Archive for the ‘Emergent Church’ Category

ARE NOT THESE MY CHILDREN TOO?

September 13, 2011

9/11 Remembered

We were just finishing up Morning Prayer in the Chapel of Christ the Lord at The Episcopal Church Center in New York when a staff member I didn’t know pushed open the glass doors. “A plane just crashed into the World Trade Center!” Assuming, like everyone else initially, that this was some terrible accident, we took a moment to pray for those involved and then hopped on to the elevators to get to our various office floors.

My unit had a small TV in a snack room and so six or eight of us gathered around watching the news and the terrible pictures until it dawned on us that it had really happened. And, that this was no accident.

Susanne was at a deacons’ meeting at The General Seminary some twenty blocks closer to what came to be known as “Ground Zero’ than I was and I spent the next hour trying to get in touch with her since cell phones and most other kinds of communications were spotty at best. When I did finally reach her and found out she was OK and in the midst of a caring seminary community, I wandered back into my office. As I looked down on Second Avenue there were vast streams of people just walking aimlessly up the street.

Most of them looked dazed but normal. Some still bore the ashes that had fallen out of the sky when first one great Tower, and then the second, collapsed virtually on to their own footprints in that horrible aftermath.

Bishop George Packard, chief of our Armed Forces Chaplains and Federal Ministries had his office next door to mine in those days and he was trying to get through to the Diocese of New York to assist in coordinating our outreach efforts. He posted a sign-up sheet within hours for clergy who worked at the Church Center to volunteer to serve as Chaplains at Ground Zero. In those early hours, or course, we assumed there would be many injured as well as killed….hundreds rushed to hospitals…last rites to administer…many bodies to recover…and many funerals at which to officiate. As it turned out, hospitals sat virtually empty. Only some of the survivors were injured…and many of those injured did not survive. Many were never found.

In the weeks that followed, Susanne and I took our rotation as chaplains in St. Paul’s Chapel, literally a stone’s throw from the site of the World Trade Center. Its building and graveyard were covered with feet of ash but miraculously this 235 year-old structure, a Chapel of Trinity Church, Wall Street (with George Washington’s favorite pew intact) was not structurally damaged.

But it became the primary oasis for first responders, other police and firefighters, and construction workers. Food was served…naps were taken….massages were given. Clergy counseled the traumatized young men and women many of whom (save perhaps the police and firefighters) had never expected to see anything like this. I remember Susanne sitting for a long time with a young African American construction worker who had quite literally “uncovered” the body of an airline stewardess. He would never be the same.

I guess none of us will ever be. Later, I officiated at the funeral of Tim Haviland, the 41 year-old son of one of our priests in this diocese (Doug and Betty Haviland from St. John’s in Ames.) Tim was killed instantly on the 96th floor of the North Tower on that terrible day. One of thousands…

My wife, Susanne, wrote “Prayers of the People” for the 5th anniversary of the 9/11 attack. They were used all over the country and include petitions like this: “For those who acted selflessly that day; for police officers, firefighters, sanitation workers, health care professionals, first responders and construction workers, chaplains, cooks, and for ordinary citizens who were transformed from strangers to friends. For teachers and parents who held our children while in danger and who guide them now into hope…for the perpetrators of violence on that day, and for those who perpetrate violence every day.”

Our Lessons from Scripture today have to do with the children of Israel escaping their Egyptian slave-owners through the Red Sea experience…with St. Paul’s warning not to judge our neighbors…and with Jesus’ stern warning in the Gospel to forgive those who wrong us – not because they deserve it…but because we ourselves have been forgiven.

There would be lots of ways to go in preaching a sermon on those Lessons…on this occasion. And, while I believe personally, that we squandered an enormous opportunity in this country after 9/11 when virtually the whole world was in our corner and grieving right alongside us – I have no idea if we should have, or could have, responded any differently than we did. I judge no one for how they responded or how they felt after that horrendous crime was committed.

But, as I read our First Lesson today from Exodus, I could not help but reflect on the ancient Jewish Midrash on this story. The Rabbis taught that when the Israelites escaped from the Egyptians, their persecutors were drowned in the Red Sea that had temporarily parted to let the children of Israel pass through. Naturally enough, the chosen ones cheered! Miriam gathered the women together, they played their musical instruments and sang “The Song of the Sea”, and everyone danced for joy.

But when the angels in heaven began to join in the celebration, God rebuked them asking why they were rejoicing when God’s creatures were dying? “Are not these Egyptians my children too?” the Ancient of Days said. And, chastened, the angels began to weep alongside the Holy One.

This is not a day for political rhetoric or second-guessing or even congratulatory comments about our finally have “gotten” Osama bin Laden. This is a day to remember…and to weep…and to pray. We pray for victims and perpetrators…families and friends…nations and their leaders…people of all religions and people of none.

Following our service today, at noon, we will toll our tower bells in cooperation with Senate Resolution 237 asking churches to do so in order to STOP AND REMEMBER 9/11 today. In addition, some of us will be part of an Interfaith Commemoration this afternoon at 3 o’clock in Augustana’s Centennial Hall, Rock Island.

People from diverse faith groups and community leaders from the Quad Cities will come together to commemorate this 10th Anniversary with reflections and prayers. A year-long series of interfaith events in the spirit of promoting bridge-building within our community will be announced.

Perhaps this is one way to move forward with even greater strength and deeper understanding of each other. Pray that it may be so…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ten Commandments for Christian Discipleship

August 28, 2011

In today’s Gospel we hear Jesus’ familiar instructions to his disciples to “deny themselves, take up their crosses, and follow him.” (Matthew 16:24) That challenge has been interpreted in a variety of ways across the centuries. The original readers of the Gospel probably knew that the disciples to whom Jesus was speaking had all suffered martyrdom for following him, and so they prepared themselves, if necessary, to give up their very lives for the sake of the Gospel if that became necessary – and it sometimes did…and does today.

Sometimes the command to “deny” oneself took on a pietistic and ascetic quality, leading Christians to engage in fasting and abstinence, giving up various kinds of food and drink or even denying themselves the joys of marriage and family life by living celibate lives or taking on the monastic vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. In addition to these orthodox ways of practicing self-denial some believers adopted unhealthy, or even pathological, expressions – sometimes intentionally hurting themselves in order to share in the sufferings of Christ.

Well, this morning I’d like to suggest that our Second Lesson today tells us about all we need to know about living a life of self-denial and about taking up our crosses. These verses from St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans (12:9-21) might be called “The Ten Commandments of Christian Discipleship.” Let’s take a look:

  1. First, Paul writes, “Let (your) love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good.” Notice it does not say, “hate the one who is evil.” It says, “hate what is evil.”  Our very Baptismal Covenant instructs us to renounce “Satan and all the spiritual forces of wickedness that rebel against God…the evil powers of this world which corrupt and destroy the creatures of God…sinful desires that draw us from the love of God.” So we can reject and even hate those forces and powers and desires that get in the way of our relationship with God. But we are not free to hate people who may be oppressed by those forces or powers. We are to love them – with a love that is genuine – even while we hate what is evil.
  1. “Love one another with mutual affection; outdo one another in showing honor.” “Honor” – now that’s a word we don’t hear too often today. To honor another person means to show them respect. And another part of our Baptismal Covenant requires us to respect “the dignity of every human being.” We may not think that every person is worthy of our respect — and indeed their actions may not be . But every human being has a certain dignity simply by being created as a child of God. And, no matter how tarnished that Image of God may be, we are to look for it…and respect it….honor it…for that person too is a child of God!

 

  1. “Do not lag in zeal, be ardent in spirit, serve the Lord.” I must say: it is sometimes pretty frustrating to me to see how lacking in “zeal” and “enthusiasm” Episcopalians can be! Now I don’t expect a church full of “happy, clappy” Christians every Sunday, but when I look out sometimes when we are singing words like “All hail the power of Jesus’ Name, let angels prostrate fall.” or making some of the responses in the Liturgy it is hard for me to tell whether some of you believe those words or are excited by those concepts…or not!  Be ardent in spirit, Paul says…when you serve, and worship, the Lord.

4, “Rejoice in hope, be patient in suffering, persevere in prayer.” I think the key to this “4th Commandment” is to persevere in prayer. Prayerful people are hopeful people…and prayerful people are more likely to be patient in times of trouble. Spend some time each day with your God in personal prayer and see if you do not gradually become more patient with others…and more hopeful.

 

  1. Contribute to the needs of the saints; extend hospitality to strangers.” This is a call to share! Share your material resources with others. Open your hearts and your hands and your homes in hospitality to others. As far as our life at Trinity Cathedral is concerned, this means giving generously to support the life and work of this church, and look around for the visitor and the newcomer and the stranger and make an effort to welcome all who come here to become part of our parish family and our church fellowship!

 

  1. “Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse them.” God knows, this may be the most difficult of all these “10 Commandments for Christian Discipleship,” but it is in some ways the most distinctively Christian. Non-violent resistance to oppression, praying for our enemies, even forgiving those who wish to harm us go back directly to Jesus’ life and teaching and find the clearest expression in his last hours on the Cross. “Forgive them, Father, for they know not what they do” was his prayer for his persecutors even while they were driving the nails through his hands! If he could do that, can’t we at least try to ‘bless those who persecute us?”

 

  1. “Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.” Today, we would call this having “empathy.” Empathy means to try to identify with the thoughts and feelings and attitudes of another person. Try to “be where that other person is” if you want to be in relationship with them, and perhaps be of some assistance. Be sensitive to the needs and wants of others.

 

  1. “Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly; do not claim to be wiser than you are.” This is the Christian virtue of humility. Pride was, and is, the original sin! If you can have an accurate reading of yourself and keep in mind that there is always someone smarter, more compassionate, or holier than you are, you’ll have no problem “associating with the lowly,” standing in solidarity with the poor and the marginalized which is also part of our Christian vocation.

 

  1. Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.” This goes back to that tough #7 about blessing those who persecute you. “An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth” was an Old Testament, not a New Testament, ethic. And it eventually leaves everyone toothless and blind! Someone has to stop retaliating for evil; someone has to absorb the pain and refuse to pass it on. Jesus has already done that to the ‘nth” degree! Can’t we try to imitate him in that?

 

  1. And all this leads to Commandment #10 – “If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.” That is a very gentle ending to a very demanding list! “If it’s possible,” Paul says! He knows that we will not fulfill all these commands perfectly, but he desperately wants us to try! “If possible…so far as it depends on you…” We can’t be responsible for how another person acts. We can only be responsible for ourselves. We can’t control the other person’s behavior, but we can control ours! “If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all!”

So,

Hate what is evil but hold fast to the good

Outdo one another in showing honor

Don’t lag in zeal

Persevere in prayer

Extend hospitality to strangers

Bless those who persecute you

Weep with those who weep

Don’t claim to be wiser than you are

Don’t repay evil for evil

Try to live peaceably with all…

 

 

 

Ten Commandments for Christian Discipleship…

 

Ten ways to deny yourself…

 

To take up your cross…

 

And to follow Jesus!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Broadcasting the Word

July 11, 2011

Proper 10A – Trinity Cathedral. I sometimes think we have too much Scripture read on Sunday mornings! That may seem like a strange thing for a pastor to say but, when you are confronted, week after week, with so much rich material from the Bible, and you hope to come up with a sermon which does justice to all of that (without preaching for 45 minutes or more!), it is a real challenge!

I could use a whole sermon, or even a sermon series, exploring the Genesis story of the twin brothers, Jacob and Esau, this morning. Besides being a great story of “sibling rivalry” it’s a fascinating example of ancient literature trying to understand the eternal struggle between the Jews (as descendants of Jacob) and the Arabs (descendants of Esau), the ramifications of which still continue today in the Middle East. Jews and Arabs still cannot figure out how to share the ancient land of Palestine. And the accounts of greed and deception on both sides described in today’s First Lesson continue up until today and are as fresh as tomorrow’s headlines.

But then, I really ought to spend some time dealing with the 8th chapter of Paul’s Letter to the Romans which we had as our Second Reading today. At the very least, it needs to be said that, when Paul talks abut the conflict between the “flesh” and “the spirit,” he is not talking about some kind of split between our bodies and our minds – as though the body was evil and the mind, or spirit, good. The Greek word we translate for the “body” is “soma” (from which we get our word “psychosomatic.”)

But the Greek word Paul uses here for “sinful flesh” is the word “sarx.” And sarx refers to our broken, flawed, and fallen human nature. When we sin, it is not just our bodies which sin. We sin with our minds, with our hearts, and spirits – all of us! So, it’s not a question of our bodies being evil and our spirits being good (no matter how it may sound when you first read this part of Romans). The war is not between our bodies and our minds or spirits. The war is between our entire, fallen human nature (what WE want to do so many times) and God’s yearning for us (what God’s HOLY SPIRIT wants us to do).

That’s why Paul can finally say, “…you are not in the flesh; you are in the Spirit…” Certainly we are still in our bodies! But they are bodies now inhabited by God’s Holy Spirit – which is why Paul can say, “To set the mind on the flesh (on our old, self-centered nature) is death…but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace.” So many things to preach about…so little time!

I guess about the only consolation a preacher has can be found, as might be expected, in the Gospel today. The parable of the sower. It’s pretty clear that Jesus is not an agent of the extension service today, teaching farmers how to plant their seeds! “Broadcasting” seed is not a very productive method of farming – especially in the sandy, rocky soil of the Middle East. Lots of seed is wasted when you throw it around, not much caring where it falls.

But if, as Matthew suggests, the seed represents “the word of the kingdom,” then things begin to make a little more sense. And the description of the process is one that is borne out in every preacher’s experience! Sunday by Sunday we try to “break open the Word of God” for you as we stand in this pulpit. We don’t do it perfectly, but we try to reach every corner of this Cathedral church with at least a little of that life-giving seed.

Some of you will greet us at the door with “Wonderful sermon…I really needed that.” But then we may not see you again for two or three weeks… and whatever insight you may have gleaned from that particular sermon is just a faint glimmer by that time.

And then there are those of you who believe that one hour on Sunday morning is about all you need for your Christian formation. No daily prayer discipline, no Bible study, no participation in whatever adult education offerings we may be able to provide here. “No root”…is the way Jesus describes it. No rooted-ness, no deep grounding in the Faith. Just a nodding acquaintance with it for an hour or two on Sunday mornings.

And what about what Jesus calls “the cares of the world and the lure of wealth” as obstacles to really hearing and receiving God’s Word? All of us have cares in the world…and all of us expend a good portion of our energy earning the money we need to live and take care of our families. But if those ‘cares’ and those ‘monetary pursuits’ consume all our time and energy and keep us from spending time consciously seeking God and God’s will for our lives, then – no matter how effectively the Word is proclaimed – it will be choked…and “it will yield nothing.”

So, what the preacher has to rely on – when all is said and done – is that at least some of that seed, each week, does fall on good soil. Some of you make an effort to be here every week…you say your prayers…and maybe even take a look at the Lessons which will be preached on the next Sunday and which we list in our Announcement bulletins. You come with open hearts and open minds and don’t let yourselves get distracted by all that competes for your time and energy – family issues, over-committed schedules, worry about finances and security, whatever personal sins and shortcomings you may be struggling with.

No, you show up…like good soil…ready to receive and take in whatever poor morsel of seed we may be able to “broadcast” from this pulpit and this lectern. The “Word of the Kingdom,” Matthew calls it.

And, thank God: that is enough. Because you are the ones who hear the word, and understand it…you are the ones who indeed bear fruit and yield, in one case a hundredfold, in another sixty, and in another thirty. Fruit of the Spirit seen in your time, your talent, and your treasure – offered in God’s service.

You are the ones who sustain the ministry of this Cathedral parish.

You are the ones who help us, in some small way, cooperate with God in building the Kingdom.

You are the ones who make it worth it – Sunday by Sunday – to “broadcast the Word.”

Thank you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Radical Hospitality

June 29, 2011

When Susanne and I were living in New York, we didn’t always have Sunday responsibilities so we had the joy of worshipping together on Sunday mornings. To be honest, at first we found the large and very formal New York Episcopal churches not very friendly and hard to feel at home in. We also realized that it had been a long time since we were “visitors” in a congregation, seeking to find acceptance and welcome like every other newcomer to our church.

Finally, we tried St. Bartholomew’s, a large, historic parish located in midtown right next to the Waldorf-Astoria hotel! I knew St. Bart’s had been through hard times in the past, but had made a real turnaround since the arrival of their new rector, Bill Tully. A large part of that is their commitment to what Bill calls “radical hospitality” and a real welcome for the newcomer.

On their website, you can find these words in a section called “What We Are For:” We are for “the dignity and worth of every person. An open-minded, passionate commitment to truth. The importance of everyone’s own spiritual journey. God’s friends wherever we find them. Seeking Christ in every person who comes through the door. The sacredness of life’s rites of passage. The value of community. The hard work necessary to make sure that all are welcomed. Telling the truth about life’s challenges. A “user friendly” church- experience. Children and families.”

The central sentence in that description caught my attention: “Seeking Christ in every person who comes through the door.”  That line comes from the 6th century Rule of St Benedict, a rule he wrote for his monks about how they were to live together in community and how they were to welcome the stranger and the sojourner into their midst. They were to welcome them as though they were welcoming Christ himself!

If that sounds familiar to you it may be because of the words Christ himself spoke in the Gospel of St. Matthew this morning. Addressing his disciples, Jesus said, “Whoever welcomes you welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes the one who sent me.” (10:40) He was, of course, preparing to send his disciples forth to preach and teach and heal in his name. He was about to transform them from “disciples” (learners) into “apostles” (ones who are sent).

And he wanted them to know that they were going out as his ambassadors. So that, whoever welcomed them, into their homes or synagogues or communities, was actually welcoming Jesus and his message as well. Decades later, St. Paul would describe the Church as “the Body of Christ” – meaning that the Church was to be the visible presence of Christ in the world (after his physical presence was no longer with them).

And, of course, the whole purpose of the Body of Christ (whether that was the earthly body of Jesus or the earthly mission of the Church) is – according to today’s Gospel — to “welcome the one who sent” him. Jesus was all about welcoming people, introducing them to God and to God’s Kingdom. He said, on more than one occasion, that when they looked at him, they were actually looking at what God is like. Jesus was the human face of God! And we are to be the human face of God today.

When those early Middle Eastern audiences heard and welcomed the apostles and their message, they were actually hearing and welcoming Jesus – which means that they were, at the same time, discovering the true and living God — Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier of all! Our task is exactly the same today – to welcome every newcomer and stranger who walks through our doors as though we were welcoming Christ himself. Because, when we do, we are actually welcoming God ever deeper into our lives and into our community.

We need to do a better job of welcoming at Trinity Cathedral. Like most congregations, I know that we consider ourselves to be warm and friendly. But that sometimes means that we are primarily “warm and friendly” to one another. While we have had special “greeters” here in the past and it is certainly part of the usher’s responsibility to extend a cordial welcome to newcomers, to see that they sign our guest book and to invite them to remain after church for a while, if they can, for coffee hour and a time of conversation, it is up to every single one of us to reach out and provide a welcoming atmosphere.

I have seen – and I’m sure you have too – occasions when the 8 o’clock or 10:30 coffee hours are buzzing with conversation and laughter and small groups sitting around tables while a newcomer or a new family stands around in the middle of the Great Hall, looking pretty lonely and pretty lost.

How do you think that would square with Jesus’ words that “whoever welcomes you welcomes me?” How would it square with St. Benedict’s injunction to “seek Christ in every person who comes through the door?” Or even the Church of St. Bartholomew’s commitment to “do the hard work necessary to make sure that all are welcomed?” Not very well, it seems to me.

So, in this time of transition at Trinity Cathedral, as we prepare to call a new Dean and enter into the next stage of our life and ministry in this historic cathedral parish, let’s all of us rededicate ourselves to being the kind of community which wants to reach out…and wants to grow. Hear again what one growing and vibrant Episcopal congregation says it is “for”

We are for “the dignity and worth of every person. An open-minded, passionate commitment to truth. The importance of everyone’s own spiritual journey. God’s friends wherever we find them. Seeking Christ in every person who comes through the door. The sacredness of life’s rites of passage. The value of community. The hard work necessary to make sure that all are welcomed. Telling the truth about life’s challenges. A “user-friendly” church- experience. Children and families.”

That’s what the people of St. Bart’s in New York are “for.” What are we “for?”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“The Real Anglican Orthodoxy”

June 10, 2011

Having recently participated in a diocesan discussion on the proposed Anglican Covenant, I continue to come away with two distinct impressions: 1) Episcopalians are deeply committed to the Anglican Communion and mindful of the common heritage, ethos, and missional opportunities we share with the other Provinces of the Communion, but 2) Episcopalians are deeply suspicious of the proposed Covenant, fearing that it changes us (and not for the best) from a autonomous but interconnected family of “national” (read “provincial”) churches into a “global” church similar to the Church of Rome.

This has been said before, but I am increasingly convinced of it: we are much more like the international family of Orthodox churches. Regularly we hear that the three largest Christian bodies in the world are: the Roman Catholic Church, the Orthodox, and the Anglicans (followed closely by the Lutheran World Federation) . And, while the Roman Church is certainly structurally (if not always functionally) “one church,” the Orthodox (and Lutherans) certainly are not.

Besides the major theological differences still impairing communion between the Eastern and so-called “Oriental” Orthodox churches, there are stresses and strains between the sometimes fiercely nationalistic churches of the East as well. Certainly, the Orthodox share a basic, underlying theology, but there are subtle and not-so-subtle differences which keep them from even attempting, or wanting, to be a “global church” in the way that the Roman Catholic Church is.

Yet, no one doubts that there is a recognizable “Orthodox” family of churches which, like us, share “a common heritage, ethos, and missional opportunities” together. My sense is that, no matter which way the Anglican Covenant goes — whether 51% of the Provinces sign on and 49% do not, whether a “two tiered” system develops in the Communion or not — there will always be a recognizable Anglican family of Provincial churches, a family which the world will recognize…even if we sometimes do not! 

And that, it seems to me, is good news.

 

An Anglican Response to the Rob Bell Controversy

May 23, 2011

I don’t know how many of you may have seen news reports of the latest flap circulating in evangelical circles these days. Now, I don’t mean the obvious fact that Jesus did not return in glory yesterday – no mature Christian, Catholic or Protestant takes these kinds of “predictions” seriously.

No, this has to do with a new book written by Rob Bell, the young pastor of a huge mega-church in Grandville, Michigan, called the “Mars Hill Bible Church.” Rob is the founder and producer of the “Nooma” film series we have been using for the last several years as part of our Adult Education offerings on some Sunday mornings.

His new book is entitled “Love Wins: A Book about Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived.” Not a very modest title, which may be one reason that the book has caused such an uproar in some circles. He has been accused by some of denying the existence of hell and of being a “Universalist” – that is, one who believes that everyone will eventually make it to heaven. He has denied both accusations and staunchly defends his book as not denying the reality of hell, but questioning some of his fellow-evangelicals’ certainty that they know just exactly who is going to hell and who is not!

In one exchange, he argues with a fellow pastor who claimed that Gandhi was certainly in hell. Rob replied, “Gandhi in hell? Really? We have confirmation of this? Without a doubt?”

Of course, those who claim that only Christians —  or even only born-again Christians – will make it into heaven often quote the very passage we have from John’s Gospel this morning: in response to Thomas’ question about how they can know “the way” to where Jesus is going, he replies, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” (John 14:6)

The first part of that citation is Jesus’ primary point and he goes on in the rest of our Reading today to elaborate on what it means to say that he is the way, the truth, and the life. Jesus is the way to God because, as he says, “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, “Show us the Father?” (John 14:9)

The point here is that the fact of the Incarnation means that Jesus is the “human face of God.” God is really quite beyond anything we can touch or feel or see or even comprehend fully. But the Christian claim is that all we NEED to know about God can be discovered in Jesus. When we look at Jesus, we know what God is like! Does that exhaust everything about the nature of God? Probably not. But, again, all we NEED to know about God, we believe we have found in Jesus Christ. He is “the way” for us.

Next, we are told that Jesus is “the Truth.” And John’s Gospel goes on to quote him as saying “The words that I say to you I do not speak on my own; but the Father who dwells in me does his works.” (John 14:10) So, when Jesus teaches, he is not just teaching on his own, he is conveying “the truths” he learned from his Father.”  Jesus is speaking the truth about God because God is speaking though him.

And finally, we hear that Jesus is “the Life.” Well, I don’t know anyone – Christian or non-Christian – who does not believe that Jesus lived an exemplary life and that if more people lived more like Jesus, this would be a considerably finer world. Or, as Jesus puts it in today’s Gospel, “Believe me that I am in the Father and the Father is in me; but if you do not, then believe me because of the works themselves. Very truly I tell you, the one who believes in me will also do the works that I do…” (John 14:11-12) We are to live life like Jesus!

So, we believe that Jesus shows us the way to God…teaches us the truth about God…and exemplifies for us the kind of life God would have us live. He is, therefore, the way…the truth…and the life! But does that mean that only Christians will get to heaven? And, if so, what kind of Christians? Practicing Christians? What about non-practicing Christians?

Catholic Christians? What about Protestant Christians? Conservative Christians? What about Liberal Christians?

Yet, John’s Gospel does quote Jesus as saying: “No one comes to the Father except through me.” What does he mean by that? Well, Peter Marty (our colleague up the street at St. Paul Lutheran) puts it this way in a recent review of Rob Bell’s book in The Christian Century magazine: “the glue holding Bell’s project together is the firm conviction that Jesus is bigger than any one religion. He is the cosmic Christ who will not be co-opted or owned by any one culture. He is supra-cultural.”

“The apostle Paul wrote, ‘In Jesus, God was reconciling the world to himself’ and Bell is not willing to say that what Paul really meant was a reconciliation of the Christian world. Similarly Bell thinks that when Jesus announced that “God so loved the world…’ he actually meant the world. Had John been interested in shrinking the gospel or lessening the scope of the cross, he might well have proposed that ‘God so loved only Christians.’ But John did not.” (May 17 Christian Century, page 25)

No, John did not propose that…but sometimes Christians seem to wish that he had! Some of this debate is new to evangelical Christians, and that’s why Rob Bell has been so roundly criticized by some of his fellows. It’s not a new debate to Catholic, Orthodox, or Anglican theologians. Roman Catholics believe in Purgatory which may allow a way for former unbelievers yet to be recipients of the gift of heaven.

Orthodox and Anglicans often speak of an “intermediate state” called Paradise where we will continue to grow in grace after death while we await the final judgment, and where those who have never heard the word of Christ or who have had it so poorly presented that they rejected it, likewise may have the opportunity to be introduced to Jesus and walk through that “door of the sheepfold” into eternal life with God.

I remember my professor of systematic theology at Seabury-Western once saying “We absolutely must posit the existence of hell…because God will not force anyone to spend eternity with Him who doesn’t want to. BUT,” he continued with a smile, “ if you and I do our jobs, it is not necessary to posit that anyone will actually end up there…finally!”

Well, to be honest, I expect there actually will be those who choose to turn their backs on God once and for all. There are some people who seem actually that self-centered. But let us not join those who criticize people like Rob Bell who at least hold out the hope that, in the final analysis, Love does indeed “win.”

And that those who – knowingly or unknowingly – follow the way, the truth, and the life of Jesus will one day see him face-to-face and (like us) will receive the Gift that neither they, nor we, deserve.

The Gift of Eternal Life!

After Baptism…then what?

May 9, 2011

Easter 3A – Community of Celebration.

As former ecumenical officer for The Episcopal Church, I am a great supporter of our having adopted the Revised Common Lectionary. That’s the scheme which selects and organizes the Lessons from Scripture we read every week. We now share this Lectionary with the Church of England, the Lutherans, Methodists, Presbyterians and others.

Churches like ours which follow a set Lectionary have a great advantage, it seems to me, in that we cover large portions of the Bible each year and it is not up to the preacher to pick and choose which Scripture he or she will preach about each week.

Rather, we have to start with the Word of God, start with the selections provided for us, and then say our prayers, do our commentary work, pay attention to the world around us and the parish we serve, and allow the sermon to be framed out of the interaction of all those factors. So I appreciate the work of those who developed the Lectionary we use.

Having said that, I am at something of a loss to understand why they stopped at what I believe to be one verse short in our First Reading from Acts this afternoon! We come in at the tale end of Peter’s great Pentecost sermon, the very first Apostolic sermon preached after the pouring out of God’s Holy Spirit upon the Church, that event which transformed that ragtag bunch of disciples from a fearful, if excited, new Community which had just experienced the Risen Christ, into the most formidable band of missionaries and evangelists the world had ever known!

Peter begins with the Old Testament prophecies, rehearses the story of Jesus’ life and death and resurrection and how that ties into those ancient prophecies, and concludes with this powerful line: “Let the entire house of Israel know with certainty that God has made him both Lord and Messiah, this Jesus whom you crucified!” (Acts 2:14).

Well, that got their attention and the text says that:  “when they heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and to the other apostles, “Brothers, what should we do?” Peter tells them that they must “repent” (must turn around and go in a new direction – must now follow the One they had betrayed, or at least deserted) and be baptized so that their sins might be forgiven and so that they might receive that same Pentecostal gift of the Holy Spirit. We’re then told that his hearers welcomed that message and were baptized – some 3,000 persons on that very day! Pretty impressive!

And I suppose that, if all we were interested in was “church growth,” creating “mega churches,” and putting (as it is sometimes indelicately stated) “more butts in the pews,” that might be a good place to stop the First Lesson for today. But look what the next verse says, the verse that was “left out” for some strange reason: “…that day about three thousand persons were added. THEY DEVOTED THEMSELVES TO THE APOSTLES’ TEACHING AND FELLOWSHIP, TO THE BREAKING OF THE BREAD AND THE PRAYERS! (Acts 2:42)

Beloved, coming to faith in Jesus Christ and being baptized into his fellowship is just the first step in a life of Christian discipleship! In some ways, that’s the easy part. Then comes the life of discipleship! Then comes the day to day, week to week, year after year after year JOURNEY INTO CHRIST! And Luke describes that journey, in the Book of Acts, as having at least four components:

The first is being devoted to the Apostles Teaching. Those early Christians were going to have to devote themselves to sitting at the Apostles’ feet, week after week, just as the Apostles had sat at Jesus’ feet week after week, and be instructed in how to live the Christian life!

At the very least that was going to entail learning how to love God and loving their neighbors as themselves. That was going to include treating other people with justice (treating people as God would treat them). It was going to entail healing the sick and feeding the hungry and clothing the naked, and turning the other cheek rather than responding to persecution with violence and revenge.

The second component in being a disciple was to devote themselves to “Fellowship.” Now, that’s a word that has been so watered down in today’s church as to be virtually indistinguishable from hanging around for coffee hour after church or showing up at a pot luck supper three or four times a year! What it meant for those earliest Christians was much more like what it means for the Community of Celebration! All things held in common, not a poor person among them, accepting all comers – even the outcasts and the marginalized. The word is “koinonia” in Greek and it means, according to New Testament scholar N.T. Wright, that:

“in Christ, Christians not only belong to one another but actually become mutually identified, truly rejoicing with the happy and genuinely weeping with the sad…Koinonia is part of the truth about the body of Christ. All are bound together in a mutual bond that makes our much-prized individualism look shallow and petty. This fundamental meaning of koinonia best explains its other uses, particularly that of “generosity” or “almsgiving”…Christians give to one another because they belong to one another.”

The third component of discipleship is “the breaking of the bread.” Originally that meant sharing meals with one another and with the poor but, after the sun had set on the Sabbath Day, it also meant sharing the Bread and Wine of the Eucharist with one another as Jesus had done at the Last Supper and as we are doing here tonight. It was to do as St. Paul had instructed in First Corinthians “For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes,” (I Corinthians 11:26)

And finally, the fourth component – they were to pray, to become people of prayer. The Old Testament patriarchs, matriarchs and prophets were people of prayer. Jesus was a man of prayer. The Apostles were becoming people of prayer, especially after they had received the Gift of the Holy Spirit on that Pentecost morning. How can we serve God and follow God’s will without communicating on a daily basis, two-way communication (offering our praise and thanks, confession, intercession and petition…and also sitting in silence and contemplation listening for that “still, small Voice” of the Master? I don’t see how we can.

So…three thousand baptized in a single day? Very cool. It has taken us 15 years to baptize that many in my diocese! But unless every one of those newly-baptized are also “discipled,” turned into real disciples of Christ, we might as well not have wasted the water!

“Brothers, what are we to do?” the congregation asked. “Peter said to them, “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ so that your sins may be forgiven; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.”

Yes, but if that Holy Spirit has been truly received, four things will be required: devotion to the Apostles’ teaching, true fellowship, the breaking of bread…and the prayers.

We are doing all four of those things in this service.

Thanks be to God!

A Freedom Meal for Servants

April 22, 2011

Maundy Thursday. If we had to come up with a caption, or a summary, for the events we are commemorating here tonight, it might be “a freedom meal for servants.” That may sound like an oxymoron so let me unpack what I mean.

Most scholars believe that the Last Supper Jesus ate with his disciples was a Passover Seder. They were observant Jews and would have taken special care to celebrate the Passover together every year. Tonight’s reading from Exodus tells us of the origins of that sacred meal: Moses and his people are preparing to pack up and escape the bonds of their slavery in Egypt after a long struggle with Pharaoh and the ruling authorities there.

Just before they go, Moses experiences God telling him to transform an ancient sheep-herder’s spring festival into a new “freedom meal.” The meal was called “pesah” which we usually translate “Passover” because of the story of the angel of death “passing over” the homes of the Jewish people that night. But it more likely means “have compassion on” or “protect.”

Just as God had “compassion on” and “protected” the early, nomadic Hebrew shepherds, now he was to have compassion on and protect the whole people of Israel from the Egyptians’ fury. So, just as in those earlier meals, they slaughter the spring lambs and share the meal among families. But this time, there are some changes to “the liturgy.” They spread the lambs’ blood over their doors to identify the children of Israel, and they eat the meal in haste – with their “loins girded, sandals on their feet, and staffs in their hands” – because their mad dash to freedom was about to begin!

The Jewish people have celebrated that Meal annually from that day until this in accordance with the Lord’s commandment: “This day shall be a day of remembrance for you. You shall celebrate it as a festival to the Lord; throughout your generations you shall observe it as a perpetual ordinance.” (Exodus 12:14)

And it was this that the Psalmist was singing about in tonight’s Psalm: “How shall I repay the Lord for all the good things he has done for me? I will lift up the cup of salvation and call upon the Name of the Lord. I will fulfill my vows to the Lord in the presence of all his people…O Lord, I am your servant and the child of your handmaid; you have freed me from my bonds. I will offer you the sacrifice of thanksgiving…” (Psalm 116 passim)

It was that meal too that Jesus was presiding over when he “changed the liturgy” once again! When he “lifted up the cup of salvation” he said, “This cup is the NEW covenant in MY blood. Do this as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.” When he lifted up the unleavened bread and broke it in order to share it with his friends, he said, “This is MY body that is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” (I Corinthians 11:23-26 passim)

No longer was it the lamb’s blood spread over the doors that spoke of God’s “compassion.” Now, it was Jesus’ blood – the sacrifice of his life – that showed how much he loved them. No longer was it the unblemished lamb that provided spiritual food. Now, it was Jesus’ own Body, which he was prepared to offer for their protection…and for their liberation.

So, the Passover Seder is the freedom meal for the Jews. The Holy Eucharist is the freedom meal for Christians.

But just what kind of Christians are we called to be – we who are invited to the marriage supper of the Lamb?  Well, “during supper Jesus knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and was going to God, got up from the table, took off his outer robe and tied a towel around himself. Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples’ feet…” (John 13:3-4)

I’ve always thought it so interesting that Christians follow Jesus’ command to “Do this in remembrance of me” every Sunday in countless churches around the world. We follow his example to wash one another’s feet only once a year – if that – on Maundy Thursday. I’m proud of Trinity Cathedral for being willing to share also in this ritual – a tradition of the Church for 2,000 years!

A freedom meal for servants!

St. Paul once wrote, “For freedom Christ has set us free.” (Galatians 5:1). God created us to be free, but we abused that freedom. God led the children of Israel out of slavery into freedom time and time again, but they often abused that freedom as well.

Jesus Christ came with a message of freedom and was prepared to lay down his life rather than compromise that message. But we have often compromised it. What we never seem to “get” is this: Freedom is not doing anything we want to do. That’s “license” not freedom. Real freedom is about “service” – serving God and serving one another.

There is a prayer which I say almost every day in the service of Morning Prayer, and it begins like this; “O God, the author of peace and lover of concord, to know you is eternal life and to serve you is perfect freedom…” If you really want to be free…start serving God.

This is the message of Maundy Thursday. The message Jesus was preparing himself to die for when he broke the Bread, shared the Cup, and washed his disciples’ feet. He knew that knowing God IS eternal life and that serving God is perfect freedom.

For freedom Christ has set us free, dear friends!

Welcome to this “freedom meal…for servants.”

Shine, Jesus, shine!

April 5, 2011

Lent 4A Trinity Cathedral.

Before I begin my remarks this morning, let me say that I was able to spend some time this last week with Bishop Zache Duracin of the Diocese of Haiti while I was at the House of Bishops’ meeting in N.C. I told him of our efforts here, and across this Diocese, to assist in “Rebuilding our Church in Haiti” and he asked me specifically to thank you and to let you know that you are in his prayers…as he remains in ours. So, thank you and if you have not made a contribution in one of our pew envelopes or the glass jar in the Great Hall, I invite you to do so today.

Now to the sermon: Even though we are in the “year of Matthew” in our Sunday lectionary this year, during Lent we have had selections from the Gospel of St. John and we have today the story of the healing of the man born blind – the sixth of Jesus’ seven “signs” or miracles as recorded in this 4th Gospel. There is not time in one sermon (or even one seminary-level class!) to explore all the symbolism in this account of Jesus’ healing of the man born blind.

There is almost nothing in St. John’s Gospel that does not have at least two or three levels of meaning! All the Gospel writers use symbolism, of course, but John was the most intentional about that and you are nearly always reading on a couple of levels at one time. This story is a perfect example. Before the symbolism starts in earnest, however, Jesus once again comes out against a common “theology of the times” which taught that illness and suffering are punishments from God. You still hear that taught sometimes even today. And sometimes, in our weaker moments, when we are suffering we may even think that: “what did I do to deserve this?”

But, as they come across this blind man, Jesus’ disciples ask, “Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind? Jesus answered, Neither this man nor his parents sinned…” but his blindness can be an occasion for God’s works to be revealed! (John 9:1-3)  In this answer, Jesus doesn’t attempt to address all the issues involved in human suffering. We don’t know why “bad things happen to good people” but we know that it is not punishment for their sins or the sins of the parents!

Bad things happen to good people because the world we live in is not a perfect world. There is a fundamental brokenness or incompleteness in Creation, which is where accidents and disease and seemingly unjust suffering come from. We often say of such things, “It’s not fair.” But unfortunately “fairness” is not a feature of this fallen and broken world – some people are born in poverty, some of us are born in affluence; some people live in the path of tsunamis, others don’t; some people contract vicious and death-dealing illnesses, and some of us don’t. Life is not fair!

We don’t have the answers as to “why.” But we DO know that God’s grace can be powerfully at work in those situations – leading the rich to share with the poor; providing relief efforts after natural disasters; ministering to the sick and suffering and to their families and bringing such as healing into those situations as we can! And that is precisely what Jesus moved to do as he spat on the ground and made mud, spread the mud on the man’s eyes, and ordered him to go and wash in the pool of Siloam. “Then he went and washed,” the text tells us, “and came back able to see.”

Now, to the various levels in this story: The most obvious level is that Jesus was a healer and that, on more than one occasion, he restored sight to the blind. That gave the Apostles, and gives us in today’s Church, our mandate to pray for healing and to exercise a healing ministry such as we are engaged in in this parish.

The second level of symbolism, which could not possibly have been missed by the first readers of John’s Gospel, is that this is a story about Baptism! The Greek word for “spread” as when Jesus “spread” mud on the man’s eyes is the same as the word for “anoint.” In the early Church the baptismal candidates were anointed several times with oil, both before and after they were baptized. Just as King David was anointed with oil by Samuel in today’s Old Testament Lesson and Jesus is called the “anointed one” or “the Christ.” In this story, the man is “anointed,” then “washed” with water, and his eyes were opened!

Right after that, he and his whole family were pursued and harassed by the Pharisees and finally “driven out” of the synagogue. And that was precisely the experience of those early Christians who were reading John’s Gospel for the first time! They had been anointed, baptized, given “new sight” as they were born again in Holy Baptism, and then they – and often their whole families – suffered persecution both at the hands of the Jewish establishment and the Roman government, until finally the separation between synagogue and church became complete sometime early in the second century. They were “driven out.”

And there is yet a third kind of symbolism, which has to do with Jesus bringing light into darkness on every possible level. That is best described by the Epistle to the Ephesians this morning: The author writes, “Once you were darkness, but now in the Lord you are light. Live as children of light – for the fruit of the light is found in all that is good and right and true. Try to find out what is pleasing to the Lord. Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead expose them. For it is shameful even to mention what such people do secretly; but everything exposed by the light becomes visible, for everything that becomes visible is light. Therefore it says, “Sleeper, wake! Rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.” (Ephesians 5:8-14)

It is that profound sense of Jesus bringing light into our dark and fallen world that led Kathleen Thomerson to write the words to one of our most moving contemporary hymns, “I want to walk as a child of the light.” The refrain goes like this, “in him there is no darkness at all; the night and the day are both alike; the Lamb is the light of the city of God; Shine in my heart, Lord Jesus.”

Shine in our hearts indeed, Lord. Shine in our hearts throughout this Lenten season. Shine in our hearts as we walk the Way of the Cross on Good Friday (and in our individual lives). Shine in our hearts as we celebrate the Resurrection on Easter Day. And shine in our hearts on that last Great Day when we shall finally see that “the Lamb is the light of the city of God.”

Shine in our hearts…Lord Jesus!

Theological Education in The Episcopal Church

March 30, 2011

Our fnal day was highlighted with a first-ever meeting of the House of Bishops with all the seminary deans of The Episcopal Church (except one absent from illness). There is a House of Bishops Committee on Theological Education which serves as a kind of liaison with the seminaries, but this is the first time we have all met together.

Seminaries are, of course, struggling financially in our day. Seminarian debt is a huge issue because of the expense of a three year seminary experience. Many of us wonder if seminaries are not actually training people to serve in a church which no longer exists. And there is the long-standing “competition” and suspicion on the part of seminaries about diocesan training programs which have developed to train lay persons, deacons, and priests as alternatives to the seminary experience.

We heard a brief address from the President of the Seminary Deans and then brief vignettes of “good news” from each of the other 9 deans present about new initiatives in their schools. These ranged from distance learning to mergers to ecumenical cooperation to emphases on Latino ministries, to a desire for each of the seminaries to create their own “niche” or specialty so that they do not try to be all things for all people.

I do think the deans are aware of the problems and are trying, but in my opinion a number of key issues remain:

1. We have too many seminaries (11) for the size of our church (about 2 million members).

2. They have a tendency to think that the only way theological education can take place in community is in a residential seminary.

3. Issues of tenure may keep on older faculty members to the exclusion of raising up new and younger scholars to education a new generation.

4. Seminaries do not seem to teach”pedagogy” – they do not teach seminarians to teach.

I’m glad we began the conversation and hope it will continue because we have a long way to go before we reach at least my vision for theological education — which is that every Christian has the right to a full and equal theological education. Then, gifts and talents will deermine who gets ordained or serves in some specialized ministry – not the level of one’s training.