Unless You Come As A Child

September 17, 2007

In Chicago for (yet another) meeting, I slipped out of the hotel on Sunday morning and took the L train into the city to get to the Eucharist. The church is a famously “anglo catholic” parish known for its good music and full liturgy and I was not disappointed. The simple offertory anthem by Felix Mendelson sung by a solo tenor voice was almost worth the trip!

But, aside from a decent sermon and receiving the sacrament, I was most moved by an unselfconscious gesture  by the rector while distributing communion. There was a sizable group of young people, from toddlers to teenagers, who were ushed down the aisle by their Sunday School teachers to receive communion first.  Baptized children are allowed to receive communion in our church, but some parents still prefer that they wait until confirmation, or at least until first communion classes, so the children receive a blessing at the altar rail rather than the sacrament.

This is done by a simply laying on of a hand and/or marking their foreheads with the sign of the cross while pronouncing a prayer of blessing. What I liked in this case was that the priest lowered himself to one knee in front of each small child he was blessing to that they could see his face and be greeted “on their level.” A simple thing, but it spoke volumes to me about honoring everyone.

It was almost as though, in addition to the logistics of height and access, the priest was genuflecting before “the least of these” which the church values highly. “Suffer the little children to come unto me…”

“Unless you come as a child…”    

Interfaith Dialogue and Culture

September 13, 2007

Conversations with a visiting bishop from Pakistan yesterday highlighted for me once again the great difficulty of interfaith dialogue. While we in the United States, and so many in the West, seek to put the best face on Islam, consider it one of the three great “Abrahamic faiths,” and seek mutual understanding, tolerance, and even cooperation where possible, there are Christians in other parts of the world with a very different perspective.

It reminds me of a moment at the Lambeth Conference in 1998 when there was a session on “interfaith dialogue.” A bishop from one part of the world spoke of the richness of interfaith dialogue and the deepening of relationships and mutual understanding, an African bishop from the same podium exclaimed, “If they would just stop killing us, we would be glad to initiate a dialogue!”

This is not so much due to the fact that there are different “Islams” — there is a certain unity in Islam (even with the Sunni, Shiah, Sufi divisions) that Christianity, and perhaps even Judaism, lacks. It seems to me more a factor of culture and context. Muslims — like the rest of us — are products of their nationalities and upbringing and cultural contexts.

Political frustrations — and the resultant violence too often — are brought about by marginalization, arrested economic development, poverty, demographics and the environment among many other factors. If we are to engage productively in interfaith dialogue, we must first of all understand the essence of the religions themselves. But we must also take very seriously the cultural context in which each of our religions is lived out.

This can be very tricky indeed. But it is absolutely essential in our day. For, as Hans Kung has said,

“No peace among the nations without peace among the religions.

No peace among the religions without dialogue between the religions.

No dialogue among the religions without investigation of the foundations of the religions.”

And those foundations include the cultural as well as the theological ones.       

Nine Eleven

September 9, 2007

The preacher today shared some memories of September 11, 2001 and suggested we might want to do the same, during this week, not to cling to them but to acknowledge and remember the past, live fully into the present, and  embrace the future.  Not a bad idea. You might want to do the same thing. I  remember…

*Watching the whole event unfold, with my staff, frozen to the TV in our midtown Manhattan office…

*Worrying about my fiancee who was at a meeting closer to Ground Zero than I was…

*The sound of silence in the city streets, even with so many streaming past our building…

*Volunteering to take some shifts as a chaplain, whatever that might mean…

*Days later,  putting my fiancee on a train in Grand Central, crowds like a train station in a WW II movie…

*Serving food at the Seamens’ Institute, talking with construction workers in St. Paul’s Chapel…

*Presiding and preaching at a requiem for a clergy couples’ son in our Chapel of Christ the Lord…

*Wondering, as I still do, why this nation chose misguided vengeance rather than reconciliation and healing…

We left church this morning with these words, sung to the tune of “Melita,” the great Navy hymn, still ringing in our ears:

“So brief, the joy since each was born/ So long the years in which to mourn/ Give us compassion to sustain/ Each other in this time of pain.

Guard us from bitterness and hate/ And share with us grief’s crushing weight/ Help us to live from day to day/ Until, once more, we find our way.”

Indeed. Help us, O God, as a individuals…and as a nation…”find our way.”

Emergent and Renewal

September 7, 2007

I had a very interesting conversation yesterday with Jim Wallis (of Sojourners), Brian McClaren (Emergent Village),  and several young people about a possible “American Green Belt Festival” planned now for the summer of 2009. “Green Belt” has been around in England for decades and is a combination music festival, art show, conference, and revival! It is ecumenical and celebrates renewal in its broadest sense.

The dream here is to find an American expression of that event, bringing together large numbers of young people — musicians, artists, pastors, teachers, seekers — who are involved in the “emergent” church, movement, conversation (whatever) with some of us “mainliners” who are interested in tracking and learning from this movement. The hope is also to cast a wide net by being “catholic friendly,” diverse in race, class, age, and ethnicity. 

The emergent conversation often describes itself as being post-evangelical and post-liberal, seeking to find ways to bring the gospel message of the kingdom of God to the “post modern” world by linking faith and social justice.  I’d be interested to hear from some of you who check in with this blog from time to time what you know or think about “emergent.” 

Is this a new wave of renewal or a “passing fad?”

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!

Our Own Little Missouri Synod?

September 1, 2007

Now that Kenya has consecrated two more American priests as bishops to be missionaries to the West here in North America and there are threats of boycotting the Lambeth Conference from certain Provinces in Africa and bishops from the US and even the Church of England, I wonder if the time has come to at least consider what some kind of “orderly reconfiguration” of the Anglican Communion might look like.

What if we simply acknowledged two separate expressions of Anglicanism here, and perhaps elsewhere around the globe? Would that be the end of the world? Since many of the so-called “continuing churches” seem to prefer the word “Anglican” anyway perhaps we should just concede them that formal designation.

Many Episcopalians do not consider themselves Anglican first and foremost anyway, but rather Episcopalians who are members of the Anglican Communion. If Canterbury were to recognize two expressions of that Communion would it be any worse than the Lutheran World Federation which acknowldedges Missouri Synod Lutherans as well as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America both as members?

Missouri Synod Lutherans are a more conservative expression and the ELCA a more progressive experession of Lutheranism on these shores and beyond. The two groups disagree mightily on some things and there is a certain amount of tension between them. Yet, they do cooperate in such things as Lutheran Social Services, certain missionary endeavors, and in the Lutheran World Federation itself. Everyone knows they are all Lutherans.

I know the critique here: the LWF is a “federation” of churches while the Anglican Communion seeks to be just  that — a “communion” of churches. However, when you have whole Provinces declaring themselves “out of communion” with others and bishops refusing to receive the sacrament from other bishops, it is perhaps time honestly  to concede that we look a whole lot more like a federation. Indeed, up until the middle of the 20th century that’s pretty much how we understood ourselves as Anglicans anyway.

As one whose entire life and ministry is dedicated to working toward the fulfillment of Jesus’ prayer “that we all may be one” this gives me no pleasure. I hope a way can be found for the Communion to remain intact. But, if such a way cannot be discerned, would it not be better to preserve some sense of civility and some level of cooperation rather than watching endless division and fragmentation in this church?

Would we not be a better witness to the world if we found a way for an “amicable” separation showing mutual respect and tolerance? Would some “friendly competition” between “Anglicans” and “Episcopalians” on the local level be all that bad? (Provided we were both seen as full members of the Anglican family of churches?)  

Could we not find a way to live alongside our own little Missouri Synod?      

Celebration!

August 30, 2007

One of my first responsibilities after vacation was making my annual visitation to the Community of Celebration in Aliquippa, PA. I serve as their “bishop visitor” (meaning counselor, encourager, and friend).

Some may know this community better by the name of their music ministry, The Fisherfolk.

Born out of the renewal movement at the Church of the Redeemer in Houston in the 60s and 70s, the community has traveled all over the world and had major presences in England and Scotland as well as several locations here in the States. Now officially recognized as among the Religious Orders and Christian Communities in the Episcopal Church this mixed, family oriented community takes life vows and their days are marked by Morning, Noonday, and Evening Prayers from the Book of Common Prayer plus a festive, song-filled Eucharist on Saturday afternoons.

Their main ministry is one of presence in a modest to poor neighborhood of Aliquippa, part of the rust belt on the outskirts of Pittsburgh. They provide lower cost housing for a number of families, work to improve the community, partner with the Church Army in ministries such as the “Uncommon Grounds” cafe, and ecumenically with othe Christians to tutor children from neighborhood housing projects, work with a Women’s Project teaching life skills to women from the local prison. A new ministry, Global Outreach in Addiction Leadership (GOAL) seeks to “export” 12 step programs to parts of Africa most effected by HIV/AIDS in an innovative approach to understanding the linkage between these two scourges.

The total commitment of these Christians to the triune God and to each other, their perseverance over many years of ministry, their hospitality to all, and their infectious joy in the Lord humbles me everytime I am with them. Join me in praying for their life and work!  

        

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!