Archive for the ‘Scripture’ Category

Deacons and Evangelists

October 11, 2007

 

Some of us have just returned from the Kanuga Conference Center in North Carolina where we participated in a gathering entitled “Creative Sacramental Leadership in the Small Congregation.” It was sponsored by our Office of Congregational Development with Suzanne Watson providing the primary leadership. It was well attended and brought together ministry developers and others from all over the country. Keynoters included a bishop from Canada, an area missioner from New England, an Archbishop from New Zealand, and our own Presiding Bishop.

The Chaplain for the conference – The Rev. Susan Snook – used our “saint for today” (St. Philip, Deacon and Evangelist) as a kind of guiding light for the daily meditations and reflections in our worship. And she focused on the various Scriptural references to  Philip – from his calling as one of “the Seven” chosen to assist the Apostles in feeding the neglected Greek-speaking widows of Jerusalem… all the way through his ministry to the Ethiopian eunuch recounted in our first reading from Acts today and beyond.

The Presiding Bishop preached on that text at the closing Eucharist for our conference and pointed out that deacons in the early Church were not simply “servants” as we sometimes want to define them today. Beginning with the “proto deacons” in Acts – people like Philip and Stephen – they preached, they baptized, they reached out to the poor, and they became administrators in the early church, working closely with the bishops.

And she pointed out the role of deacons is to be leaders in such “diaconal ministry” for all of us! Their primary work is not “in the Church” but in the world.” My wife, who is a deacon, often points out that the deacons’ ordination vows do not say that they are called to “interpret the needs of the world to the church and the church to the world” as is often claimed.  The vows are a one-way street: “You are to interpret to the Church the needs, concerns, and hopes of the world!” That’s why deacons – at their best – are often “irritants” to the institutional Church. They’re supposed to be! They’re always tugging at our sleeve saying, “What about them? Where are all the voices? Who’s not at the Table?”

Katharine pointed out that Philip didn’t wait around for the Ethiopian to find his way to church! He followed the Spirit’s leading and climbed into the chariot of this man who – while a God-fearing man – could never become fully accepted as a Jewish convert because he was considered a sexual deviant and as “less than whole” as a human being, really outside the Covenant.

Philip was able to say, “Well, I follow One who offers you a ‘new’ covenant — one of inclusion and grace.” And he “proclaimed to him the good news about Jesus” (Acts 8:35). Well, it must have sounded like good news to this Ethiopian because he asks for baptism immediately and Philip responds!  The text goes on to say that “When they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord snatched Philip away; the eunuch saw him no more!”

So, I guess we have to hope that someone else followed up on that baptism, that someone was able to provide some “post-baptismal” catechesis. But it wasn’t to be Philip! That’s not the deacon’s role. He was probably off to find some other outcast to baptize. And that, Katharine concluded, is why the Church needs more deacons!    

Never Look Back

October 3, 2007

 

I’m not sure there is any way to soften the shocking impact of Jesus’ challenge to his would-be followers in today’s Gospel! He was such a charismatic figure that, I suppose, he often heard rash promises like the one with which our passage begins: “I will follow you wherever you go,” (Luke 9:57) gushes perhaps a young person, filled with zeal and excitement!

“Be careful what you say,” Jesus seems to caution, “Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but I have no where to lay my head!” And “neither will you” seems to be the implication.  That seems like a pastoral approach to this would-be disciple. No sense taking advantage of his zeal without first making clear the consequences!

But then Jesus actually extends an invitation to the next person! “Follow me,” he says. “Lord, let me first go and bury my father.” Seems like a reasonable request. To which Jesus makes a harsh reply, “Let the dead bury their own dead; but as for you, go and proclaim the kingdom of God!”

And a similar scenario follows as another seeker says, “I will follow you, Lord, but let me first say farewell to those at my home.” “No one who puts hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God.” Tough stuff.

N.T. scholar Tom Wright puts it this way: “…the summons was shocking: Jesus’ call overrode normal family obligations of the kind usually regarded as sacrosanct. ‘Leave the dead to bury their dead’; only someone conscious of an all-important task could have issued such a summons, and only someone who believed him could have obeyed it.”

“This definite call offered nothing except a wandering life: foxes have holes, birds have nests, but the son of man has nowhere to lay his head.  But the promised long-term reward, as one might expect from a leadership prophet, let alone one who was more than a prophet, was that one would share in the blessings of the great coming new age, the age of redemption.” (N.T. Wright, “Jesus and the Victory of God”, page 299)

I don’t know about you, but that kind of commitment, that kind of total self-offering makes my discipleship look pretty tepid. I guess I’ve made a few sacrifices in my life to follow Jesus. But they do not compare in the slightest to the sacrifices made by those original 12…or by the early Church saints…or by the martyrs down through the centuries…or by women seeking to find their place in the leadership of the Church…or by gay and lesbian Christians wondering how long “full inclusion” really will take…or by African bishops and primates who take their lives in their hands every time they speak out for religious freedom and tolerance in some Islamic republic. Yes, my discipleship is pretty tepid!

I guess I could spend my time feeling guilty about all that. Surely, I am guilty in lots of this. Or, I can spend my time being grateful. Grateful to my fellow Christians who have no where to lay their heads…who are actually willing to let the dead bury the dead…and who – having put their hand to the plow – never look back!  

                 

  

These Also Were Born There

October 2, 2007

 

One of our Eucharistic prayers begins like this: “We give thanks to you, O God, for the goodness and love which you have made known to us in creation; in the calling of Israel to be your people; in your Word spoken through the prophets; and above all in the Word made flesh, Jesus, your Son.”

 

In those few words we have a recounting of our whole salvation history – the beauty of the Creation itself, the irrevocable Covenant with Israel, the challenging voice of Israel’s Prophets, and – finally – the incarnation of all of that in Jesus of Nazareth! Today’s Lessons describe the centrality of the people of Israel in all of this – their self-confidence and trust in their relationship with God which they have always had, at their best.

The prophet Zechariah says, “Peoples shall yet come, the inhabitants of many cities; the inhabitants of one city shall go to another, saying, ‘Come, let us go to entreat the favor of the Lord, and to seek the Lord of hosts…In those days ten men from nations of every language shall take hold of a Jew, grasping his garment and saying, ‘Let us go with you, for we have heard that God is with you.’” (Zechariah 8:20, 23)

The Psalmist rejoices in this historic role of his people: “…the Lord loves the gates of Zion more than all the dwellings of Jacob. Glorious things are spoken of you, O city of our God…Of Zion it shall be said, ‘Everyone was born in her…The Lord will record as he enrolls the peoples, These also were born there!’” (Psalm 87) And here we have a hint of the universal role of Israel – this covenantal relationship with God is not only for the Jews, but through the Jews (potentially) to everyone!

Jesus understood that clearly. In fact, it was central to his entire message about the kingdom of God. In today’s Gospel, he was once again prepared to visit the hated Samaritans and to spend time with them, but they would not “receive him because” the text says,“his face was set toward Jerusalem.” (Luke 9:53-54). Now, he was not actually “on the way” to Jerusalem physically at this point, so this text must mean something else.

I think it means that he was bound and determined to speak his message in Jerusalem. He had come to believe that the course of his life and his core message of the kingdom had to be proclaimed in Jerusalem itself, in the heart of the temple, in the symbolic center of Jewish life. Not because he was trying to “convert the Jews” to some new religion. But because, from the heart of their faith, would come salvation for the whole world!    

The disciples in this story react in a very human way to their Master’s rejection. They want to punish the Samaritans. “Lord, do you want us to command fire to come down from heaven and consume them?” (Seems a bit of an overreaction to me, but then it’s basically what the prophet Elijah is said to have done to the prophets of Baal!). Not exactly Jesus’ style though and he simply “turned and rebuked” the disciples for even having such a thought.

After all, why would he want to punish his adversaries when he had just finished preaching, “Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you.” (Luke 6:27). Besides…even Samaritans are among those Jesus called “good.” And – even though they (and we) often forget it – We “also were born there” — in Zion…in Jerusalem…for the great One in the midst of us is none other than the Holy One of Israel! (Isaiah 12:6)  

House of Bishops – Day Four – Sunday

September 24, 2007

I presided at the Eucharist and preached at a small mission congregation in the Diocese of Louisiana this morning.  Before the liturgy, I led an adult forum with about 15 folks around a table in the parish hall. After an overview of the House of Bishops meeting and a little bit on our ecumenical relations, I opened the floor for their questions.

Lots of concern about the “September 30 deadline” (which, of course, is not a deadline but as the Archbishop of Canterbury has reminded us “perception is reality” in real life). I spoke of my hopes that we will find a way forward, and then said something like:

“Two things I hope you’ll hold in tension: I want you to be concerned about these larger issues, about the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion, and all the rest of it. But, bottom line, no matter what happens at this House of Bishops meeting, it doesn’t have to derail your local efforts. The cutting edge of our mission and ministry is the local congregation and you need to build a healthy and vital congregation!”

A 40-something big guy, with a red face and tears in his eyes said, “I disagree with you. What happens does affect our local congregation! I invite people but nobody in this part of the world wants to come to a church where, when you open the paper, is all about gay bishops and being thrown out of the world wide communion!”

I conceded that there are local consequences, but reminded him that I was only arguing for some balance in all this…that we shouldn’t be consumed by “the issues” but dedicate ourselves to mission. Then we went on to the predictable argument about “do we believe the Bible or not…why won’t the bishops defend the plain Scriptural truth…why is the Episcopal Church going against worldwide Christian opinion on these matters, etc., etc., etc.”

So, I did what bishops do every Sunday in the 50 minutes we are given in adult forums like this…trying to summarize decades of biblical scholarship, cultural differences, Anglican polity — things which parish clergy should have been doing for years in little places like this! In the end, I think I did OK. They trusted me enough to come to the liturgy, listen carefully to the sermon, receive the sacrament. All in all, it was a good day.

But, over a glass of wine at lunch with the rector and his wife,  I had to confess that I do not know if we can hold this fractious Church together. Where I live, in New York, we bishops will be pilloried if we make any concessions in a conservative direction. An 815 staff person walked out on Katharine Jefferts Schori after she reported on General Convention Resolution B033. It was too conservative.

Finally what we will have to do, over these next two days, is say our prayers…listen deeply to each other…come to a consensus decision which is faithful to what this church is and what this church desires to become…and offer it to the larger Church.

As we said in an earlier communication from this House: all we can offer you is who we are. Not who you might wish we were.

House of Bishops – Day Two

September 22, 2007

Another difficult day. We listened to passionate testimonies from members of the Anglican Consultative Council and several Primates of  the Anglican Communion.  Clearly,  they want more from us than General Convention has said.  We will  certainly not — and cannot — usurp the prerogatives of our synodical form of government including bishops, priests, deacons, and the laity making decisions together.

On the other hand, there are — in our checks and balances system — specific responsibilities given to bishops, as well as to the other orders of ministry. We can give or withhold consent to episcopal ordinations. We can authorize, or refuse to authorize, specific liturgies in our dioceses. We can cooperate, or refuse to cooperate, with “delegated episcopal oversight” in our dioceses. These are among the decisions we will have to make.

After thanking the Archbishop of Canterbury and our other visitors on the floor of the House this morning, I also thanked the House of Bishops Planning Committee for the schedule. Today was not a day to craft a “Mind of the House Resolution” on these matters. Many of us were too angry.
But now we have the weekend to “take a deep breath.” We hang dry wall and paint houses tomorrow. We worship with the people of Louisiana and Mississippi on Sunday.

Monday, the harder work starts…

House of Bishops – Day One

September 21, 2007

Quite a roller coaster of a day yesterday. Our first time, as Episcopal bishops, to meet with the Archbishop of Canterbury to talk face-to-face about our ongoing issues in the Anglican Communion.

We began with a festive Eucharist in the hotel with a great sermon by our Presiding Bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori and the lusty singing of hymns from “Holy, holy, holy” through “There’s a sweet, sweet Spirit in this place” (and, perhaps surprisingly, there is!) to “O Praise Ye the Lord!”

Then, we entered into table discussions and open plenaries sharing our Hopes and Concerns for this meeting. My hope was that we could find a way to assure the Communion that we will do what General Convention has asked us to do by exercising restraint in consenting to the election of  bishops whose manner of life will produce additional strains on the Communion. My concern is, that nothing we do will be enough for some — in our own House and in the Communion.

The afternoon continued with a brief address by Archbishop Rowan Williams and two questions to wrestle with: how far can we go in accommodating the request of the Primates’ Communique and what kind of “shared episcopal leadership” (within our own House) would we find  possible and helpful. Lots of pain and anguish from all sides in the open discussion which followed. But it was good for Rowan and the other Primates and visitors from across the Communion to see the kind of respectful and thoughtful conversation we can have together.

I learned nothing really new. No conversations we have not had before. But it was good for our overseas colleagues to engage with us. It would  have been helpful for the Archbishop to have done this three years ago.

Last night he preached a brilliant sermon at an ecumenical service at a Convention Center focusing on the plight of New Orleans and the role of Christians in bringing healing, reconciliation, and rebuilding to this city and to the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Each diocesan bishop filed up with an offering (some as large as $10,000) collected by the Bishops of Louisiana and  Mississippi to assist. Tomorrow we will get our hands dirty in some work projects in both dioceses.

It was moving to see the Bishop of Los Angeles and the Bishop of Quincy coming back down the aisle after each making their offering. Mission does indeed unite.

Today, we continue with Bible study led by the Archbishop. And more conversation. May the Word speak in and through the many words…

Labor Day and Immigration

September 3, 2007

Labor Day and immigration. Are there connections? Well, pretty obviously, since a huge portion of our labor force in the United States is made up of recent immigrants — documented and undocumented.

Yesterday, in the parish my wife and I attend, that connection was made pretty clearly. First, by the sermon based largely on this text from the Sunday lectionary:

“Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers…” (Hebrews 13:2a)

The sermon made appropriate connections between this text, the long biblical history of Israel being commanded to treat the alien well, since they themselves had  been aliens in a foreign land, and our responsibilties to “the stranger” in our land today.
And secondly, by an adult forum led by a Roman Catholic priest active in the “new sanctuary movement” whereby congregations and individuals can show solidarity to immigrant families (and in more ways than providing classic “sanctuary” in churches).

This might entail housing them, accompanying them to immigration hearings, deportation proceedings, etc. and assuring that they are provided due process under the law. It may also entail advocacy to try and change some of our immigration laws so that they might actually approach being “just” and heeding biblical ethics on showing “hospitality to strangers.”

It was a good Sunday. And it gave us plenty to reflect on as we enjoy this “last day of summer,” ever conscious of our privilege and of God’s call to love mercy and act kindly, yes — but also to do justice.  I cannot get these words out of my head and heart today, reverberating to the great hymn tune “Finlandia” to which we sang them  yesterday:

This is my song, O God of all the nations/ a song of peace for lands afar and mine/ This is my home, the country where my heart is/ here are my hopes, my dreams, my holy shrine/ but other hearts in other lands are beating/with hopes and dreams as true and high as mine.

My country’s skies are bluer than the ocean/ and sunlight beams on cloverleaf and pine/ but other lands have sunlight too, and clover/ and skies are everywhere as blue as mine/ O hear my song, thou God of all the nations/ a song of peace for their land and for mine.

This is my prayer, O Lord of all earth’s kingdoms/ Thy kingdom come; on earth thy will be done/ Let God be lifted up till all shall serve him/ and hearts united learn to live as one/ O hear my prayer, thou God of all the nations/ myself I give thee; let thy will be done!

Now With God At Table We Sit Down

August 25, 2007

 

I suspect that one of the reasons I got interested in ecumenism, and the relationship between churches, is that I have something of an ecumenical past. I grew up in what some would describe as a “fundamentalist” denomination. It was a Christian tradition which majored in judgment!

We stood in fear of God’s judgment, we feared the judgment of other people, and yet we were just about as likely to judge others as unworthy as we felt ourselves to be! And while lots of people still live in that kind of religious world today, more of us have exited that form of Christianity and sought out a more “generous orthodoxy.”

My family and I spent some time in the Presbyterian and Methodist churches before a next door neighbor, who figured out that we were searching, invited us to attend their Episcopal Church and we never looked back! We fell in love with the liturgy and the sacraments, with the kind of pastoral care we received, and perhaps above all else, the kind of common sense and non-judgmental preaching we heard from that pulpit.

For myself, I have no doubt that was the right decision. But there is a danger here of a kind of “flabby” Christianity! The kind of Christianity which views God as a kindly old favorite uncle who makes no demands, is easily persuaded to wink at our transgressions, and – as a matter of fact – does not take what we do or do not do very seriously at all!

Today’s Lessons challenge both of those inadequate expressions of Christianity. Our First Reading from Isaiah makes it perfectly clear that God does take what we do seriously and that God will be the ultimate judge of all our actions. “Therefore hear the word of the Lord, you scoffers who rule this people in Jerusalem,” the prophet thunders, “…See, I am laying in Zion a foundation stone…a precious cornerstone, a sure foundation…And I will make justice the line, and righteousness the plummet…for I have heard a decree of destruction from the Lord God of hosts upon the whole land.”

It’s worth noting that God’s anger here is directed against the civil leaders in Jerusalem. Instead of trusting in God to deliver them, they’ve made alliances with Egypt, and sought out foreign military aid against the threatening Assyrians. God is displeased with their faithlessness and the futility of their “homeland security measures”. And so Isaiah warns of the fall of Jerusalem.  

Lest we think that it is only the Old Testament “God of wrath” who is concerned about judgment, the Gospel reading today has some hard sayings from Jesus as well! When he is asked, “Lord, will only a few be saved?” he replies, “Strive to enter through the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will try to enter and will not be able.” And then we hear those frightening words about “…Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the prophets in the kingdom of God, and you yourselves thrown out!”

Again, we need to remember, Jesus is talking about a specific set of people here: the religiously “pious”! He’s talking about those who are so sure they are the righteous ones and everyone else is going to hell in a hand basket! We know that because he concludes, “Then people will come from east and west, from north and south, and will eat in the kingdom of God.  Indeed some are last who will be first, and some are first who will be last.”  Once again, it’s the “little ones” who can be assured of God’s grace here – the lost and the lonely…the last and the least! 

So, God will judge the unrighteous and the unjust of this world. God has made us the stewards of creation and it does matter how we carry out that stewardship. But that doesn’t mean that we need to cower in fear like Jonathan Edwards’ “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God!” Rather, we can be comforted by what I’ve always believed to be among the most beautiful passages in the entire New Testament, our Second Lesson today from Hebrews:  

“You have not come to something that can be touched, a blazing fire, and darkness, and gloom, and a tempest…But you have come to Mount Zion, and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem…” (from Hebrews 12:18-19, 22-24)

The author is hardly holding up a vision of that permissive “favorite uncle” God I spoke of earlier! No, we do indeed stand before the living God and heavenly Jerusalem, before innumerable angels in festal gathering…and before God…the judge of all!

But we stand there surrounded by the communion of saints – in the assembly of the first-born who are enrolled in heaven…the spirits of the righteous made perfect, and…We stand in the presence of Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant… 

Because of his life, death, and resurrection and because of our baptism into that life, death and resurrection, we have learned to trust that – one day – people will indeed come from east and west, from north and south, and will eat in the kingdom of God.  Our deeds will be taken seriously and judgment is inevitable. But the life of Jesus teaches us that God’s judgment is always tempered by mercy!

Our motivation for doing “good deeds” is not to earn God’s love and forgiveness. We already have that! Our motivation for doing good is gratitude! We are so grateful that we have been given God’s love and the gift of eternal life that we want to live the kind of life God wants us to live! We don’t do good in order to be saved; we do good in thanksgiving for the fact that we’ve already been saved!

 We already sit at God’s table. Today, we eat and drink in the kingdom of God! Today, we who really are last…are welcomed as among the first! Today, the words of the Psalmist are fulfilled in this place:

God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.

Therefore we will not fear, though the earth be moved,

And though the mountains be toppled into the depths of the sea;

Though its waters rage and foam, and though the mountains tremble at its tumult.

The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge!

                           

  

How Does Jesus’ Death Save Us?

August 24, 2007

 

There is a good bit of discussion and debate today in “emergent church” circles about the Atonement – the doctrine(s) which try explain what Jesus’ death on the cross has to do with our salvation.

Emergent church is not really a church, but a movement, largely of young people, who consider themselves “post liberal” and “post evangelical” and who are trying to articulate the Christian faith for their peers in this “post modern” world. Predictably, they are finding themselves having to re-address or even redefine classical Christian doctrines for themselves (as perhaps every generation does to a greater or lesser degree).

Among the many theories of the Atonement, three have achieved the most prominence historically. The “substitutionary” theory proposes that Jesus died in our place. We deserve death because of our sins and a just God will not allow that debt to go unpaid, so Jesus came to take upon himself that punishment so that we would not have to suffer it. Many people today find this a harsh and intolerable explanation.

The “moral influence” theory proposes that Jesus came as an example for us. He taught us how to live a good life. If we do that, and confess our sins when we do fall short, we overcome sin and the death which is its consequence. Many people find this theory weak and unsatisfactory.

The “Christus victor” theory sees Jesus as engaging in a great cosmic battle with the Evil One, winning the victory by his life, death and resurrection and therefore liberating all humankind from the bondage of sin and death. Many people find this theory just simply unintelligible and bereft of the kind of rational categories understandable to modern (or post modern) people.

Most theologians agree that no one theory is adequate, that each of the three (and other theories) attempt to explain and flesh out the biblical witness and that a number of theories must simply be held in tension as we seek to understand yet another mystery of the Christian faith which may be beyond our ability to articulate adequately.

My own approach comes from the fact that “God was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself.” Because Jesus was the very incarnation (“enfleshment”) of God, it is not  adequate to view God as punishing his innocent son on our behalf. (The caricature of this is sometimes called “cosmic child abuse!”). Rather, God took upon himself, in the incarnation, the full consequences of sin and death.

Because God loves us so much, he was willing to undergo – in the Person of the Son – everything you and I will have to undergo, including identifying with our sin and undergoing death itself, sin’s logical consequence. Therefore, when we cry out to our God we cry out to One who, not only understands us from afar, but who has “been there.”

This effects the “at-one-ment” with God lost so long ago in the mists of human history and the reconciliation with God which leads to abundant life here and eternal life in the hereafter. This is admittedly a somewhat subjective and experiential theory, but at least deserves, in my view, to be held together with the others in a kind of “quiver” of the various approaches to this central mystery of the Christian faith.

In the final analysis, I appreciate Bishop Tom Wright’s observation that “on the night before he died Jesus did not give us a theory; he gave us a meal.” It is in sharing that meal that we perhaps best understand and experience “atonement!”          

Coming Down From the Mountain

August 21, 2007

All good things come to an end, the saying goes. Maybe not, but holidays and vacations do! Even the Transfiguration, that mountain-top experience of Jesus and his friends, ended not with enshrining the moment and seeking to live in it forever — but in coming down the mountain, focusing on Jerusalem and the very hard “work” ahead.

The purpose of the Sabbath was indeed to step back from one’s work, to realize that we do not exist only to be productive and that we are not possessed by our possessions, but ultimately and finally children of the living God. But that very sabbath experience of rest and re-creation had, as one of its tanglible results, the effect of letting one start over again, refreshed and renewed, for the tasks of living and the work of ministry.

So, lazy summer days of (in our case)  jazz festivals, state fairs, visits with parents, chidren and grandchildren, naps in the afternoon (and sometimes in the morning!), working on our house and in the yard, reading mindless novels, and more leisurely and reflective prayer times must come to an end for now. May we carry something of this quality into the busy-ness of our working days.   

And may we be even more fit for  God’s service in the days, weeks, and months ahead!