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BORN INTO COMMUNITY

12/31/2017

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Psalm 133   -   The Blessedness of Unity
 
How very good and pleasant it is
    when kindred live together in unity!
It is like the precious oil on the head,
    running down upon the beard,
on the beard of Aaron,
    running down over the collar of his robes.
It is like the dew of Hermon,
    which falls on the mountains of Zion.
For there the Lord ordained his blessing,
    life forevermore.

Well – we missed the Christmas story this year (with the majority of us out sick)  but I don’t think I want to go back and try to play catch-up.  We have all heard that story all our lives – whether in church or even just the reading from Charlie Brown’s Christmas on TV – and we have all celebrated it in one form or another this past week.  I’ve noticed in the past that if we miss a holiday and try to go back to pick it up, it has a tendency to fall flat because the world has already moved on.

I do want to talk about the Christmas story today, but not in the traditional way.  When I read through it this week preparing for today I was struck – as I don’t think I have been before, by just how crowded the story – according to Luke -- is. 

What we can assume we know is that there was a man and a woman, about to have a child -- a couple who are – at best – lower middle class.  I read somewhere that the word we translate as “carpenter” actually is closer to “handyman” – not someone who owns his own business but someone who does pick-up work for others.  This shouldn’t make a big difference, but I suspect it did drop Joseph down a notch in the social hierarchy of the time.  My point being – these were not important people. 

Except for Mary’s prenatal visit to her cousin Elizabeth, we don’t hear any mention of family on either side.  They don't even have the luxury of being at home in familiar surroundings when the birth occurs.  Whatever plans they might have had with a midwife, for instance, were left back in Nazareth – and they were off in Joseph’s birth city alone and among strangers. 

This is what we can assume we know.  Even the part about traveling to Bethlehem may just be window dressing to make the story match up with an old prophecy from Micah that said the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem.

So, a man and a woman – and eventually a baby.

Until we get to Luke’s Gospel.  And suddenly this story of an ordinary birth becomes an extraordinarily crowded story.

Luke’s version – written something around 90 A.D. – fully 60 years after the death of Jesus, remember -- begins, of course, with flights of angels, but then we get to shepherds – pretty ordinary, everyday people.  But these shepherds all just take off, leaving their sheep untended, to go see the result of the birth of a child belonging to someone they don’t know at all.  We may not think that is so unusual these days when we drive for miles at a moment’s notice, but this really is an unusual happening.  And then on their way home, they tell everyone they know – so they can go see, too.

Eight days later, Joseph and Mary make the trip to Jerusalem and the Temple to present their child to God and to the assembled community.  There, the holy man Simeon praises God and reminds them that it was promised he would see the salvation of the peoples before his death – and this is the one.  Then Anna, the prophetess, speaks up and proclaims that this is indeed the one they have awaited for so long.  All of this in the Temple, itself – in public, including the whole worshiping community into the story.

All of these things are public presentations reminding us that we are not born into isolation or strict individualism but into community.  We exist with and for each other.

We used to live in multigenerational families – the most natural thing ever – but we tend to self-sufficiency these days – or, think we do.  But, doing life on our own is not how God designed us.  We are created to live in humble interdependency with each other.

So let’s finish off the Christmas season with one more look at our subject through the lens of Matthew 25 – whatsoever you do to the least of these... and see how that applies to living in community. 

Family is our first community – but from there, how far out does community reach?  And what are our responsibilities to those communities?  Where do we find Jesus in the least of these?

Any thoughts, ideas?

​{Discussion]

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THIRD SUNDAY IN ADVENT: REFLECTION AND DISCUSSION

12/17/2017

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Isaiah 35:5-10
The eyes of the blind shall be opened,
    and the ears of the deaf unstopped;
The lame shall leap like a deer,
    and the tongue of the speechless sing for joy.
For waters shall break forth in the wilderness,
    and streams in the desert ...
A highway shall be there,
    and it shall be called the Holy Way;
No traveler, not even fools, shall go astray.
No lion shall be there,
    nor shall any ravenous beast come up on it;
they shall not be found there,
    but the redeemed shall walk there.
And the ransomed of the Lord shall return,
    and come to Zion with singing;
and everlasting joy shall be upon their heads.

The theme for this week is Joy and, just like Hope and peace, there are many, many layers in any discussion of Joy. 

The Isaiah reading we used in our candle-lighting is a promise written for the people in exile that they will one day be returning to Jerusalem from Babylon.  It is a it is a joyous anticipation of the celebration for those who had been dragged away from home and family and who are now home again.  It is tempting to just stop and remain here – right here – in the joy.

But we have to remember that the joy was still to come and that when it did come, it would be followed in short order by contention and struggles for power, and some truly ugly battles as to who were the real sons of Abraham – those who remained at home or those who labored in Babylon?

It should be a promise of good times, the return from exile, the return to home, with blessings right and left.  Well, yes, except that when the promise was realized, the “home” the exiles returned to wasn’t the one they’d been fantasizing about for years.  Those who had been left in Jerusalem had taken to doing things their own way and the returnees didn’t seem to fit anymore.  Those who’d been left behind were hurt that the returnees didn’t seem to appreciate just how hard it had been for them, too.

Somehow, our story, when we follow it a bit further along, appears to be equal parts praise and lament.   

Sound familiar?  We, too, live in a world that often-times is unfair.

Some of us live in comfort, some of us live on the streets.  Some of us are untouched by disasters while others’ lives are destroyed.  Some of us live in rented apartments, drowning in tons of paperwork and red-tape as they try to figure out how to rebuild lives that recently went up in flames.  Some people, like the folks in Houston and Puerto Rico are trying to dig out of the shambles left of their lives after Rita passed through – and many of them feel utterly abandoned and alone.

Whenever there is this level of disparity in people’s lives, joy is often accompanied by its opposite.  The opposite of Joy I believe, is not fear or war – it is hatred, and wherever the possibility of Joy exists, we will, unfortunately, find hatred and anger and envy, and well.  Look around you anywhere today and you can easily find hatred – hatred that someone else expects us to do something differently; hatred that life isn’t actually “all about what I want”; hatred that someone thinks I should share or care about others in any way; hatred that someone, somewhere feels Joy that I do not; hatred that some people are different; hatred stoked by greed and selfishness.

Where does Joy fit into the lives of these people?  If we stick with our Matthew 25 theme for Advent – whatsoever you did for the least of my brothers and sisters, you did for me – where can joy be found for those who feel bereft?  Where and how do we fit into the task of offering and building joy for and with them?  And harder yet, how do we offer joy to those who are mired in jealousy and hatred?

I woke the other morning singing one of my favorite old hymns – actually, I realized I’d been singing it all night, in my sleep:
  • “I heard the bells on Christmas day
  • Their old familiar carols play,
  • And wild and sweet the words repeat
  • Of peace on earth, goodwill to men.”
 
But it was this verse that I found myself singing over and over:
  • “And in despair I bowed my head:
  • “There is no peace on earth,” I said,
  • “For hate is strong, and mocks the song
  • Of peace on earth, goodwill to men!”
 
What a despairing verse – and it pretty well reflects my feelings lately as long-held rights are disappearing and whole peoples are being demonized and the poor are being tossed aside to live or die as they can on their own.
  • “For hate is strong, and mocks the song
  • Of peace on earth, goodwill to men!”
 
This song was thoroughly stuck in my head and I walked around singing it for several days.  Finally I realized I knew nothing of its origin so I looked it up.  It was a poem written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in the middle of America’s Civil War, when hate was most certainly strong. 

His wife had died a couple of years previously, leaving him to raise several children on his own, and most recently, one of the children – his beloved oldest son Charles -- had joined the Union army and had been severely wounded – he almost died and was left paralyzed for the remainder of the war – only eventually recovering.

Longfellow had reason to know that hate was strong, but whenever that verse comes to mind, it is followed immediately by the last verse, with which he concludes the poem – the one that reminds us
  • “Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
  • God is not dead, nor doth he sleep;
  • The wrong shall fail, the right prevail,
  • With peace on earth, goodwill to men.”
 
We have a choice:  we can choose to live in despair – where we will be no help to ourselves or to anyone else; or we can choose to live with God’s promises and God’s deep joy.  One of the quotes on today’s handout is from Henri Nouwen:  Joy does not simply happen to us.  We have to choose joy and keep choosing it every day.
​
It’s our choice.  We can either live our tidy lives and pretend that ugliness isn’t real; or we can be part of those God calls to stand with God and right the wrongs so that the wrong shall fail, the right prevail, with peace on earth, goodwill to men.
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SECOND SUNDAY IN ADVENT:  REFLECTION & DISCUSSION

12/10/2017

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Colossians 3:1-2, 15-17 (MSG)
1-2 So if you’re serious about living this new resurrection life with Christ, act like it. Pursue the things over which Christ presides.  Don’t shuffle along, eyes to the ground, absorbed with the things right in front of you.  Look up, and be alert to what is going on around Christ—that’s where the action is.  See things from his  perspective.

15-17 Let the peace of Christ keep you in tune with each other, in step with each other.   None of this going off and doing your own thing.   And cultivate thankfulness.   Let the Word of Christ—the Message—have the run of the house.  Give it plenty of room in your lives.   Instruct and direct one another using good common sense.   And sing, sing your hearts out to God!  Let every detail in your lives—words, actions, whatever—be done in the name of Jesus, thanking God every step of the way.
Today is the second of the four Sundays of Advent.  As you know, the church has long years assigned different attributes or subjects to each of the four weeks:  Hope, Peace, Joy, Love.  Each of these four words is short, simple, easily approached and easily understood ... but when we start digging a little deeper, we discover that each of these simple-appearing words is really quite multi-layered, with all kinds of varied nuances.

Last week we learned that Hope is both a verb and a noun with meanings ranging from a casual wish to a deeply-held conviction to an activist approach to world issues. It turns out that Peace has even more layers.

I don’t often use Wikipedia as my source for information, because it is volunteer-written and not always academically reliable, but it has some interesting information in its article on Peace.  When we trace the origin of our English word back through French to the Latin pax, we get meanings such as "peace, compact, agreement, treaty, tranquility, absence of hostility, harmony" – these are mostly meanings that have to do with an absence of war or fighting.  This is the word mostly used in the New Testament.
Further back in the Old Testament, the word used was the Hebrew, shalom, which we today usually translate straight across as peace, but if we look more carefully, shalom has a whole different meaning having to do with “being complete, or whole.”  Shalom is clearly related to the Arabic salaam, which – in addition to peace, can mean “justice, good health, safety, well-being, prosperity, equity, security, good fortune, and friendliness.”

Many cultures use their version of “peace” as a blanket salutation, instead of “hello” or “goodbye” – just as a general expression of goodwill toward the recipient.

On top of all these, we have the whole range of expressions of personal inner peace, when we are “at peace with ourselves’ or have reached a meditative state of inner peace.

And then, of course, Jesus had a few rather important things to say about peace, and peace-makers.  First, he used “Peace be with you,” as an all-purpose blessing -- “hello” or “good-bye” depending on circumstance.  He rarely spoke with anyone without wishing them peace. 
​
Peace was his “good-bye” when he knew his earthly life was coming to an end:
Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you.  I do not give to you as the world gives.  Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid.​
We are all pretty familiar with that verse, but I found it very interesting to read in the Message version:
​I’m leaving you well and whole.  That’s my parting gift to you.  Peace.  I don’t leave you the way you’re used to being left—feeling abandoned, bereft.  So don’t be upset.  Don’t be distraught.
That is “peace” used in the sense of “shalom” – wholeness.  “I’m leaving you well and whole.”  I like that usage of the word.
​
And then, of course, we have – first in the familiar language:
 “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.”
But this is how it reads in The Message:
“You’re blessed when you can show people how to cooperate instead of compete or fight. T hat’s when you discover who you really are, and your place in God’s family.
So – having all these layers at our disposal, and returning to Matthew 25, as we will all throughout Advent - ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me’ – how do we go about ‘being’ peace for those whose lives appear to have little or no peace?

I have to warn you that what follows is not a happy list.  I depressed the heck out of myself while putting it together this week.
  • What does peace look like right now to a family crammed into a border refugee camp when they can’t go home again, because home has been destroyed, and they can’t go forward because no one will take them in?

  • What does peace look like to a young African-American male walking down the street, knowing that at any moment someone could decide he looks dangerous and makes them feel frightened and shoot him – and likely get away with it?
  • What does peace look like to a teen-age girl who has run away from her home, because no one would believe her when she tried to tell them about Uncle Fred and the games he liked to play with her -- only to end up working the streets as the “property” of the local pimp – and when she tries to cry out for help, once again no one believes her?
  • How many mercilessly bullied children today are finding their peace at the end of a rope noose because no one will listen and no one will help?

These, and so many like them are truly the “least of these” that Jesus loves.  How do we reach out to them?  What are we called to do?
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FIRST SUNDAY IN ADVENT: REFLECTION & DISCUSSION

12/3/2017

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Isaiah 2:2-5    SG)
There’s a day coming when the mountain of God’s House will be The Mountain—solid, towering over all mountains.
All nations will river toward it, people from all over set out for it.
They’ll say, “Come, let’s climb God’s Mountain, go to the House of the God of Jacob. He’ll show us the way he works so we can live the way we’re made.”
Zion’s the source of the revelation.
God’s Message comes from Jerusalem.
He’ll settle things fairly between nations.
He’ll make things right between many peoples.
They’ll turn their swords into shovels, their spears into hoes.
No more will nation fight nation; they won’t play war anymore.
Come, let’s live in the light of God.

It feels almost ironic to start this advent season with HOPE when so many people are feeling, not hope, but despair, right now.  Things are so ugly in our country these days that Hope seems like the furthest thing from our horizon.  And yet .....

It is not in the midst of comfort and peaceful agreement that God offers us Hope.  We don’t need hope when all is going well.

Derek Penwell is a Christian Church pastor in Louisville, Kentucky.  He is also a writer, and a lecturer at the U. of Kentucky at Louisville.  He is one of the people whose writings I follow because he has such a talent for seeing to the heart of the scriptures.  The piece I’m going to quote in a moment here is from his discussion of the Matthew 25 reading we read last week: 

   I was hungry and you fed me,
   I was thirsty and you gave me a drink,
   I was homeless and you gave me a room,
   I was shivering and you gave me clothes,
   I was sick and you stopped to visit,
   I was in prison and you came to me.’
​

   “Then those ‘sheep’ are going to say, ‘Master, what are you talking about? When did we ever see you hungry and feed you, thirsty and give you a drink? And when did we ever see you sick or in prison and come to you?’ Then the King will say, ‘I’m telling the solemn truth: Whenever you did one of these things to someone overlooked or ignored, that was me—you did it to me.’

When I began thinking about hope, in a hopeless world, this week, it came to me just how truly well last week’s scripture, and Penwell’s thoughts on it, fit our Advent theme.
To continue what Penwell had to say:  "What has troubled me, perhaps as much as anything, about our current cultural moment is not just the lack of empathy among so many, but the idea that empathy might even be something anyone should even care about.  For more than a year now, vast numbers of our neighbors have lived in fear of what the powers and principalities might do to them.  People who claim to follow Jesus, the one who identified with the very people who feel threatened in this environment, have a responsibility to see in those people the face of Jesus.

"And that’s the surprise of this parable:  When Jesus shows up, it’s definitely not what we expected.  When the Son of Man comes in his glory, shouldn’t the heavens be torn apart, and the sound of mighty winds fill the air—shouldn’t God come among us with awe and majesty?

"Alas, when the Son of Man comes in glory, what we see are the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the sick, and the prisoner—because that’s where Jesus has chosen to hang out. Indeed ... that’s who Jesus is."

The gospels tell us over and over that Jesus did not come for the rich and the politically powerful – although God knows, they need him too – they just are so blinded by their arrogance they can’t see how desperate their need is.  He did not come for those who issue edicts and pontificate from their high altars, believing themselves the chosen, the worthy and the important, those through whom God speaks.  So busy speaking from their own importance that they don’t hear Jesus calling them to listen and repent.

As followers of Christ, we are called to be where the poor and the hope-less are.  This first Sunday in Advent we are called to be hope in the midst of a world full of war and selfishness and hunger and greed – a world that doesn’t seem to have much hope in in right now.

What does hope look like to someone who is about to lose their access to food-stamps?  Or healthcare coverage?  To someone who is one serious illness away from losing their home?  To someone who has lost all hope of ever affording a home?  To anyone who recognizes that they do not matter in the slightest to the decision-makers who hold power around them?

To quote Penwell again: "Alas, when the Son of Man comes in glory, what we see are the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the sick, and the prisoner—because that’s where Jesus has chosen to hang out.”

These are the people Jesus loves.  These are the people we are told to care for.
​
How?
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    Picture

    Rev. Cherie Marckx

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