Friday, October 31, 2014

Be Transformed

“Grant, o merciful God, that your Church, being gathered in unity by your Holy spirit, may show forth your power among all peoples.” What a wonderful and powerful way to begin worship, which is what we did on August 24, 2014. This was a day that the sermon focused on transformation, and what better way to lead into this subject than to ask God to fill the church with the Holy Spirit, so that we might show forth God’s power among all people. This prayer was then followed by the reading of Paul’s letter to the Romans (12:1-8) in which St. Paul challenged us “not to be conformed to the world, but to be transformed by the renewing of our minds, so that we might discern what God’s will is for us.”

This passage goes on to remind us that like a human body, the church has many members and that all members do not have the same function. In fact, each of us has gifts that differ from those of others in the church and that each gift is a grace given to us by God. Some have the gift of teaching, others the gift of preaching, or caring, or generosity, or leading. Others know how to feed the hungry or shelter the homeless, or mow the grass or prune the roses. All of these gifts are given to us by “one and the same spirit, for the common good.” (1 Corinthians 12:7)

It is important for each of us to recognize that we all have something to give to the church and the world. We have different talents and gifts and as St. Paul tells us, they are all given by one and the same spirit for the common good. In addition to the gifts of teaching, singing, praying, building and serving, there are times in each of our lives where our gift just might be receiving. Yes, receiving. Being still, being cared for, laying fallow, so that when our time comes again to use our gifts we will be ready, revived and resourceful.

I am convinced that Jesus’ main purpose in coming to earth was to make God’s Kingdom as real on Earth as it is in Heaven and to inspire us to be co-creators with Him in this venture. After all, the Gospels tell us that we will do even greater things than he does because God will send us the Holy Spirit. Our purpose, then, must be to help transform the world, which just might involve transforming the church first.

What does it mean “to transform the church?” Does it mean to change everything that we do? To completely change our style of music, to quit wearing vestments and wear denim? No, I do not believe it means this at all. But, it might mean to survey our community, find out who comes to church and why, who does not come to church and why not, which demographic groups come to church and which do not. Next it is important to figure out who we are and who we are not and to recognize that we cannot be all things to all people. Finally, who would we like to involve in our worship and fellowship, and what changes will help us attract them. After all, the church exists just as much for those who are not members as it does for those who are.

Having done all of this, then we may want to add some variety to our preaching, or singing, or liturgy. To look for ways to reach people with the Gospel of Jesus Christ in ways to which they can relate. St. Paul, might call this meeting people where they are. Besides, it just might be fun to use a variety of the resources available to us as Episcopal Christians. This often allows us to hear God speaking in different ways or for us to speak to God in different ways. When we do this we never know exactly where the spirit will lead us, but we do know that we may have to hang on for the ride.

Remember, transformation is what the Kingdom of God is all about: transformation of the church, transformation of each individual Christian, and ultimately transformation of the world.

 

 

 


 

Thursday, October 30, 2014

The Human Side of Jesus

The Human Side of Jesus

In reading Matthew 15:21-28, we run across a Jesus who is very Jewish, very tribal, in fact, very human.  He is approached by a Canaanite woman looking for a favor, looking for healing, looking for the Lord to act on her behalf.  “Have mercy on me, Lord, Son of David, my daughter is tormented by a demon, please heal her.”  Instead of the answer we might expect from the one sent into the world so that “the whole world might be saved,” we get “I am sent only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel.”

 At this point, the woman kneels before Jesus and pleads, “Lord Help me,” to which Jesus replies, “It is not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.”  For goodness sakes, the Lord of Heaven and Earth is comparing a distraught mother and her child to dogs.  Calmly she replies, “Yes Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from the master’s table.  Convicted of his human blindness (in my humble opinion) Jesus responds, “Woman, great is your faith, let it be done to you as you wish.” As scripture then tells us, “her daughter was healed instantly.

This is such an important passage in our Scriptures, because we often get so wrapped up in the Godness of Jesus that we forget his Humanity.  The fact is that if Jesus is not human, then nothing he does would matter:  relationships, suffering, death.  If Jesus were only God, suffering would not really be suffering and death would not be a big deal.  After all he will be back soon.  If Jesus were only God, human relationships would be irrelevant since I believe one has to be human to understand what they could mean and how complicated they can sometimes be. 

As a Human Being, Jesus was not born (again in my opinion) knowing all that humans have to learn over a life time by trial and error.  He would not have needed his vision expanded or his boundaries enlarged.  As it is, the Canaanite woman was able to draw Jesus into an experience in which his view of the world was expanded and his blindness to God’s overall plan for Him was taken away.  The human side of Jesus had a limited vision of his mission: only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel.  Through this woman, Jesus was able to see the larger vision of his mission, ministry and life.  Her faith and vision helped Jesus be open to and find his larger vision.

If Jesus’ mission and vision can evolve and grow, surely ours can too.  Our interactions with other people can open our eyes to see more and better.  To recognize who my neighbor is and who my family is.  We can ask ourselves questions such as, are Central American children coming to the United States Illegal Aliens or Refugees?  Are they children of God and neighbors who need our help to escape hunger, slavery and war, or are they thieves intent on stealing our birthright?  These are simple questions with complicated answers.  Did Jesus come only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel, or did he come that “the whole world might be saved?”

To answer these questions it is important that we as human beings keep ourselves informed, which includes listening to the opinions of those with whom we disagree.  It is also crucial that we, the Church, remember that the world contains “all sorts and conditions of people,” and that, for better or worse, they/we are all Children of God.

If Jesus can learn from a person a Jewish man should never listen to, a foreign woman, from whom can we learn?  If Jesus, our Lord can change his mind about who to heal and love, about what can we change our minds?  If Jesus came that we might have life in all its abundance, can we live in a manner that others may have this life as well?


“Can we seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving our neighbor as ourselves?”

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Slowing Down the Mind, Experiencing the Presence of God

Slowing Down the Mind, Experiencing the Presence of God

After a busy half week in North Alabama full of fun and people and things to do, I am sitting at my desk/dinning room table in Central Alabama watching it rain slowly on the lake.  The leaves on the trees are changing colors and there is a touch (just a touch) of fall in the air.  I am “supposed” to be turning a sermon into a blog post and reviewing Medicare part D and Supplemental information so that my wife and I can “do what needs to be done.”  Instead the rain, as it often does, has made me pensive.  Like so many human beings my brain often takes off at high speed to figure out everything that needs to be done in my life, including some things that really do not need to be done at all.  At times I convince myself that everything that needs to be done needs to be done right now, and probably by me. 

It is days like today that remind me, and hopeful some of you as well, that life is a gift and that if we can slow our bodies down and our minds down at times, that we can appreciate and enjoy that gift even more.  There is so much beauty in this world: the lakes, the trees, the mountains and hills, and the people in our lives.  On a day like today I can enjoy the beauty without having to do anything to change it, or fix it, or make it better and more beautiful.  I can think about my friends and family members and experience the emotions I feel when I am in their presence.  I can reflect on how much they mean to me and how my life is better because they are in my it.  I can even reflect on the times I have hurt others or others have hurt me and turn all the hurt over to God.  I can ask forgiveness for the hurts I have caused and let go of the hurt I have received.  (I do recognize that prayer and good therapy can be necessary as well.)

There are places for me to go today and people for me to see, but this peaceful interlude might just change how I treat the people I meet and perhaps even how I treat myself.

Remember, it was in the ‘Still small voice” that Elijah knew God, and it was in the quite places when he was alone that Jesus was able to commune with God the Creator, thus renewing His strength for His journey.  I pray that today you and I will also find blessing and peace, strength and courage.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Knit Together in the Mystical Body of Christ


Knit Together in the Mystical Body of Christ

Revelation 7:9-17
After this I, John, looked, and there was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, robed in white, with palm branches in their hands. . . .They will hunger no more, and thirst no more; the sun will not strike them, nor any scorching heat; for the Lamb at the center of the throne will be their shepherd, and he will guide them to springs of the water of life, and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes."

The Feast of All Saints/All Souls is an occasion of both joy and reflection and sometimes sadness for those of us who are the church, who are the People of God.  The reading from the Revelation of John sums up for us what it means to be connected to one another and the communion of Saints in what we call that “great cloud of witnesses.”  We are truly a great multitude, an inclusive multitude from every nation, all tribes and peoples and languages.  We are who we are because of those who have gone before us and because they shared their faith and their love and their lives with us.

On these two days we intentionally remember those “saints,” famous and not so famous, who have “proclaimed by word and deed, the good news of God in Christ,” who have taught us how to live and in some cases, have taught us how to die.  We particularly remember those family members and friends who have died, and we stop to thank God for their presence in our lives.  Yes there will be tears, but as the writer of the book of Revelation assures us, “the Lamb of God will guide us to springs of the water of life, and God will wipe away every tear from our eyes.”

As we enter into these two holy days I encourage all of you to take the time to meditate on those important relationships in your lives, to live with the tears as well as the laughter and the joy, and to offer all of these feelings and emotions to God.

On Sunday, November the 2nd, at Christ Church we will lift up these “Saints” and our emotions to God.  Those who would like will be invited to come forward to light a candle in memory of some of those who through the grace of God made us who we are.  It truly is a time to celebrate our lives as the people of God.

“Almighty God, by your Holy Spirit you have made us one with your saints in heaven and on earth: Grant that in our earthly pilgrimage we may always be supported by this fellowship of love and prayer, and know ourselves to be surrounded by their witness to your power and mercy.  We ask this for the sake of Jesus Christ, in whom all our intercessions are acceptable through the Spirit, and who lives and reigns for ever and ever.  Amen.”




Monday, October 27, 2014

Love God, Love Your Neighbor


Love God, Love Your Neighbor 

Many Christians are aware that Jesus did not “invent” the Great Commandment, “love the Lord your God with all your heart and mind and soul and mind, and love you neighbor as yourself.”  (Matthew 22: 37-40)  They understand that the teaching is from a combination of Leviticus 19:18, “you shall love your neighbor,” and Deuteronomy 6:5, “you shall love the Lord your  God. . . .”  Jesus did know the interconnection of these two commandments.  That we cannot have one without the other, “that if we love God we must love our neighbor,” or as the Letter of James states, “we are liars.”  They became the core of his teaching and his mission.

I want to look at Leviticus 19:1-2, 15-18 and reflect on what it might mean to love our neighbor today.

The LORD spoke to Moses, saying:
Speak to all the congregation of the people of Israel and say to them: You shall be holy, for I the LORD your God am holy.
You shall not render an unjust judgment; you shall not be partial to the poor or defer to the great: with justice you shall judge your neighbor. You shall not go around as a slanderer among your people, and you shall not profit by the blood of your neighbor: I am the LORD.
You shall not hate in your heart anyone of your kin; you shall reprove your neighbor, or you will incur guilt yourself. You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against any of your people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the LORD. 

I believe loving our neighbor might just have something to do with being holy as God as Holy; with walking in Love as Christ loves us and gave himself as an offering and sacrifice to God, of truly loving both God and neighbor 


According to Leviticus 19, loving our neighbor means not showing preference to either poor or rich.  That might entail welcoming all into our churches as well as encouraging fair business practices, including a fair salary for a fair day’s work. 


Loving our neighbor will include “not hurting our kin,” and since all of God’s children are kin, we are called not to hurt one another; to work for justice, freedom and peace.  We are also called not to slander, not to build ourselves up by putting others down, and not to gossip about others.  The letter of James also deals with the dangers of a loose tongue as well.  Loving our neighbor might even involve some restraint in how we talk about politicians with whom we disagree.  Hopefully this includes not putting rash and often inaccurate “sound bites” on social media. 


Loving our neighbor means not profiting by their blood, whether that be unfair labor practices or literal rape, murder or other physical harm.  If we love our neighbor, we will encourage “right relationships, while at the same time realizing that we cannot fix all people and all problems.  We will, in fact, “seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving our neighbor as ourselves, and will respect the dignity of every human being.” (The Baptismal Covenant, Book of Common Prayer, pp. 304-305)

 

Sometimes it just takes a good Hebrew prophet to help is see Jesus’ teaching in a new light.