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.
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Joseph was a Good Man Advent 4 Yr A
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Advent 3 Yr A
John the Baptist was antsy. Sitting in prison and waiting, waiting for the messiah whose coming he had prophesied, waiting for his cousin Jesus to get on with the fire and brimstone of judgment, to get on with separating the chaff and the wheat, waiting for Jesus to clear the threshing room floor, waiting, no doubt, for Jesus to get him out of jail!! John asks, if you’re the one, then where’s the action? Where’s the wrath?
In response, Jesus lists his acts of love—no recompense here, just healing.
Jesus wasn’t the messiah a first century Jew expected. From John the Baptist of Jesus’ early ministry, to the apostles of his life and the early Christians of Paul and James, Jesus’ followers assumed that the second coming was going to happen soon--so they waited, getting everyone riled up to “be ready.”
Of course we’re still waiting…but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t get ready.
But, just what constitutes “getting ready?” Repenting of our sins, turning our lives around? Absolutely, these are important steps, but they’re reactive—reactions to choices we now regret. Besides being reactive, we must also be pro-active. We have a part in this second coming, but we need to pay attention, because God? God tends to show up where we least expect it…in the downtrodden, the lost and the unnoticed.
If the first Advent was ushered in via a scared young woman and her poor yet faithful fiancé, why should we expect the Second Advent to be some type of surround sound High definition blockbuster event?
My guess is that God will come in the most astonishing and unimaginable way possible, simply and quietly, because that’s what God does….God hides in plain sight.
No one expected anything good to come out of Nazareth and certainly no one gave that poor couple searching for lodging in Bethlehem a second thought. Just like so many in our world don’t give a second thought to the homeless, the hungry, the captive or the destitute among us. But we must because that’s how God comes to us. In the unnoticed, unrecognized “other.”
When God came the first time, in the person of Jesus, the Romans weren’t toppled, the Pharisees weren’t thrown out of the temple. The lame walked, the blind saw and the deaf heard.
The Kingdom of Heaven on earth isn’t going to be an event, God’s reign on earth is a process. A process which began to unfold through the First Advent, and which will culminate in the Second Advent. The first Advent and the second are all God’s doing, but the in between time? That’s ours. The in between time is the time for us to bring the love of God into action.
Jesus’ first coming did cast the mighty from their thrones—but not because of military action or legislation, but because he put compassion into action and that is what will bring Christ again. Compassion in action—the Second Advent will begin when we ----God’s beloved-----put the compassion of Christ into action.
And we can do it---we can bring compassionate justice into our world because we have God on our side [it’s right there in this morning’s collect]. God’s bountiful grace and mercy helps and delivers us--- from hardness of heart and wanderings of mind, from looking out for ourselves on the backs of our neighbors, from walking past the homeless and the outcast, the downtrodden and the lost. God’s bountiful grace and mercy is given to us as fuel…fuel to do all the work we’ve been given to do, work in redeeming this world from the power of selfishness and hatred, from war and violence, from cheating and deceit.
The second coming, the Second Advent, the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth is guaranteed—it’s guaranteed because God is patient---God will wait until we get it right, God will wait until we realize that our part in the second Advent is neither passive nor impossible.
Our part in the Second Advent is active and possible, it is energetic and do-able, and it is necessary and needed. And it is up to you and to me.
John the Baptist wanted to know if Jesus was the one because Jesus wasn’t acting like he expected the Messiah to act. Today, the leaders of faith who get the most attention beg a similar question---they don’t act like people of faith—they seem to ignore the teachings of Judaism, Islam and Christianity, begging the question, “where is the loving God of faith? Where is the tolerance of the Almighty, of Yahweh, of Allah? Where is the peace of Abraham, of Isaac of Ishmael, of Jesus? How can you, [how can we], preach a message of redemption, of repentance, of renewal when what comes out of your mouths is hate and intolerance?”
The questions of John the Baptist, “are you the one?” came because the peace of a humble carpenter’s kid from the backwater area of Nazareth was not how he envisioned God in the Flesh. The questions were legitimate and Jesus answered them---not by proclamation, but by action.
The public view of religion today has been usurped by fanatics who have high-jacked the message of God, as expressed in the three great Abrahamic faiths, to suit their own needs of power and elitism. No wonder people today ask us, how can your faith be the answer…look at what’s being done in the name of God!
John the Baptist was antsy, antsy for some action from the Messiah. And now the Messiah is antsy, anxious for some action from us.
Our Advent task, our Christmas task, our Epiphany, Lent, Easter and Pentecost task is to reclaim the message of the incarnation—the message of peace on earth—and make sure that in all our doings we live into the message of hope which is Christ, that the lame and the blind and the deaf of our lives—those people who are deaf to the pleas of the homeless, the people who are lame to the plight of the destitute, the people who are blind to the needs of the outcast—are healed.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Advent 2 YrA
John the Baptist: wild haired, camel skin wearing, locust eating mad-man standing in the middle of the murky Jordan River, preaching a message of repentance---accusing the world of sin and challenging everyone, especially the Jewish elite of his day---to make their way straight and get ready. For the Kingdom of Heaven was coming and there was no time for arrogant self-serving piety.
No doubt the Pharisees and Sadducees wished he would just go away. Or at least be quiet.
But it was too late. Word had gotten out about this prophet—was it Elijah?—who was baptizing people with those muddy waters, promising them a new kind of baptism—with fire and the Holy Spirit no less---to be rendered by a messiah—the messiah. His shtick, if he was to be believed, was just the opening act, the main event was about to burst on the scene. And John, John was trying very hard to get everyone ready.
Of course getting ready is what Advent is all about and it’s why the Baptist takes up two of our four Advent Sunday Gospels---because we are to be aware, to get ready and to repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is about to arrive. God is coming to be with us, we best be ready. We best repent.
Repentance. To turn from sin and dedicate oneself to amendment of life.
To turn from sin. Sin is such a tough word for our 21 st century ears---well at least for my 21 st century ears—its been tossed around by so many tele-evangelists, folks who profess to be holier than thou but who, in the stark light of day, turn out to be a lot more human than holy.
We sin when our actions take us away from God. The German Jesuit Theologian Karl Rahner puts it best when he says that all human behavior moves along a continuum—a continuum that is either moving toward God or moving away from God. Are our actions moving us closer to God or farther away from God? If we’re moving farther away from God we’re sinning. All sins are not the mortal sins we here our Roman Catholic sisters and brothers talk about. To sin is to miss the mark. To sin is to do something, which furthers our own self-interest instead of moving along with the divine plan. You know the divine plan I’m talking about—loving our neighbor as yourself, loving God with all our heart and soul and mind. Sinning isn’t always headline news. Sin, more often is simply missing the mark. Sinning moves us away from God.
The goal of our life, according to Rahner, should be to move toward God—because God is always—always—reaching out to us.
Of course, during Advent this is particularly poignant for us because in the Christmas event—in the birth of Jesus, God not only reaches for us, God becomes us.
With God coming to dwell among us, the time seems ripe for us —to repent, amend our lives and head toward the outstretch arms of our loving God.
So we visit the stories of John the Baptist, this wild man on the banks of the river, screaming at us to straighten up and fly right.
He saves his most venomous wrath for the religious elite of his day—the Pharisees and Sadducees—they figure by virtue of their heritage—being children of Abraham---they’re set. They assume the Baptist has come on the scene to help the gentiles, the pagans, the fallen away Jews---but not them.
The arrogance of piety—the thought that his message of repentance was for other people---people who don’t follow the law, people who don’t tithe, people who don’t offer the appropriate sacrifices at the temple—it was this arrogance which fueled John’s You Brood of Vipers rage.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Advent 1 Yr A
Advent always seems to sneak up on me. I guess it’s my determination to give Thanksgiving its due; I resist the onslaught of Christmas decorations that appear the day after Halloween. In my focus on fall and harvest themes, pumpkins and squash, pots of soup on the stove and a slow extraction of sweaters and coats from storage, the transformation from the settling in of a WNY fall, the winding down of the long season following Pentecost into the expectation—the getting ready-- of Advent catches me by surprise, each and every time.
Advent has long been misunderstood. Advent isn’t a mini- Lent but it’s also not a 4-week wind up to Christmas.
Advent is, by design, a penitential season of sorts—it is a season when we focus on becoming reconciled with God. But it’s not like Lent when we lay ourselves bare before God, stripping ourselves, confessing our sins and awaiting God’s redeeming act of resurrection. No Advent is when God lays God’s self-bare before us[1]---when God comes to dwell among us in the stark vulnerability of a newborn baby.
Advent is when we ready ourselves for the ultimate reconciliation of humanity and God---reconciliation in the person of Jesus Christ.
It’s actually overwhelming, when you think about it, God is coming to us—how can we ever be ready for that?
‘Tis the season for avoiding darkness, debauchery, licentiousness and the thief who steals away in the night…
ho ho ho.
Advent is about waiting. Advent is about getting ready. Advent is about remembering that we don’t know the day, the hour, or the moment of Christ’s return.
We don’t know what tomorrow will bring. We can plan all we want, making lists and checking them twice, but life marches on, seemingly oblivious to our desires. Life is fragile, unpredictable and wonderfully spontaneous, despite our best-laid plans!
I think all this Christmas frivolity, the shopping of Black Friday, the parties, the mailing of packages to loved one’s far away, the writing of Christmas cards is….. absolutely fine. Good even. Really good.
And cherishing one another is what God wants us to do, because that’s what God does.
Have we moved out of darkness and into light?
(This is what Advent asks us to do---it’s right there in today’s collect—“cast away the works of darkness and put on the armor of light.” )
So I wish you all a very happy and blessed Advent. A season of getting ready to receive the glorious love of God, as given to us all in Jesus Christ. Amen.
Thursday, November 25, 2010
A Thanksgiving Homily
Two weeks ago this very evening I awoke in the recovery room of Roswell Park Cancer Institute so overwhelmed with gratitude all I could do, for several minutes, was cry.
So overcome all I could utter, through the tears, was “thank you.” Never have two words meant so much.
Thank you God for a community of family and friends huddled in that waiting room, and across town and across the country by phone and computer, waiting for the news…committed to walk with me wherever this journey takes us. Members, each and everyone, of Team Cathy—people who aren’t just helping me, but are fully in this with me. Ready to help me laugh and cry.
Thank you God for faith. For the indescribable, ever present belief that, as Paul states in tonight’s Epistle: whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure comes from the love of God, poured out for us through Jesus Christ.
Because of cancer, dear God, I have found gratitude.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
All Saints' Sunday 2010
I sing a song of the saints of God
Patient and brave and true,
Who toiled and fought and lived and died
For the Lord they loved and knew.
And one was a doctor, and one was a queen,
And one was a shepherdess on the green:
They were all of them saints of God --- and I mean
God helping, to be one too.
They loved their Lord so dear, so dear,
And his love made them strong;
And they followed the right for Jesus' sake,
The whole of their good lives long.
And one was a soldier, and one was a priest,
And one was slain by a fierce wild beast;
And there's not any reason --- no not the least
Why I shouldn't be one too.
They lived not only in ages past,
There are hundreds of thousands still,
The world is bright with the joyous saints
Who love to do Jesus' will.
You can meet them in school, or in lanes, or at sea,
In church, or in trains, or in shops, or at tea,
For the saints of God are just folk like me,
And I mean to be one too.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Dust is dust and faith is faith. Pentecost 22 Yr C 10. 25.10
Monday, October 18, 2010
God is dancing on our hearts-- Proper 24 Yr C
Monday, October 4, 2010
Lamenting is Good News 10.3.10
Today’s readings from Lamentations are Good News. Really.
You may ask: Where’s the good news in laments such as: How lonely sits the city that once was full of people? Or the thought of my affliction and my homelessness is wormwood and gall?
You see, the Good News of our faith isn’t always bright and cheery. A whole lot of scripture involves mourning, lamenting and grief.
And that’s ok, because Holy Scripture provides a road map back in time, showing us that the human condition has been the same for generations. Human beings, whether in exile after the fall of Jerusalem in 586 BCE, which is the setting for the Book of Lamentations, or whether a 21st century people in a rust belt city trying to maneuver their way through this modern world; worry bemoan grieve and cry.
We, because of our hard-wired need for companionship, for community, because of our ability to love, experience loss. Relationships end, people leave us---they die, they divorce they move out they move on. We lose things too---jobs, homes, security, hopes and dreams. And when we lose these people and these things, we often become sad. Or mad. Or both. And when mad, when sad, we complain, we yell, we cry, we lament.
So, where’s the Good News in that?
The Good News is that God loves us in all sorts and conditions---God wants to be with us in all the things, at all times. Even the times when we are really really ticked off at God. Even when the pain we feel seems so unbearable we can’t stand it.
As you know, last weekend we hosted a group of jr high students from across the diocese. We got into a discussion of how they explain their faith to their friends.
One young woman, I’ll call her Emma, mentioned that you can’t really explain God, that you must experience God.
When Emma was 8 years old, her mother died of cancer. It was a quick death—some 8 weeks between diagnosis and death. Emma said, that when people would try and comfort her by saying, “now dear don’t cry, your mom is with God now,” she would feel worse. How dare God taker her mommy from her!
Finally a wise adult urged Emma to express how mad she was at God.
By having these self -described temper tantrums at God, Emma began to experience God, she got to know God.
By experiencing God, instead of trying to understand God, Emma came to a place in her grief which, although still incredibly painful and sad, became bearable. Manageable. God bless the adult who sat down with Emma and let her lament, let her rail against God and let her express her pain. For in doing that Emma showed an incredible faith. She let God have it without fear that God would abandon her. By letting God have it, Emma was able to welcome God back into her life. Because she was honest, because she showed God exactly who she was, she became more sure in her faith. At 8 years of age.
When my father died, my nephew John was not quite 14. Now many of you met John when he visited for my installation. Now 31 years old, John has severe cerebral palsy and as a result, cannot speak. In the middle of the memorial Eucharist for my father, John began to cry…not just the quite flow of tears so many of us were crying that day, but he let out a wail which ripped my heart out. It was an honest and real lament of a young boy who had lost his grandpa, his father figure, his confidante and his pal. To this day people remember John’s wail as emblematic of the pain we all felt. On that day, John let God and everyone else within earshot, know of his sorrow.
Lamenting is good for us. By expressing our sorrow, our worries, our anger, our grief and our sadness. By letting God have it, as it were, we’re doing exactly what Christ has asked us to do…. we’re giving ourselves---all of who we are---to God.
And that’s what God wants. God wants us just as we are, even if just as we are in any moment in time is angry, hopeless and despairing. That’s having faith. Faith that God accepts us in all the varied conditions we find ourselves in.
Suffering is a huge, unavoidable element in the human condition. To be human is to, at one time or another, suffer. No one gets an exemption from this suffering. the Book of Lamentations gives dignity to this suffering by insisting that God enters our suffering and is our companion in it.[1]
God is a companion in our suffering, God is a partner in our lament---now that’s good news.
Faith isn’t just what we have when things are going well. Faith isn’t just what we have when things are not going well and we reach out to God in calm and measured tones. Faith is also what we show when we love God enough—and trust God enough—to moan, bewail, cry and lament at God.
Faith is how we tap into the immense power of God in our lives. Faith is the invitation we give God, at any particular moment in time, to lead us. Faith is when we stop trying to be in charge and let God be in charge.
Lamenting is an act of faith---by railing at God, by screaming out to God, by quietly weeping in a sorrow so intense and so deep we cannot see anything else around us, we are laying ourselves bare before God.
And that’s just what God wants us to do.
For when we allow ourselves to be completely honest---and a lament is nothing if not honest----we’ve opened our hearts and our minds and our souls to God.
So don’t worry if your faith some days is the size of a mustard seed, don’t worry if some days you have only sadness and anger to give to God. For in sadness and anger, in loss and despair, in lamentations and exhortations we are presenting ourselves to God just as we are, just as God created us to be.
And that is, indeed, Good News.
Amen.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
18 Pentecost, September 26, 2010
+From Wednesday’s Buffalo News: A lawyer who admitted Tuesday to stealing 2.7 million dollars from his clients in a complicated web of schemes, pleaded guilty to 33 felony counts as he admitted to fleecing 23 clients and loan agencies.
The reason? To finance an opulent mansion he was building in Orchard Park.
What would cause someone to commit such fraud? Well, perhaps DA Frank Sedita summed it up best when he said the lawyer’s motive was, “good old fashioned greed.”
Greed: an excessive desire for more.
This man’s greed caused him to a) break the law; b) take advantage of clients who, according to court records, “struggled financially as they waited for verdicts or settlements in their cases.”
Even though already wealthy, this man’s excessive desire for more caused him to lose sight of right and wrong, to disrespect his clients and to violate the trust they placed in him.
His being wealthy wasn’t what caused his problems, it was his crazy desire for more which became the problem. Because, that desire, when left unchecked, can become an obsession and obsessions distract and derail us. The distraction away from the good is what tripped him up.
And it’s this—this distraction away from the good-- which really gets Jesus’ blood boiling.
Jesus doesn’t care if we’re rich or poor, God isn’t interested in our debt to income ratio. God wants us—Jesus tells us---to take care of one another—to respect one another.
The Rich man, as we heard in Luke this morning didn’t do this. He didn’t treat Lazarus with love. He didn’t treat Lazarus with respect. I’m not even sure, in life, if the rich man ever even noticed Lazarus.
But after death? Well then the rich man noticed Lazarus—noticed him in paradise while the rich man? The rich man sat in exile, in torment, far from paradise.
Seems pretty cut and dry doesn’t it…..suffer in this life , get rewarded in the afterlife. Be rewarded in this life, suffer in the afterlife.
Seems like the rich are doomed and the poor will be exalted. But to think that is to only consider this story at face value, to assume that the primary issue is wealth, that somehow God doesn’t want us to be wealthy.
But wealth isn’t what this parable is about. This parable is about worth and how, when we find worth in things and in stuff, in power and prestige instead of finding worth and dignity in all whom we encounter-we lose our way.
The lawyer I mentioned at the beginning of this sermon appears to have lost his way. So did the rich man.
You see, somehow, when we get distracted by money, we get lost, and before we know it, we’ve cut ourselves off from God, stuck on the wrong side of the chasm, the wrong side of the divide.
How do we get so lost? Most of us here today don’t have to worry about being distracted by riches, but we have plenty of things to distract us---wanting what we want and wanting it now. Worrying about what we don’t have. We get lost when those things—the worries and the wants-- take priority in our lives.
So I don’t think this Gospel is about wealth at all. I think it’s about being aware. About seeing what’s going on around us and responding to it. When Jesus is railing against wealth he isn’t saying, being rich is bad. He’s saying, being blind to need is bad. Being deaf to need is bad.
Being unaware is what’s bad.
The Rich Man didn’t notice Lazarus until he needed something. Lazarus wasn’t another human being to the Rich Man, he was a means to an end. He was a servant. He was a slave. The Rich Man, if he ever looked at Lazarus at all, certainly didn’t see Christ in him. The Rich Man respected a lot of things—money, power and prestige but he forgot to respect the one thing we are commanded to respect: each other.
The Rich Man couldn’t , for all his riches, see what was right under his nose.
And there’s the problem.
If we don’t see what’s around us, then how will we ever find our way to God? If we’re so caught up in worries about money—---too much, not enough, whatever--if we let our concern about money or power or prestige take our focus away from seeking God in all we do, then we’re on the Rich Man side of the chasm, aren’t we? If we stay focused on the stuff of this world then we remain on the other side of the great divide, far apart, making it seem as if God is unreachable.
But God is never unreachable. God doesn’t hide from us, we hide from God. When we fail to see Christ in those around us, when we fail to offer assistance, regardless of how meager it may seem to us, we hide from God.
Now, this may not sound like a stewardship sermon, but it is. Because when we really notice one another, when we see Christ in all whom we encounter, when we, out of the love we garner from this community become strong enough to respect the dignity of every human being, no matter how challenging that may seem, we’ve hit the jackpot. Then we’re rich. And our job, once we receive such riches, is to give back.
Not because we have to, but because we want to.
So, listen carefully to our stewardship speakers, reflect on what this place has meant to you and then help us to continue this work, help us to be who you want us to be. Offer as much of yourself as you can. For in giving---of time, talent and treasure-- we bridge the gap between us and God. We bridge all divides.
In giving we arrive in the land God promised, a land flowing with hope and promise, a land where love of God and love of neighbor are embraced and lived. +
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Pentecost 17, Proper 20 Yr C
+At the end of the announcements each week I say an offertory sentence, words taken directly from scripture to ready us for making and receiving offerings at the altar. We bring forward the collection plates, the bread and the wine and then we receive the gift of grace through the body and blood of Christ at the altar. I usually say “Walk in Love as Christ Loved us and gave himself for us, an offering and sacrifice to God.” There are several others, including: “If you are offering your gift at the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother, then come offer your gift.”
The point of this sentence is that if we’re holding a grudge, if we have unfinished business, if we haven’t forgiven a misunderstanding, a debt, or a disagreement, then we aren’t ready to make an offering to God or to receive the abundant grace of God offered to us through the Eucharist.
God wants us free and clear when we come to this altar. That’s why we do a confession of sin just before we come with the gifts. It prepares us, it wipes the slate clean---it frees us.
Today’s Gospel-- the Parable of the Dishonest Manager-- is a story about the forgiving of debts. Not just monetary debts, but all debts---all the scores we keep—who has slighted whom, who owes whom an apology…we have a laundry list of things done to us, and things we’ve done to others ---which must be cleared from our hearts and souls before we can fully receive God’s love as offered to us through the sacrament of Holy Communion.
Today’s parable has a lot of conniving, debting and dishonesty in it. And it’s easy to get lost, trying to figure out who’s the villain, and who’s the hero.
To review-- there is an absentee landlord, landowner who has a resident manager to handle the day to day affairs of his business---which includes taking advantage of the farm workers---paying them an unlivable wage, charging them huge rents and then gouging them at the company owned store….
….In summary: the landowner was cheating the peasants, the manager was cheating the landowner and the peasants by taking a little off the top for himself. When the manager is caught by the landowner the manager turns to the peasants and by cheating the landowner even more, makes the peasants happy. There’s a lot of cheating and conniving going on here.
Luke wraps up this parable talking about faithfulness, dishonest wealth and true riches.
So, once again, it sounds like Jesus is condemning wealth.
But to just assume that and move on is to miss what Luke has been saying to us all summer----that all the riches of this world will never ever take the place of the riches God bestows upon us….for the grace of God is what makes all things possible –even our wealth. And to be able to fully receive God into our hearts we must be free of resentment, free of regret, free of burden.
For Luke, forgiveness is the name of the game. Luke tells us again and again that God is always ready to forgive. Abundantly, extravagantly outlandishly. That God, regardless of what we’ve done, is completely willing---anxious, actually---to forgive us.
Now, as we heard last week, while forgiveness is always available we must ask for it, we must long for it, we must seek it…forgiveness is not some free giveaway, it’s an abundant gift given to those who are ready to receive it, who have repented, have amended their lives and want to be washed in the forgiveness of God to start their life anew. A process we go through, week in and week out as we come to this altar to be forgiven, healed, renewed…fed in the glory of God, nourished to go out and do the work we have been given to do.
But, and here is where this week’s parable becomes clearer, forgiveness is not just something we receive …it’s also something we give….Jesus makes it very very clear in the Lord’s Prayer---forgive us our trespasses, our sins, our debts as we forgive those who have trespassed—sinned—debted against us.
Jesus is telling us, with this convoluted story of landowners managers and peasants, that we must forgive others—their mistakes, their faults, their debts---in order to be forgiven ourselves.
Our forgiveness of others is to have the same character as God’s forgiveness of us---as God’s love for us: it is to be abundant, extravagant and outlandish. It must be overflowing, it must be constant. With this parable we are told that we must forgive… that only in forgiving others can we truly accept the forgiveness God has for us. The forgiveness of God is so intense, so absolute, that we have to make room for it.
To do that, we must empty ourselves---of our resentments, our anger, our bitterness, our disdain and our petty scorekeeping. We are to-- simply and completely--- forgive people. Everyone. Not just those who have, in our eyes, earned it…..but everyone.
None of us can earn forgiveness, we can only desire it…and we only desire it, we only want it, when we realize, when we admit that we’ve made a mistake.
The manager had no right to forgive half the debts of those debtors.
But neither did the landowner have the right to pay those debtors an unlivable wage.
There is no villain in this story and there’s no hero …and that’s the point.
In this parable, everyone was making mistakes….everyone needed forgiveness….
Just like real life. We all make mistakes, we all need forgiveness.
Jesus is saying, don’t wait for someone to ask for forgiveness, just grant it…For it isn’t our job to keep score, it isn’t our job to decide who gets forgiven what when and how, Our job is to free ourselves enough to receive the fullness of God’s love.
By granting forgiveness, we lighten our own load of bitterness and resentment, we free up space deep within us, space which will be filled at the altar as we present ourselves, forgiven, healed and ready to be fed by the grace and truth of God, who forgives all our debts.
Always.
+
Monday, September 13, 2010
Sept. 12, 2010
How would you feel if, because of the actions of a few, you, because you identify yourself as a Christian, were discriminated against, hated reviled and wished harm?
It would feel lousy, right?
Perhaps you would say, “hey don’t blame me for the actions of a few crazy radicals. I am a ‘real Christian’ and I follow the teachings of Jesus to the best of my ability. I believe that God is Love and that we are called to love our neighbor, regardless of who they are or what they do.”
If there is one thing the actions of Terry Jones-- that pastor in Gainesville Florida who was spearheading the Int’l Burn the Qu’ran Day—did, was offer a tangible reminder of how the millions of peace loving, devout and honorable Muslims must feel in this day and age of misunderstanding the Islamic faith. It served as a reminder of how the actions of a very few can skew the perception of a great many. You and I are no more hate-filled Qu’ran burners, than the Muslims who worship at the mosque on Amherst Street are terrorists who wish us dead.
Fear is powerful. Fear can paralyze. Fear can antagonize. Fear can intimidate, fear can incite. Fear is a complex human trait…causing both flight---getting ourselves out of harm’s way---and fight---causing us to dive right in, fighting our way free of fear, free of danger.
Think about September 11, 2001. As terror took hold in NYC, Washington DC and that field in western PA did you react in measured tones, realizing that whoever was behind the attacks needed our prayers and forgiveness?
Probably not.
Because when we are terrified, when something happens which puts everything we believe, everything we trust in, everything we hope for in peril, we lose our measured selves, we lose perspective. We quickly lose our bearings, our way and can react in a manner we would never expect….we can become reactionary and intolerant.
Hate is kept alive when we let fear rule us instead of faith. Hate is kept alive when we claim that if we don’t attack first, then we’ll be attacked. Hate is kept alive when we believe that there are unredeemable people in the world. Hate is kept alive when we think that there are sheep or coins—to use the two examples in today’s Gospel—, which aren’t worth searching for, finding and bringing into the fold.
Of course we were terrified on 9/11/2001. We should have been! That is the absolute goal of terror----to keep us so scared, so frightened, that we stay stuck in reaction, we stay mired in misperception, we stay trapped in intolerance----
But what a good portion of this nation did, what a great many of you, I’m sure, did, was stand up and shout to the world…no, we won’t be reactionary, we won’t be fear mongers, we won’t HATE. We will LOVE. We will pray. We will try very hard to love our neighbor, even the neighbor who doesn’t look and act like us. We will FORGIVE. We will believe, in our heart of hearts that the Good Shepherd searches out each of us no matter how far we have strayed, no matter how lost we have become, no matter how heinous our crimes. Because the angels in heaven rejoice each and every time the lost is found, the sinner repents and the hater becomes the lover.
Love doesn’t overtake hate through further acts of hate---like racial profiling, burning Qurans or blocking the construction of a house of worship----love overtakes hate when we repent of our own misdeeds…for in repenting for our own mistakes builds tolerance for the errors of others.
Love overtakes hate when we pray our way though our terror instead of yelling our way through it.
Love overtakes hate when we remember that everyone, no matter how lost they are, is sought after by God--even misguided Pastors in Gainesville Florida and extremists who have done us great harm. Because we are all beloved daughters and sons of God and when any one of us repents and returns to the fold, there is great rejoicing in heaven.
So, as we remember the lives lost on 9/11 and the thousands of lives lost in the ensuing conflicts, when we hear about Qu’ran burning and protests against the construction of a mosque for the faithful Muslims of lower Manhattan, when fear grips our own hearts and hate seems so much easier than love, we must open ourselves to the power of grace, a grace which is freely bestowed upon all who seek it…not because we are better than anyone else, but because we all, at one time or another, will find ourselves lost and we all--- daughters and sons of the Torah, the Bible and the Qu’ran—are worthy of being found.
Amen.
Sunday, September 5, 2010
Sept. 5 2010: Labor on, For the Glory of God Pentecost 15 Yr C
+I love Labor Day weekend. Not because it’s a weekend of cookouts and relaxing. Not because it’s the last hurrah before the routine of the September through June world takes root. No I love Labor Day because we sing one of my favorite hymns: “Come Labor On,” #541 in our hymnal. I love that the words of this hymn reflect God’s sanctifying of our daily work, our labor.
Our work, what we do to earn a living, to put food on the table, occupies a huge portion of our life, yet many of us don’t connect what we do 9-5, M-F with what we do here on Sunday morning from 8 until 9 [10:30-11:30].
This hymn states that God has given us the ability and the expectation that we will work, that we will labor. This hymn tells us that there is work to do and that, when we work hard with dignity and integrity, God is pleased.
Pleased with our efforts, please with our work. All our work. Not just work we do specifically “for the church.” God sanctifies all human labor. This hymn acknowledges that work is part of the human condition and that God notices.
Of course, we all want to be acknowledged for the work we do, to be told that what we’ve labored at all day, all week, all career, is worthwhile and appreciated. But it usually isn’t God we turn toward for that praise.
You see, when we’re focused on being acknowledged by our bosses, by the folks who sign our checks, by our friends and family; we forget that the acknowledgement that really matters, the honor that really counts, is that which we get from God.
And, remembering God in all we do is the message in today’s Gospel.
When Jesus tells us to hate mother, father, sister, brother he means, don’t lose our primary focus— remember God in all we do, not just in times of trouble, not just in times of joy-- but always and everywhere.
He knows how easy it is to get caught up in the here and now, to pay attention to the loudest voices around us, the voices of judgment and expectation put forth by our co workers, our bosses, our friends and our family.
Jesus is reminding us that what we do---that everything we do—is because of and for God.
As stated in the Book of Jeremiah, God, the great potter, has molded us from non-distinct balls of clay into the wonderful vessels we are today, complete with the unique attributes which make you, you and me, me. Each of us fulfills a different purpose within creation. This brings to mind another old hymn—I Sing a Song of the Saints of God. A hymn which details how all of us are saints in the eyes of God, no matter what we do. We can be teachers or doctors, shepherds or queens, soldiers or priests, or even slain by a fierce wild beast…..but the point is we all have specific gifts bestowed upon us by our creator and our job is to go out into the world utilizing these gifts, as best we can, in whatever circumstance we find ourselves in.
Every job, even the wonderful job of being your rector, of being a priest, has drudgery attached to it, There are things I need to do on a daily basis which don’t feel, at first blush, to be furthering God’s kingdom. I bet your jobs feel the same way. But, and here is the point, when we are working at our daily tasks, no matter how mundane, we are living into the life God created for us.
We are God’s creation and all we do is of God.
When we get so caught up in just “getting through the day,” when our daily tasks become a burden, when we work simply to get to the end of the day, when we forget to see God at work even in the most tedious of tasks, we are turning our back on God.
Jesus is saying, “don’t let anything stand in the way of your love of God. ….it doesn’t matter if you can’t see the glory in what you do every day. . .because God sees it, and God has sanctified it.”
The regular-ness of our daily lives, our jobs as clerks, managers, accountants, teachers, construction workers, bankers, homemakers and volunteers… is where we live out the fullness of our faith.
The regular-ness of our daily lives—our Monday through Saturday lives, is more sacred than our Sunday morning lives. For it is in our daily lives that others are able to see God’s grace –a grace we gather each week here to celebrate and honor---at work in our lives.
What we have to do, what our task is as put forth by Jesus, is to do our very best to seek and serve Christ in all people—even when our bosses, our co-workers, our classmates, all our companions along the way ----drive us nuts, make us mad, hurt our feelings and exasperate us.
That’s when we’re carrying the cross of Christ. Carrying our cross and following Jesus is not proselytizing it’s not preaching…it’s living our regular, ordinary day in and day out lives.
If we live our lives doing the best we can, seeking and serving Christ in all people---even in those people who drive us nuts---then we’re carrying the cross of Christ, we’re ---evangelizing. Because, by being who God molded us to be, we show others that God loves us all and sanctifies all that we do.
So go out from here today, resuming the routine of a September to June world, knowing that God is with you in all you do, loving you for who you are and what you do, so that no matter what heartache befalls us, no matter what frustrations we feel at home, at work or at school, we are the beloved masterpiece of our potter God, a God who formed us to be exactly who we are.
So go, Labor on. Your work is beautiful in God’s sight. +