Sermons, from the Canon to the Ordinary in the Episcopal Diocese of Northwestern Pennsylvania and the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York. Why call it Supposing Him to be the Gardener? Because Mary Magdalene, on the first Easter, was so distracted by her pain that she failed to notice the Divine in her midst. So do I. All the time. This title helps me remember that the Divine is everywhere--in the midst of deep pain as well as in profound joy. And everywhere in between.
Monday, September 9, 2013
Holy Hatred and Courageously Bearing the Cross Sept 8 Proper 18c
“Whoever comes to me and does not HATE father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and even life itself, cannot be my disciple.” Holy Hatred Batman!
“Holy hatred” is how one commentator characterized what Jesus is asking us to do in today’s Gospel.... i think it fits....it's a tough message to hear isn’t it? Especially when it’s the first day of our program year—Sunday School, the choir and folks we haven’t seen a lot of over the summer months are all back, our stewardship campaign is getting ready for kick off and in the luster of all this joy we have Jesus telling us to hate! Telling us, in no uncertain terms, that we must be willing to turn our backs on our family, friends and life as we know it–to hate all that we currently love, small l, in order to Love, capital L, God.
Now, what Jesus knew and what we tend to forget is that being a Christian really isn’t easy. To truly live out our baptismal covenant, to be followers of Christ, requires a lot more of us than just showing up on Sunday morning. We are charged, through our baptism, to stand up against the evils and the wrongs of this world---globally and locally, generally and personally, popular stances and not so popular stances. To be willing to disagree with those we love, to support unpopular causes, to go against the grain of mainstream culture---to hate the things that distract and detract from the pursuit of establishing the Kingdom of God here on earth.
Holy Hatred indeed!
Today’s readings share a certain theme—the cost of bearing the cross and the need to stand up against the forces of this world, against wrong, against evil. As it’s put in Deuteronomy, we have a choice, live a life centered around the eternal love of God, or live a life centered around the fleeting love of things temporal. The author is pretty vocal about what they consider to be the right choice….”choose [God] so that you and your descendants may LIVE…”
And then we have this quirky little letter of Paul to Philemon where Paul is actually—dare I say it?—compassionate in his encouragement of Phil and in his support and love of Onesimus, Philemon’s runaway slave. Paul is asking Philemon to welcome Onesimus back into his household, not as slave, but as a free man. Paul acknowledges that what he’s asking of Phil is costly.
Paul’s correct, living the life we proclaim in our creeds IS COSTLY.
My seminary's motto was Magnani miter Crucem Sustine: Courageously Bear the Cross. But just what does it mean… to courageously bear the cross... to really be a disciple of Jesus Christ?
Well it begins with this notion of Holy Hatred.
Holy Hatred is to resist, deny and ultimately defeat the evil that permeates our world.
And picking up your cross, or as my alma mater puts it, courageously bearing your cross, is doing just that.
It’s a process…Holy Hatred leads to courageously bearing the cross.
This is what Jesus is trying to get across to us.
It’s what Paul is asking Philemon to do.
Hate the evil of this world and through faith, name it, confront it and deny it.
It’s the Christian task here on earth. It’s what we’re marked and sealed to do at our baptism and beyond.
And just how do we do this? Well…
We courageously bear the cross when we struggle, really struggle with what to do about Syria.
We courageously bear the cross when, upon hearing of the murder of a 13 year old girl just blocks from where we are right now, we say to our mayor, our common council reps and our children that no life—no life---is disposable and that when a child is killed senselessly and brutally all of us—all of us-- are hurt down to our core.
We courageously bear the cross when, faced with the graft and corruption and “business as usual” in our local governments, be it Erie or Niagara County, Buffalo or Niagara Falls, that we stand up and say NO it isn’t business as usual because we deserve and demand to have a government that is truly and always by the people and for the people.
We courageously bear the cross when we say to our school boards that our children deserve to learn without the fear of common core test scores determining the success of their education.
We courageously bear the cross when we see the abuse of a spouse or a child or a senior and tell someone about it.
We courageously bear the cross when we reject the hateful rhetoric that fills our airwaves and our social media.
We courageously bear the cross when we say NO to those who would restrict who can marry whom and who can adopt whom and who can worship whom!
We courageously bear the cross when we sit down with the teens in our midst to say what Miley Cyrus and Robin Thicke demonstrated was disrespectful and demeaning and that it is never ever ok to objectify another person. Never. Ever.
We courageously bear the cross when we reach out to the stranger, the foreigner, the outcast.
We courageously bear the cross when we turn over the tables of the money changers, touch the untouchables and eat with notorious sinners.
We courageously bear the cross when we live as Jesus has taught us.
I think you get my point.
Holy Hatred is understanding that the way of THIS WORLD is often in conflict with the Way of God.
And Courageously Bearing the Cross is doing more than nodding our heads in ascent, or paying lip-service to the mantra, Dignity to all Forever. No Exceptions.
Courageously Bearing the Cross is walking out of here, forgiven, healed, renewed and strengthened to love our neighbor as our self and realizing that our neighborhood stretches from the corner of Jewett Pkwy and Summit Ave (Linwood Ave and North St) to Syria, Africa, China and all parts in between.
Holy Hatred Batman, I believe we have work to do!
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