Daytona Beach is such a place for me. I never actually lived in this little east coast town myself. My parents and I vacationed here from the 1950s when we still lived in Greenville, SC.

When we made the big move to Florida in 1955 we settled in Orlando because of my dad’s work, but kept a series of boats in the Municipal Yacht Basin on the Inland Waterway in Daytona. Then, when I left for college at the University of Florida, my folks moved to Daytona full time, living in a series of small houses and condominiums both on the beach side and the mainland.

Whenever we visited them during college, seminary, or during my tenures as a parish priest in Melbourne, Lakeland, Jacksonville, and Cocoa, Daytona Beach was where we came. My formative years were spent swimming in the surf or in boats up and down the Halifax River. Even though this town has never really been my home, it has always been “home!”

Part of the reason I like Daytona is that it is not just a rich person’s resort town. Certainly there are many wealthy people here who live in the same kind of high-rise condos and lavish river and beach front homes as you find up and down both coasts of the Sunshine State. But Daytona has always also been the vacation-destination of choice for all sorts and conditions of white and blue collar workers and persons of all ethnicities and economic levels.

Some of the still-family-owned motels along A1A may look tacky (and they are) but are affordable “resorts” for lots of people who would otherwise never walk up and down a Florida beach for more than a few days in their entire lives. And there are “old salts” and Florida crackers who have lived here for generations as well as an African American community centered around the famous Bethune-Cookman University with its primarily Black student body and faculty. St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church is located virtually on the campus of this small college and has become my favorite church in town.

So, it’s good to be back for a few weeks this time of year. Not only to visit my dad who remains in assisted living just north of Daytona. But to spend some time in that “home” which has never been my “home.”

Maybe it will be one day.

 

Life Before Death

February 8, 2017

This trip to Florida will end up, sadly, mostly spent taking my 95-year old dad around to doctors’ appointments and running other errands. He’s in assisted living now which, as near as I can tell, means he’s on his own except that nurses bring him his meds, check on him a few times a day, and are available at the end of a pull-chord should he fall (and be able to get to it!).

Medicare won’t allow these particular nurses to do anything really except administer the meds so, in order to have a couple of wounds treated (one, a bed sore developed when he was in the hospital; the other an elbow scrape sustained in a fall) he has to contract with an outside health care agency for which he pays extra and who visit him a few times a week.

He can get transportation to appointments and such and will have to do so when I head back to Iowa, but it’s a hassle and takes all day to get transported to and from the docs and to hang out in their waiting rooms for what seems an interminable length of time. Just so much easier, when I’m here, to drive him myself and maybe take him out for a meal to break the monotony of the dining room service in his assisted living facility.

It’s not much of an existence for one who has had such a long and active life. Former Air Force pilot, architect and banker, boat owner and faithful churchman. All of that is gone how, including his beloved “Maggie,” wife and best friend for 72 years until her death a few years ago. Like so many elders, my dad really wishes it was over, but the will to live is still mostly there and so he faces the endless days largely alone and making lists of things he needs to do.

There are, of course, activities provided but he’s never been much of a “joiner” and, apart from the occasional bingo game, does not participate in many of them. He’s not able to concentrate enough to enjoy reading, TV is mostly awful, and his hearing is so bad (even with hearing aids) that carrying on an extended conversation with his few friends proves difficult if not impossible.

He keeps a sense of (sometimes “gallows”) humor, calling Bishop’s Glen where he lives “Sing Sing” (“It’s walled in, they lock us in at night, and we’re here for a life sentence!”). And he gruffly maintains that no one should live past 80…85 at most. “Four sets of 20,” he growls,” 20 years to grow up and get educated; 20 years to advance in your chosen work; 20 years to enjoy your success; 20 years in retirement, and then you’re done. If I was running things, that’s the way it would work!”

Looking at his lot in life now, I can’t say that I disagree.

Except that I just turned 70!

Salt and Light

February 5, 2017

Jesus said, “You are the salt of the earth; but if salt has lost its taste, how can its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything, but is thrown out and trampled under foot.“You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot be hid. No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven. Matthew 5

I’m not preaching today but, if I was, I would say something like this: In confusing, uncertain and downright scary times like these, it’s important for the people of God to remind ourselves of what we are all about. We must remember that Jesus, and his earliest followers, lived in a time of oppression and violence. Their whole nation was under the domination of the Roman Empire and had been for a very long time.

Some of Jesus’ fellow Jews counseled violent revolution to overthrow the government. These were the Zealots of Sicaari (dagger men). Others followed the path of withdrawal. The Essenes and others retreated into the desert to avoid being persecuted and to create an intentional community of prayer and holiness; there to await the coming of the Messiah. Still others like the Pharisees and Sadducees tried various ways to “go along to get along.” They paid attention to their religious observances, but made the compromises they could with the political establishment and, in the process, were often rewarded by the state in ways tangible and intangible.

Jesus taught another way — the way of non-violent resistance to the powers-that-be. He and his closest followers continued to live “in the world” but to live lives that were remarkably different from the dominant culture. Like salt they livened things up a bit in the midst of the meager rations of everyday life. They stood with the outcast and the marginalized. They brought what healing they could into the lives of the poor. Occasionally, by openly debating the issues (with the Pharisees and others), by staging a mock procession into Jerusalem for the feast of the Passover, and finally by undergoing public martyrdom, they brought a shock to the taste buds of those who feasted on the provisions of others.

By public preaching and teaching, by enacted parables of resistance and justice they sought, like that lamp on a lampstand, to shed light into the darkness of their day. They stood up to tyranny, but without breaking a bruised reed or lifting up their voices in the street. They were salt. They were light.

Are we?

 

Works of the Flesh; Fruit of the Spirit

February 3, 2017

For evangelical Christians: Donald Trump’s moral check list from the 5th Chapter of Paul’s Letter to the Galatians. “Works of the Flesh:

  1. Fornication – Check
  2. Impurity – Check
  3. Licentiousness – Check
  4. Idolatry – Check
  5. Sorcery – Not so much
  6. Enmities – Check
  7. Strife – Check
  8. Jealousy – Check
  9. Anger – Check
  10. Quarrels – Check
  11. Dissensions – Check
  12. Factions – Check
  13. Envy – Check
  14. Drunkenness – Not so much (teetotaler)
  15. Carousing – Check

“Works of the Spirit”

  1. Love – Check (family)
  2. Joy – Unknown
  3. Peace – Not so much
  4. Patience – Not so much
  5. Kindness – Not so much
  6. Generosity – Not so much
  7. Faithfulness – Not so much
  8. Gentleness – Not so much
  9. Self-control – Not so much

No wonder he was like a fish out of water at the National Prayer Breakfast!

Going High

February 1, 2017

I am so tired of the inflammatory, relentlessly adversarial, tit-for-tat rhetoric – from both left and right – in politics today. Obviously, the system is set up to be adversarial in some respects, but most of us can remember the days when there was mutual respect on both sides and when principled compromise was actually a goal to be reached so that bipartisan consensus could be found and legislation actually passed for the good of the American people.

As a lifelong progressive Democrat, obviously I lay much of this at the feet of the Republican Party which reached its crest during the last eight years of the Obama administration. When the stated goal of the GOP leadership, from day one, was to see that Barack Obama was a failed president it is not hard to see how all of this has developed. However, I refuse to believe that acting exactly the same way as Democrats under a Trump administration is the way to go.

Michelle Obama’s “when they go low, we go high” may not have been a winning strategy in the short run. But it is a moral strategy and we are not always called to “win.” We are called, as the saying goes, not always to be “successful” but to be “faithful.” I am opposed to Democrats “boycotting” hearings for Trump nominees for Cabinet positions. Congress folks should show up, grill the hell out of the nominees, vote No if they need to and make it clear to their constituents and to the American people at large why they did so.

I believe Neil Gorsuch should be confirmed by the United States Senate, not because I agree with many of his positions on ‘the issues’ but because he is imminently qualified and because elections (even ones as contentious a problematic as this one) have consequences and Presidents deserve to be able appoint Justices of their persuasion if they are well qualified. Yes, Barack Obama should absolutely have been allowed to appoint Merrick Garland who the Republicans shamefully blocked from even getting a hearing. But two wrongs do not make a right and “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth eventually leaves everyone blind and toothless.”

Democrats should fight the good fight, according to the rules, after setting priorities and deciding which ditches they are prepared to die in. Christians and people of good will from all religious perspectives and none should be prepared to make our voices heard in the halls of Congress and in the streets (but not by blocking interstate highways or breaking windows and vandalizing property). We should stand in solidarity with those who may be hurt by reactionary and right-wing decisions be they immigrants, refugees, women, people of color or members of any other marginalized group.

And we should gear up now for the next election cycle and try to get “our” candidates elected up and down the ballots in 2018 and in 2020. Hillary Clinton won the popular vote and, if we had campaigned smarter and harder in swing states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, she would now be in the White House. Dear friends, never give up on “going high.” It is our calling.