The Binding of Isaac

This sermon, preached at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Madison, Wisconsin on June 29, 2014 is based on the Old Testament reading assigned for Proper 8 of Year C in the Revised Common Lectionary.

You can find that reading here.

So it’s probably been about 8 or 9 minutes since we heard it. We said a psalm. We heard a New Testament reading and just now a gospel reading in the interim… but I’m guessing that it’s the words of today’s first reading from the book of Genesis that are still echoing in your ears this morning. The Akedah, the binding of Isaac story that is nightmarish in quality; sort of indistinct and blurry references to time, and to distance, and location; things happening that don’t quite make sense, where is Sarah when they load the donkeys and ride out of camp that morning? It is a story that is deeply disturbing in its content and its narrative. God says to Abraham take your son Isaac the one whom you love and go to the land of Moriah. Sacrifice him there on a hilltop that I will show you… How can this be?   How can God be instructing Abraham to sacrifice his son, the son whom he loves?

You would think that a story this disturbing it might just be shuttled off to the side to be read as infrequently as possible in the lectionary, to receive a little attention. But this story is one that has some real traction. It is a story that stays with us, a story that writers and theologians and philosophers and poets return to again, and again, and again. So I think it’s worth our time this morning to examine this story in its context and to see what might be happening. What makes us keep this story within reach and within view?

Terah, the father of Abraham, brings his family from Ur of the Chaldeans on his way to the land of Canaan.  He stops in Haran and instead of continuing on his journey he settles there.   It is there in Haran that God calls to Abraham. God says leave your family, your tribe, your people. Leave everything you know behind and go to the land that I will show you. No named destination, no road map, no clear way to get there. Just leave it all behind and set off into the wilderness. And Abraham does it! Along the way Abraham encounters God again. This time God tells him that he will make Abraham the father of nations, that nations will come from him, that his descendants will be as many as the stars in the sky, as impossible to count as the dust on the earth, and that his descendants will be a blessing to all people.

Years go by. Abraham is traveling through the wilderness with his wife Sarah and his family and he starts to get worried. He starts to get nervous that these promises won’t come true because Sarah still hasn’t born him a son. So he and Sarah take matters into their own hands. In an attempt to ensure the promises that God has made Sarah sends her handmaiden Hagar in to Abraham’s tent and she bears Abraham a Son named Ishmael.

Some time later three strangers visit Abraham and Sarah in the desert by the Oaks of Mamre and Abraham provides them with hospitality, providing them water to wash their feet, a place to rest and food. They promise that by the time they return the following year Sarah will have borne a child.   But by this time Abraham and Sarah are so old that the birth of a child seems impossible and Sarah laughs loud enough for the three strangers to hear her. But it happens. The promise is fulfilled.   And it’s such a remarkable thing that they name the child Isaac, which means “laughter.”

God made promises to Abraham. Abraham went into the wilderness leaving everything behind. God continued to reiterate the promises. Abraham and Sarah tried to take things into their own hands ensuring the fulfillment of the promises through the son of Hagar the handmaid. Now finally, after all these years, they have a child of their own. This child is the key. Through Isaac Abraham’s descendants will populate the world. Through Isaac Abraham will become the father of Nations and his children will be a blessing to all people.   So when God comes to Abraham and says take your son, the one whom you love, Isaac, and sacrifice him it’s an outrageous demand!   To sacrifice your own child is an awful act but there is a threat here to the promises that God has made to Abraham and around which Abraham has structured his entire life for the last 25 years.

I can’t imagine what it would’ve been like. That three-day journey with Isaac and with the servants heading for that unnamed unknown mountain must’ve been like a nightmare to Abraham, one of those nightmares that wake you up in the middle of the night shaking and sweating, unsure of who you are and where you are. Like one of those nightmares that when you finally have recovered enough to fall back asleep picks right back up where it left off.

So here’s Abraham going up the mountain.   He’s now transferred the wood from the donkey to Isaac’s back and he’s carrying the fire and his knife. Isaac speaks up, “Father?” Abraham says, “Here I am.” Isaac asks, “The fire and the wood are here but where is the Lamb for the burnt offering?” Here’s where I think the story becomes really interesting and the key for why we keep this story within reach and within view.

Scholars will tell us that when they examine the structure of the Hebrew in these verses there is a pattern. There’s a call, a response, and an address, a call, a response, and an address, a call, a response, and an address. There is a strong repeating strophic pattern in this passage. That pattern is broken by one verse, Abraham’s response to Isaac. This response falls right in the middle of the story dividing the first from the second halves and throwing the whole thing out of balance. Abraham says, “God himself will provide the Lamb for the offering my son.”

Think about the history of the relationship between God and Abraham. God has made promises. Abraham has followed God’s call but he’s wrestled back and forth.   He’s laughed. He’s tried to take things into his own hands. God continues to reiterate the promises. Abraham’s unsure whether this is really going to happen and now suddenly there’s this child. It seems like it’s all true the prophecy is about to move forward. But, given all this wrestling, all of this back and forth, God doesn’t know how Abraham will respond, in this moment, to the promises being fulfilled. That’s what it says later in the story when the Angel stays Abraham’s hand. “For now I know…” For now I know.

At this moment, as they’re going up the hill, God doesn’t know how Abraham is going to respond. But at this moment Abraham and God are in similar places because Abraham doesn’t know how God is going to respond either. Abraham’s response to Isaac, “God himself will provide the Lamb…” was surely uttered with this subtext running in Abraham’s head.   “Okay. Okay. Here I am God. I’m being faithful and doing what you asked.   But you’ve made all these promises and I trusted you.   Maybe I haven’t been perfect but I tried my best. Please figure out a way to get us both out of this mess!”

God is testing Abraham to see if Abraham will be faithful. Will Abraham trust that no matter what, in spite of it all, no matter how it looks, God will be faithful and God’s promises will come true.   Abraham is saying to God please be true, be faithful to the promises that you have made. Abraham is, in this verse at the center of the story, in this verse that breaks the symmetry of the poetry, putting God to the test. This understanding of the story is buttressed by the way that it ends.

“So Abraham called tat place ‘The Lord will provide’; as it is said to this day, “On the mount of the Lord it shall be provided.” (Genesis 22:14.)

It’s not a one-way testing that’s happening here. There is mutual accountability in this relationship, there is a mutual testing and trying, there is a push and pull, there is a wrestling with God that is echoed again and again through the Old Testament. Isaac’s grandson Jacob will wrestle with God at the river Jabok and come away limping with a mark on his hip. Marked for life by his encounter with God and the wrestling that they do.   There’s no question in my mind that both Isaac and Abraham are marked by their encounter with God in this moment, changed forever, because in this moment when Abraham is faithful and God is faithful their relationship is sealed forever.

It’s still a very dark difficult and mysterious story one from which we might be tempted to turn away. But we haven’t done that. We keep this story within reach, within view because in some ways it describes our experience of life. Our inscrutable God will demand things of us and ask us to respond.   Sometimes we’ll understand and sometimes we won’t. And sometimes we will be faithful and sometimes we won’t. The relationship that is depicted in this Scripture is the one to which we are called. We are called to wrestle with God. And in that wrestling we will find that God provides, and that God is faithful. So don’t be afraid to wrestle. Don’t be afraid of the struggle. Don’t be afraid to ask questions and to push back. Start here with this story, today, wrestling with God because it is in that wrestling that we discover God’s truth and God’s faithfulness.

It is through wrestling that we finally learn that God’s promises to us are true.

Amen

A Sermon for Wednesday in Holy Week

This sermon, given at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church on April 17, 2014, is based on the Gospel reading for Wednesday in Holy Week. 

You will find that reading here.

Here on Wednesday in Holy Week we sit riveted as the pace of the unfolding drama picks up speed. Today we hear a story that is part John’s account of the Last Supper. We hear the story that sets the machinery of the world into motion and that will finally result in Jesus hanging dead on the cross on Good Friday. It is story of terrible juxtaposition. We have the beloved disciple, the one whom Jesus loved leaning against his breast as the Disciples share this last meal together; and we have Judas, one of the twelve, leaving to summon the temple guard to the place where Jesus will be arrested. This juxtaposition heightens the anxiety we feel when we hear Jesus say, “Very truly I tell you, one of you will betray me,” and we begin to wonder if those words are directed at us.

The study Bible that I use, a New Revised Standard Version, labels this story, “Jesus Foretells his Betrayal.” The NIV uses a similar heading, “Jesus predicts his betrayal.” And the RSV calls this story, “Jesus dismisses Judas Isacriot his betrayer.” Those labels say something very clear.

We do not like this story and we don’t like Judas.

We don’t like it because it is a story about the worst that is in us, betrayal in the face of unconditional love and we don’t like Judas because he hold up a mirror fomr which we cannot avert our eyes.

But if we are driven by our discomfort to turn away from this story too quickly we will have missed a great treasure. For in this story there is good news. In fact John, in the telling of this story, has given us reason to hope and to rejoice. So perhaps a better name for this story in the Gospel of John would be, “Jesus commits himself to being faithful.”

Jesus commits himself to being faithful.

That is certainly good news. Jesus’ faithfulness to us is cause for great celebration. But why is that an appropriate name for this passage and where do we find such good news here in this story of Judas’ betrayal?

The story of the Last Supper, in which we hear this story about Judas and Jesus, appears in all four Gospels. In the three synoptic Gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke the story of Jesus predicting Judas’ betrayal is pretty much the same. In all three he tells the apostles that one of them sitting at the table will betray him. In all three Gospels the apostles become upset and wonder who it will be. And in all three: Matthew, Mark, and Luke Jesus says, “woe to the one by whom the Son of Man is betrayed.”

In John’s Gospel we have all of those elements but we also have a very important addition. John’s Gospel is the only one that has Jesus tell Judas, “Do quickly what you are going to do” (John 13: 27).

To understand why this little addition is so important we need to think for a moment about the Jesus of John’s Gospel. John takes stories from among the the opther Gospels and from the oral traditions and sayings of Jesus and crafts a narrative that portrays a Jesus who is in complete control of his destiny from the beginning to the end. John makes very it explicit; nothing is happening to Jesus that is beyond his ability to stop.

Earlier in John’s Gospel Jesus is talking about himself as the Good Shepherd who lays down his life for his sheep. He says,

“No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it up again. I have received this command from my Father” (John 10:18).

In the chapter following the one we read from today Jesus says,

“I will no longer talk much with you, for the ruler of this world is coming. He has no power over me; but I do as the Father has commanded me, so that the world may know that I love the Father. Rise, let us be on our way” (John 14:30-31).

Again, in John’s Gospel, when we read the story of Jesus’ interview with Pilate, we suddenly understand that it is not really Pilate who is in control of the interrogation process. Pilate is the one asking questions but it is clear that Jesus is in charge. Pilate becomes flustered, frustrated, and angry and John’s Gospel tells us,

“Pilate therefore said to him, “Do you refuse to speak to me? Do you not know that I have power to release you, and power to crucify you? Jesus answered him, ‘You would have no power over me unless it had been given you from above…’” (John 19:11).

Jesus is clearly in control of what is happening here…

Now if we were reading this story for the first time, never having heard it before and not knowing how the story ends, we would be caught up in the tension of the moment. What will he do? The powers of the world have conspired to silence the voice of Emmanuel, “God with us.” Will he put a stop to it? Surely he knows what is coming. Jesus has seen in the life of the Prophets how the world treats those who tell the truth in love and seek to bring us to a greater awareness of God’s presence in our lives. Surely he knows what fate awaits him if Judas leaves on his dark mission.

He has told the apostles that one of them is about to betray him. Will he tell them who it is? “It’s Judas! He is the one! Quick, tie him up and lock him in the closet!” Jesus is in control. What will he do? Will he abandon the humanity that he has taken on, assume his full glory and power and smite those who would arrest, torture and kill him? He is in control here… what is he going to do?

What he does is almost unthinkable. He says to Judas, “Do quickly what you are going to do” (John 13: 27).

 As we sit here reeling from the choice that he has made the story goes on. Judas leaves and the Gospeller reports, “And it was night.” Darkness had fallen on the world.

Hmmm… maybe the heading, “Jesus foretells his betrayal” isn’t strong enough. At this point in the story we might be feeling that a more appropriate heading for this story would include some really nasty epithets for Judas.

But the story isn’t over yet…

 “When he had gone out, Jesus said, “Now the Son of Man has been glorified, and God has been glorified in him. If God has been glorified in him, God will also glorify him in himself and will glorify him at once’” (John 13:31-32).

Now the son of man has been glorified? Now? At once? In this moment when Judas has gone off to betray him? Now before he has been crucified and risen? Now, before he has even been arrested? Why is Jesus saying this here?

Remember that Jesus is in charge, in control here. I made a funny reference a minute ago to the apostles tying Judas up and locking him in the closet. I hope it sounded funny at the time but the point is a serious one. Jesus had a choice to make. Did he look at what was about to happen to him and say, “Hey Let’s just put a stop to this right now before someone gets hurt!” Or did he,

“humble himself and became obedient to the point of death–even death on a cross” (Philippians 2:8).

John wants us to know that Jesus is in charge and he does have a choice. We did not take his life. He gave it for us.

Jesus said, “Do quickly what you are going to do” (John 13: 27) and in that moment he set the terrible machinery of death into motion. He refused to stray from the path. He refused to abandon his humanity and pull himself out of an awful and deteriorating situation.   Instead he remained obedient to the Father and to the task that he had been sent to accomplish, the reconciliation of our relationship with God and the drawing of the whole world to himself.

So this was indeed the moment in which to say,

“Now the Son of Man has been glorified, and God has been glorified in him” (John 13:31) for, “…he humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death–even death on a cross. Therefore God also highly exalted him and gave him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:8-11).

“Jesus commits to being faithful.” That is the heading that I proposed for this story. I am not sure that I will submit that name for the next scholarly translation of the Bible./ Aside from being a little “clunky” there are many moments in the scriptures where we can say that Jesus has made that commitment. But I hope that we can see that this story is not so much about Judas as it is about Jesus.

It is important to see this as a story about Jesus because an interesting thing happens when we read the story that way. Instead of squirming in our seats wondering who he is talking about when he says “One of you will betray me” we can finally begin to admit that he is, in fact, talking about us. We are the ones who betray him. We all betray Jesus in little, and sometimes in not so little ways. When we create idols for ourselves, when we put anything in our life before our relationship with God we are betraying the Son who came to show us that it is our relationship with the God who creates, redeems and sustains us that is the most important thing in our lives. When we place more importance on things than we do on relationships with each other, when we fail to hold up the most vulnerable among us, when we exploit one another as a means to advance ourselves… we are, in those moments and actions, consigning Jesus to the cross.

When the story that we have been talking about today stops being about the betrayer and starts being about the redeemer, the one who chose to be faithful to us even when we were not faithful; who chose to love rather than abandon us, even in the face of unspeakable pain and suffering, suddenly we see that we have been given an invitation to come back to that upper room, to come back to the table.

When we read this as a story about Jesus and not as a story about Judas the betrayals that have haunted us and have kept us from approaching the throne of mercy become a little lighter. Jesus has chosen to stay with us, through the betrayal into the hands of Pilate, through the pain and suffering of the cross and through the pain and suffering of our betrayals. He has chosen, and he shows us, that he will not abandon us. We may approach and ask for the forgiveness that has been promised for he has chosen and,

“neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:38-39).

Amen

Come “Inhabit” the Great Story of Holy Week

When we read the scripture on Sunday morning we are not just reading stories about people who lived two thousand years ago. We are “proclaiming” that the stories that we are reading our also our stories. We are “claiming” them as our own. We are saying that the themes, plot lines and narratives of the Bible are the themes, plot lines, and narratives of our own lives. We are very much like the people in our scriptures, capable of the same tenderness and violence, love and hatred, generosity and greed… We read these stories because they shed light on our own lives and because the “truth” that lies beyond the “details” of the stories are as true for us today as they were for the people in the days that these stories were told around campfires, in the synagogues, and finally, written down for the generations to come.

When we read the scriptures on Sunday morning something else is happening as well. We hear the stories in a way that makes those stories present here and now. We aren’t “remembering” something that happened long ago. We are recalling, bringing into our reality something that is alive and present in and for each of us. When we gather for the Seder Dinner on Maundy Thursday we will hear a prayer that says, “In every generation, a person is obligated to regard himself as if he had left Egypt. It was not only our ancestors whom the Holy One, blessed be He, redeemed from Egypt; rather, He redeemed us, as it is stated: “He brought us out from there, so that He might bring us to the land He promised our fathers, and give it to us.” This is the “stance” from which we hear, read, mark, and inwardly digest our scriptures on Sunday mornings. We are reading the scriptures in a way that allows us to inhabit them and which allows them to inhabit us. The technical term for this kind of “recollection” is “anamnesis.”

This proclamation and recollection, the anamnesis and the claiming of the text that it makes possible, work to inform our interpretive strategy, the lens through which we see and experience the world around us. This shouldn’t sound foreign or strange. There are all kinds of pressures on us all of the time pushing us to adopt someone else’s interpretive strategy or lens. How do you experience people who are “different”? Do you interpret that individual through the lens that has been ground and polished by the media’s portrayal of that person, or of persons of that nationality, skin color, or socio economic status? How do you interpret the news of the day? Do you interpret through the strategy and lens of Fox News, NPR, or MSNBC? We read the texts on Sunday morning, we recite the stories because we want our lens to be ground and polished through our reading, preaching and teaching of the scripture, through our proclamation and claiming of the texts, through our participation in common prayer, and through the hymns that we sing together.

In just a few weeks we will all have a wonderful opportunity to participate in this highly formative process in a very focused and intentional way. Palm Sunday, April 13th will mark the beginning of Holy Week. We mark this special week with daily worship opportunities which culminate in the Triduum: Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday. It is during this period when we recall and make present the events of the Last Supper, Christ’s arrest and trial before Pilate, and his crucifixion death and burial. All of this leads us to the glory of the new dawn, the new creation which breaks upon the world on Easter Day.

Of all the opportunities we have to be formed and shaped by our scripture, by our tradition, and our common prayer, this is perhaps the most focused and intense. Four days, Thursday through Easter Day when we come together as a community, as the Body of Christ and live into and through the story that makes us one.

So come enter into the story. Let it mold and shape you as you experience first hand the circumstances, people, and events of Holy Week. Prepare yourself for that new light that will dawn when we reach the other side of this Lenten Wilderness. Grind and polish your interpretive lens so that you will be better able to see the truth that is illuminated by that wonderful light. Join us as we “inhabit’ the story and the story, God’s word, “inhabits” us.

Peace,

Andy+

 

State of the Parish Address

November 17, 2013

Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church

1833 Regent Street

Madison Wisconsin

 

Good Morning!  And welcome to an event that is surely the highlight of the church year…  Annual Meeting Sunday!

I know that you all are looking forward to a clearly articulated and well presented set of hard data points that will allow us all to immediately grasp the true state of the parish:

numbers, lists, dates,

asset and liability tables,  bank balances and accounting statements,

recent results, historical trends, and projected outcomes…

Yeah…   All of the stuff that makes for a scintillating and uplifting state of the parish report…  And I promise…  We will get to all of that today.  Well… We’ll at least get to some of it.

But before we do I would like to establish some context, to help grind and polish our interpretive lens a little, so that we can approach that data set with some shared understandings and perspective.

To do that I want to tell you about three extraordinary moments that I experienced in the last two weeks:

A Celebration of New Ministry at St James Milwaukee, a small downtown Parish that is facing some extraordinary challenges

A Gathering of the of the Clergy of the Diocese of Milwaukee and the presentation that we heard from two members of the Virginia Theological Seminary Faculty and Staff

And the first Church Development Institute training weekend of the 2013 – 2014 academic year

So first stop, downtown Milwaukee:

The Reverend Drew Bunting has been at St. James for over six months now and finally, after a lot of pastoral work, a season of relationship and trust building, and some serious calendar crunching, they planned a Celebration of New Ministry for November 5th

Drew and his wife April Berends, who is the Rector of St Mark’s Milwaukee, have been in the diocese for several years and, through our contacts at Clergy Day, Diocesan Convention and service on the Diocesan Executive Council,  I have come to appreciate him as a colleague and a friend.  Most importantly however I have come to respect and admire him as the Lead Vocalist and Bass Player of the Diocese of Milwaukee’s own Clergy Rock Band Monstrance in which I a play Lead Guitar.

I was a little intimidated but also deeply honored, when Drew asked me to preach at a service where the Bishop and a whole pack of Diocesan clergy would gather with the people of Saint James to mark a wonderful and tender moment in the life of Saint James Episcopal Church.

The moment came; the Gospel was proclaimed amongst the people, the Deacon and the acolytes came back to the chancel, I knelt before the Bishop for his blessing and then I walked to the crossing, stood at the head of the center aisle.  I felt honored and privileged to have been asked to speak to them in such a wonderful and tender moment.

            “Wonderful and Tender”

“Wonderful” – rich with symbolism and pageantry, laden with meaning and promise.

We had followed the cross into sacred space.  We had prayed for Drew, for the community gathered, for the larger church, and for one another.  The congregation was about to present Drew with Gifts symbolizing their ministry together in that place, formalizing the partnership and commitment to mission that they had been developing for the last six months.  The congregation and their Priest were making public vows to one another and beginning a new chapter in the life of that community. 

A truly wonderful moment.

Standing there in a building that had stood in that spot for 160 years, in a community with a rich and vibrant history, a parish that had once been the largest parish in the Diocese of Milwaukee but that is now struggling to maintain its crumbling building, that worships with fewer than fifty people on a Sunday, and that is only able to afford half time clergy, it was also a moment marked by great tenderness. 

It wasn’t tender because of the expressions of love and respect they would wear or because of the gentle grace with which they would offer Drew those gifts of ministry. 

That was a tender moment because the title of the event in which we were all participating included the word “new.”

“New…”  A celebration of “New” ministry.  Just say that word and watch people squirm. 

“New” by definition means that something else has become “Old.”  

“New” implies movement away from past, glorious or painful, and at the same time it announces movement towards the future… promising or frightening.

The real truth is that “New” is just a kindler gentler word for “Change.”  “Change”

Yeah…  So any event that has the word “New” in its title is a tender moment, the kind of tender you imagine when someone takes a meat tenderizer in hand.

Now be at ease…  As you can see I escaped that preaching moment relatively unscathed.  I didn’t use that moment to start swinging any threatening kitchen implements and neither did they.   

I instead pointed out to them the truth that our history as a church, our history as a people of faith, even the scriptures that they had chosen for that celebration… are filled with tender moments:

Moments of challenge,

Moments of movement away from something and toward something else,

Moments of change,

Instances and examples of “New.”

I made the assertion that the tenderness that they were feeling as they celebrated their “New” ministry together was, in some ways, not unique to their context and situation; that it is part and parcel of what we all experience as we live our lives as members of what our predecessors in first century Palestine referred to as “The Way.”   The Christian life is a journey, characterized by challenge, by movement, and by change – or to use our own lexicon, transformation and conversion.

What I didn’t share with them that night, because there was a reception to get to and we could all smell the food, was that, even if we disregard our corporate history, our legacy and heritage of challenge, movement, and change, their tender moment of “New” Ministry is not unique to their situation and context. 

 

This past Thursday the clergy of the Diocese of Milwaukee gathered at Saint Peter’s in Fort Atkinson to participate in a conversation with Dr. Lisa Kimball and The Rev. Kyle Oliver.  

Lisa is the Director of the Center for the Ministry of Teaching, and Professor of Christian Formation and Congregational Leadership at Virginia Theological Seminary.

Kyle Oliver is a priest of the Diocese of Milwaukee, a UW Madison and Saint Francis House Alum who has preached from this pulpit, sung in our choir, and who participated in the life of this parish in some significant ways while he was here in Madison.  Kyle is also the Digital Missioner and On Line Learning Lab Coordinator at the Center for the Ministry of Teaching at VTS.

They were here to help the clergy of this diocese to name a Tender moment that we are experiencing as a church.  They started out by talking about the “Nones.”

They weren’t talking about women in black habits who have taken vows of poverty, chastity and obedience.  They were talking about the growing number of people in this country who, when filling out questionnaires that ask about their religious affiliation check the box that says “None.”

Recent studies tell us that:

1 out of 5 Americans are religiously unaffiliated.

One third, one in three, adults under the age of 30 are religiously unaffiliated.

Part of this isn’t new.  It’s really about people starting to be truthful about who and where they are.  They don’t have a tradition that they claim as their own.

27% of Americans surveyed don’t expect to have a religious funeral

            To them Church is irrelevant – it doesn’t sew their life together. 

44% of people spend no time seeking “eternal wisdom”

“I’m not even thinking about the existential questions – I am satisfied with what I am experiencing now”

 

A 2010 Study by Hartford Seminary shows that across the board:

Congregations are less healthy than they were 10 years ago

Congregations across the board have experienced Drops in financial health and attendance

There is continuing high level of conflict in 2 out of 3 congregations

Our membership is aging – 75% old line congregations are comprised of less than 10% young adults

Median worship attendance is down from 130 to108.

One in four congregations  have fewer than 50 people in worship on Sunday mornings.

 

But wait!  There is more!  How do young people see us?   A recent Barna group study says they see us as:

boring

judgmental

overprotective

exclusive

unfriendly towards doubters

antagonistic towards science

shallow

And the truth is that these statistics aren’t new.  We have been asking questions, polling people, sifting their responses, and crunching the numbers for a long time and the results I just cited aren’t going away.

 

So…  Are we having fun yet?  Remember the word “Tender?”  The whole church is experiencing a “Tender” moment.  The world around us is changing culture, society, economics, politics our world is changing.  And we have, in the church, spent a lot of time coming to grips with the truth that we need to change too!…  Yes a “Tender” moment indeed.

Which brings me to the third event of the last two weeks that I want to share with you this morning.

 

Yesterday fifty members of the Diocese of Milwaukee gathered at Holy Wisdom Monastery for the first Church Development Institute Training Weekend of the 2013 – 2014 academic season.

The Church Development Institute is a national program that the Diocese of Milwaukee underwrites here in Southern Wisconsin to bring Organizational Development theories and practices to the life of the church.  It appropriates and adapts ideas that are used in other contexts, it teaches and shares models and methods that have been developed specifically for the church, and it helps people to train fresh eyes on the life of their congregations.  CDI trains people to understand the emotional and relationship systems that are present in parishes and to help facilitate and manage change in ways that are healthy and productive.

The CDI curriculum is a two year cycle and every year a cohort graduates out and a new cohort begins. Yesterday we had a large group of first year students and we began as we always do, by introducing ourselves and giving offering one reason for the excitement that we were feeling as we began another year.  I looked around the room, I saw Henry Peters, one of four members of our parish who graduated from CDI several years ago and who is now interning as a CDI Trainer.  I saw Scott Wright, Peter Luisi-Mills, and Mary Hastings, all of whom are filling positions of leadership in this parish and who will graduate from CDI at the end of this year.  I had a lot of excitement to talk about!   

What I said was, “I am excited to be here because whether we like it or not, whether or not we choose to acknowledge it, even if we try to insulate ourselves from it…  the church, just like the world around us, is changing all of the time.  And I am excited to be here learning how to manage and facilitate that change in healthy and productive ways.”

 

The church, just like the world around us, is “New” every day!  Changing contexts, shifting paradigms, broadening perspectives, and new discoveries make “New” a daily occurrence and reality in our lives.  The key is to recognize and embrace that reality in ways that allow us to do what Saint James Milwaukee was doing two weeks ago.

Mother Dorota and I were at Saint James for their “Celebration” of New Ministry.

They had, over the six months that Drew had been with them, moved to a place where they could begin to celebrate the newness, the movement, the change that they are experiencing.  It was a “Tender” moment but it was also a “Wonderful” moment.

 

OK.  So I understand if you are starting to feel like the victims of a little bait and switch here.  This particular moment has been billed as a “State of the Parish Address.”  When I started out this morning I promised, or at least alluded to data sets, numbers, accounts, trajectories and projections.  What you have heard so far this morning has focused on the condition and state of the larger church, and on our relationship to the world around us.

I am sorry if you are disappointed but I need to admit right now that I am going to leave the data sets for others to deliver when we get downstairs and have had something to eat.

What I want to do in the next couple of minutes, and I promise that is all it will take, is to help shift our focus from the “Tender” to the “Wonderful” so that we can all see why we should be celebrating this new, and I believe extraordinary, moment in the life of the church and of this parish. 

 

Back to the Barna Group’s study.  Young people see the “Church” as:

boring

judgmental

overprotective

exclusive

unfriendly towards doubters

antagonistic towards science

shallow

When Lisa Kimball and Kyle Oliver showed us that list of characteristics they said that there is not a word on that list that our tradition, Anglicanism and the Episcopal Church, is not well equipped to address.

I agree with that statement and I would say further that there is not a word on that list that we, the Body of Christ here at 1833 Regent Street are not especially well equipped to address.

 

We are a vibrant, spirit filled, parish that is moving forward on a spiritual journey with a joy and excitement that is palpable and contagious!

We are the fourth largest parish in the Diocese of Milwaukee, we are debt free, and our buildings are in reasonably good condition.

We are participating in the life of the larger community, hosting Girls Scout Troops, AA Groups, Community Association meetings, recitals, lectures, and offering our own Concert series to our neighbors.

We are actively engaged in study, gathering here in this building, in one another’s homes and in public spaces reading the Bible and stories of Christian Witness in the world.

We are reaching out to the broader community through a newly redeveloped web site and communications strategy that employs social media, printed materials and extensive sharing though word of mouth.

We are a parish that last year gave $40,000 a tenth of our operating budget to outreach, working to manifest God’s light and love in the lives of people whose circumstances have left them, in some cases, without the means to live the life for which we were all created.

We are working hard to engage and embrace the realities of our changing context and the changes in the world around us sending members of our parish to train with the Church Development Institute.

Our elected leadership is engaging in a process of Mutual Ministry Review that utilizes CDI concepts and practices, working intentionally to strengthen the structures and practices that make us a vital and growing parish.

We have been wise and faithful stewards of the tremendously generous gift that was given to us by Tom Shaw.  A bequest that has allowed us to engage a design firm to develop a master plan for our campus and buildings that will assure that our real assets will serve and promote our mission and ministry well into our future.

We have taken the extraordinarily mission oriented step of calling a second full time Priest to serve and minister among us in this place, becoming only the second parish in the diocese to staff such a position, but knowing that this is the way forward for our time, our context, and our community.

We are a parish that is on the move, working to answer God’s call to us, our vocation as the Body of Christ and that alone is cause for celebration.

The Church is changing, is in a constant state of adaptation, movement and evolution each and every day.  It has to change because the world around us, culture, society, economics, politics is changing.  And we, here at Saint Andrew’s, are in a place where we are able, each and every day, to celebrate the “New” ministry that is ours.  What a gift to be in a place like this!

 

But Wait!  There is more…

Hang in there.  I am in the home stretch now…

In one year we will be Celebrating our 100th anniversary as a parish here on the near west side of Madison Wisconsin.  We will recognize and honor all of the “Tender” moments that have gone before, the changes that we have made as our context has shifted and our circumstances have changed.

We will honor the people whose perseverance has brought us to this place, to this physical location and building, and to this spiritual place where we can celebrate and give thanks.  We will honor the sacrifices they made, the work that they did, and the faith that they expressed.

We will also celebrate the future that lies before us, the possibilities that God has placed in our path.  We will even celebrate the “Tender” moments that we will face together.  Because we will face them together, with the strength of a community that has a long history of facing and celebrating such moments; a long history of facing moments of challenge, moments of movement away from something and toward something else, moments of change, Instances and examples of “New,” and of allowing ourselves to be transformed and converted into an incarnate manifestation of Christ in the world.

I hope that you are looking forward to the next year as much as I am, to truly celebrating where we have been and to discerning our future and to growing as the Body of Christ through Worship, Service Learning and Fellowship right here at 1822 Regent Street. 

Peace,

Andy+

 

 

 

Who Is My Neighbor? A sermon for July 14, 2013

This sermon is based on the readings for Proper 10 Year C in the Revised Common Lectionary.

You can find those readings here

This sermon was preached at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Madison Wisconsin on July 14th, 2013, the morning after George Zimmerman was found “not guilty” in the death of Trayvon Martin.

The Good Samaritan.  Those words just roll off our tongues.  We say them so often, we hear them so often, that we probably don’t think very much about them when we hear them.  We hear that phrase used on the news for the person who stops to give aid at a traffic accident, at a fire, for anyone who goes out of their way to help someone that they don’t know.   There’s even, if you look it up on the Internet, a “Good Sams Club.”  And so if you are someone who goes out of you way to help others you can sign up and be a member of the Good Sams Club.

But I think all of that repetition and easy usage has domesticated the story that we heard this morning so that when we think of the story of the good Samaritan we probably hear a version very similar to this “Beginners Bible,” this well thumbed volume that lives on the bookshelves in my son’s room.  The version that is in this Bible goes like this:

A Good Neighbor

“I know that I should love God,”

a man once said to Jesus.

“I should love him with all my heart.

And I should love my neighbor too.

But who is my neighbor?”

Jesus told him a story.

There was a man walking along a road.

He was going on a trip.

Suddenly, robbers jumped out at him.

They hit him.

They took all the things that he had with him.

Andy they left him, hurt, lying by the road.

A short time later, step, step, step,

Someone came down the road.

It was a man who worked in God’s temple.

He could help the hurt man!

But, not, when he saw the hurt man,

He crossed the road.

He passed by on the other side!

Soon another man came.

But he passed by, too.

Then, clop, clop, clip, clop,

Along came a man with a Donkey.

This was a man from a different country.

When he saw the hurt man, he stopped.

He put bandages on his hurt places.

And he took the man to a house w

Where he could rest and get will.

Jesus finished his story.

He looked at the man.

“Who was the neighbor to the hurt man?”

Jesus asked.

“The one who helped him”, said the man.

“Then you can be a neighbor to anyone

Who needs your help,” said Jesus.

                                      The Beginner’s Bible: Timeless Children’s Stories

This is a very different version that the one that we heard from Luke’s Gospel this morning.  There are lots of details that are omitted from this reading.  I think that they are omitted because the original version, the one from Luke’s Gospel, is filled with tension, conflict, and, at its heart, an accusation.

A man, a lawyer well versed in the Mosaic Law, a master of the traditions of his community, stands to trap Jesus and he asks him a question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”  Now Jesus employs an age-old clerical trick, one that I am sure he learned in an Episcopal seminary, he answers the man’s question with a question of his own,  “What is written in the law?  What do you read there?”  And this lawyer, true to form, rises to the top of the class.  He gives the perfect answer, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself” (Luke 10:26).  And Jesus says give the man a prize, top student of the day.  But then the real tension begins.

“But wanting to justify himself, he asked Jesus, ‘And who is my neighbor”  Luke 10:29)?  Seeking to justify himself…  we know that somewhere in the back of this person’s mind he knows.  He knows that he is not living up to this commandment to love his neighbor as himself.  He can probably review the tapes and he can see moments where he has failed to love the “other.  So he asks Jesus to limit the scope of this commandment.  “Surely you don’t mean them.  Surely you don’t mean him.  You can’t possible mean her.  Love my neighbor as myself?  You must mean these folks here with me, the people with whom I have surrounded myself,  The people I have chosen as my neighbors.

I think that we need to re hear this original version of Luke’s Gospel because it is in this moment that we are convicted.  This is a story that tells us how to live according to God’s commandment and love.  We call the answer that the lawyer gave “The Summary of the Law” and we can probably all recite those words.  But in that moment where Jesus says, “You have given the right answer; do this and you will live,” there are those tapes playing in our heads confronting us with those moments when we have not quite fulfilled our vocation as the children of God by loving our neighbor as ourselves.  And so we, like the lawyer engage in a process of self-justification.

Listen to what Jesus does.  He tells the lawyer a story.  A man is beset by robbers and is left lying, bleeding in the ditch.  He is passed by, his plight ignored, by a Priest and a Levite.  Now everyone in the audience hearing this story, and certainly the lawyer, knew that if the Priest or the Levite had ventured into the ditch and touched this bleeding man they would have been ritually impure, unclean, and could not have gone into the temple to perform their sacred duties.  And so at some level, somewhere, in the back of our mind, these two people are “justified” in not loving this person as they love themselves.  All of the people listening to Jesus tell this story to the Lawyer also knew that it was a ruse that robbers frequently used; putting someone in the ditch who appeared to be injured and wounded to lure you off the road and into the brush where you could be attacked and robbed yourself.  So as the people were listening to this story they would have been checking their way down through their internal list and would have thought, “look there’s another way to let these guys off the hook.”  They would have been endangering themselves personally f they had ventured into the ditch to help.

You can hear the self-talk now…  They were on important business, probably visiting parishioners in the hospital.  They had things to do, places to be, people to meet.  They are important people and they just didn’t have time to get involved.

So they didn’t want to become impure, tainted by association, they didn’t want to risk their personal safety.  They didn’t want to interrupt their busy schedule…  The list of justifications goes on and on.  This is the moment in the story where Jesus pulls all the stops and says something really shocking to get our attention.  The person who does stop to lend aid to the man lying in the ditch is a Samaritan.

The Samaritans were people from the tribes of Israel who had intermarried with the people of the land of Canaan and whose worship practices were a mixture of the Jewish peoples practice and the practices of the people of the land.  The Samaritans and the Jews did not get along.  They despised one another.  So the task of being a neighbor falls to this despised person, who takes the time, who risks going into the brush, who becomes even more impure and unclean by tending to his bloody wounds pouring wine and oil on them.  He takes a day out of his busy schedule to stay with him at the inn.  And then he gives of his own resources to help.  Here is the accusation.

How far will we go to justify our failure to love our neighbor as ourselves.  And do we have to see someone in whom we think that behavior so unlikely that it’s almost unimaginable, to convict us of our own hard heartedness?

This Gospel reading today calls us to look within ourselves and find the places where we seek to justify our failure to love those who speak differently than we do, who dress differently, who look different, who love differently, even those who speak of God using different names and different images that we do.  The truth is that all of God’s children are our neighbors.  And we are called to embrace that reality and to live our lives in a way that demonstrates that truth to the entire world.

We have had a little too much of courtroom drama this week.  But that’s exactly what we have here in this story as this lawyer rises to challenge Jesus and to try and entrap him.   And it is we who are being convicted in the court of the Gospel of our hard heartedness and failure to love our neighbor as ourselves.

We have had a clear demonstration of the consequences of failing to love our neighbor as ourselves and we know that we cannot afford to live in guarded and gated communities; ghettos of like-minded people who look and dress just like us.  We cannot afford to live in a world where we are suspicious of those who do not look like us, dress like us, talk and walk like us.  We cannot afford to live in communities where to be “other” is to be immediately suspect.  We are called to something more.  We are called to help build a world where rather than getting out of the car, armed with a gun, to confronting a young man with a bag of skittles and an iced tea, we roll down our window and offer him a ride home in the rain.

Amen

Blessing Same Sex Relationships: Doing the Theology

The issue of blessing same sex relationships is once again front and center in the the life of the Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee.  Bishop Miller has decided not to authorize the use of the Blessing Rite that General Convention approved for trial use in 2012.  His concerns are with the language and structure of the rite itself and with the possibility that offering the sacrament of Marriage to heterosexual couples and a blessing to homosexual couples creates a second class status for some.

The Bishop is also concerned that we have not yet done the theology necessary to the establishment of a new practice, the blessing or marriage of same sex couples, in the church.

The church has been wrestling with this issue for a long time and page upon page has been written in support to, and in opposition to, the acceptance of homosexuality as compatible with the Christian life and whether we should recognize, honor and bless committed, monogamous, covenantal relationships between same sex couples.

As the Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee works to develop a “generous pastoral response” to our LGBT brothers and sisters I will be working to highlight and lift up the theological and pastoral work that has already been done.  It is my hope that this will assist us all as we work to discern a way forward together.

As a beginning I am re-posting this sermon from May 13, 2012, just about two months prior to last year’s General Convention and a blog post that I wrote on June 30, just a week prior to convention.

These two posts begin describe the scriptural and theological basis for my assertion that we should be offering the sacrament of marriage to all of God’s children and I hope that they serve as an introduction to the important conversation that we will be engaging in the months to come as the Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee.

The Very Rev. Andrew B. Jones

May 13th, 2012

Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church – Madison, Wisconsin

This sermon is based on the readings for the 6th Sunday of Easter in year B of the Revised Common Lectionary.  You can find those readings here.

Our reading from the Acts of the Apostles this morning is only a few short lines.  So as we read through it we may be tempted to rush ahead to our Gospel text of the day.  Baptizing Gentiles doesn’t seem like such a big deal to us in this day and age so let’s just jump straight to what Jesus has to say about love!  But if we take another look at the reading from Acts and read it in its context, read it thinking about the themes of the book of Acts, we begin to recognize that this is a passage fraught with conflict: fraught with potential and hope.  It is a passage that demands our attention today.

It says in this passage that the Holy Spirit descended upon a group of people and Peter said, “Can anyone withhold the water for baptizing these people who have received the Holy Spirit just as we have?” (Acts 10:47)  Apparently, someone has been saying that the Gentiles should not be baptized.  We get another clues as to what has been happening when we go back a few more lines and read that “The circumcised believers who had come with Peter were astounded that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out even on the Gentiles…” (Acts 10:45) people who they thought were on the “outside.”  The leaders of “The Way, this new faith, this new idea about how to be in relationship with God were in conflict with one another.  Should converts to the faith be required to be circumcised according to the Jewish tradition and Mosaic Law in order to participate in this community?

There was a lot at stake here for Peter and the leaders of the early church.  They are members of a new and growing movement trying to understand how to live out their new faith and their new understanding and to integrate that with their Jewish identity.  At the same time this new movement is under the scrutiny and suspicion of Rome who is very concerned about this movement’s ability to claim people’s allegiance and to subvert their fealty to the Emperor.  This new way of being is also being regarded with great suspicion and hostility by the temple authorities, the Scribes and the Pharisees who, even as we approach the day of the destruction of the Temple and the end of Temple Judaism, are concerned and angered by claims that Jesus is the Messiah.  They are anxious about the competing claims of this new group in their midst.  They are also angry about the ministry and preaching of that radical, liberal malcontent who is claiming that God’s love and grace is open to everyone… even to the Gentiles.  You know… that radical, liberal malcontent Paul!

Paul, whose ministry and teaching is in conflict with the Temple authorities, is also in conflict with Peter and the leaders of the early church.  Paul is saying that people who are converted to the faith from outside of Judaism should not be required to undergo circumcision in order to become members, and Peter and the leaders of the church have been fighting him.  But here, in this moment, Peter meets a group of Gentiles and he learns that he must in fact offer them the sacrament that forms us as the church, and that he must offer that sacrament without asking them to become circumcised.

What evidence do Peter and his group of “circumcised believers” find that causes them to change their minds?  After all, in the seventeenth chapter of Genesis God makes a covenant with Abraham and in that covenant makes a lot of promises to Abraham and to the people of Israel through him:

I will make you exceedingly fruitful; and I will make nations of you, and kings shall come from you. 7I will establish my covenant between me and you, and your offspring after you throughout their generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and to your offspring after you. 8And I will give to you, and to your offspring after you, the land where you are now an alien, all the land of Canaan, for a perpetual holding; and I will be their God” (Genesis 17:6-8).

These promises are so deeply imbedded within the people of Israel that even as they come to this new faith they are clinging to them, to the reality and to the understanding that this is not something new, this is not something drastically different.  This is a fulfillment of the faith and the promises that were established in their forefathers, the faith that they have understood and held all of their lives.

In that seventeenth chapter of Genesis God goes on and tells Abraham that his part in this covenant is to circumcise every male among his people.

You shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskins, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and you” (Genesis 17:11).

And a few short lines later God says:

“Any uncircumcised male who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin shall be cut off from his people; he has broken my covenant” (17:14).

So as Peter and the leaders of the church, in this new and evolving culture and context, with hostility from the synagogue and from Rome confronting them on every side, trying to understand how to be faithful and to live out the teachings of Jesus, are confronted by people who have not been circumcised and yet want to be baptized… they are deeply troubled.

What could make them change their minds?  All along they have been saying “no” to requests like this one.  Something must have shifted their position!   What, short of the very teachings of Jesus himself, could have led them to affect this radical shift in their understanding?

But if you go back and read through the Gospels, through Jesus’ teachings, Jesus doesn’t say anything about circumcision!  We know that he himself was circumcised.  We have that story in our sacred texts.  And we know that Jesus says through his words and actions, over and over again, that the Kingdom of God is for all people.  But Jesus himself does not address the specific issue of circumcision.  He doesn’t ever say whether or not circumcision is a requirement for being a member of his Body, the Church.  So by what evidence do Peter and his colleagues abandon this requirement that is as old as the book of Genesis?

Go back to our passage from the book of Acts and we will see that it was the presence of the Holy Spirit in those who sought the sacrament of Baptism that convinced Peter that he must in fact offer them this blessing.  The people there began to speak in tongues and to extoll God.  Peter and his friends saw this as evidence of the Holy Spirit in these people.  God was already there.  God was already present in these people.  How could they possibly refuse to baptize them?

Now that may seem like a radical thing to do: to overturn all those years of tradition and that sense of scripture based on what seems to be their subjective observation of an event in their lives there in that moment.  But there is scriptural warrant for this kind of interpretation and this kind of change.

In the 14th chapter of the Gospel of John, Jesus says:

 ‘I have said these things to you while I am still with you. But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything, and remind you of all that I have said to you” (John 14:25-31).

Two chapters later in the Gospel of John Jesus says:

 “I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now.  When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth; for he will not speak on his own, but will speak whatever he hears, and he will declare to you the things that are to come” (John 16.12-13).

Jesus himself says that revelation will be on going, that the holy Spirit will come and will guide us into change, that the Holy Spirit will move us forward, and that God is not done speaking yet.

So when Peter and his colleagues encounter these Gentiles who begin to speak in tongues and to extoll God, and they perceive this to be a manifestation of the fruits of the spirit, they baptize them.

We are reading this morning from the 10th chapter of Acts and really, this is the beginning of the end of this conflict.  The conflict between Paul, with his radical liberal views, and Peter and the circumcised believers has been building for the first ten chapters of the book of Acts, in chapter 15 it comes to a head.  In chapter 15 Paul and Barnabas are talking to other church leaders in Antioch and we read:

“And after Paul and Barnabas had no small dissension and debate with them, Paul and Barnabas and some of the others were appointed to go up to Jerusalem to discuss this question with the apostles and the elders. So they were sent on their way by the church…” (Acts 15:2-3).

No small dissension and debate!  They were sent on their way to meet with Peter and the elders of the church.  Seems to me they were going to General Convention.  In the end Paul and Barnabas prevailed.  After a long and serious conversation Peter stood up and said to the rest of the church:

My brothers, you know that in the early days God made a choice among you, that I should be the one through whom the Gentiles would hear the message of the good news and become believers. And God, who knows the human heart, testified to them by giving them the Holy Spirit, just as he did to us; and in cleansing their hearts by faith he has made no distinction between them and us” (Acts 15:7-9).

So just to make sure we understand what we are talking about here… We have the early church struggling to find its way forward, struggling to define its mission and vocation to the rest of the world.  It is doing that in a context that is shifting dramatically and there is opposition from the culture around them, and from those in authority over the nation of Israel.  There is dissension within the church itself.  And then they are confronted with something that seems to go against the scriptures that they hold sacred and which challenges the very core of their beliefs.  These uncircumcised Gentiles have come seeking the sacrament of baptism, the sacrament that binds us one to another and makes us the church.  And in the face of that challenge, the church changes and offers that sacrament because of its faith and trust in the manifestation of the fruits of the Holy Spirit.

Just to make sure that we understand what we are talking about… we are talking about the sacrament of baptism.  But all week long, as I wrestled with these passages, I was confronted by the reality that we could just as well be talking about the sacrament of marriage.

On Tuesday night this week we gathered with a group of people here in Madison at Saint Luke’s, to talk about the materials that have been presented to General Convention by the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music.  We looked at the thirty-eight year history of legislation in General Convention around the blessing of same gender unions.  We read through the theological points being offered for consideration by the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music.  We looked at the materials they have developed to prepare people in same gender unions to have their union blessed.  We looked at the extensive study guide that they have prepared to help congregations and dioceses discern whether or not they are called to participate in the three-year trial use of the liturgy that they have developed.  And we sat together in that space and we read through the liturgy.

Before we began that reading there were people in the room who were uncomfortable with what we were doing.  They were uncomfortable with the idea that we were considering this at all.  There were other people who felt that this is not enough.  “It’s a blessing not a marriage and why can’t we have the same sacrament that everyone else has?”  By the time we finished reading that liturgy everyone in the room was in a very different place…

A very powerful experience, a liturgy that recognizes the covenantal nature of relationships and makes room for the church to offer it’s blessing on two people who have made life long monogamous commitments to one another in the kind of love and joy that is manifested by God’s relationship to us and by God’s relationship to the church.

It was particularly difficult to come home from that meeting on Tuesday night and to learn that the state of North Carolina had passed an amendment to its constitution banning same gender unions, and civil unions, and partnerships: stripping away hospital visitation rights and all sorts of things that married people take for granted.  It was a difficult and strange juxtaposition.

It was even stranger then the next night when I came home from an all day retreat with the Diocesan Executive Council and the Diocesan Strategic Planning Task Force, and heard my son exclaim from his room down the hall that he had just read on Face Book that President Obama had affirmed same sex marriages in a televised interview with a reporter from ABC.  It has been a difficult and tumultuous week.

This issue is not going away.  Our nation is grappling with it.  Our government is grappling with it.  And my brothers and sisters, denominations all across this country are wrestling with this issue right now.

We, and I say that because I believe this is true for most if not all of us,…  I can say without doubt that I know and love many people who love people of the same gender.  And I have perceived holiness of life and the movement of the Holy Spirit in many of those people.  I know many people who are in monogamous, lifelong committed partnerships with people of the same gender and I have seen the fruits of the Spirit and the ends and purposes of marriage served and made manifest in those relationships.  And I believe that we are confronted and convicted by that truth and that the manifestation of the Holy Spirit leading us and teaching us to a new thing.

This summer I am serving as a deputy to the General Convention of the Episcopal Church in Indianapolis.  Last April I went to a workshop in Atlanta sponsored by the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music as it developed the materials and resources that are now available to all of us in “The Blue Book” so that we can prepare for this conversation at General Convention. I am proud to have been a part of that work.  And I will be voting to allow the three year trial use of this liturgy when we gather at General Convention this summer.

In the time between now and then, and while we are there, I will also be praying.  I will be praying that we in this church and that we in this diocese will be allowed to recognize, and to honor, and to bless the outpouring of the Holy Spirit that we experience in the same gender couples who are members of this parish, who are members of this community, who are members of the Body of Christ, and who are beloved children of God.  I will be praying because I believe, that faced with the evidence of the Spirit’s work among us, we must, must, bless what God is doing in our midst.

Amen.

The Very Rev. Andrew B. Jones

June 30, 2012

Three years ago, the 76th General Convention of the Episcopal Church passed resolution C056:

“Resolved, the House of Deputies concurring, That the 76th General Convention acknowledge the changing circumstances in the United States and in other nations, as legislation authorizing or forbidding marriage, civil unions or domestic partnerships for gay and lesbian persons is passed in various civil jurisdictions that call forth a renewed pastoral response from this Church, and for an open process for the consideration of theological and liturgical resources for the blessing of same gender relationships; and be it further

Resolved, That the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music, in consultation with the House of Bishops, collect and develop theological and liturgical resources, and report to the 77th General Convention;”

As part of the process of “collecting and developing” resources the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music held a Church wide Consultation in Atlanta GA in March of 2011.   Each diocese was asked to send one lay and one clergy deputy to participate in a process designed:

“to inform the deputies about the work of the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music in response to Resolution 2009-C056;

to engage the deputies in theological reflection in response to the Commission’s work, and to solicit feedback that would inform the Commission and its task groups as they continued their work;

to equip the deputies to report to the rest of their deputations and engage them in ongoing theological reflection about the blessing of same-gender relationships.”

I attended this gathering as the clergy deputy from the Diocese of Milwaukee.

As we were introduced to the process and the materials that we would be using at the consultation It was made very clear to us that we were gathered to engage the work with which the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music had been charged, specifically, the collection and development of theological and liturgical resources to be considered by General Convention 2015 for blessing, not for marrying, same gender couples.

This was a very important distinction. When the church gathered at General Convention in 2009 the church was not in a place to talk about a marriage rite. It was important, if this work was to move forward, that we be clear that the materials being collected and developed were for blessing and not designed to be a marriage rite.

We are now in a very different place.  Resolution 2009-C056 acknowledged that circumstances in the United States and in other nations had changed with regard to same gender couples and in they have continued to change in the three years since.  Public opinion poles for the first time show that a majority of Americans favor or approve of same gender marriage.  The president of the United Sates endorsed same gender marriage in a nationally televised interview.  Many states here in the US and much of Europe have now legalized same gender marriage.  Great Britain is wrestling with legislation that will make it legal for people of the same gender to marry.  And within our own church people are moving, hearts are changing, and the topic of discussion has begun to shift.

I have heard from many people that the theological foundation for the blessing rites that will come before our General Convention in July is inadequate.  I would argue that it is adequate if we are talking about blessing.  I would agree that it is inadequate if we are talking about marriage.   It seems, from much of what I have read, that we are now, in fact, talking about marriage.  I believe that we are finally having the right conversation!

I am always pleased when a couple chooses, for the wedding the passage from the Gospel of Mark that says two people become one flesh.  This reading gives me the opportunity to point out that no one present in the church that day has the power to effect such a marvelous thing.  None of us gathered in the congregation has the ability to make two people one flesh.  Only God can do that.  And so what we are doing is gathering to witness and celebrate something that God has done, is doing, and promises to do forever in the life of the two people who stand before us.

Our Book of Common Prayer says “We have come together in the presence of God to witness and bless the joining together of this man and this woman in Holy Matrimony” (BCP p. 423).  We are not “joining” them.  God has/is/will do the joining.  We are there to “witness and bless.”

The Book of Common Prayer also says that “The union of husband wife is intended by God for their mutual joy; for the help and comfort given one another in prosperity and adversity; and, when it is God’s will, for the procreation of children and their nurture in the knowledge and love of the Lord” (BCP p. 423).

I believe that the conversation has shifted from blessing to marriage because of our experience of same gender couples whose common life serves and manifest the ends and purposes of marriage.  Many, if not most of us, have experienced same gender couples whose life long commitment can be seen to signify “to us the mystery of the union between Christ and his Church…” (BCP p. 423).  These relationships are characterized by the mutual joy that the partners find in their relationship and in the help and comfort that they give to one another in prosperity and adversity.   Many of the couples that we are considering here have raised or are raising children and the generativity of their union is manifest in the love and spirit we observe in their children.

I am not saying that the lives of all same gender couples reflect and serve the ends and purposes of marriage but I neither would I make that claim for all marriages between people of different gender.   When we agree to witness and bless the union of two people we do so because we see the ends and purposes of marriage being served in their relationship and union and because we see the fruits of the spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, manifest in their common life.  Often we only see the seeds, or the beginnings, the early growth of these fruits and we witness and bless their union in the faith and hope that those seeds, that early growth will blossom into a new creation in Christ.

I said before that I am pleased when a couple asks me to preach on Mark 10:6-9, 13-16 at their wedding because it allows me to point out that it is God who is effecting their union.  I am pleased because I believe that the implication of this passage of scripture is clear.  If God has/is/will join two people, making them one flesh, if we observe the ends and purposes of marriage being served in their union, and if we see the Fruit of the Spirit manifest in their common life… how can we, the church possibly refuse to bless what God has done?

My experience of same gender couples leads me to believe that we should be having a conversation, not about blessing, but about marriage.  There are many in the church who now share this view.  The Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee asks “is the proper matter for marriage simply two human beings?”  Along with a growing number of people in the church, lay and ordained, I would answer with a resounding “yes!”  But this “yes” leads to another question.

Does this mean that God’s truth has changed or has the proper matter for marriage always been “simply two people”?   It seems to me that the only possible answer to this question is to face the reality that our refusal to witness and bless the unions of our LGBT brothers and sisters for all of these years has been wrong.  For years the church did not recognize, would not witness or bless the union of people of different ethnicities.  Can any of us look back on those days and believe that God was sanctioning our refusal to witness and bless the union of two people because one was black and one was white?   We were wrong!  And in our refusal to acknowledge God’s presence those relationships, in our refusal to say publicly that we saw God manifest in their unions we hurt people and participated in a system of oppression in a way that is not worthy of our prophetic heritage.

If the proper matter for marriage is simply two people then the proper matter for marriage has always been simply two people and we have been participating in a great wrong by refusing to acknowledge God’s action and presence in the unions of faithful members of our church.

In the sixteenth chapter of John Jesus says, “I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now. When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth; for he will not speak on his own, but will speak whatever he hears, and he will declare to you the things that are to come” (John 16:12,13).  As Anglicans and as Episcopalians we believe that revelation is ongoing.   To borrow a phrase from our brothers and sister in the UCC, “God is still speaking.”  Three years ago we were not ready to talk about marriage.  Today, with three more years of revelation, of guidance from the Holy Spirit, we are talking about something that we could not have addressed in the same way three years ago.  We have a long way to go.  Changing our canons and our prayer book to allow for the marriage of same gender couples will require two consecutive votes by General Convention.  We might be able pass a resolution this year that will allow for that second vote in 2015 but frankly, and I am only a first time deputy to General Convention, I don’t think that we are going to be able to move that far this year.  So marriage for same gender couples is at least three and maybe six or nine years away.  This begs the question.  Can we as a church continue to deny the presence and work of God in the lives of two people, can we continue to tell them that we do not see God manifest in their relationship and in their common life, can we continue to inflict injury and hurt on people who sit in our pews and kneel beside us at the altar while we wind our way through the legislative process of General Convention and struggle to get the wording “right”?

I believe that the conversation needs to be about marriage and I am glad that we are moving in that direction.  At the same time I wonder how we can decline to bless the relationships of our LGBT brothers and sisters while we work towards a theology of marriage that will allow us to offer the sacrament of holy matrimony to all of God’s children.   Resolution 2009-C056 declared that the changing circumstances in the United States and in other nations call forth a renewed pastoral response from this church.  Would it be a “renewed pastoral response” if, having come this far, we decline to take a step in the right direction?

The conversation of the last three years has moved us forward in an exciting and prophetic way.  I will travel to our General Convention with the faith and hope that our conversation, our journey together, will be advanced by our coming together in the presence of the Holy Spirit.   And I will travel to General Convention with the full and certain knowledge that I will be changed by what I experience there.  But today, given all that I have heard, read, learned and experienced I would vote for a resolution that called for the amendment of the Book of Common Prayer and the Constitution and Canons to allow for marriage between two persons regardless of gender and I would vote to approve the blessing of same gender relationships so that we can begin to publicly affirm what God is doing in our midst; making two people, regardless of their gender, one flesh “for their mutual joy; for the help and comfort given one another in prosperity and adversity; and, when it is God’s will, for the procreation of children and their nurture in the knowledge and love of the Lord,” thereby, “signifying to us to us the mystery of the union between Christ and his Church…” (BCP p. 423).

Peace,  Andy+

Into the Wind: A Sermon for The Day of Pentecost 2013

This sermon draws on the readings for the Day of Pentecost in Year C of the New Revised Common Lectionary. You can find those readings here.

Here is a link to an audio file of the sermon.  The text that follows is a transcription of the recorded sermon with only minor grammatical and syntactical edits.

Jesus said, “Do not let your hearts be troubled, do not let them be afraid.”  He says, “Peace I leave with you.  My peace I give to you. “  I will send to you the Advocate, the…

The Advocate?  The Advocate?  That word has caught me up several time s this week.  Shouldn’t he say “Comforter?”  That’s what we just sang, “O Comforter draw near.”  And In fact, if you go back and look in the King James Version it doesn’t say “Advocate,” it says “Comforter.”

Comforter would make sense.  We are reading form the Farewell Discourse as Jesus is preparing his disciples for his departure, trying to teach them how to live in the world after he is gone, trying to prepare them for life without him.  And so a comforter would be sorely needed.

So why is it that we don’t use that word in our reading today?  In the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible which we are now using the word is “Advocate” and then there is an asterisk that says , “or ‘helper.’”  Comforter, Advocate/Helper…  Those words feel very different.  Sometimes I think I would prefer the comforter, but then the kind of comforter that we seem to have heard about this morning is one that bursts into the room with a sound like the rush of a violent wind and sets our hair on fire!  Well… it wouldn’t burn for very long… but that would be pretty uncomfortable!

So what is it about advocates, helpers, advocacy there is a very different feel there.  Comforters, that’s what you need when you are mourning, when you are grieving, when you are hurting, and troubled and what you really need to do is to sit still and be held.  An advocate or a helper implies that there is some sort of conflict going on, that there is motion, that there is movement.  And so what Jesus says is I will send to you something that will set your hair on fire and send you out into the streets speaking words you never imagined you were capable of and doing things that you could never have dreamed were possible.

The piece from the book of Acts that we read this morning preceded this wonderfully long sermon that Peter gives.  He goes on for hours and hours and hours, and hours and hours and hours… and add more than three thousand people to the church that day.

There is something compelling, something impelling about the coming of the Holy Spirit.  She pushes us to move.  Now arriving with a sound like the rush of a violent wind and with tongues of flame… those may be difficult things for us to envision, difficult for us to grasp… so I have been struggling all week for a metaphor to help us to sort of feel where this is.  And this is what I came up with.

Do you all know who Jim Cantore is?  He’s the hurricane guy on the Weather Channel.  And where do you always see him?  He’s out there on the Outer Banks of North Caroline.  And the wind is blowing the rain so that it is flying sideways and the hood on his windbreaker is whipping back and forth and making so much noise that it almost drowns out his microphone and before you know it he’s leaning into the wind like this and he’s saying, “Bill the wind is really starting to blow now.  We’re up to about a hundred and twenty miles and hour!”  And he’s struggling, leaning, working really hard not to get blown away by that wind.

Part of the problem is that he is trying to stand still.  That wind wants more than anything to make him move and he is trying to keep his feet in the same spot and not let that wind change his position at all.

So another part of the visual here…  We are still on the beach.  The hurricane is coming.   And there up on the flagpole at the marina is a flag that somebody forgot to take down.  The wind is blowing a hundred and a hundred and twenty miles an hour and that flag is trying to stay in place up there on the pole… And what happens to it?  It gets shredded.  It gets torn to pieces.

So here we are with this wind, the Spirit of Truth Jesus calls it, blowing through all of creation, blowing through the church and we are at risk of being shredded by that wind.

The way to avoid being shredded is to move.

So here we are again.  We are still here on the Outer Banks.  Imagine what it would be like if when we felt that wind coming we lifted our anchor, we let go our moorings, we pulled in the sheets and tightened the sails, and we pointed ourselves into that wind.  The wind starts buffeting the front face of the sail.  The sail starts luffing a little bit so we pull the sheets in little tighter, and now there’s a vacuum out in front of that sail because the wind is moving so fast in front of it, and we  start moving, pulled forward into the wind.  Into the wind.

The way to avoid being shredded by the wind, by the violent wind, the spirit of truth, the Holy Spirit, is to be willing to pull up our anchor, to let go of our moorings, and to see where God is calling us.  When we respond in that way, when we risk letting go of what’s familiar, our slip there at the marina where the restaurant is up there on the second floor and the showers are down there around the corner, and we have all the things we need to scrape the hull and keep the boat clean and sparkly, and venture into deep water…  we know that this is the place where we will find God.  That is where God is, at the heart, at the center of that wind.  And when we are willing to point our bow in that direction and be drawn in we will be in a position to help build the kingdom of God wherever that wind takes us.

The wind is blowing.  And you can apply that metaphor to all sorts of arenas in our lives all sorts of settings, all sorts of contexts…  The wind is blowing through the church.  It is also blowing right here in this place.

Think for a moment about where we are.  We are about to welcome a full time Associate Priest.  We are about to celebrate our centennial, a moment when we can look back on our history; to see where we have been, to assess where we are, and choose whether or not to let go of those moorings and move into deep water again.   We do all of this with a gift from a long time committed beloved member of this parish that will help us to go to places that we might not have dreamed.

The wind is blowing.  And God is in the center, in the eye of that storm,  And the wind that is blowing from God has the power to draw us forward, as long as we are willing to move, to pull up our anchor, to let go of our moorings, to shift our feet, and to let God sail the boat.

This is a moment of great excitement… Yea I said that right?  Excitement…  It can be terrifying.  It can be terrifying.   But listen to what Jesus says, “Do not let your hearts be troubled, do not let them be afraid.  My Peace I give to you.  And I don’t give as the world gives.

It takes much more energy and it is much more difficult, and it is completely unproductive to work so hard to lean into that wind and not move your feet, to cling to that anchor line, to cling that flagpole and try desperately to hang on.

It is life giving, it is energizing, and it is who we are called to be, to let g, to go with God, who fills our sails and draws us forward, calling us to that new reality that is ours if we dare.

Amen.

God Talk: Venturing anew into a very old conversation

God Talk…  Beginning a new blog site…

During the Season of Lent we at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church used the book Living the Questions: The Wisdom of Progressive Christianity as a jumping off point for our conversations at the Sunday Forum.  During those weeks  attendance at the Sunday forum more than doubled.

We didn’t work through the book chapter by chapter, instead we allowed the material of two or three chapters shape our conversations each week, honoring the trajectory of the book, and allowing the cumulative weight of our readings and conversation to move us forward.

Our momentum took a real hit when we reached chapter 11, The Myth of Redemptive Violence.  What do we mean when we say that “Jesus died for our sins”?  What do we mean when, as part of our Eucharistic liturgy we say, “By his blood her reconciled us.  By his wounds we are healed” (BCP p. 370).  Are we saying that Jesus payed the price for our sins so that God’s wrath might be assuaged, God’s justice served, and our freedom purchased?

This is the question of “soteriology” or salvation and it is a question in which I am passionately interested.

I am going to spend some time over the next couple of months reading and studying soteriology, salvation, atonement, the cross and I would like to invite you to join me in this journey.  I will post summaries of the materials that I read and my responses to them on my new blog, God Talk, and I hope that you will offer your comments, thoughts and reflections to those who join this forum.

The best way to keep up and to participate will be to subscribe or “follow” the God Talk blog.  There is a button on the sidebar of the God Talk home page that will allow you to follow the blog so that anytime something is posted you will be notified by email.

Comments on God Talk are moderated, I have to approve them before they go public, but I will allow all ideas and perspectives to be heard.  I will only “edit” with an eye for civility and respect for difference of opinion.

My reading list is available on the God Talk blog.  It is listed on the main menu on the banner of the home page.

I do hope that you will join us as we work together to “Always be ready to make your defense to anyone who demands from you an accounting for the hope that is in you…” (1 Peter 3:15b).

Peace,

Andy+

There is Blood on our Hands: A Sermon for Palm Sunday

This sermon is based on the Readings for Palm Sunday in year C of the Revised Common Lectionary.

You can find those readings here.

There is an audio file of the sermon available here:

Sermon Palm Sunday 2013

It seems like a lot to ask.

I mean, life is hard, there’s a lot going on right now.  The economy is still a little shaky, a lot of us are living in homes that are worth less than when we bought them.  People we know, family friends, neighbors, some of us, have lost our jobs, have had to rethink the future.  Our retirement accounts haven’t bounced back yet, our benefits keep shrinking, and everything costs more than it did yesterday.

It is a lot to ask.

You turn on the news, pick up the paper, talk to your friends, things that we have always been able to count on seem less sure.  It feels like our rights are being chipped away, like someone we can’t quite identify is working to undermine our place in the world, our sense of security and well being.  It turns out that people, structures, and institutions that we thought would protect us are, in the end, only interested in protecting themselves.

It asking too much!

At a time when everything seems to be changing at a dizzying pace, when our children and our children’s children don’t seem interested in the things that we have treasured and maintained on their behalf…  When the validity and relevance of things that we thought would last forever is being challenged.

It’s too much to ask and what a time to be asking!

Here we are, gathered at the foot of the cross, grieving, confused, scared and angry…  And Paul has the nerve to ask us to lower ourselves and to become slaves?

Look.  We don’t need this guy Paul and his insensitive, over reaching, nagging…

What we need is some fresh ideas, some new life, some one to ride in here on a white horse and help us out of this mess that we are…

 

Paul isn’t being insensitive to the difficulties that we face.  He isn’t over reaching by asking us to do too much.  He may be nagging a little, he does that from time to time…  But what he is really doing in this moment is singing a hymn.

We believe that the selection we heard from Paul’s letter to the church at Philippi is something that the early church said or sang as part of their liturgy, we call it The Christ Hymn, and Paul is singing it to us today, in the midst of our pain, our confusion, our suffering, and our fear, to help us to understand that we are being confronted with a choice, a choice so fundamental to the way that we understand and participate in the world that it really must be asked now, even as we stand here trembling at the foot of the cross.

“Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus,

who, though he was in the form of God,

did not regard equality with God

as something to be exploited,

but emptied himself,

taking the form of a slave,

being born in human likeness.

And being found in human form,

he humbled himself

and became obedient to the point of death–

even death on a cross.”

Paul is asking us to set aside our need to be at the center of all things, our sense that we deserve to be first, that our needs are more important than the needs of the people we all to easily see as “others.”

Paul is asking us to see ourselves as part of something greater than the wealth that we have accumulated, the rights and privileges we have won, the benefits that accrue when we pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps and declare ourselves to be “self made.”

Paul is singing to us, asking us to put ourselves in service to a radical and subversive view of creation.  It may be our right, we may be entitled, it may even be guaranteed to us by our founding documents and principles, but, Paul is saying, we need to be prepared to let it go for the sake of the greater good, for the sake of our children, for the poor and the widowed, for the people with whom Jesus chose to minister and associate.  Paul is reminding us that Jesus came not to be served but to serve and he is trying to sing us into a new way of being, one where we aren’t as worried about being served as we are about serving others.  Paul is asking us to give up our own, self centered, narcissistic, shortsighted view of ourselves and the world and to choose instead God’s dream, God’s vision for a creation reconciled to one another and to God.

 

It seems like a lot to ask!

And it would be one thing to ask if were are well fed, rested, comfortable in our ability to acquire and provide the things that we and our beloved need and want… when our faith and trust in the institutions we have labored so long to support and buttress were unshaken… when our heritage, our legacy was secure, beloved and well received by those who will come after us…

It would be one thing to ask as we cheer along the parade route, joining our voices with the crowd, shouting with excitement as the one upon whom our hopes rest rides triumphantly into the lion’s den…

It is a lot to ask!

And it gets even harder when the one we had hoped might deliver us is arrested and taken from us, when he seems so small standing before Pilate and the machinery of death that we had hoped to escape.  It gets harder when we see him beaten, spat upon, and rejected by the people who had hailed him as their king!

It is too much to ask!

To ask us to follow him as he carries his own cross through the streets of Jerusalem on his way to a shameful and public end.  It is too much to ask as he is nailed to a tree and the agents of oppression cast lots for his clothes.  It is too much to ask as the tree is hoisted into the air and Jesus agony is apparent for all to see.  It is too much, too much!

Here we are, gathered at the foot of the cross, grieving, confused, scared and angry…  Paul, how can you ask this of us now?

 

Paul is asking us now because this is the moment that the question becomes most clear.  Here at the foot of the cross we see the consequences of our “no” to God’s “Yes” in the person of Jesus.

When we decline the call to serve…  When we place ourselves at the center of all things and set about to defend what we believe is ours, what we believe we deserve, what we believe to be our right and privilege, we put at risk what is “theirs,” what our common humanity says we all deserve, what is ours by right because we all are made in the image of God.

When we say no to Paul, no to Jesus, no to God’s call to service of others, then we are by default, aligning our selves with Pilate, who rode into town this morning with an army of soldiers intent on defending what was his, what was Caesar’s, what belonged to Rome.

Paul is asking us now because the consequences of our “no” are right here before us, impossible to ignore, impossible to dismiss.

There is blood…  Blood in our streets, blood in our schools, blood in our homes, blood on the cross.  Blood on our hands.

Let us pray

“Let the same mind be in US that was in Christ Jesus,

who, though he was in the form of God,

did not regard equality with God

as something to be exploited,

but emptied himself,

taking the form of a slave,

being born in human likeness.

And being found in human form,

he humbled himself

and became obedient to the point of death–

even death on a cross.”

 

Amen.

 

On Bended Knee with Our Broken Hearts in Our Hands: a Reflection on the Season of Lent

This is how we approach the love that we have wounded, the love that we have injured, the love that we have neglected or betrayed.  Filled with remorse for the pain that we have caused, hoping beyond hope for forgiveness, we acknowledge the wrong that we have done, we declare our remorse, we proclaim our love, and we promise to change, to live more fully into the relationship that we long to maintain.  We do everything that we can do to be reconciled to the one whom we love.  It is an all too familiar scenario.  Children and parents, husbands and wives, partners in every kind of relationship find themselves in this place; having hurt one another, desperately seeking forgiveness, hoping for reconciliation, longing to mend what has been broken, approaching on bended knee, broken heart in hand.  This is also the posture in which we approach the season of Lent.

We know that we have sinned, that we have failed to live into the relationship that God is offering us and that we long to experience, in the things that we have thought, in the words that we have spoken to one another, and in the things that we have done.  We know that we have not loved God with our whole heart, and we know that we have not loved our neighbors as ourselves.  We know that we have neglected and betrayed the one who loves us beyond all measure, the one with whom we long to abide in peace and trust.  We know that the peace of God, which passes all understanding, has eluded us because we have not sought, recognized, and nurtured the relationship that brings that peace.  This strain in the relationship which should be at the center of our lives is so difficult to bear that we come to church every week and confess our sins, the ways in which we have fallen short of the life and love that God holds out to us.  Every week, again and again we come to the table with our hands outstretched, trembling at the love and grace that endures, the knowledge that God remains faithful even when we are not.   If we are already confessing, on bended knee, our broken hearts in our hands, why do we set aside the forty days of Lent as a time of “self-examination and repentance; of prayer, fasting and self-denial; of reading and meditating on God’s holy Word” (BCP p. 265)?    I would like to suggest that the season of Lent is not a time for seeking forgiveness.  It is a time to turn our hearts, to change, it is a time for repentance and renewal.

The analogy that I set up earlier in this reflection, of approaching the people in our lives whom we have hurt, seeking their forgiveness, hoping for reconciliation doesn’t quite describe our humble approach to God.  When we have hurt the person whom we love we hope for their forgiveness, but there is a chance that they will refuse us the reconciliation we crave.  There is the chance that they will have had enough of the pain that we inflict.  There is a chance that the relationship will have finally been ruptured beyond repair.  But God loves us so much  that God came among us as one of us, and giving God’s self into our hands, allowed us to choose whether or not to love God in return.  God, in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, experienced the very worst that is in us when, in our desperation to be rid of God, we nailed him to a tree.  The analogy that I set up at the beginning of this reflection falls short here because, despite our betrayal, God has not abandoned us!  The Incarnation, Life, Death, Resurrection, and Ascension of Christ has proven to us that nothing, nothing can separate us from the love of God.  Every Sunday when, on trembling knees, we confess our sinful thoughts, words and deeds, the things done and left undone, our failure to love God with our whole heart and our neighbors as ourselves, we do so knowing that God is waiting to forgive us and restore us to the light and love for which we are created.  We hear the words that we long to hear, “Almighty God have mercy on you, forgive you all your sins through our Lord Jesus Christ, strengthen you in all goodness, and by the power of the Holy Spirit keep you in eternal life”  (BCP p. 360).  It is interesting and important to note that on Ash Wednesday, the day that we venture into the wilderness of Lent, we do not hear those words of absolution.

On Ash Wednesday we confess our sins in the Litany of Penitence (BCP p. 267-269), and then  “the Bishop, if present, or the Priest stands, and facing the people” … declares that God “has given power and commandment to his ministers to declare pardon and pronounce to his people, being penitent, the absolution and remission of their sins”  (BCP p. 269).  And then…  that absolution is not conferred!

Just before the peace is exchanged, at the conclusion of the Litany of Penitence, the confession, the Bishop, if present, or the priest says:

 “Therefore we beseech him to grant us true repentance and his Holy Spirit, that those things may please him which we do on this day, and that the rest of our life hereafter may be pure and holy, so that at the last we may come to his eternal joy; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen” (BCP p. 269).

Here on Ash Wednesday, as we begin our journey through the season of Lent we are praying for repentance, a turning of the heart, away from the things that damage our relationship with God toward the things that are life-giving, that deepen and nurture that relationship.  Here at the beginning of the season of Lent we are praying for the Holy Spirit, for help and strength as we, acknowledging the great gift that God gives us by lifting the burden of our sins, work to repent, to change!

We all long to hear the words of absolution, to know that we are forgiven, to hear that the relationship is still intact, but absolution is only the beginning of something even harder than asking for forgiveness.   The human analogy will serve us well in this moment.  When we go to our love with our broken heart in our hands we may, on the surface be craving their forgiveness, but what we really are afraid of is the loss of relationship.   What we really long for is the wholeness that comes from being one with another.  Forgiveness, absolution, allows us to remain in the presence of the one we love without shame or fear, but the relationship is only made whole if we repent, turn away from, whatever it was that caused the relationship to be ruptured or strained in the first place.  If the thoughts, words, or deeds that caused the breach continue, then the relationship will continue to be deeply wounded and forgiveness becomes nothing more than a topical analgesic.  We set aside the season of Lent, the forty days preceding Holy Week and the Resurrection as a time for deep healing and true reconciliation.  Lent is a time for change… and that is why, when we ask God to grant us “true repentance” we also ask for God’s Holy Spirit.

The kind of change we are talking about here isn’t something that we can do by force of will, commitment, or by working harder.  The kind of change we are talking about here is only possible through the Grace of God and our Lord Jesus Christ.  It is only in knowing that we are forgiven, that nothing we can do will ever separate us from the Love of God, that we can set our hearts and minds to the work of repentance, of change.  It is God’s gift, loving us even before we can love God in return that sets us free to acknowledge our faults and shortcomings, our betrayals, our sins, and ask for forgiveness.  It is God’s gift, the presence, guidance, and grace of the Holy Spirit, that helps us to know when we have failed to hit the mark, that helps us to get back on target.  It is only through the strength and courage we receive in knowing that God, through the Holy Spirit, continues to walk this journey with us that we are able to begin the hard work of repentance, amendment of life, of change.

“Therefore we beseech him to grant us true repentance and his Holy Spirit, that those things may please him which we do on this day, and that the rest of our life hereafter may be pure and holy, so that at the last we may come to his eternal joy; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen” (BCP p. 269).

Peace,

Andy+