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Sermon, Oct. 2

Read my sermon on today’s Gospel, from 2019, here.

  1. This Sunday’s Texts
    1. Powerful, emotional Old Testament text; demanding, strange Gospel. But I like what I’ve preached about them in the past. Didn’t have something new to say. 
      1. So I found myself looking at the 2 Timothy reading. 
    2. A few weeks ago I admitted: clergy don’t know all Scriptures equally well. 
      1. There are parts we rushed by in our seminary classes
      2. Parts we tend to ignore in favor of other texts, when preaching. 
      3. Moving towards a decade and a half as a preacher – I’m feeling a pull to spent time with the ones I’ve avoided? 
      4. I’m not sure I’ve ever preached on 2 Tim or its siblings at all. So, here we go. 
  1. The Pastoral Epistles
    1. Referring to my Harper-Collins Study Bible – not taking it as my authority, but it summarizes well what I have read and learned elsewhere. 
      1. 1 and 2nd letters to Timothy & letter to Titus – have been seen for a long time as a set. 
      2. Called the Pastoral Epistles because of their concern with leadership roles and church order. 
      3. It’s also been recognized for at least a couple of hundred years that although all three begin by introducing the author of the letter as the apostle Paul, they very likely were not really written by Paul. 
        1. Why? Lots of reasons. First, vocabulary and style notably similar across these three, and notably different from the letters we are pretty sure are really Paul’s voice. 
        2. References to aspects of church order that almost certainly didn’t emerge till long after Paul’s death. 
        3. Key theological and social questions handled very differently from Paul’s thinking and writing. 
    2. Who are Timothy and Titus, the supposed recipients of these letters? 
      1. Timothy – first mentioned in Acts 16 – Paul meets him & takes him on as a helper & fellow traveler. 
        1. In Pauline letters, Paul describes him as a beloved child in the Lord, and brother and co-worker in proclaiming the Gospel. 
      2. We know less about Titus but he is likewise a sometimes companion to Paul, mentioned in the letters to the church in Corinth.
      3. It’s clear that these were real people. Not impossible that there could be letters Paul wrote directly to Timothy, or Titus. But… is that what these are? 
  1. Pseudepigrapha
    1. There’s a word for letters that pretend to be written by someone they were’t really written by: Pseudepigrapha. A known thing in both the ancient and contemporary worlds. 
    2. I had picked up the idea that in the ancient world, people didn’t really mind this. That their ideas of authorship and history and authenticity were more flexible than ours. 
      1. It is true that in the centuries surrounding the time of Jesus, there was a lot of this kind of thing being written. 
      2. For example: Just last week we heard a reference to Baruch, the scribe of the prophet Jeremiah, who lived about 600 years before the time of Jesus. 
        1. There is a Book of Baruch in the Apocrypha, probably written about a hundred years before Jesus, give or take, and reflecting on the experience of exile. 
        2. Study Bible intro to Baruch: “It was a common practice during the late Second Temple period” – which encompasses both Jesus’ and Paul’s lifetimes – “to compose edifying works that expanded the biblical tradition.” 
        3. So: Edifying fan fiction. Using existing characters – like Baruch, Daniel, Moses –  to tell a new story, or offer a new perspective on an existing story. 
        4. It seems that this was an accepted literary practice; no actual intention to deceive. 
    3. BUT. But, but, but. Writing a short story about how the exile felt to Baruch, five hundred years after his death, is actually pretty different from writing a letter in Paul’s name, maybe ten or twenty years after Paul’s death. 
      1. Bible scholar Bruce Metzger – difference between a literary pseudepigrapha, and a forgery, with intent to deceive and to borrow someone else’s authority. 
      2. And people in the decades of the early church WERE concerned with authorship and authenticity. 
        1. 2 Thess 3:17 – end of one of the true Paul letters: “I, Paul, write this greeting with my own hand. This is the mark in every letter of mine; it is the way I write.”
          1. He doesn’t quite say, “If the letter doesn’t have my handwriting, don’t trust it,” but it seems close! 
          2. Of course letters would have been copied and shared; and Paul seems to have dictated most of his letters, and just written a short message at the end and signed them. That little bit of Paul’s handwriting would not have been much protection against forgery. But the point is: It was a concern.
          3. Likewise the Didache, one of the earliest Christian texts, talks about the need for churches to check out visiting preachers & try to suss out whether they are the real thing or just grifters. 
          4. Early Christians were aware – as we are aware – that there are folks who will try to get in on anything, for their own benefit or to promote their own agendas; and they tried to guard against it. 
      1. It’s possible that some of the stylistic differences between the Pastoral Epistles and the other Pauline letters could be explained by the secretary thing… 
        1. Some folks hold that, as a way to believe this author when he names himself as Paul while also acknowledging the big differences of style. 
        2. But that runs us up against the differences of content, not just vocabulary. 
      2. Neil Elliott book, “Liberating Paul”
        1. Canonical betrayal of Paul: When the Church, over a couple of centuries a long time ago, decided what would be included in the NT, it *betrayed* Paul by including the Pastoral Epistles – because the Pastorals are not just different but diametrically opposed. 
          1. Especially 1 Tim and Titus, there is a lot of emphasis on social order and respectability. Women should be quiet in church. Church leaders should be well regarded in the wider community, and make sure their children behave. Widows who want to be supported by the church should have only been married once, not be gossips, and so on. (Probably pass a drug test…) Older women should avoid getting drunk. Slaves should not talk back to their masters. And oh, by the way, slaves, if your master is a Christian too, that shouldn’t make you think you can talk to them as equals; rather, you should serve them all the more, since by doing so you’re helping a fellow believer! 
        2. Elliott – this is conventional morality, defining Christian living in terms of norms of respectability and proper behavior in the surrounding culture. Sharp contrast with “real” Paul, who favored the “leadership of charismatic women, egalitarian communities, and resistance to Roman coercion.” 
        3. Overall, he says, reading the Pastoral Epistles as if they are actually Paul’s voice turns Paul from an “apostle of freedom” into a “priest of social convention.”
      3. Elliott notes that some people have an understandable feeling that since these letters did become part of the Bible, we should trust the Holy Spirit working through the church and accept their authority. To that, he says: Yes, but: what if they were accepted into the Bible under false pretenses? If we now believe them to be deliberate forgeries… how are we bound to read and regard these texts, as Christians?
  1. BUT. If you’re listening very closely indeed, you may have noticed that all that applies to 1 Tim and Titus. 
    1. 2 Tim is at least a little less clear. 
      1. It has a lot of similarities to the other two letters.
      2. It also has significant differences. 
        1. There is less of the social order stuff and, frankly, the misogyny – though there is a passage in chapter 3 about how people have to be careful about false teachers ensnaring “silly women” who are “overwhelmed by their sins and swayed by all kinds of desires.” Don’t love that! 
        2. Instead, more focus on advising Timothy – or “Timothy” – to stay strong and keep proclaiming the Gospel, no matter what happens. 
          1. Understanding of the letter that Paul is imprisoned in Rome – his final imprisonment – and that Christians are facing a wave of persecution. 
        3. Is 2 Tim different because it’s a different voice – or just because it’s a different kind of letter? Some scholars think the Pastorals were written together and intended to be read together. 
          1. A little symphony with three movements – second one strikes a different tone, third one reprises themes from the first.  
          2. Scholars of ancient texts would describe 2 Tim as falling into the genre of “testament” – someone offering final advice before their anticipated death. This was a kind of text that people wrote and read. 
    2. Differences between 2 Tim & 1 Tim just in the short passage we have today. Let me point out one. 
      1. “I remind you to fan the flame of the gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my hands.”
        1. 1 Tim 4.14: “Do not neglect the gift that is in you, which was given to you through prophecy with the laying on of hands by the council of elders.” 
          1. “Council of elders” is one of the bits that sounds like it’s talking about the church in the second century. Not a known form of church organization in Paul’s time. (And this sounds like ordination.) 
          2. OTOH, for Paul to lay hands on Timothy as a way to pass on the Holy Spirit is totally consistent with Acts & Paul’s known letters. 
    3. It is possible that 2 Tim preserves fragments of actual letters of Paul. It’s also possible that this is just a pretty skilled forgery. 
      1. After all, the stakes were fairly high, if this author was motivated by wanting their opinions about how everybody should be acting at church to bear the weight of Paul’s authority.  
      2. The author here – if not Paul – had clearly studied at least some of Paul’s letters, and the book of Acts. Knew Paul’s writing pretty well. 
        1. These letters are petty; Paul could be petty.
        2. These letters have poetic moments; Paul could be poetic.
        3. These letters use some weird sports and military metaphors; Paul sometimes did that too. 
      3. These letters lay it on thick with specific names and details; does that point to their authenticity, or were they, as my study bible puts it, “crafted to lend pathos and concreteness to the Letter’s warnings and exhortations”? 
  1. How do we read and receive this text? 
    1. It comes to us as Scripture, for better or worse – though we’re free to find it more or less spiritually helpful. 
      1. I feel bound to at least ask, with a text like this: Is there a word or a witness here for me, for us, today? Accepting that sometimes the answer might be No. 
    2. When I first read this passage, this line seized my attention: “God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline.”
    3. Is this small-s spirit or capital-S Spirit? I’m not sure it matters. I think the understanding of the early church was that in baptism, the Holy Spirit activates something that keeps working inside us, especially if we tend to it – fan its flames, as this author advises. 
    4. Let’s take these gifts of the Spirit in order. First comes Power – dunamis in Greek, the root of our words dynamite and dynamic. It can mean magical or holy power, but more commonly it means ability, strength, capacity to do stuff. 
      1. I sometimes talk about agency – our ability to act. Having a sense of agency is important; feeling helpless eats away at our souls. 
      2. That’s one reason even small actions in the face of big problems do matter.  We need to feel our ability to push our lives and world closer to our hopes and intentions. And sometimes small steps give us courage to take bigger steps. 
      3. Our text here says that’s one of the things the spirit does in us: gives us power. Strengthens our capacity to act. 
    1. Love. The Greek of the New Testament has several words for love; the word here is Agape. Agape is the word used for God’s love for humanity, and the ideal for the kind of love Christians should have towards one another and our neighbors: an unselfish love that always seeks the good of the other. 
      1. So that’s another thing the Holy Spirit kindles in us: our capacity to love and bear with one another.
    2. And then there’s the last word, self-discipline. I spent a long time on this word!
      1. It’s part of the distinctive vocabulary of the Pastoral Epistles – used in all three, and not really elsewhere. 
      2. It’s been translated lots of different ways: sobriety, self-control, moderation, sound-mindedness. 
      3. Since it isn’t used elsewhere in the New Testament, we can’t look at it in other contexts to help understand it.
      4. I looked and looked for more information about this word – and finally I hit Greek ethics, that whole big body of ancient literature about what it means to be a good person and what our purpose in life should be. 
      5. It turns out the root of this word – sophron – was a pretty core idea in Greek ethics. Jewish scholars in the first century were studying that stuff, so I think it’s probably what this text has in mind. 
      6. Sophron is related to a word I talk about a lot: Sozo, meaning rescued, saved, restored. Sophron combines that word with a word for mind or understanding. So, “sound mind” really is maybe the simplest translation – “sound” as in “safe and sound.” 
      7. There are literal entire books about the concept of sophron in Greek ethics. But from what I could find easily, it refers to being a person who knows what the right thing to do is – and is able to do it, without inner struggle. 
        1. It’s a state of harmony, of being in alignment within yourself and with the world, of being attuned to truth, in a way that leads towards right action. 
      8. The word here in our text is a becoming-word. It’s sophron plus a suffix that indicates being called towards something. So: the spirit within us draws us towards that kind of clarity and alignment and capacity to know and do what is good and right. 
    3. Next Sunday, God willing, we’re doing a baptism at our 10AM service. The family is new to the church, seeking a faith home. We’ll bless baby S and name her as Christ’s own forever. 
      1. It’s the Church’s understanding that the Holy Spirit does something within a person at baptism. And maybe the author of 2 Tim here – whoever he may be – has given us a way to think about those gifts of the Spirit within us. 
      2. The gift of power – the capacity to act in the world, to make a difference. I want that for S, and for all of us.
      3. The gift of love – the capacity to connect, to share, to give and receive care, to build community. I want that for S, and for all of us.
      4. And the gift of sophron – of something deep inside that shapes us, over a lifetime, towards knowing and choosing the good. I want that for S, and for all of us. 
      5. May we fan the flames of the gifts that are within us by the grace of the Holy Spirit, friends. Amen. 

 

A few sources… 

John Stott, though he ultimately believes 2 Tim at least is Pauline, has some helpful blog posts working through the pseudepigrapha idea: 

https://johnstott.org/bible_studies/20-nov-2019/

https://johnstott.org/bible_studies/16-may-2022/

Excerpt of Neil Elliott’s book:

http://www.kingscollege.net/gbrodie/Elliott%20Pauline%20pseudepigraphy.PDF

Regarding sophron, I read lots of stuff. This is dense but fascinating –

https://www.its-her-factory.com/2013/03/ancient-greek-neoliberal-harmony-pt-1-sophrosyne-as-proportion/

Homily, Sept. 25

Okay. When we hear this story, I think there’s something in the story that can really distract us and make it hard for us to hear what Jesus means us to hear. 

The thing that is distracting is the idea that the rich man is sent to a place of suffering after he dies. That because of how he acted when he was alive, now he’s somewhere surrounded by flames, desperately thirsty, and without any help or relief. 

I understand why that’s a distracting idea. It’s an upsetting idea!

Some of you might have grown up in churches that talked a lot about how our beliefs and actions in life might mean we go to Heaven – or Hell – when we die. (You may have noticed that’s NOT stuff we talk about a lot here…)

The places where the rich man and Lazarus end up when they die, in the story, are not Heaven and Hell. Those ideas really come along later, though there are similarities. 

Instead Jesus is using an idea about the afterlife, about the place people go when they die, that was common at the time.

People thought the afterlife was like a countryside. And some parts of it were really lovely and lush and comfortable – like the valleys of Abraham, where Lazarus is. And some parts of it were terrible and dry and scorched – like where the rich man is. 

And maybe there’s a literal chasm – like, a great big split in the ground – between those two places. 

Listen, this is important: Jesus is using this idea to help him tell a story, to make a point. He is not trying to tell people what actually happens after we die.

There are a couple of other places where he seems to try to gesture in that direction – when he says things like, Even if you die, you live; and In my Father’s house are many mansions. 

But it seems like it’s one of the things that’s pretty hard to explain. 

And he’s not trying to explain it, here.

He’s just telling a story. 

And notice that the characters in the story are extreme characters.

The rich man is very rich – he’s like a stereotype of the worst kind of rich person: he has a feast of fancy food every day, and he literally steps over this poor man at his gate, when he goes out shopping for more fine linen clothing. 

And the poor man is very poor – lying in the street with no one to feed or help him. 

Maybe we could imagine this happening in real life, unfortunately – but these aren’t real-life characters. 

This is a story told to make a point. 

So what is the point? 

The point of this story, I think, is about knowing better. 

The last part of the story is the important part; the rest is just setting things up for this conversation between Abraham and the rich man. 

And the point of that conversation is that the rich man – and his brothers! – had every reason to know how they should act towards the poor at their doorstep. 

Look, the rich man even knows Lazarus’s name; it’s not like he’s just never noticed him. 

The point of this story is not that the rich man should have been kind to Lazarus TO AVOID PUNISHMENT IN THE AFTERLIFE.

That is not the reason he should have been kind!

God does not want us to do kind and right and just things because we are afraid. That was the church’s idea, I think. 

Fear is not a healthy heart-reason to do good things. 

Not what God wants from us or for us. 

The point is that the rich man should have been kind to Lazarus because it was the right thing to do.

It was what all the teachings and traditions of his faith told him.

Moses and the prophets, the sacred texts of the Old Testament, the Scriptures of Jesus’ people, are super clear about the responsibility to care for the poor and the sick, to share our resources and respond with kindness to those in need. 

And he should have helped Lazarus because it was a human need right in front of him that he could have easily met.

I think what we should carry away from this story is just a reminder that we know how we should act in this world, how we should treat people … and we don’t always do it.

When we have a chance to be kind, we should be kind. 

Now, sometimes we’re the ones who need kindness, right? Sometimes we’re the ones who need that helping hand. 

Sometimes it flip flops on a daily basis whether we need the kindness, or are in a position to offer kindness.

But when there’s a need right in front of us, a chance to just make somebody’s life a little better or easier – we should TAKE IT. 

Not because we’re afraid of eternal torment, but because that’s the kind of people God asks us to be. 

There’s one more thing I want us to notice about this story…

We have two characters: a very rich person and a very poor person.

Remember a few weeks ago when we talked about who people think is important… 

Who would most people think is more important, of those two people? …

But which one does Jesus give a name, in the story? … 

 

 

About the vales of Abraham… https://publicorthodoxy.org/2018/10/11/the-vale-of-abraham/

Sermon, Sept. 18

Read today’s lessons here. We use the Track 1 readings.

  1. The Parable of the Dishonest Manager 
    1. Oddly delightful contrast with last week.  
      1. Last week: Lost and found parables – sheep, coin; talked about the prodigal son – feel familiar to many of us, and relatively easy to understand, though there are depths and nuances to explore.
      2. This parable leaves us thinking, What??…. Confused and uncomfortable. 
    2. This story directly follows the lost & found parables in Luke’s Gospel. But that doesn’t mean it belongs there. 
      1. Luke’s self-appointed task, from the beginning of chapter 1: to investigate everything he could find out about Jesus, and write an orderly account. 
        1. He is pulling together material from different sources and sometimes he just … sticks something somewhere. 
    3. What is a parable, anyway? …  A story that’s meant to open something up, to point beyond itself. 
      1. This is an odd little fact that I love: It’s basically the same word as “parabola,” which describes the line something travels when you toss it up into the air. A parable is something you throw out there… & see where it lands. 
      2. Parables are meant to make you see things in a new way, or leave you thinking; some more than others. 
        1. This isn’t even the most complex or ambiguous one, not by a long shot.
    1. In the preceding parables, Jesus makes it clear that the Shepherd, the Seeking Woman, the loving Father are meant to help us understand God. Does it follow that the authority figure in this story – the Rich Man – is also a God-figure? 
      1. No, not necessarily. Jesus tells parables about the ways of the world as it is, as well as parables about God’s kingdom and the ways the world could be. 
      2. The way Jesus wraps up this parable – “The children of this age are shrewd in dealing with their own generation” – seems to suggest this is a this-worldly story. 
      3. But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have a message for the children of light, for those who seek to follow Jesus.
    2. So what’s the message? Well: Either Luke’s source, or Luke himself, has put this parable together with some sayings about wealth and money. 
      1. Call to integrity in financial dealings, and in life in general – “Whoever is faithful in a very little is faithful also in much…” 
      2. And a call to not letting money or wealth be a dominating concern in your life – “No slave can serve two masters… You cannot serve God and Mammon.”
      3. Let’s talk about Mammon for a moment. Who’s heard that word before, either in this saying, or elsewhere? … 
        1. Word is slowly disappearing from Bible translations, being replaced by “wealth” or “dishonest wealth.” 
        2. “You cannot serve God and wealth” is easier to understand; I see why translators are making that choice. But it is losing something. 
        3. Mammon is an Aramaic word – the language Jesus spoke. There are other words Jesus could have used, and did use elsewhere, for wealth and money. 
        4. There are a few times in the Gospels where Jesus’ Aramaic is kept, even as the rest of the narrative is told in Greek. I think Luke keeps “Mammon” in Aramaic because he sees that Jesus is treating Mammon as a character here. 
          1. Reading it through the lens of the Old Testament’s long struggle with idolatry, worship of false gods: it’s pretty clear that Mammon here isn’t just “wealth,” but is “wealth” personified as a godlike being.
        5. Commentary on this text – Barbara Rossing: “Perhaps we need to retain the personified idol named Mammon, as a reminder of how a financial system itself can function as an idol or ‘religion.’” 
          1. A hallmark of the false gods of the Old Testament is that they often demand extreme sacrifices, even human sacrifice, which is anathema to followers of Israel’s God. We might well ponder the human sacrifices demanded by our financial system and economy today. 
      4. So: This parable offers a teaching on keeping money or wealth in perspective – as a tool, not a goal; as a thing, not a god. That is a valuable and important teaching for God’s people and God’s church, in any time and place. 
      5. But: I don’t think that exhausts the meaning of this parable. There’s something provocative and interesting here that resists being boiled down. 
  1. The story itself… 
    1. Let’s look at the story itself, translating it into a modern situation that might help us understand it.
      1. Say there’s a payday lending company that specializes in high-interest loans to poor people. 
        1. High interest means that if you take out a loan, borrow money from that company, you’ll have to pay a lot more than the money you originally borrowed to pay it off and settle things again. 
        2. This company can afford to do this because it makes loans to people who don’t have good credit. That means that they have struggled financially in the past, and so regular banks might not want to lend them money. And they really need the money fast, because of some difficult situation – rent, car repair, funeral expenses. 
        3. Can people who are already poor and struggling financially, afford to pay really high interest? No! This is predatory and awful and deepens people’s suffering. And it happens all the time. 
        4. Now, say there’s a manager at a branch office of this company. When he signs off on loans to their customers, he adds in some extra fees, or a couple of percentage points of extra interest, above what the company asks for. When that part of the money comes in, he puts it in his own pocket.
          1. How do you think people feel about this manager? Maybe they realize he’s taking extra, maybe they don’t. But regardless: they know that this company only pretends to help them, while actually dragging them deeper into poverty and bondage. 
      2. But then this manager gets in trouble with the head of the company. He finds out that he’s going to be fired. But he’s got a couple of days before they escort him out and change the locks. 
        1. And he thinks, This is terrible. This is the only job I know how to do. I’m not strong enough for physical work, and I’m ashamed to depend on charity. But I can’t count on anyone to help me; because of my work, all I have are enemies. 
        2. So he gets on the phone and calls in as many customers as he can – people who owe money to his branch of the company. When they come in, he pulls out their paperwork. They look at how much they still owe – and he says, Let’s just bring this number down a little. 
          1. Maybe he alters the initial loan amount. Maybe he writes in some payments that were never actually made.
          2. Maybe all he cuts out is the extra that he put in to benefit himself; or maybe he cuts deeper, erasing some of the profit the company would have made. 
            1. How much do you owe? A hundred dollars. Quick, let’s make it fifty.  
            2. And how much do you owe? A thousand dollars. Here, let’s just adjust that down to eight hundred. 
          3. When the head of the company hears about it, he chuckles to himself. Maybe he says, “It’s a good thing I fired that guy, but man, he is one shrewd SOB.” 
      3. It’s easy to move this parable into the modern day; the dynamics of the situation translate well. But it doesn’t clear up any of its moral ambiguity. 
    2. A few chapters later, in Luke 19, we meet a tax collector – Zacchaeus – whose heart is changed by meeting Jesus, and who swears that if he has defrauded anyone by taking a little extra from them – “IF” that’s happened, mind you – then he will pay it back fourfold. 
        1. Zacchaeus does that as part of his repentance, getting right with God. The manager in the story does it for pragmatic reasons. He needs to have some people who’ll maybe help him out a little, instead of spitting in his face.
        2. But maybe those are both conversions, thought of different kinds. Zacchaeus’ heart, mind and life are changed for the good. The manager in the story just realizes that he can’t keep taking forever. That money and position can only protect you so much, for so long. 
  2. We’ve developed a habit here in our in-person worship of having a place on the way into the nave where you can pause and light a candle, if you like. Many Sundays we have an image of one of the saints or holy ones there, Someone who might inspire our prayers. 
    1. I discovered recently that Dag Hammarskjold is honored in Lutheran churches on the date of his death – today, September 18 – as a Renewer of Society. 
    2. I’ve had a prayer by Hammarskjold on the bulletin board by my desk for years: “For all that has been – Thanks! For all that will be – Yes!” 
      1. It’s from the book of spiritual reflections that was discovered and published after his death. 
    3. Hammarskjold was born in 1905 to an upper-class, educated family in Sweden. Dag studied poetry in college, then economics and law. He taught economics and served in the Swedish government, dealing with unemployment, banking, and foreign relations, including working on the Marshall Plan, which rebuilt Western Europe after World War II. 
    4. In 1949 he became a Swedish delegate to the United Nations, an intergovernmental organization formed after World War II, with the stated purpose of maintaining international peace and preventing future wars. 
    5. And then, in 1953, out of the blue, Hammarskjold was elected as the second Secretary General of the United Nations. 
      1. Sarah Wilson writes, “He was chosen, in a sense, by accident. Dag appeared to be a pale, complaisant nobody; a good compromise candidate for the great powers ramping up for a full-blown Cold War.”
      2. Another biography states, “The UN Security Council believed they had chosen a competent administrator who would not challenge the existing world order. Before long, they would learn just how thoroughly mistaken they had been. Hammarskjöld … stood up against the superpowers in the Security Council and with unshakeable integrity defended the interests of small nations.”
    6. Unsurprisingly, the fact that their boring compromise candidate turned out to have some strong convictions was not entirely well-received. Wilson writes, “[Hammarskjold] declared the need for balancing… loyalty to one’s own nation with the best interests of the whole human family—and thus got declared a traitor to his own, a pretender accountable to nobody. He practiced a self-effacing patience to bring leaders to a conciliatory posture—and got blamed for not acting faster. He held to a fundamental humanism, a willingness to believe the best even of a humanity that repeatedly lived up to its worst—and suffered bitter disappointments.”
    7. Despite opposition and struggle, Hammarskjold served as Secretary-General from 1953 until his death in 1961. During his tenure, he strengthened its peacekeeping and diplomatic work. One of his greatest triumphs was smoothing over the Suez Canal crisis by helping Israel and Egypt find their way to a compromise. 
    8. He also played a very important role by, in Wilson’s words, acting as “midwife to the new nations in Africa emerging from the yoke of colonialism.” 
      1. The Western nations who had been, and in many cases still were, the colonizing powers were not in a hurry to give these new nations a full voice on the world stage. But Hammarskjold  believed in the possibility of a true world community, and pushed the UN towards welcoming, supporting and uplifting these young nations. 
      2. He did not get everything right – and it may have cost him his life. In the brutal mess of Congo’s independence struggle, Hammarskjold failed to throw the UN’s weight behind the democratically-elected prime minister Patrice Lumumba when he faced a military uprising – perhaps out of concern that Lumumba held secret Communist sympathies. Remember the Cold War? … 
      3. Lumumba was overthrown and executed. Six months later, while traveling for UN cease-fire negotiations between Congo’s warring factions, Hammarskjold died in a plane crash, along with fifteen others. It’s still unclear whether it was accident or assassination. 
      1. Let me back up and say a little about who Hammarskjöld was, as a human being. He was a person of deep spirituality and indeed mysticism – something few people knew about during his lifetime. He wrote in his spiritual memoir, Markings, “In our era, the road to holiness necessarily passes through the world of action.” 
      2. Wilson suggests his Christian faith grounded him for his difficult role: “In his heart was forged a tremendous patience and long-suffering charity that would serve him supremely well as the leader of a still-new, always-fragile experiment in keeping world peace.”
      3. Hammarskjold may also have been a deeply closeted gay man. Wilson writes, “Loneliness was an essential companion in his ability to give himself to the great and risky dream of world community; it made him vigilant and nonpartisan.” 
  1. What does Dag Hammarskjold have to do with the dishonest manager? Well. Remember the people who elevated him into leadership thought he would go along with the global status quo, dominated by a few Western powers. Instead, Hammarskjold spent his tenure – in a very real sense, spent himself – working to support the poor, young nations of the developing world. 
    1. Perhaps, like the manager knowing he’s about to be fired, Hammarskjold shrewdly recognized that the world order of the mid-20th century could not last. Better to befriend the small and many, than to count on safety among the powerful few. 
    2. When we light a prayer candle at our little saint altar at church – or at home – it might be for whatever is on our hearts and minds. There’s also some tradition of lighting candles in the presence of a saint, for the kinds of things that saint in particular might be able to help us with. 
    3. When we light a candle on this day of remembrance for Dag Hammarskjold, we might ask for his prayers to use whatever influence, resources, and opportunities we have, within the imperfect and often unjust systems and institutions of this world, to build human connection and better the circumstances of those with less… that we, too, may someday be welcomed into the eternal homes. Amen. 

Read Sarah Wilson’s beautifully-written reflection on Hammarskjold here: https://www.sarahhinlickywilson.com/blog/2019/9/4/lutheran-saints-7-dag-hammarskjld

 

Sermon, Aug. 21

This sermon is an outline rather than a full text – apologies for somewhat less ease of reading! Here is the annotated page I prepared of this text, which you can open or print. 

Hebrews12AnnotatedPage

  1. INTRO
    1. Clergy don’t know all of Scripture well, or equally…
    2. Hebrews is one of the parts I don’t know well.
    3. When it comes around in lectionary …., I tend to wait it out. 
    4. But last time it came around, I noticed a sentence I liked & kept it to use as a Scripture to lead us from the Peace & announcements, towards the Eucharist…. 
      1. A place in Anglican worship where it is traditional for the priest to read some short piece of Scripture. 
    5. Hebrews 12:28-29 – “Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us give thanks, by which we offer to God an acceptable worship with reverence and awe.”
      1. Printed it out, taped it to the ambo! I say it, many weeks.
    6. THIS year, when this part of Hebrews comes around – What does this mean?… 
  1. Hebrews
    1. One of the letters of the Early Church
    2. Very finely written – literary
    3. Author unknown – Pauline but not Paul
      1. Priscilla? – named leader in the early church 
    4. Thinking and writing at the interface between Judaism and emergent Christianity – describing Jesus in terms of the ritual practices of the great Temple. 
    5. Hebrews is hard to teach and preach today because of its supercessionism. That big word means the belief that the Church replaces Israel and the Jews as God’s people. 
      1. Not a new branch grafted onto God’s holy tree – Paul – but a whole new tree that has taken over the old tree’s roots. 
    6. When this was written: Christians were a minority, not much power. When Christians become the politically powerful majority, a couple of centuries later, this idea starts to become very dangerous. 
      1. Gospel story – Let’s be clear that everyone here is Jewish. And Jesus’ response here is also very Jewish. 
      2. This leader is uptight because he’s uptight, not because he’s Jewish. 
        1. Friend – kids helping in worship – “sucked all the holiness right out of the room”. 
        2. Episcopalians can get a little anxious about disrupting orderly worship, even if the disruption is life-giving. 
      3. But stories like this eventually become part of Christian thinking about Judaism as superficial and legalistic, vs. Christianity as religion of the heart. 
        1. Let me be clear: that is not a distinction that holds up to scrutiny! 
    7. We have to be careful with texts like this. What do they actually say? How have they been used? 
  1. Today’s passage… 
    1. Towards the end of the letter – 13 chapters – this is the “how to live” part, after the big theological argument. 
    2. I was starting somewhat from scratch 
    3. Discovered a really densely allusive text – Page!
  1. Working through the page… 
    1. This passage: Contrasting two mountains. First, Sinai – where Moses received the covenant, on the wilderness journey from the book of Exodus
      1. God’s presence – fire, earthquake, storm – other places in OT, too – signs of power. 
    2. Stay away from the mountain!! Exodus 19… 
      1. Sense of terror and danger in God’s presence. 
      2. Could kill you just to see God directly! 
    3. The second mountain – Zion. 
      1. Jerusalem – City of David – 1000 years ago now – becomes an idealized image of the holy City – “the heavenly Jerusalem.” (The heavenly New York…) 
    4. The gathering at/on the mountain… Sinai: people filled with dread. Here: at my first reading, a party! “Festal gathering.”
      1. WorkingPreacher – actually this is Greek political terminology – assembly, enrollment, festal gathering – this is an alternative body politic, a renewed civil society, a divine democracy. 
        1. Different from party image – but also appealing! 
        2. God the judge – could sound scary, we’ve heard a lot about God’s judgment. But maybe positive here? 
        3. Contrast to the fear and trembling of Sinai. 
    5. “Sprinkling blood” – what? 
      1. Abel – Adam and Eve’s son killed by his brother – reference to human tendency to kill each other? 
      2. Based on practices from the wilderness Tabernacle that became part of Temple worship
        1. Animal sacrifice – blood as holy, represented life force. 
        2. Sprinkling blood as act of symbolic cleansing –  
          1. Exod 24 – Moses sprinkles the people to affirm the covenant with God.
      3. Earlier in Hebrews – ch 9 – explicit contrast of these practices and Jesus’ self-sacrifice. Blood of goats & bulls can clean people superficially, but  “How much more, then, will the blood of Christ… cleanse our consciences…, so that we may serve the living God!”
      4. I hope you are starting to notice how well this author knows the OT & how skillfully they are weaving it into their writing here! 
      5. Re: supercessionism: The text wants to say that Jesus has replaced those old ritual practices. 
        1. Thing is, Judaism ALSO emphasizes that rituals aren’t enough in themselves & need to have the right heart towards God!
    1. Okay, new paragraph, and a new aspect to the contrast. God’s people at Sinai struggled to listen, obey, and trust. Wilderness stories…. Call for the Christian community to do better! 
      1. Quotation – “Yet once more  I will shake not only the earth but also the heaven.” This is from the prophetic book of Haggai. (How did I find that out? Google.)
      2. Haggai – prophet during the building of the Second Temple. Minor Prophet – means we didn’t learn very much about them in seminary. 
        1. Telling the people to have confidence and trust that God will help them rebuild. 
        2. People who have been through great “shaking” – conquest, exile – next “shake” will be to your benefit! 
      3. This author’s interp – not much to do with Haggai. — “Yet once more” as pointing towards end times – everything shake-able, that is, everything earthly and tangible, will be gone, soon. 
        1. But what cannot be shaken will remain, endure. 
    2. Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken… What kingdom? 
      1. This is basically the only time Hebrews uses this word. But it’s pretty clearly alluding to Jesus’s kingdom language. Examples on page – two out of MANY. 
      2. Hard to unpack briefly! An alternative reality we can choose to step into now, and also, something beyond this world that we are promised… 
    3. One more quotation – “For indeed our God is a consuming fire.” 
      1. This is the ONLY TIME this particular Gk word appears in the NT! (How do I know THAT? Google. Well: an online concordance, which is a kind of index to all the words used in the Bible.) 
      2. BUT it is used a couple of times in the Septuagint, which is a Greek version of the Hebrew Bible. It’s the version of the Old Testament that this writer would have known. 
      3. I’m almost certain this line is a direct quote from Deuteronomy 4. 
        1. Deut – one of those parts I do know relatively well – at least the gist – because I wrote a paper on it in seminary!  
          1. Moses’ last words to the people before entering the Promised Land.  
          2. Strong theme: Choose faithfulness, choose to follow God’s ways & stick with God, as you enter this new chapter, and things will go well for you. 
          3. This passage consistent with that – a reminder that faithfulness includes not messing around wiht other gods, because our God does not like that! 
      4. So while this passage begins by saying we – as Christians – aren’t like God’s people huddled in terror below Mount Sinai, it ends on this note: we should rightly feel some awe before God.
  1. So – having gone through all that – better sense of meaning – still a text I want to use liturgically? Appropriate? 
      1. “Since, then…” (or, “Therefore…”) 
        1. Here, wrapping up this argument.
        2. In worship: Everything before – readings, hymns, sermon, prayers, confession – should point us towards this realization/affirmation.
      2. Since, then, we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken… 
        1. We have to bear with the mystery of the kingdom & let those layers of meaning add up over time. 
        2. “That cannot be shaken” – don’t need context – The idea of something unshakable – appealing. 
      3. Let us give thanks – Or, Let us have grace. 
        1. Charin – which is the “char” in Eucharist. 
        2. Translated as grace and as gratitude or thanks. Scope for a whole word study there!
      1. “Let us give thanks, by which we offer to God an acceptable worship with reverence and awe. 
        1. “Acceptable” –  Gk: “well-pleasing.” Translator DB Hart – worship that delights God. 
        2. LOTS of examples in the Bible (Isaiah, recently) of worship that doesn’t please God because it’s not offered with the right state of heart or mind. 
        3. So: A call to worship with gratitude and reverence. 
      2. For indeed our God is a consuming fire! This part isn’t on the paper on the ambo… but sometimes I say it anyway!
        1. God’s generosity towards us, our response of gratitude and wonder – sometimes adding that final note of God’s powerful otherness also feels important. 
        2. Worshipping at synagogue recently – how much their worship emphasizes God’s holiness. 
          1. Kabod in Hebrew – heaviness, weight. Approaching the living God is a serious matter. 
          2. We “God is love”-type Protestants can sometimes need a little reminder of that. 

So. 

Since, then, we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken,

Let us give thanks… let us have grace… 

By which we offer God well-pleasing worship, with reverence and awe… for indeed our God is a consuming fire. 

  1. Conclusion
    1. Doing this work helped me appreciate this author, their voice, their craft.  I hope for you too.
    2. Doing this work helped me go deeper into the meaning of something I say often. I hope you found some meaning too.
    3. And doing this work stirred up some of my awe, my gratitude, at being called into the presence of the Living One. At being, indeed, promised a kingdom that cannot be shaken. I hope for you too. 

Survey Report, August 2022

St. Dunstan’s Parish survey results, June-July 2022

Thanks to all who filled out our survey about your experiences of church and Covid over the past two years! We got 50 responses. Here are some general findings and patterns. 

  • The pandemic has been very very hard – but in different ways for different people. 
  • It looks like Zoom worship is here to stay for the foreseeable future. People really appreciate having both in-person and Zoom options. (Though we got hints hat people can sometimes feel a little jealous of the other service. Trust us: both Zoom and in-person worship are getting all the time, attention and resources we can give!) 
  • We now have somewhat separate Zoom and in-person congregations, as we used to have 8AM & 10AM congregations. 
  • A lot of people want interaction. They may miss friends; they may just want to feel integrated and connected, or see what the other group is up to. We’ll be keeping an eye out and doing some experiments with gatherings and opportunities that can bring together folks from the Zoom/in-person congregations, in the months ahead. Your ideas are welcome too!
  • Isolation has been tough, for lots of people. Building space to reconnect is important. Several people mentioned feeling like they had lost social skills due to the pandemic. Perhaps some lightly-structured social gatherings, like craft groups, book groups, simple service projects, game nights, etc., would be helpful doorways back into community. 
  • About returning to in-person worship: 11 people said they were uncomfortable returning to in-person church because of Covid risks; 4 people said they don’t want to return because they don’t want to wear masks at church. We still have a continuum of views and risk tolerances among our members. Your parish leaders are trying to hold the best balance we can, and maintain options that allow people to participate in many different ways. 
  • Music feels less important than before the pandemic to some, and more so to others. Same with Eucharist. Same with the building. Overall: Connection and participation remain important, but what and how have shifted for many folks. Perhaps this indicates how people are changing and adapting, as the church changes and adapts. How do we continue to feed our holy needs, in changed and changing circumstances? 
  • People miss choir, but also it’s not clear whether it’s the highest priority, or that everyone who’s historically participated is ready to return to it. We’ll continue experiments and opportunities with shared song an music-making in the weeks and months ahead. 
  • It’s OK to ask for a home visit or for someone to bring you Communion! Rev. Miranda or another visitor would be glad to make a plan with you. Some people feel reluctant or hesitant, but please ask if it’s something you want. And if you’re willing to visit people – in person or over Zoom – to chat, pray with them, perhaps bring Communion, etc., let Rev. Miranda know. 
  • 94% of respondents felt a high or very high level of trust in parish leadership. 90% feel that they understand the decisions that have been taken about Covid response and mitigation. About 88% feel that their needs and feelings have been heard and considered in that decision-making. 
  • This is good to hear because your leadership have been trying really hard to be worthy of your trust, listen to everyone, make the best decisions we can, and communicate clearly about what and why. We’re glad that that’s coming through. 
  • That said, if you’re one of the folks who is at the lower end on those questions and you need further conversation, please reach out. You can always email . 

Sermon, July 17: Amos 8

Prepared for Zoom worship by Sister Pamela Pranke, OPA.

Read the Amos lesson here! 

[Show a basket of summer fruit. Looks good but ripening and beginning to rot.]

Here I have a bowl of summer fruit. It’s beautiful, isn’t it? While the fruits are not from the Middle East, they represent the basket of summer fruit given in a vision by the Lord to Amos along with the words, “The end is come upon my people of Israel; I will not again pass by them anymore.”

That does sound like a dire warning, but – really, what does it have to do with a basket of summer fruit?

Let’s keep this fruit handy while listening carefully to the warnings given to Amos by the Lord, and draw some parallels for 21st Century Christians.

Sometime, about 765 BC, the prophet Amos tried to warn the Jewish people living in the northern Kingdom of Israel that they were headed for disaster unless they made some changes to the way that they were living. As any prophet knows, the people just won’t listen.

And why should they listen, after all, like us, Israel was experiencing a time of relative prosperity as symbolized by this lovely bowl of fruit. Yet, when we look more closely, we notice that it is not as lovely as it first appeared. 

Here the skin is shriveling, this one is beginning to rot, this one has a worm.  Summer fruit, while delicious, doesn’t last long and must be examined carefully.

Amos is known as the social justice prophet sent by God to inform Israel of the rot present in their fruit, of its faults, how the Kingdom needed to change its ways to repair injustice, and to warn the people of coming disaster if they did not do so. This is also a message for us.

While the economy could be doing better, most people are doing alright, there is no famine, yet hunger exists among the poor and sick, especially among widows, children, and refugees, with a growing disparity of wealth between the ones who had and the ones who had not. 

The poor grow poorer. They are being cheated in the markets, prices are raised so the poor only grow further into debt, becoming slaves to the wealthy.

Are we like the people of ancient Israel where prosperity was available only to those who did not experience misfortune of any kind, such as illness, coming from a conquered nation, having a husband die, or being a woman or, or elderly, or a child?

Do these things really happen in the United States? 

Can you offer some examples? 

Regarding wealth, The Pew Research Organization stated that there has been an uninterrupted increase in inequality since 1980. Income and wealth inequality in the United States is substantially higher than in almost any other developed nation, and it is on the rise, [Council of Foreign Affairs).

Despite the presence of injustice, like the people in ancient Israel, most of us are content with the general state of affairs. 

The people of Amos’ time did not want to listen to Amos so he wrote the Lord’s words down so they and us could read and study them today. We must take care that we do not make the same mistake as they did by not listening to the warning.

We, means individuals, families, churches, and our nation, that we must listen to this warning about injustice. A just society is a stable society and a stable society is a just society.

When greed for power and wealth overcome a society it begins to go bad. Like this bowl of fruit, it will look good until closer examination. That was Amos’ message. 

That is not just Amos message, it is God’s message, as well. Throughout the Old and New Testament, the Lord teaches us to live righteously. 

Christianity is a faith with defined moral rights and wrongs lived out, above all, in love. As Christians, our life ought to look like our beliefs, a life of humility, honesty, righteousness, and above all, love.

Here at St. Dunstan’s, we see that lived experience with loving actions toward those in need and care for the earth.

As individuals, each of us are called to contribute in whatever way we are called. Do for others what you have a passion to do, what you love to do. 

I have a friend who runs a dance studio, she offers scholarships for dance class to children who cannot afford the usual fee. 

I have another friend who collects Christmas gifts for abused women and their children.

 Whatever we do, do in love, do with joy, and do with the knowledge that it will not be easy, therefore, support one another in God’s work.

Amos’ warning was indeed dire. And, it is a warning given in love to help the people in ancient Israel, and now, so inevitable disaster would be avoided.

So, enjoy the summer fruit, and, do not take it for granted. It is fragile and fleeting.

As another prophet, Micah, said in Micah 6:8,

He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the Lord require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly
[a] with your God. [NIV]

Zoom sermon, June 19

Preached by the Rev. Lorna Grenfell. 

The young poet Amanda Gorman burst on the American consciousness at the presidential inauguration in January 2021 when she read her poem “The Hill We Climb”. More recently, she has written a poem entitles “Everything Hurts”. The first four lines of which are as follows:

“Everything hurts,

Our hearts shadowed and strange,

Minds made muddied and mute.

We carry tragedy, terrifying and true.”

Certainly, the phrase “everything hurts” sums up much of what each of us sees, hears, and experiences in our world today.

-The pandemic continues to dictate much of our lives.

-There is a very decisive war being fought in Ukraine and in 20 armed conflicts–terrorist insurgencies, civil wars—in the rest of the world right now.

– Storms, hurricanes, floods, and wildfires continue to rage and devastate many parts of the planet with our inability to address climate change adequately and quickly.

– Our beloved country is enmeshed in a political morass of unbelievable proportions.

– And our attention is riveted to the demands of addressing gun violence, reproductive rights, homelessness, inflation, and our systemic, ever-present racism.  This morning, we praise God that Juneteenth, begun in 1865, is finally a federal holiday.  It took us 157 years to make that happen, and there are still only 18 states that have actually funded this federal holiday.

Good heavens.  Have I left anything out?  No wonder the phrase “everything hurts” comes to mind.  Our world seems barely tolerable.  In fact, a good word for today is INtolerable.  So, let us turn together to our scripture lessons that were so beautifully read for us this morning.

After King Solomon’s death, ten tribes broke away from Davidic rule and set up Israel where Ahab was king in the 9th century BCE.  Ahab marries Jezebel, daughter of the King of Sidon, Israel’s Phoenician neighbor.  Jezebel promotes the worship of their god Baal.  The prophet Elijah appears on the scene and overwhelmingly demonstrates YHWH’s superiority over Baal, ending in the slaughter of all the prophets of Baal.  Jezebel is furious and swears revenge on Elijah.  She’s so angry that she swears death to Elijah.  

Elijah has to get out of town fast.   He flees into Judah and then into the wilderness.  After 40 days and 40 nights, exhausted and alone, Elijah lies down to sleep beside a wadi.  While he sleeps, angels come and leave food—a cake by his head. (I think this is one of the first biblical references to Angel Food Cake?  Don’t tell Miranda I said that!)  After his long journey alone into the wilderness, after wild wind and splitting rocks, after earthquakes and fire, there is the sound of silence.  Verse 12 tells us God speaks to Elijah when he is alone in the sound of sheer silence.  The words translated as the sound of sheer silence have more than one meaning: quiet, small voice, gentle whisper, stillness.

Our New Testament story this morning tells of the Gerasene demoniac who also finds the world Intolerable and flees to a place where he can be alone.   This Gerasene demoniac is a heartbreaking, Biblical figure, a man possessed by demons, a man with no name, a human being who, when asked his name, replies “legion”—a direct reference to the oppressive Roman rule that all are living under.  A Roman legion is composed of up to 6,000 armed men trained for war.  Like Elijah, life in community for the demoniac becomes intolerable.  He also flees to a place where he can be alone, the cemetery.  Alone and afraid, ranting, naked, violent and shouting, he lives among the dead.  He lives amidst a great silence.  And, of course, it is here that God comes to him in the form of a human being, Jesus.  It is exactly here that Jesus comes to the demoniac and exorcises all his demons, banishes them into the pigs who rush into the sea and drown.  And Jesus tells the man to return home and share with people how much God has done for him.

So, what about us gathered here this morning?  Retired Bishop Steven Charleston writes:

“When I watch the news, I get the feeling that history is deconstructing itself all around us.  What we knew is not what is now.  What we once assumed or expected is giving way to what we never could have imagined.  Old alliances are breaking apart.  Old assumptions about who we are no longer apply.  Like it or not, we are a transitional generation, people living on a hinge point of history.”

I think one of the questions for us gathered here this morning is how do we address what the World Health Organization describes as our collective ‘exhaustion, cynicism and burnout’.  When everything hurts, where will we get the courage, the stamina, the expertise and knowledge to live in and change our communities, our country and the world which have become nigh on INtolerable with violence and prejudice, with the systemic and ingrained harm human beings are doing, one to another.

It seems to me that our lesson is first to find a place where each of us can be alone.  In Jesus’ time, the world population was 250,000.  Today it is 1 billion people.  So, this finding a place to be alone might pose a challenge, but I think we can each do it if we are intentional about it.

maybe on a hilltop watching a sunrise on a morning walk or run

maybe a woodsy spot where we can feel and smell the sun-warmed pine needles

maybe an evening canoe paddle on a glassy smooth lake

maybe a chair outside at dusk to watch the stars come out

…a place for you alone where you can listen for the sheer silence, the small voice, the gentle whisper, the stillness.

…a place where there is a joining of the seen and unseen

…a place quiet enough for the transcendent and the immanent to meet

…a place for simply and passively receiving healing and strength

…a place where you don’t have to be busy

…a place where you don’t have to hold a prayer seminar with God

…a place to just let the sheer silence, the stillness, the gentle whisper flow into your very being.

Down through the ages, there has been a great deal written about these places of silence.  Songs and poems abound, and I know you know many of them!

–Of course, there is the old hymn “I come to the garden alone”, the place where “he walks with me and he talks with me”

–and for those of us who came of age in the ‘60s, there is Simon and Garfunkel’s “Hello darkness, my old friend/I’ve come to talk with you again…And the vision that was planted in my brain/Still remains/Within the sound of silence.”

–And here are the words of beloved American poet Wendell Berry:  “When despair for the world grows in me/and I wake in the night at the least sound/in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,/I go and lie down where the wood drake rests in his beauty on the water….”

–And here are my all-time favorite words from all of Christmas.  When a congregation sings this, I hold my breath and just listen: “How silently, how silently, the wondrous gift is given/So God imparts to human hearts the joys of highest heaven/No ear may hear Christ coming, but in this world of sin/Where meek souls will receive him still, the dear Christ enters in.”

Again, in Bishop Charleston’s words:

“Our task is not to run away from change, but to run towards it.  We must swing the hinge of history in the direction we want to go for our shared future.”  In being alone with God, both Elijah and the demoniac receive the strength to return to community.  Elijah goes on to deal again with Ahab and with his son Ahaziah and eventually to pass his own mantle on to Elisha.  The demoniac becomes an active community witness to all God has done in his life.

When life seems to become intolerable, may each of us find a way to be alone, a way to let the sheer silence of God reach in and bring comfort, courage, strength, solace and renewal.

It’s important.  It’s what enables us to go on, and you never know–maybe there’ll be Angel Food Cake?

Amanda Gorman ends her poem “Everything Hurts” with these words: 

“Maybe everything hurts,

Our hearts shadowed and strange,

But only when everything hurts

May everything change.”

In the words of poet David Whyte, ‘the visible and the invisible working together in common cause produce the miraculous.’

Amen and Amen.

Lorna Grenfell

June 19, 2022

Bulletin for July 3

9AM Zoom online gathering: We use slides during worship that contain most of this information, but some prefer to follow along on paper.

Bulletin for July 3

The link for the Zoom gatherings is available in our weekly E-news, in our Facebook group St. Dunstan’s MadCity, or by emailing Rev. Miranda:  .

THREE WAYS TO USE AN ONLINE BULLETIN…
1. Print it out!

2. Open the bulletin on one device (smartphone or tablet) while joining Zoom worship on another device (tablet or computer).

3. On a computer, open the bulletin in a separate browser window or download and open separately, and view it next to your Zoom window

Sermon, May 29

Before the readings: 

We’re celebrating the Feast of the Ascension today. Ascension is technically a Thursday – and we’ve sometimes done a special Ascension service – but this year we’re observing it on Sunday, as many churches do.

Ascension is a fancy word for “going up.” What we remember and honor today is the time when the risen Christ, who has been spending time with his friends and followers, gives them their final instructions – tells them to wait for the coming of the Holy Spirit – and leaves to return to God the Father. 

We know that God doesn’t actually live above the sky, but there’s a very deep-seated and ancient impulse to think of God that way, so Jesus appears to ascend – go up – into the sky, out of sight. My favorite images of the Ascension are the ones with Jesus’ feet dangling down from the top of the frame. 

The lectionary does something odd but understandable for Ascension. It gives us the very end of the Gospel of Luke… and the very beginning of the book of the Acts of the Apostles. Those passages overlap: they both tell the Ascension story. 

The Gospel of Luke and the Book of the Acts of the Apostles have the same author. That’s widely accepted by Biblical scholars. But Luke didn’t just cut and paste. There are differences. 

Luke has done a lot research and gathered all the information he can, to put together his accounts of the life of Jesus and the early church. So we might think of him as a historian. But he’s not a historian in the modern sense. It doesn’t bother Luke that he has Jesus saying slightly different things, in these two scenes. 

Maybe the best analogy is to modern authors like Hilary Mantel who do a lot of research so they can write about real people and real events, but then do their historical writing as a novel, a story, to catch readers’ attention and bring them along. 

Let’s receive those texts now… 

 

What do you notice?… 

I feel like the Luke version feels a little like an episode of a TV show at the end of a season when the writers don’t know yet if it’s going to be renewed. Trying to wrap things up so that it feels complete, but also leaving some threads they can pick up if they DO get another season.

And they DID – so the Acts version is more forward-looking. It leans into what happens next – in the next 28 chapters and fifteen years or so. 

Maybe the biggest difference is the two men in the Acts version. We’re meant to understand that these are angels – their sudden appearance, their white garments. In Luke’s Easter Gospel, there are also two men in white clothes who appear suddenly – to tell the women who have come to the tomb that Jesus is not here, but has risen. 

Why leave those angelic messengers out of the Luke version? It might make you wonder if that particular detail really happened. It might make you think: what does this do, in the story? 

What it does in the story is get the disciples to stop staring up… and start looking around, and out… at THEIR work in the world, the work Jesus has charged them with: being his witnesses in Jerusalem, in Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. 

Being witnesses. The word used there in Greek means both of the things it means for us in English. Somebody who sees a thing happen, and can tell other people about it. Or: Somebody who is a witness in a legal sense – who testifies at a trial to what they have seen and know to be true. 

It means a third thing too, because the Greek word here is martus. It’s the root of the English word martyr, someone who proves the strength of their convictions by being willing to die for them. 

We have that word because so many in the early generations of Christians, in times of persecution, were called to face death for their faith in Jesus. 

So being a witness, in this particular Christian sense, isn’t just about knowing and telling. It’s also about being willing to put yourself on the line – to take a costly stand – for what you know to be right and true and good.

Jesus’ friends, watching him disappear into the clouds, might not know – yet – that that kind of courage and commitment will be asked of them. But Luke certainly does. By the time he’s telling this story, Peter, Paul, and many other Christians have become witnesses to Christ Jesus at cost of their lives. 

This call to be witnesses is interestingly different from what Jesus tells the disciples in the gospel of Matthew – the text sometimes called the Great Commission. At the very end of Matthew, Jesus says, “Go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.”

Matthew’s Jesus tells the disciples: Go make more Christians. Convert people. In Luke and Acts, Jesus tells the disciples: Bear witness. Tell and show people what you have learned from me. Luke’s Jesus leaves the outcome of that witnessing in God’s hands. 

Last week I read a piece by two young Christians, Hannah Bowman and Luke Melonakos-Harrison, about being witnesses to Christ in a time when a conservative Christian cultural and political agenda is threatening trans lives, LGBTQ+ rights, reproductive freedom, and teaching the truth about race and racism.

Their article never uses the word witness but I think that what it means to be witnesses to Jesus, in these times, is exactly what they’re talking about.

Luke and Hannah write, 

“Solidarity requires that we translate our general values—our desire to love, protect, and support the LGBTQ community [or other communities under threat]—into specific actions sufficient to the threats we face now…. Churches should consider how they can—as a congregation or community—develop real relationships of mutual aid with affected individuals and families…. The church must be a community of real bodies, acting together as a material expression of the body of Christ in our society. …The question for the church must not be “how do we form willing, individual Christians into allies of the LGBTQ community [or other communities under threat]?” but instead “how do we become the broken body of Christ given up in acts of solidarity?””

How do we, together, become ready to put ourselves on the line – to become witnesses – for what we know to be right and true and good?  For what we have come to believe, and to hope for, in Christ? It’s a big question. But the book of Acts has one answer – an important answer. It’s in what happens in the very next verses.

After these two men in white tell them to stop staring at the sky, the disciples go back to Jerusalem. They regather in the upstairs room where they’ve gathered before. The core group gets back together – the men and women who have been Jesus’ closest companions along the way. And they spend a lot of time praying together. 

A few verses, and about ten days later, they’re still gathering for togetherness and shared prayer. Our Pentecost lesson for next week begins, “When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place.” 

Our former Bishop Steven Miller preached on this text once and it stuck with me. He pointed out that this sentence, that first sentence of the Pentecost story, Acts chapter 2, really stresses the group’s togetherness. All. Together. In one place. Three separate words in the original Greek. Luke really wanted to hammer this home. ALL. TOGETHER. In the same place. 

So what do the disciples do in response to Jesus’ call to be witnesses? They regroup. Literally. They regather in a familiar place. 

I’ll bet they did some checking in on those they hadn’t seen yet. Has anyone seen Thaddeus? How about Joseph Barsabbas? Does anyone know where Mary and Cleopas are staying? … 

More people would show up, day by day, and be welcomed. Everyone would share what’s been happening to them. How it’s all been feeling. Maybe how frightened they’ve been, and how sad. They’d wonder together: what next? Jesus seems to think there’s more for us to do… but right now, this is what we need: just to be together, all together, in one place. To regroup. To find each other and ourselves again. 

I’m listening to the wisdom of this text. I know there are people in this congregation for whom the question they bring with them to church is: How does faith matter, facing the things we’re facing? What is the good news here – for me, for my struggling neighbors?For the grieving and the outraged and the hopeless? And how can I, can we, offer or embody that good news? – Especially when the name of Jesus Christ is plastered all over movements that seem so far from his teaching and witness? 

And I know there are people in this congregation for whom the question they bring with them to church is: Does this place, these people, this God, have anything to offer to help me hold myself together, or hold my loved ones together? To help me survive, and maybe begin to heal? 

There are probably other big questions that people are carrying inside them too. And many may carry some of each. 

It’s been said that every preacher really only has one sermon. I suspect, with humility, that my one sermon is: God calls and empowers us to join God in striving for justice, mercy, peace, and human wholeness, individually and together, in ways small and large. That we are not here for solace only, but for strength; not for pardon only, but for renewal. 

But sometimes – Lord, sometimes just we need solace. Sometimes we just need to regroup. The past two years have been so hard. The past two WEEKS have been so hard. People keep gently suggesting that maybe this summer we should just… meet up around the firepit. Have a tea party on the patio. Go for walks together. Connect and reconnect. Rest and play, listen and share, and pray for and with one another. 

Whether we gather virtually or in person, we need to regroup. To find each other and ourselves again, all together in one place. To experience ourselves as the Body of Christ gathered. So that when the Holy Spirit shows up to send us forth as witnesses – we’re ready. 

Bulletin for May 1

9AM Zoom online gathering: We use slides during worship that contain most of this information, but some prefer to follow along on paper.

Bulletin for May 1

The link for the Zoom gatherings is available in our weekly E-news, in our Facebook group St. Dunstan’s MadCity, or by emailing Rev. Miranda:  .

THREE WAYS TO USE AN ONLINE BULLETIN…
1. Print it out!

2. Open the bulletin on one device (smartphone or tablet) while joining Zoom worship on another device (tablet or computer).

3. On a computer, open the bulletin in a separate browser window or download and open separately, and view it next to your Zoom window