A Discussion with Mr. Jefferson

Tomorrow we celebrate Independence Day, the founding of our great nation. As we look back on the those days in the 18th century especially during this election year, you may hear claims from one group or the other that the founding fathers of this nation were all “good Christian men,” that they founded the nation on Christian principles or even that the majority of them were Episcopalian. These ideas by the way are all nonsense and it is clearly a time for a visit from one of the great founding fathers himself. I want to welcome the third President of the United States, Thomas Jefferson.
Bob
Welcome to Grace Episcopal Church Mr. President. This is the year 2011 and we thank you for your service to this great nation. Today being the 3rd of July, we were wondering if you would share with us some of your personal thoughts and religious practices. We have a lot of confusion today about what you, Mr. Washington, Mr. Franklin, and others were thinking at the time, and what your intentions were for the country. After all, Ben Franklin attended an Episcopal Church from time to time and once said that “Lighthouses are more helpful than Churches.”
TJ
You probably know that I was raised an Anglican, that is the Church established by the King of England. Early in my career I served as a vestryman at Fredericksville Parish in Albemarle County, Virginia. Sunday attendance in the tiny parish seldom exceeded 60. Now you may think I was continuing the Anglican tradition of my youth, but that would be incorrect. You see, Fredericksville was a new city and there was only one other church in town, which was a Catholic church. My colleagues and I had great respect for the influence of religion on public life and we supported it by attending church regularly. My commitment to this idea was so strong that often my family stayed home and I rode alone on horseback ten miles into church, even in winter. Wherever we went, our attendance at church was largely a choice based on convenience more than anything else. To me one church is no better than another.
Bob
Is it true that you, Mr. Washington and Mr. Franklin, were never confirmed and you never received communion, and if so, how do you justify that practice with your attendance at various churches?
TJ
Aye, Mr. Wickizer, ‘tis indeed true that none of us attended these superstitious rites. For my part, I believe that the Christian religion is a corruption of the genuine precepts of Jesus himself, the clergy being the chief promulgators for the structure of a system of fancy absolutely incomprehensible, and without any foundation in his genuine words.
Bob
Wow. That’s quite a charge Mr. President. How do you propose we determine the genuine words of Jesus?
TJ
Well I started with two copies of the Good Book, (two copies, because you might have good text on either side of a page, you know), a pair of sharp scissors, some horsehide glue, and another book with blank pages. I plowed deep furrows through the Gospel books and even the Book of Acts trying to discern with only the gift of human reason whether the words spoken by Jesus made any sense at all. I cut out those words and affixed them to this volume of blank pages. By my method, you have only about twenty pages of text, something any school child could easily memorize.
Bob
So what do you do with the doctrines of the church, such as the divinity of Christ, his miracles, the holy Trinity, the virgin birth, the Nicene Creed?
TJ
These are all part of the “corruptions of Christianity, to which I am indeed opposed, but not to the genuine precepts of Jesus himself. I am a Christian, in the only sense in which he wished any one to be: sincerely attached to his doctrines, in preference to all others, ascribing to himself every human excellence, and believing he never claimed any other.”
Bob
So would you be comfortable with this recent trend of people worldwide of many different religions, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, and Hindus who have read the bible and devote their lives trying to follow the teachings of Jesus? Many of these people continue to observe religious rituals of their own faiths while trying to live as good, virtuous followers of Jesus. Many of them are misunderstood and persecuted by their coreligionists.
TJ
I am happy to learn that people are putting the teachings of Jesus into their daily living. This is all that Jesus truly wanted us to do. I must ever believe that religion substantially good which produces an honest life, and we have been authorized by One whom you and I equally respect, to judge of the tree by its fruit. Our particular principles of religion are a subject of accountability to our God alone. I inquire after no man’s, and trouble none with mine; nor is it given to us in this life to know whether yours or mine, our friends or our foes, are exactly the right.
Bob
Why do you think so many people today think that the founding fathers were deeply religious and founded this nation on great Christian principles?
TJ
Part of this nonsense got started with your own Episcopal clergyman named Mason Weems, who wrote a book titled Life of Washington, in which he created the myth of the cherry tree and portrayed Washington as a devout Christian. Washington’s diaries were available in the Library of Congress and revealed almost nothing of his religious beliefs. He never mentioned Jesus Christ in his diaries or the thousands of letters he wrote. On the Sundays when communion was given, Washington waited outside the church in his carriage for his wife to take it.

[pausing]

But Mr. Wickizer, I understand that you yourself have labored as a scientist. How then can you value human reason so much as to be a man of science and at the same time believe in all these superstitions such as miracles, the Trinity, a divine son of God, and the like?

Bob
Mr. President, a lot of science has advanced greatly since you … departed from this world. One of the most humbling aspects of modern science is the sure knowledge of what we DON’T know. We even have mathematics to calculate how much we do not know. When we look out at the heavens, we realize that we can only observe a tiny fraction of the universe, and even what we can observe is perhaps only 10% explained by science today. Faith in human reason alone is misplaced. We can now prove that human reason and observation can never uncover ultimate knowledge.

Like you, I have my doubts about all the doctrines of our faith. I hold these things lightly, but I know that the more science advances the more it uncovers deeper mysteries that can include a God that loves us and interacts with us in ways we can scarcely imagine.

Also, like you and Mr. Washington and Mr. Franklin, others believe that religion of all kinds is good for building up the moral fabric of a society. I believe that Jesus teaches us to change our priorities from a self-centered world to a world where God is first, other people are second, and I am third.

TJ
Mr. Washington probably said it best when he remarked, “Let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religions” But you intrigue me in that you hold two contradictory beliefs at the same time: Your faith in a divine being on the one hand and your belief in human reason and the achievement of science on the other.
Bob
Did not Queen Elizabeth tell the English clergy and people that they would be both Catholic AND Protestant? Our Anglican-Episcopal faith is a model for modern people in that we can comfortably hold two seemingly opposite views at the same time. Things are not necessarily black and white. There is a lot of grey out there.

Our Episcopal brand of Christian faith is better suited for the modern world than any other denomination out there. We do not force people to believe things they cannot accept. We only ask them to think with their God-given gift of human reason, and then admit that maybe humans will never be able to know everything.

All you need to do is spread the word. Even Thomas Jefferson might be persuaded to attend Grace Church more often.



Do, believe, belong – huh?

There are so many misguided interpretations to this key parable that it is easy to miss the plain truth. Rather than expository preaching, I thought it might be fun to give you two new parables illustrating two radically different interpretations of the parable of the sower. Here is the first one.

A corrupt politician in a big city wanted to become the mayor of that city. Slowly she went through every precinct in the city promising jobs and favors to anyone who would vote for her. She lavished attention on those who could organize large groups to vote for her. She pulled strings and made it very uncomfortable for anyone who opposed her. Within a few years she became mayor and ruled the city with the same favoritism that got her elected. This went on for some years and many people said they were happy because of the jobs and favors they had received.

One day another politician with even deeper pockets decided he wanted to be mayor, so he used the same strategy and undermined the mayor. Eventually he unseated the mayor and ruled over his favorites for a while. This cycle of favors and elections continued for a long time. People just took it as the truth that those who were not connected to the current mayor would be isolated or even punished.

Here is another parable.

There once was a monk in a huge city in the Far East. The city had millions of people living in abject poverty, and the young monk was filled with compassion for their suffering. Even though the monk was born into a merchant class family and his monastic life was austere, he lived better than most of the poor in the city.

One day he decided that offering prayers to God while so many people suffered outside the gates was an outrage. He got up in the middle of worship one day, went outside the gates of the monastery, and gave away the food from the monastery kitchen to everyone at the gate. His only care was to relieve their suffering, and he did.

Some of his superiors saw how this made many people happy and gave them hope again. Some of them supported the young monk. Others refused to oppose him and did nothing. But some of the older superiors were jealous and said among themselves, “This young buck has not earned his stripes by spending years in the monastery like us. Why should we let him become so powerful?” So they plotted against him.

Months went by and the crowds grew enormously along with donations from all over the city. The monastery increased in size to support feeding all the people. Some people ate the food and never even said thank you. Others ate the food and helped out for a while but returned to their life of poverty. A smaller group ate the food and was so amazed by the generosity of the young monk that they organized to expand the feeding. The young monk was happy and continued his prayers and daily chores at the monastery. The people in the city began to grow; businesses and commerce flourished. The stronger the city became, the more the elders in the monastery plotted.

Finally the superior of the monastery summoned the young monk. He said that the young monk must learn true humility and obedience. So they sent him to another monastery far away in the mountains where no one lived but a handful of old dying monks.

In the parable of the mayors the seed is the false gospel of exclusive claims about religion. Such exclusive claims build up this or that church or leader from time to time, but they have no sustaining power. The jobs and political favors distributed to the insiders are the exclusive claims that God only loves certain people, or that God only loves people who will DO certain things or that God only loves people who BELIEVE certain things. The church and its leaders are the parties who benefit by falling in line behind one mayor or the next.

In the parable of the monastery, the young monk is the Word of God. He is not the earthly person of Jesus, but he is the risen Christ, the Logos, or in John’s Gospel, God’s Word. He is the life giving force that was here before creation and gives life to all of creation. The people who ate the food and did nothing in gratitude were the seeds thrown on the path in Jesus’ parable of the sower. How many of us at one time in our life or another have received blessings from God without giving thanks?

The people who ate the food and helped out for a while but then went back to life as usual were the seeds scattered among the thorns or rocky ground. Do you find yourself weighted down with the cares of the world at times wondering about your family, your health, your financial situation, or your job? Do these things ever hold you back from giving back to others?

The smaller group recognized and received the same generous spirit of the young monk. They could see the suffering and through the same generous spirit they were able to sustain the work. Note that this parable does not refer to any particular religion, but only to the spirit of generosity and the response of the people to it.

The Good News of this teaching is that God’s Word is generously given to everyone at all times in our lives. We do not have to DO anything or BELIEVE anything or BELONG to anything to receive it. At different times in our lives we will find ourselves confronted with situations where we ARE the soil on the path or we ARE the soil amidst the thorns or we ARE the rocky ground. At the times in our lives when we ARE the good soil, will we recognize the blessings we have received and respond with the same generous spirit?



Good and Evil

Our Gospel lessons the past two weeks fall into a special category of “seedy teachings from Jesus.” I just have to wonder what Jesus would have done with today’s lesson if some smart aleck in the crowd shot up their hand and said “I know, I know.” “Know what?” Jesus asks. “I know how God will do it. God will use Roundup resistant genetically modified wheat and then spray Roundup over the whole field just before harvest time.”

What I find frustrating about these lessons is that Jesus explains MOST of the parable. I am tempted to say, “Jesus explained most of it. No need for a sermon. We’re done here.” But he did not explain ALL of it. We do have some cautionary items and caveats to note here:

First of all this parable offers solid teaching on the age old and unsolvable problem of “Why does God allow evil to be present in the world.” Who here has not wondered why an all powerful God would allow evil in the form of natural disasters, personal health, or individual bad behavior to flourish in the world. The short answer is “Good and bad spring up together from the same soil. They can be difficult to tell apart from one another. Live with it.” For a longer answer, I commend Rabbi Harold Kushner’s book When Bad Things Happen to Good People.

Note that Jesus cautions the slaves NOT to take matters in their own hands by uprooting the weeds. The plants on top may be easily separated, but the roots are intertwined, and uprooting the bad would harm the good. The weed Jesus refers to here is very common in the Middle East. It is called “darnel” and it looks identical to wheat almost until the very end when the seed heads begin to form. When you look at a crowd of people can you tell the good from the bad? The sinners from the righteous? I had a junior warden at a former parish embezzle $750K from a local swim club. Everyone was shocked. He is going to jail. He and his family were strong contributors to the church.

How many times when we see evil or misbehavior in our family or our congregation have we been tempted to take the matter into our own hands? Often what passes for leadership is the person who will pass judgment and take action quickly. “Drive the bum out.” “Get rid of her.” “Those folks are bad people.” When you take this kind of leadership and apply it to groups of people divided by religion, language, race, or geography, what you get is called “ethnic cleansing.” This is NOT leadership. It is madness.

How many times do well meaning people in a congregation try to take action and weed out those people they consider to be troublemakers? Giving in to the all too human desire for control, they circumvent the frustrating and messy process that everyone in the congregation needs to do. Do you know what that messy process is? Prayer, Bible study and discernment. Oftentimes God’s worst enemies are people who assume they are God’s friends doing God’s work. If you find yourself quick to judge sometime, come see me first. We will delay the judgment and begin with prayer, Bible, and discernment.

What would have been apparent to Jesus’ audience, but is lost to us hearing about weeds and wheat, is that these two plants cannot be identified or separated until harvest time. The simple lesson from this is that in spite of our desire to label this or that group as evil or terrorists or just plain bad, the only one who gets to make that call is God at the end of the age when God’s reapers gather the weeds to be burned and the wheat into the barn.

Next I call your attention to the collective nature of this parable. Jesus is not talking about individual sinners or righteous people. Nor is he talking about groups of people who are sinful or righteous. We are in fact the muddy field in which these seeds are planted. Good and bad. Evil and just. Righteous and sinful. All these grow at the same time in each one of us.

For example there was an 18th century English slave ship captain whose early career is worth retelling. His father was a respected ship captain and his mother died when he was a child. He first went to sea with his father’s crew at age 11. By 18 he was captured and impressed into the British Navy as a junior officer. His characteristically foul language and attitude did not serve him well. He abused everyone on the ship including the commanding officer. He tried to desert at one point and was punished by flogging in front of the crew. He was reduced to the lowest rank of seaman. Following this humiliation, he contemplated suicide.

In the mid-Atlantic the British Navy had enough of him and transferred him to a slave ship – as a slave. The ship returned to West Africa and he was held as a slave by a black plantation owner for three years. Eventually his father learned of his predicament and arranged to buy his son out of slavery.

You would think with this kind of resume that a near death experience might turn him around. He eventually got his own ship and made quite a profit carrying slaves, rum, and sugar. One journey off the coast of Donegal a fierce storm came up that nearly swamped his ship. With the main deck awash, the masts gone, several crew lost, rudder disabled, the ship drifted helplessly in the westerly wind at night towards the rocky coast. As the ship filled with water he called out to God and vowed to turn his life around. As he did, some of the remaining cargo floated in the hold and stopped up the hole in the hull. The ship was able to drift into shore.

This first vow was only partly effective. He quit swearing, gambling, and drinking and began to read the Bible. He continued to sail in the slave trade. While sick with a fever on the next voyage he asked God to take control of his life. He made several more slave trips until he suffered a severe stroke.

After the stroke it would take nine more frustrating years of study and application to the church before he became ordained as a priest in the Church of England. As rector of the little parish in Olney, John Newton is most famous for writing the song we know today as Amazing Grace, as well as Glorious Things of Thee are Spoken. With William Wilberforce, Newton was a strong advocate for the abolition of slavery.

Good and evil are in each one of us. With God there is plenteous redemption.



You feed them

One of my prayers during our week in the cooler, drier mountains of New Mexico was for this heat wave to break and give everyone some relief. As you can see, my prayers are not always effective.

As we visited various archaeological sites of the Pueblo Indians, I noticed that after living successfully in adobe pueblo communities for over a thousand years, the one thing that forced the Indians to abandon their settlements was a twenty year drought.

Our recent experience with only a month of triple digit highs and scant rainfall has made everyone a bit grumpy and inconvenienced, but can you imagine living for twenty years with almost no rainfall where the Rio Grande River dried up?

I cannot listen to typical sermons about the so-called miracle feeding of the 5,000 as long as the specter of famine and misery haunts so many places around the world. I cannot listen to sermons that say in essence “Jesus fed the people because they believed in Jesus. If you believe in Jesus he will feed you and bless you too.”

Not only is such a sermon a heresy, but it actually causes harm and increases suffering. If Jesus heard this preached, I think he would fire the preacher.

As I write this sermon, I have intentionally run a series of images of the current famine in Somalia where one third of the population faces starvation. The director of the World Food Program visited there and reported, “I saw large numbers of children extremely weakened by the long journeys in search of food… Some people are forced to leave family members along the road as they trek on in search of help. .. one woman had lost three of her children along the way… trying to reach food.”

It is not helpful to distract your feelings by talking about the politics of a failed nation state ruled by warlords with connections to Al Qaeda. Politics for this or any other situation are irrelevant because the Gospel tells us, “When he went ashore, he saw a great crowd; and he had compassion for them and cured their sick.” Jesus did not turn aside and say, “Let’s get out of here; these people are getting what they deserve.”

Instead he had compassion for them and he stayed there among them and he did what he could. Who among us would go to Somalia right now to help?

In our own town of Muskogee we have 300 pound ten year old children with medical needs of people in their 40s! Although it is not starvation, it is a form of malnutrition. At the same time, the Boston Globe noted “Doctors at a major Boston hospital report they are seeing more hungry and dangerously thin young children in the emergency room than at any time in more than a decade of surveying families.”

What are we called to do about these as baptized Christians? When confronted with a late hour and a crowd getting hungry, the disciples asked Jesus “This is a deserted place, and the hour is now late; send the crowds away so that they may go into the villages and buy food for themselves.” Jesus said to them, “They need not go away; you give them something to eat.” They replied, “But we have nothing here but five loaves and two fish.” You can almost hear Jesus thinking to himself, “Did you hear what I said? YOU FEED THEM.

There are times in history when we need to hear these stories as miracle stories and times when we need to hear the more practical explanation, one that empowers us instead of dazzling us. One common interpretation of this story says that the people going to hear Jesus that day were not stupid. Who would drive to Tulsa for a late afternoon or early evening event without making some kind of provision for dinner? Likewise the people following Jesus that day knew they were going far from the village, so they brought food with them.

So the miracle here, if there is one, is that people took enough to share and there was food left over just like a church potluck. But the words of Jesus to the disciple AND to us remain the same no matter how you interpret this story. YOU FEED THEM.

In Guatemala the poor must pay money for the privilege of picking through the trash for food. In Honduras children wait at the dump for the trash to unload. Behind the children are vultures. With more than 2,000 children foraging at the Tegucigalpa dump, a few of them become food themselves for the vultures. YOU FEED THEM.

In Haiti the villagers bake and eat “cookies” made of dirt, salt, and bouillon. They tighten belts around their children’s bloated bellies to fight severe hunger pains. Jesus tells us YOU FEED THEM.

Grace Church has a long positive history of feeding others. We can and we will do more. But we need to go beyond incremental improvements. We need to have our spirits infused with the same compassion that moved Jesus that day.

I try to incorporate the Good News AND a spiritual challenge in my sermons, so this time it should be perfectly clear. The Good News is never about God blessing us or any of us benefitting because we believe. We hear the Good News so that WE will be a blessing to others. The Good News in this story is that God gives us compassionate hearts so that we can hear the cries of others.

Our challenge is that we need to engage our hearts in the presence of those who are hungry. We need to go on a mission trip. I am asking for a minimum of six people to go with me on a mission trip with Food for the Poor next summer. When you return from a trip with Food for the Poor, you will never be the same again. You will be richer in ways that really matter.



Crazy things people believe

For a number of years, the owners of the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team paid a Russian psychic healer tens of thousands of dollars a year to simply watch their games on television and think positive thoughts for the Dodgers baseball team. This went on for a number of years. We don’t know whether the Russian spiritualist had any impact on the outcome of their games, but we can be sure that he enjoyed the extra cash.

In 2007 a Miss Teen America judge asked the contestant from South Carolina how to remedy the disturbing fact that one in five Americans cannot locate the United States on a world map. Unfortunately she was part of the one in five.

A college student was unable to comprehend how it was possible to travel downhill and north at the same time. She thought it violated the laws of physics. I am glad she was not in one of my physics classes.

A similar group of one in five Americans believes that witches are real, that the sun revolves around the earth, that the lottery is a sound financial investment, that aliens from other plants abduct humans, and that the apocalypse will happen in their lifetime (and that they are part of the group that will experience the rapture).

I must make a distinction here. To “believe in” something in our day and age usually means that you have thought about it rationally and have come to some conclusions. This world view is a direct descendent of the Enlightenment Era, the Age of Reason starting with Isaac Newton in the 1600s– tracing through the industrial revolution all the way to our “post-modern” era today. Things can only be true or false if they can be apprehended by human reason. The scientific method of theory, hypothesis, experimental fact, and proof or rebuttal is the queen of rationalist thought, and it trumps any other way of knowing.

Our Enlightenment or scientific world view makes us unconsciously divide matters into things that can be examined critically with science and logic versus a set of matters that can only be grasped with the human heart. Some scientists, academics, and rationalists tend to classify matters of the heart as second class. Religions fall into this group of matters of the heart.

At the time of Jesus, our rational world view and especially its application to matters of the heart would be incomprehensible. Jewish thought at that time held that the human heart was the seat of emotions, intelligence, reason, and wisdom. When making a decision. whether about what fruit to purchase in the marketplace, ethical decisions. or how to be a faithful Jew, the human heart with all of its faculties would guide you into making righteous choices.

It is true that some schools of Greek philosophy and rhetoric infused early Christian writings, beliefs and practices; especially the writings of Paul. Setting that aside for a moment, you just cannot apply deductive reasoning to things like why a soldier in combat would jump on a grenade and willingly sacrifice himself for his colleagues; or why a mother would sacrifice herself for her child; or the existence of God; or a human being son of God; or why a loving and supposedly all powerful God would willingly sacrifice her child. Things like that just don’t add up.

But if you are in the trenches and bullets are whizzing by your helmet, you will instinctively appeal to a higher power. They say that there is no atheist in a foxhole. Likewise if you have a dread disease or even the threat of one, your friends, family, and church will all pray to a higher power on your behalf. Some modern neuroscientists claim that our brains are literally hard-wired to believe in a power or a deity greater than and outside of ourselves.

In the Great Commission at the end of Matthew’s Gospel, we are commanded to go out and baptize all peoples into the name of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We need to follow this commandment with humility and deference to others. Some scholars have pointed out that a substantial number of those killed by European Crusaders were in fact Orthodox Christians.

The Trinity, in which we will stand in a moment and profess our belief, is in one sense a shorthand summary of the unique claims of the Christian faith: that God’s son was truly human and ascended to heaven, and that in his place we have the Holy Spirit to guide us into all truth. But there is a cautionary note before we go out and bludgeon others with our hard-headed rational belief that we alone possess the truth.

What we don’t know about other peoples, other cultures, other world religions is whether the risen Christ appeared to them in some form or whether the Holy Spirit is working through their culture, their system of beliefs – even their religion. We can never know these things, therefore blanket condemnation of other beliefs and world religions is a product a human arrogance, and has no place in truly following Jesus.

Who then should we baptize? Who should we seek to convert as believers if we cannot call other religions “unbelievers?” The harvest is plenty. We are talking about those who have rejected God or a community of faith in any form: Those who spend their time on the golf course or at the lake or at home and who come to church, synagogue, mosque, or temple only rarely if at all. Those who openly reject God in any form and who ridicule religions and their believers as hypocritical. You know who they are.

Do not bother to engage the world out there in a rational discussion about your faith, because it is not rational. You will lose the argument before you begin. All you need to do is show them how your heart has changed. Show them your gratitude, your patience, your love, your wonder, your joy, your peace. Show them the matters of the heart and how THIS particular community of faith has made a difference for you. You cannot be a faithful Christian alone at home. In order to follow Jesus you must participate in a community of faith.

God’s grace, peace and mercy have been given to you. You are asked to share that with others. Bring ‘em here and we will baptize them into the sacred mystery of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We have lots of room in here. Don’t you think it’s time to fill these empty seats?



Seeing

Today’s story about Abraham and Isaac presents us with a disturbing set of questions and challenges so numerous that we are tempted to go down the wrong path at several turns. Asking questions about the nature of God, or how God could command such a thing of anyone, etc. are just not helpful here. Neither is the attempt by some to frame this as a story about blind faith or total obedience. In today’s world of religious extremism, one person’s unquestioning obedience towards the voices they think are God’s can create a very dangerous world.

We need to wind the clock back a bit and understand more of the context leading up to this point. Twenty five, maybe thirty five years before this, God promised Abraham that he would be the father of a great nation with more descendents than grains of sand. Abram and his wife Sarai received new names of Abraham and Sarah as a sign of God’s promise. All Abraham and Sarah had to do was GO to the land that God showed them, and so they did. Soon after that, they discovered that Sarah was not capable of having children. They must have wondered about God’s promise for a long time.

Eventually Sarah hatches a plan for Abraham to have a child through her servant Hagar. This union leads to the child Ishmael who will become the father of the Arab peoples. This also leads to tension and calamity within the household. Abraham and Sarah continue to grow older and now Sarah is well beyond childbearing age. Nonetheless, she has a son and they name the son “Isaac” or “God laughs.”

“This is it.” This is the beginning of the promise they think. For decades they have yearned for a sense of being settled and serenity. They are old now (by biblical standards), perhaps 45 to 60. They just want to live in peace so they can see what this promise God made to them becomes. They are just like any of us. They want to watch their sons grow up. Isaac grows to age ten or twelve and God intervenes again.

Our story today begins with the simple phrase “After these things.” It is important to note that we are hearing this story from the perspective of a community that KNOWS God is testing Abraham and we already know how this story will unfold through history. But Abraham does not know that God is testing him. He only goes as God commanded him this time and years before at Haran. The Hebrew word for test here is the same one used in the story of Job. It means to examine whether something is true or reliable. God tests Abraham and Job and others in the Bible. God tests us too to see if we are reliable.

The real verb to pay attention to in the entire story of Abraham is not “test”, but “go.” The Hebrew fairly jumps off the page, “Lekh l’kha“, “Go forth to the land that I will show you.” “Go to Haran.” “Go to Moriah.” All Abraham and Sarah want to do is settle down and enjoy their old age but God keeps interrupting their lives, telling them to GO to some place far away and start over. “GO, GO, GO”, God commands them repeatedly for fifty years. And they obeyed.

“So Abraham rose early in the morning, saddled his donkey, and took two of his young men with him, and his son Isaac; he cut the wood for the burnt offering, and set out and went to the place in the distance that God had shown him.”

At each turn of his life when things seemed to be futile and they felt like giving up, God made the impossible happen and followed that with the commandment to give up the security they had in the past and GO somewhere new. Sometimes Abraham did not act reliably or honorably, such as when he told Pharaoh that Sarah was his sister. But God kept the promise to Abraham and Sarah throughout their roller coaster ride of following God’s commandment and occasionally backsliding.

Is not the story of Abraham and Sarah OUR story as well? Whether you have lived all over the place or never left your home town, life is a journey of listening to God’s imperatives in our life: GO to church. GO to school. GO to this job. GO to that spouse. GO the counselor when your children are driving you crazy. GO to confession when you are weary and burdened with troubles. GO, GO, GO to a land that God will show you.

Like Abraham and Sarah, God’s intrusions in our lives seem to come at the craziest, most inopportune moments – often when we think we think we have made it is when we seemed to get knocked down by unforeseen circumstances. Being faithful often requires us to put our well crafted plans for career, family, or retirement aside and pay attention to the crazy thing God has in store for us. Yes, Sara laughed and God laughed when she bore a son in her old age. And yes, we should laugh with God when we heed the plans that God has for us.

Yet in spite of Abraham, out of fear and cowardice, passing off his wife to Pharaoh as his sister, and in spite of the disastrous attempt to circumvent God’s promise by having a child with Hagar, God was faithful to Abraham and Sarah. God made good on the promise. God is merciful and forgiving, and that promise of faithfulness is there for us too.

We don’t know all the adversity this family faced. We know that when Hagar and her son were about to die in the desert, God provided for them. We know that when Abraham and Sarah had given up on the promise of a child, God provided for them. We know that at the moment of absolute terror with his knife raised above his son, God provided for them. We know they were not a perfect model of faith and confidence in God’s promise, and we know that God was faithful to them in spite of their backsliding.

Throughout his journey, Abraham demonstrated incredible faith and a strong tendency to try to manipulate this faith journey on his own terms. He had the all too human need to control things. Yet at the very worst moment of his life when he was asked to give up everything, he could see God’s new plan – the ram caught in the bushes. Abraham could see in the midst of this unfolding tragedy how God provides.

God tests us too in our journeys. We are not asked to be perfect models of faith. We are asked to see God’s providence for us in our worst moments in the midst of our tragedies and suffering. Only then can we see God’s promise to us. Only then will God tell us to GO to a new place; to the land of promise.

And so my friends, I conclude this with a familiar phrase from Spanish:

GO

with God.



Following the shepherd – the right one

Last week someone in our flock noted how she was expecting more jokes in the sermon. I know there is some past history with jokes here, so I will at least increase my efforts to tell you some funny stories. This one happened just a couple of weeks ago.

I was walking to the hospital to see Joan late one afternoon. It was a beautiful warm sunny day and I was wearing shorts, a loose Tee shirt, hat and sunglasses. As I made my way up the little hill to the hospital I encountered one of our parishioners who attends church regularly. “Hi Doris” I exclaimed. Doris is not her real name. She was accompanied by a friend I did not recognize. After the usual “How are you?” exchanges, I mentioned something about her involvement at church. This was met with a puzzled stare. I reframed my remark adding a bit more detail. Again, deer in the headlights. It soon became clear that something about Grace Church, this particular woman and me wasn’t quite clicking. Finally she mustered the courage and asked “Do I know you?”

I pulled off my hat and sunglasses and said, “Doris, I’m your pastor at Grace Church.” At that point her friend just about cracked up. It is so typical of us. Sometimes in a different context we fail to recognize a person we see every week and think we know. Although I doubt he was wearing sunglasses, the women at the tomb thought that Jesus was the gardener and later the disciples failed to recognize Jesus several times after the resurrection.

The gospel today says that the sheep follow the shepherd because they know his voice. But given the recorded failures to recognize Jesus in their midst, I wonder if the sheep aren’t sometimes confused and follow a different voice? It is worth noting the difference between following the voice of the right shepherd versus the wrong one. Jesus mentions thieves and bandits that jump into the sheepfold over the fence at night. These are the obvious false leaders we see in our society to this day: power addiction, drug addiction, alcohol addiction, work addiction, rage addiction, sex addiction and so forth. Some of us devote much of our lives and our fortune to such thieves and bandits. Such addictions are bandits that literally steal our soul.

Those are the easy ones. In biblical times, it was costly to build a high stone wall. For reasons of cost as well as the mutual protection offered, the sheep from different flocks were brought into a common stone walled enclosure called a sheepfold. In the morning when it was safe to go to pasture, the different shepherds came through the gate calling their sheep. This was common agricultural practice and people would have instantly understood how sheep follow the voice of their shepherd. Yet clearly with people as with sheep, the system breaks down every now and then. What happens when we think we are following the good shepherd but we went out the gate following the wrong one?

Following the wrong shepherd is characterized by several human traits we have all seen:

A sense of absolute surety. We are convinced this is the right path A denial of all other paths. Unwillingness to consider things that may be uncomfortable or don’t seem right Strong herd mentality Intellectual justification In extreme cases: behavioral norms that are unhealthy or even destructive This process happens in religion, in political movements and in just about any social group. Given our human tendency to herd together and follow the leader who has a convincing story, how do we discern whether we went out the gate following the right shepherd?

I will give you two criteria. First, follow the money. People are motivated by simple things like political power, social power, prestige, control and wealth. If you think of all these things loosely as a form of motivational money, look at a given shepherd closely. By leading a particular flock in a particular way, does that shepherd stand to gain in any of those categories? If so, my advice to you is RUN. Following the real Jesus will never result in personal gain in terms of political power, social power, prestige, contro,l or wealth. RUN from such a leader as fast as you can.

Secondly, (this is where the shepherd thing breaks down), you won’t be following the right shepherd all the time. The Gospels record that when people initially fail to recognize Jesus and the “aha” moment finally arrives, Jesus vanishes from their sight. This means that following the right shepherd is a lifelong pursuit. It is never finished where we can sit back and smugly say to ourselves, “I’m on the right track now. All I need to do is coast until I hit those pearly gates.” No single religion or Christian religious denomination will offer, at any point in time, everything that is necessary to follow the right shepherd.

Christian life is a journey, not a destination. We can never be complacent. We must always be seeking and searching. By doing so, when Jesus comes into our lives in those fleeting moments we too will have the “aha” experience of the disciples. We too will know that we have encountered something way beyond what we can ever ask or imagine.

How do you recognize that one of those “aha” experiences is the real deal? On the downstream side of an encounter with Jesus, you will be changed. You will not look at things the same way. Your heart will be “strangely warmed.” Yet even a binge night with a controlled substance can produce these symptoms. How can we know?

The answer is the flip side of following the wrong leader. Hearing the Good Shepherd’s voice and following that shepherd will cost you. It may cost you social power. You may lose some friends. Others may not understand you like before. It may cost you political power. You may have to re-think your political position. It may cost you prestige. Your own sense of self importance may diminish. It may cost you that elusive sense of control. You will realize that you are really not in control now. You never have been and you never will be. Finally, it will likely cost you money.

If those are the costs, why would anyone want to follow such a shepherd? Because following the Good Shepherd will take you to green pastures where you may lie down and live. You will have life abundantly.



In spite of ourselves

Did you hear about the preacher and the New York cab driver? They both die about the same time and find themselves at the pearly gates of Heaven. St. Peter sees the cabbie first and says, “God has a mansion prepared for you, come on in.” Meanwhile the preacher stands outside the gates patiently waiting his turn. He can see between the bars on the gates where the cabbie is going. It looks like one of those neighborhoods that popped up like dandelions. In California we referred to them as “McMansions” or “starter palaces.” That’s where the cabbie gets to spend eternity.

Two commercial kitchens, flat panel televisions everywhere, awesome pool, cabana, hot tub, exquisite landscaping, six car garage, beautiful decorating – nothing like the squalor of the Bronx apartment he left behind. The cabbie is so thrilled he can hardly wait for his friends to pass so they can party with him.

St. Peter returns to the gate and ushers the preacher to his mansion. It is a dark, musty, cramped concrete cell with a bare light bulb, writing desk, and an old army cot. The preacher is shocked. He finally musters the courage to tell St. Peter there must be some kind of mistake. “I have devoted my life to God and this is where you have me spend eternity?” St. Peter shakes his head and says, “No mistake here. … when you preached they slept. When the cabbie drove they prayed.”

The first half of this text from John is often selected for funerals. It is a comfort to those grieving to hear that “in my father’s house there are many mansions.” Actually “rooms” would be a better translation than “mansions”, but the King James Version dies hard.

We want our place in heaven to be well appointed in the same way we shopped for our last house or selected our casket. We carry this real estate notion with us beyond death into heaven. We think somehow that it is OUR house that we have earned because of our good behavior or because we said a bunch of words about Jesus as a personal lord and savior.

Whether you look at it in English or Greek, John very clearly says right up front, “In my Father’s house.” In other words, it is God’s house, not yours.

Several years ago author Phyllis Trible wrote a book about certain Biblical passages titled “Texts of Terror.” She tackled all the uglier pieces of the Old and New Testament; things about mayhem, violence, murder, rape, incest, war etc. But in some ways we could nominate portions of John’s Gospel as terror texts.

When Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me”, some people take this statement as legitimizing only their interpretation of the Bible. Whole Christian denominations exclude one another from God’s Grace because some people believe that ONLY their interpretation is the correct one. What passes for Christianity for the next two thousand years uses this exclusive claim to subjugate or eliminate people of other faiths. The five dollar term for this is “Christian supercessionism.” Violence used to forcibly convert people, or the more pernicious form of oppressing other religions as inferior (think of the Crusades or the Holocaust) continues to cause enormous suffering in the name of Jesus.

Christians do it to each other. Christians do it to Jews and Muslims. Muslims do it to other people. Orthodox Jews do it to all the others. Hindus do it to the Jains, Buddhists, and Muslims in their countries. And in Muskogee we have people preaching and teaching how other Christian denominations are invalid or inferior or incorrect. What arrogance our religious leaders show when they try to claim it is “my way or the highway.” No wonder the modern world rejects religions of all kinds, preferring instead to stay home and try to lead a quiet, decent, righteous life.

Do we think that God, the creator of the universe, cares whether people on this tiny planet choose to see the face of the resurrected Christ in a blond haired, blue-eyed upper middle class male driving a BMW instead of a dark haired, dark eyed Hindu woman selling tea in Madagascar? Or could it be that when we persecute others who are not like us in the name of some religious interpretation, the creator of the universe sheds a tear? Yes, God suffers with us and cries in anguish because after thousands of years of human history, we just don’t seem to get the message.

Religious violence is just the handmaid of religious superiority. Now I can give you all kinds of historical, social, and political reasons why John’s Gospel is unique in the Bible in terms of its exclusion of others, animosity towards Jews, and its offer of salvation in exchange for belief. To learn more about that you should come to adult ed because we are looking at just those topics for the next few weeks.

Humans have a propensity towards making outrageous claims, persecuting others and circling the wagons in the name of something we don’t understand. This is why I get nervous when people interpret the Bible as if it were listing a set of exclusive benefits for a group called “Christians.” “In my Father’s house there are many mansions” is not an invitation to join an exclusive eternity club by muttering a few words or doing a good deed. It is a statement of fact.

The creator of this enormous expanding universe loves each tiny person on this little chunk of rock in space. We are loved so much that there is a place for each one of us – Hindu, Jew, Muslim, Jain, Buddhist, atheist, Baha’i, Shinto, black, white, Asian, Hispanic, able bodied, disabled, gay, straight, Christian, even Episcopalian. God has prepared a place for each one of us. All that is asked of us is that we be humble not arrogant, that we live decent righteous lives, and that we work to make the world better for other people.



Will our faith have children?

Maria stood in front of the enormous Mall of America and said, “Good people of Minnesota, I see how extremely religious you are in every way. For as we went through the mall and looked carefully at the objects of your worship, we found among them an altar with the inscription ‘In God we Trust.’”

Her friend Stephanie always spent Saturdays at the mall with her. Somewhere between puzzled, amused, and aghast, Stephanie wondered what had gotten into her friend with this religion stuff. She smacked on her chewing gum and asked nervously, “What has happened to you Maria? These people out here are going to think you have gone nuts. Frankly I was thinking that myself, but then again I know how prone to practical jokes you are.” Stephanie paused. “You are OK aren’t you?”

Maria looked back at her friend while people going into the mall stopped and gathered into a circle. Minnesotans are polite people. They don’t want to tell somebody to buzz off, but they will in fact circle around a curiosity. Maria had become the latest source of interesting things that happened at the mall that Saturday. She replied “I’m sorry, Steph, I must have gotten the rapture or something. I was just thinking of Paul’s speech to the people of Athens. I mean have you ever noticed how much like a cathedral this mall is?”

“We did sort of make a pilgrimage after all” Stephanie observed. “Our families came all the way up here from Muskogee, Oklahoma just to shop in the world’s largest mall. Did you know that they have 8 acres of skylights in the ceilings?” “Oh you read the same stuff on the web site that I did”, Maria said. “Did you know that you could fit 32 Boeing 737 aircraft inside the mall, or that 40 million people visit the mall every year, or that 16 million people are just here as tourists? They never buy anything … Can you imagine?” Stephanie interrupted. “They’re not power shoppers like us. I spent weeks making up my list. Dad said when I turned 15, I could take a friend up here to the mall. I’m glad you came here with me.”

“Look at that group over there”, Maria exclaimed. “Are they models shooting a movie, or is this for real?” Stephanie replied, “This mall has had over 5,000 weddings performed in the chapel since they opened. Wouldn’t it be awesome to get married here? [gushing] I mean you and your husband could just go shopping on your honeymoon!”

“Come on Steph. We’ve got some shopping to do!”

In a scene repeated week after week all over the country, our children find meaning in life, relevance, a sense of purpose, social belonging, personal identity, and fulfillment at the local shopping mall. In a very real sense, the god of commerce has become the deity of our modern cathedrals. A recent book title says it all, “Will Our Faith have Children?”

Will our faith have children? Our competition is not only the youth group down the street, it is the lure of the mall, the siren call of commercialism that tells us that to be happy you must make a lot of money and spend a lot of money. To be respected, commercialism says you must wear the right clothes, listen to the right music and know about all the right products to own and places to see. To get ahead in life you must be willing to bully the weaker people and get what you want. And of course to really fit in, some of our children are falsely taught to develop the attitude that they earned everything they have and they deserve it.

Our culture and even some churches continue to teach the old heresy that poor people and people with lots of problems somehow deserved what they got because they sinned, and if you have money then that means God has blessed you. But then we know better.

We know that bad things happen to people who have done everything right. We know that whatever we do we cannot earn God’s blessing. We are blessed already for whatever we have in life. We are here. We are blessed. We teach our children that happiness is a choice not something we can purchase at the mall. Competing with the mall is what we must do if our faith will have children.

We have a marvelously diverse and faithful group at Grace Church. Many of us have weathered life’s storms and we come to church every Sunday smiling, happy to see others and with an unshakable confidence that ALL SHALL BE WELL. Fundamentally our faith is not about being perfect Episcopalians. It is not about perfection in liturgy or prayer or music. It is about sharing and passing it on.

Paul stood there in the public gathering place, the Aeropagus in Athens long ago. He connected their public pagan culture to the God of Israel who raised Jesus from the dead. Will we be bold enough to do this in our pagan culture? Will we be able to convey our faith to our children? Here are some things we can do.

Vacation Bible School – promote it, support it financially, volunteer for it, bring children to it

Sunday school – help out with it, bring children to it, teach or help the teachers

Youth group – help us build a top flight youth group over the next few years, support it financially, maybe you have a farm where we can do a hay ride, help get more teens involved

Nursery – help out by volunteering, support the nursery financially, bring more children here

Web site – if you have web skills, we need your help. It is time to get some new functions added for youth and Sunday school

Special events for children – We need to plan another fair or fall festival. We need to open up what we have for the community around us.

Grace Church has a lot to offer the youth in this community. Faith and the bible are not fixed things that do not change over time. They must be interpreted and reinterpreted in the context of every generation the same way Paul did in Athens that day. If you will roll up your sleeves, open your hearts and make room for our youth, then indeed our faith will have children.



Was blind but now I nee

The popular notion of responding to God’s call is that once you have some degree of clarity as to where God is calling you in your life, you land on Easy Street and everything will be just dandy. My personal experience runs completely the opposite direction. Once the family decision was made to pack up a former life of business and high technology in California and start a new life for all four of us plus the dog in a seminary apartment across the country in Massachusetts, we all had the usual concerns about a major relocation and life change, but we shared some sense of the finality of the decision. “This is it”, we thought, so we set our hearts and minds towards the east and a new future.

 Then in April 1995, six months prior to starting seminary in Cambridge Massachusetts, I was on a business trip to Boston when a previously undiagnosed tumor that had been in my left ear for nearly forty years ruptured through the eardrum. It was an incredibly scary time as we descended through medical diagnosis and eventually two lengthy surgeries. In recovery after the first surgery, the surgeon (a lapsed Episcopalian who started attending church after this operation) told me it was a “good thing the tumor made itself known when it did.” At the time I was unable to walk because my balance was so disrupted. I told him that I failed to see the good news in all this. He said, “It is good news because if we hadn’t removed the tumor now, you would have died from a brain infection your first six months of seminary.”

Life as I knew it before the surgery was now totally different. I was made a different person. While I had struggled with hearing and vision problems all my life, now I had a profound experience of difference. I cannot hear things the same way people with two ears do. That is why during announcements if you need to get my attention, wave your hand. I cannot tell where your voice is coming from.

Because we humans are sheep and because of our enormous desire for similarity, when human difference arises, we find ourselves uncomfortable and often we fail miserably at seeing the image of God, the divine spark, the face of Christ in that other person who is different. Through the small impediment that I acquired, I am able to experience at a very small level what it is like to be different. Of course I can always retreat to my position of “normal” bodily capabilities, social class, education and privilege.

But if you believe that God was there suffering with Jesus on the cross, and if you believe that God dwells in us and we abide in God, then you cannot escape the conclusion that God suffers with the poor and marginalized of this world AND that God’s demands for justice START with addressing the oppression of the poor. Jesus clearly tells us that the man born blind did not sin nor did his parents. As he challenged the Pharisees and legal systems of his day, Jesus clearly challenges us change our hearts and minds and do something to address the inequality, injustice and oppression of those who are different and suffer from our society as a result.

In other words, this is a direct appeal to change our hearts, to repent. But how?

1. By forging links of justice and evangelism – As long as a church community remains rooted in one social class they are blind to the inequities and injustices done to those on the margins. Furthermore, when the community consists of one social class, that community is incapable of seeing how their higher social position benefits from the injustice and oppression done to others. Our American culture values independence and individual achievement. These values perpetuate an illusion that runs counter to the teachings of Jesus. We are not independent. We are in fact enormously dependent upon one another. In other words, “All God’s children got to sing in the choir” and all the rest of us who are blind to their situation must listen to them – carefully. 2.

2. By solidarity – Those of us with education, jobs, retirement, and other social benefits have great difficulty coming in contact with and hearing the voice of the poor. Worldwide, those with disabilities tend to be the poorest of the poor. We are often uncomfortable with the poor. We find it hard to “read them” socially. We are unsure whether an individual is threatening or just messing with us. We are blind to the needs and concerns of the poor.

In spite of our discomfort, we MUST follow the example of Jesus who had intimate social interactions with the poorest of the poor. We must move our hearts from work like Habitat for Humanity where we do something FOR the poor to just sitting down, listening to them and incorporating them into our community.

3. By challenging our institutions – For example:

a. Where is God when our government and insurance companies refuse to pay for needs making it possible for the disabled to work? Where is God when we still have rampant discrimination against the disabled?

b. Where is God when the church refuses to admit people with disabilities as full members converting them instead to the object of an outreach ministry? The disabled and the poor are ministers in their own God-given right. We need to let them in.

c. Where is God when the church refuses to recognize God’s vocational call to ordination for a person with a disability because of presumptions about disabilities?

d. Where is God when our church recognizes the need for its buildings to be accessible and yet refuses to make the necessary changes for rectories [houses provided by the church for the clergy] to be accessible?

e. And finally, why do our bishops and those in high places constantly plea for justice in faraway lands when our dioceses and churches fail to meet the demands for justice right at home?

My friends we are all blind. Jesus calls us to turn around, make a change of heart, to repent. We must welcome those with disabilities and the poor into our community as full-fledged members. We are not called to fix them or their situation. We are called to listen to them, get to know them, and welcome them into Sunday school, the choir, the vestry, the altar guild, and every other corner of our church.

When we do that, we will join hands with the man born blind and with John Newton who wrote “Amazing Grace”, and we will sing once more that line with tears in our eyes – “I was blind but now I see.”