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"Emptying Out, Filling from the Well"-- Exodus 17:1-7, Philippians
2:1-13--Sept. 28, 2014

"Emptying Out, Filling from the Well"-- Exodus 17:1-7, Philippians 2:1-13--Sept. 28, 2014

 

This morning as we baptized Emma, we affirmed that she is beloved, a precious child of God, beautiful to behold–as are each one of us. The watermark is on her and our foreheads–or all over us, if we were baptized by immersion–and this is who we are, signed and sealed by God.

The problem is that much of the time, like any other child of a parent, we do a lot of complaining and rebelling against this God by whom we are beloved and of whom we are precious children. The reading from Exodus last week told the story of the Israelites’ complaining against God that they didn’t have any food to eat in the wilderness, and Bruce’s sermon was entitled "The Joy of Complaining?"

In this morning’s reading, there’s still a whole lotta complaining going on, this time about the lack of water. This God, it seems, by whom we are beloved and of whom we are precious children, just doesn’t seem to provide what we want when we want it. Life is so much harder than we think it should be, especially if, as we hear, "God is in charge." Even a quick glance through the newspaper or one cycle of tv news is enough to make us question the truth of that statement. If this is what happens when "God is in charge," maybe it’s time for new management.

And lest we think it’s just the God of the Old Testament that we have a problem with, remember where being the beloved son of God got Jesus–crucified on a cross. Someone has observed that we may be anxious for the Second Coming of Christ because, honestly, we aren’t that crazy about his first coming. Look where it got him–and most of his early followers. You call that success? If we really are to follow him, can we expect any better treatment?

Episcopal priest and scholar Cynthia Bourgeault writes, "My hunch is that a good many of the difficulties we sometimes run into trying to make our Christianity work stem from the fact that right from the start people missed how different Jesus’ approach really was." (Wisdom Jesus, p. 63) When people began to call Jesus "the Son of God," it was a direct contradiction of what the Empire was telling everyone–that Caesar was the Son of God. Caesar ruled by fear and domination. People bowed to Caesar in order to escape punishment and death. That is the nature of power as the world recognizes it. That is what the gods are like, the Empire taught. How many of us still think of God that way–with fear of punishment? Who was–who is–this God that Jesus is the Son of?

There was a hymn, however, in early Christianity, that talked about a different kind of power, a different image of God, which Paul quotes in his letter to the Philippians–

Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God [or, had equal status with God], did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born in human likeness. And being found in human form, he humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death–even death on a cross. Therefore God also highly exalted him and gave him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

This power is not unilateral, not top down, but rather relational, flowing into the other. "He emptied himself, becoming human...he humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross." This is a whole different kind of power than Caesar’s power, than the world recognized. "Jesus rules by relationship and empathy," Bruce Epperly writes. Rather than being jealous and competitive, he "wants us to grow in creativity, freedom, and agency...The more creative agency we embody, the greater opportunity for God’s vision to be achieved in the world..[This is] the obedience of love, not fear," (Adventurous Lectionary, 9/28/14) so "every knee shall bend" in love, not fear.

This passage from Philippians makes some profound affirmations about God, Christ, and us. "Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus," Paul wrote. We can have the mind of Christ, Paul says! Remember that "mind" was not thought of as something that simply goes on in the brain, but rather was a whole body perception and will and decision-making. In fact, Jesus often talked about metanoia, transformation, literally meaning "going into the larger mind." Jesus’ teaching and personal style were all about abundance, generosity, extravagance. He taught about a God who had a spacious vision for the world. Jesus’ followers–mostly peasants, folks at the margins, people who had to struggle just to stay alive–saw only scarcity, as do many of us. And yet, in his presence, they experienced abundance. Who is this one preaching abundance, generosity, extravagance? If Jesus is the Son of God–if we are the sons and daughters of God-- what kind of God is this?

Further, Paul said, when we are "open to and guided by the mind of Christ, we experience solidarity with all creation and have a sense of unity with our brothers and sisters in faith."(Epperly, op cit.)–"Be of one mind." -- Instead of separating ourselves from "the other," we see that we are actually one. We’re all in this together, more alike than we are different.

"Therefore, my beloved, [Paul writes,] work out your salvation with fear and trembling..." The word "your" is plural–our salvation is for all of us, and instead of the words "fear and trembling," think "awe and energy." [Epperly] Our collective salvation that we are to work together on with awe and energy is for here and now, not just some later time after we die.

And not only are we in this with each other, God is in this with us. When we are able to "have the mind of Christ," we discover "the divine-human synergy" [Bruce Epperly, op cit.]–God working alongside and within us. This is the God we are beloved by. This is the God whose precious children we are. This is not a Santa Claus God who knows when we’ve been naughty or nice, but a God who longs for us all to have the mind of Christ, open to God’s love and abundance, not grasping onto anything, but allowing God’s power to flow through us. We are to become "like God," as Jesus was, not lording it over others, but rather as clear vessels for divine love and abundance to flow through and into the world, even through our deaths–our final death and all those little deaths and losses we experience in the course of a lifetime, like the end of a relationship, the loss of our health or vitality, the loss of a job or dream. Even through those losses and deaths, God’s love and abundance can flow into us and through us, bringing something new to life.

How different from the "winner takes all" god our culture holds up to be worshipped, the kind of god who annihilates and crushes all opponents, the god for whom being #1 is the only goal worth pursuing!

Not grasping, emptying, receiving all that comes to us in life, being present to it, and allowing it to flow through us is a very different practice from the usual response in our culture to things that are painful. Most people in our culture do whatever they can to avoid feeling the pain–by numbing their emotions with substances or exercise or work or shopping or eating. They avoid their underlying fear by expressing anger, often inappropriately. Putting on the mind of Christ means allowing all experiences, all emotions, to come but not clinging to any of them. Rather, releasing them. Obviously, easier said than done, and not without a lot of practice. But it is not only for saints and holy people. It is available to and possible for all of us.

Jan Richardson is an artist and retreat leader whose husband Gary died last year at the beginning of Lent. I’m guessing Gary was in his 40's or 50's. A year and a half later, Jan was able to write–

The hollowing began the moment Gary died. In the weeks that followed, it came as a physical sensation: in the center of my chest, an emptying nearly tangible, a hollowing out of the heart and of the life I had known.

Last week I visited with a friend of mine whose husband died a year and a half before Gary. We spoke of the hollowing. We talked about how there is nothing that will fix the emptiness. And we spoke, too, of how the emptiness can become a space that, in one of the mysteries of grief, leaves us more and more open to the receiving of joy. The hollowing happens. Life will empty us out, whether we will it or not. Yet Paul reminds us...that we belong to the Christ who freely chose to empty himself: who gave himself completely in a way that, paradoxically, did not diminish him but helped to reveal the fullness of who he was, and is. Encompassed by the Christ who enfolds our emptiness in his own, we become free to choose how we will respond to the emptying. In [that] emptying...how will we allow the hollowing to open our hearts to the world we are called to serve in joy and in love? [Painted Prayerbook, 9/28/14]

This baptism into the Body of Christ, this claiming of our identity as beloved, precious children of the God of Christ Jesus, is more radical than we usually acknowledge. This God of emptying, this God whose love and abundance and generosity overflow and dance in that trinitarian dance between Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer, this is the God who claims us and flows within us–not the dominating, fear-mongering god of Caesar or Empire or terrorists or plague. "Nothing in all creation [Paul writes to another church]–neither death nor life, nor things present nor things to come, –nothing can separate us from the love of God whom we know in Christ Jesus." Nothing can separate us from the God we need, even if it may not be the God we want.

Ellen and Todd–and we all–have made promises to teach Emma about this God and to live our lives, as best as we are able, so that she and all children might grow up in a world of justice and peace and, we might add, on a planet that can still sustain life as we know it. At its best, the church is where we learn to trust in that God. "We need places," Stephanie Paulsen writes, "to pray as if someone were listening, to study as if we might learn something worth writing on our hearts, to join with others in service as if the world might be transformed. Churches are places to learn to practice, with others, a continual conversion of life, a permanent openness to change." (The Christian Century, Oct. 1, 2014, p. 2)

Emptiness, being hollowed out, allowing, welcoming, letting go, opening to God, these deepen that watermark on our brows. Unless we become empty, we can’t be filled with God. It’s the only way we will be able to move into this time of profound change on our planet, as we let go of "business as usual" which will only lead to the end of life on this planet as we know it. This is the world Emma will grow up in. Emptiness, being hollowed out, not grasping, not ac-cumulating, not using up. As Jan Richardson writes, "As you attend to the empty spaces–in your life and in the world–may those spaces open wide to the joy that comes." So here, finally, a blessing--

Blessing That Becomes Empty As It Goes

This blessing
keeps nothing
for itself.
You can find it
by following the path
of what it has let go,
of what it has learned
it can live without.

Say this blessing out loud
a few times
and you will hear
the hollow places
within it,
how it echoes
in a way
that gives your voice
back to you
as if you had never
heard it before.

Yet this blessing
would not be mistaken
for any other,
as if,
in its emptying,
it had lost
what makes it
most itself.

It simply desires
to have room enough
to welcome
what comes.

Today,
it’s you.

So come and sit
in this place
made holy
by its hollows.
You think you have
too much to do,
too little time,
too great a weight
of responsibility
that none but you
can carry.

I tell you,
lay it down.
Just for a moment,
if that’s what you
can manage at first.
Five minutes.
Lift up your voice—
in laughter,
in weeping,
it does not matter—
and let it ring against
these spacious walls.

Do this
until you can hear
the spaces within
your own breathing.
Do this
until you can feel
the hollow in your heart
where something
is letting go,
where something
is making way. [Jan Richardson, op cit.]

So may we be blessed. Amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 
The People's Climate March, Sunday Sept. 21 in NYC

The People's Climate March, Sunday Sept. 21 in NYC

This march was the largest march calling for action on the climate. There were over 2,000 folks from Vermont to make the March. Grace Winslow, Barbara True-Weber, Kathy Shaw, and Mike Weber were 4 folks from our congregation to go. Thanks to them for representing us and helping to voice our concern for the environment!
Rally Sunday, September 14, 2014

Rally Sunday, September 14, 2014

Following worship, the whole church family was invited to “rally” in exploring a number of different service and mission opportunities for the coming year. Tables with ongoing projects were staffed by folks involved in different ministries, and a “None of the Above” inspiration table was available to help connect folks with resources and others who wish to initiate new projects and ministries. This was just the beginning of our year of inspiration and empowerment.  Seated here are Maggie Briggs and Scott Winslow at the Bennington Free Clinic Table.  See photo album of events on our Facebook page.  Click the link "Find us on Facebook " at the bottom of this page.
"Letting Go...over and over..."-- Matthew 18:21-35-- Sept. 14, 2014

"Letting Go...over and over..."-- Matthew 18:21-35-- Sept. 14, 2014

 

This has been a week of remembrance of the events of September 11, 2001. A friend of mine from my Positive Psychology course remembered her dad this week and her last phone conversation with him, shortly before he was killed in the Twin Towers attack. She was able to give thanks for him and all that he was to her; to "re-member" him, affirm her connection with him and the ways he is still a part of her. That is the very best kind of "re-membering."

It has been said that we are a nation that "never forgets, never forgives." (Walter Brueggemann, Journal for Preachers, Pent. 2014, p. 2) So how timely that today’s gospel reading from Matthew should be about Peter’s question about how many times we are to forgive and Jesus’ teaching about forgiveness.

The image on the top of one of the websites I turned to this week was of that familiar way of counting–4 vertical lines side by side and then one line drawn diagonally across them, each little clump a group of 5. "Then Peter came and said to Jesus, ‘Lord, if my brother or sister sins against me, how often should I forgive? As many as seven times?" One clump of 5 plus 2 more lines. "Jesus said to him, ‘Not seven times, but, I tell you, seventy-seven times." In other words, off the page, forever, over and over.

Peter had thought he was being pretty generous, offering to forgive an offender 7 times, but Jesus said, "Forget about seven. Forget about keeping count." Really? "Ask a child to apologize," someone has suggested, "to admit his or her wrong-doing, and you will discover the early limits of our empathy." [Eric Barreto, workingpreacher.org, 9/14/14] This whole forgiveness business is hard work, for children and adults. "Being corrected is painful, asking for forgiveness requires humility, and granting forgiveness is challenging." (Barreto, op cit.) And at what point do you have to say, "Enough!"? Does forgiving mean letting the abuse continue, allowing the serial killer back on the streets, the terrorist to try blowing that plane up again?

"Forgiveness," writes Bruce Epperly, "...doesn’t mean forgoing justice or putting an end to the legal system. Crimes need to be addressed and serious criminals need to be taken off the streets. But, even the serious criminal is kindred: the culture that supports us economically and in terms of privilege may also have influenced her or his poor decision-making. There is no one completely innocent or guilty..." [Epperly, adventurouslectionary.org, 9/14/14]

"How often should I forgive? As many as seven times?" Jesus said to him, "Not seven times, but, I tell you, seventy-seven times." It’s not about keeping score. It’s about staying open to the endless reservoir of grace, much bigger than our imagination or even our notions of justice, though imagination and justice are within that reservoir. "Do not despair," St. Augustine said, "one of the thieves was saved." He then observed, "Do not presume, one of the thieves was damned." [cited by Dan Clendenin, Journey with Jesus, 9/14/14] Just keep forgiving.

Aristotle said, "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit." Forgiveness, we could say, is not an act but a habit. "Not seven times, but, I tell you, seventy-seven times."

In the 1950's 6 year-old Ruby Bridges was the only African-American child in an all-white school in New Orleans, LA. She single-handedly integrated that school. Ruby walked to and from school every day with 2 federal escorts in front of her and 2 behind her, "while an angry crowd of white adults heaped abuses on her little head," as one woman describes it. "Child psychiatrist Robert Coles noticed her lips were moving as she walked, and asked her, in her home, what she was saying. She said she was praying, ‘Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.’ Her parents hoped, by giving her this prayer, she could shield her mind and heart, and walk unscathed through her daily hell." "We are what we repeatedly do. Forgiveness is not an act but a habit." [Nancy Rockwell] First we shape our habits, then our habits shape us. It takes about 30 days to shape a habit, positive psychology tells us. Give it a try.

"Russell Banks, in [his book] The Sweet Hereafter, has school-bus driver Dolores Driscoll confide to us how she waits everyday for the same three siblings, who are always late. Time and again she had chided them, but when nothing changed in them she changed herself, turning those extra minutes into a meditative time for sipping coffee and thinking about her life. And so she forgave them, and set herself free." [Nancy Rockwell, the bite in the apple, 9/6/14]

Because, you see, that’s what forgiveness does. It’s not so much what it does to the offender, it’s what it does to us–it frees us. It frees us from the past, so that we can live spaciously into the future. "Forgiveness [writes David Lose]...is ultimately a decision about the past–the decision to accept both that you cannot change the past and also that the past does not have to hold you captive." [inthemeantime, 9/7/14]

South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, headed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, is one of the most powerful examples of forgiveness. It named the truth of the many unspeakable wrongs committed mostly by white South Africans against black South Africans. They were not to be forgotten. But the incredible wisdom of this commission was its recognition that South Africa would have no future if it couldn’t move beyond its past.

Now retired, Bishop Tutu has written a book with his daughter Mpho on forgiving, and includes in it not only lessons about forgiving others but also about forgiving oneself, sometimes just as hard, if not harder, than forgiving others.

Learning from the past [the Tutus write] is not the same as being held hostage by what we have done [or by what someone else has done to us]. At some stage we must let go of the past and begin again. We have said repeatedly that no one is undeserving of forgiveness, and this includes you...I know it can still be difficult to offer ourselves the forgiveness we can so freely give to others. Perhaps we hold ourselves to a higher standard than the standard to which we hold other people. (If we think carefully, we recognize this double standard as a small piece of arrogance: I am a better person than he or she is, so I should behave better.) [cited by Anna macdonald Dobbs, ekklesiaproject.org, 9/10/14]

The servant in the parable Jesus told Peter about forgiveness also seemed to hold himself to a different standard than he held others. After being forgiven by the king for a debt equivalent to around 15 years of labor, worth hundreds of thousands of dollars in today’s money, –a debt he could never repay--he turned around and "put the screws," as Peterson puts it, on another slave who owed more like 100 days worth of labor. After being forgiven from a deep reservoir of grace, this servant goes back to the ledger, counting offenses. The harshness of his punishment at the end–being "tortured until he would pay his entire debt"–is more a description of the world created by such offense-counting and returning than it is a prescription for those who don’t forgive.

"Forgiveness is grounded in interdependence and holy relativity," Bruce Epperly writes. (Ibid.) We must decide how we will be related to one another–tied up in knots, or connected by strands that stretch and weave–for we are connected. "Forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us," Jesus us taught us to pray. "Untangle the knots within so that we can mend our hearts’ simple ties to each other," is how Neil Douglas-Kloz prefers to translate the Aramaic. Or "Detach the fetters of faults that bind us, like we let go the guilt of others." We are all inter-related, interdependent. How do we make those connections life-giving instead of strangling and death-dealing?

So we pray not only for forgiveness but also for the ability to forgive, because sometimes it seems beyond our ability. The creeds and testimony of the truest parts of our tradition attest that forgiveness is the work of the Spirit. "In a society that ‘never forgets, never forgives,’ [writes Walter Brueuggemann] the work of the Spirit is to interrupt the cycles of hate and fear and vengeance and violence with forgiveness. The urgency of forgiveness–in families, in congregations, between haves and have-nots, among nations–is certain. It is the Spirit who breaks such cycles of deathliness. It is that Spirit who makes new ways possible. Forgiveness is hard, steady, demanding work." [Brueggemann, op. cit.]

What more important work is there, than to be part of the Spirit’s work of making new, breaking the cycles of deathliness and violence, not simply by pronouncing forgiveness, but going deep into the places of alienation, woundedness, and delusion that feed those acts that offend and sometimes inflict so much pain.

Hear one final testimony of the power of forgiveness to set free, this from the mother of a yet another teen-age African-American boy named Jordan Davis, who was shot and killed by a middle-aged white man named Michael Dunn. Dunn was acquitted of the murder. After the verdict, Lucia McBath, the young boy’s mom, was interviewed, and the reporter marveled at her grace and generosity–

Don’t think that we aren’t angry. [Ms. McBath said] Don’t’ think that I’m not angry. Forgiving Michael Dunn doesn’t negate what I’m feeling and my anger. And I am allowed to feel that way. But more than that I have a responsibility to God to walk the path He’s laid. In spite of my anger, and my fear that we won’t get the verdict that we want, I am still called by the God I serve to walk this out.

In another article, this same journalist reported Jordan’s mom telling him–

I am praying for him [Dunn] and my church is praying for him. I forgave him a long time ago. I had to. It’s not just about Jordan. And I would not stand and wait for him to apologize. I don’t need his apology. I had forgiven him pretty much in the first 30 days. I just knew that was what I was supposed to do...I remember one of the first interviews we did...And after, I was walking past St. Patrick’s Cathedral with my friend Lisa and I said, ‘Lisa, I have to go in there.’ And I went in and I was just sobbing for 2 hours. And the Lord helped me forgive [Dunn] right there. In those 2 hours, I came out and felt like, ‘OK, I’m done." [Anna Macdonald Dobs, op cit.]

We may not want to think of forgiveness as simply obeying the law of God, unless we trust God’s ways enough to know that living in that Way is ultimately the way to Life, and Joy, Freedom and Wholeness. So let us pray for those who have sinned against us, those who have offended or harmed us. Let us pray that we ourselves might be forgiven the ways we have offended or wronged others, even for the harm we have done to ourselves. Let us re-member. The web that connects us all is living and full of Light and Life. Don’t keep score. Just throw yourself into the game. Give thanks to the One whose reservoir of grace and mercy is deep and wide. May it be so.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark
"The Way of the Wicked"-- Ezekiel 33:7-11, Matthew 18:15-20-- Sept 7,
2014

"The Way of the Wicked"-- Ezekiel 33:7-11, Matthew 18:15-20-- Sept 7, 2014

 

I knew it wasn’t just me when on the Tuesday night after Labor Day Weekend, Brian Williams opened his Nightly News broadcast with, "If any of your conversations around barbeques or tables this weekend turned serious, you may have noticed that our world seems to be falling apart." A world map was then displayed with all the "hotspots" highlighted, mostly where radical Islamists had attacked or raged, though there was also Ukraine and western Africa and Ferguson, MO. It was a week marked by the release of a gruesome videotape showing the beheading of a second American journalist, Scott Sotloff. "The world seems to be falling apart." The way of the wicked seems to be everywhere.

So, I’ve been wondering–What are we to do with this? How shall we respond? Not in the sense of foreign policy recommendations, as important as that level of response is, and for now not advocating any particular legislation or action by Congress, [if such a thing were even possible], but rather, how are we to deal with the relentless barage of violence and bad news? What kind of conversations do we have around our kitchen tables? How do we talk to our children and one another about this? How do we live our lives, day by day, in such a time?

One option is to try to avoid the news–don’t read the papers, don’t watch tv, don’t listen to the radio, set the picture of your homepage to a photo of cats or puppies or flowers. And, actually, sometimes we do need to fast from the news–it really can become almost an obsession, an onslaught of horror and depravity that threatens to overwhelm us. Some times we do need to just step away–for a little while.

But even if we can avoid the news media, human conflict and tragedy has a way of finding us. Difficult encounters with loved ones or friends arise. Someone at work does something that hurts you or infuriates you. Somebody cuts you off in traffic or is obnoxious in the grocery line. Your credit card information gets hacked at Home Depot. "You know what" happens.

It’s nothing new.

"If another member of the church sins against you," [imagine that!] Jesus says in Matthew’s gospel, "go and point out the fault when the two of you are alone. If the member listens to you, you have regained that one. But if you are not listened to, take one or two others along with you, so that every word may be confirmed by the evidence of two or three witnesses. If the member refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if the offender refuses to listen even to the church, let such a one be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector."

There’s no mention of parking lots here, as in "talk about the person behind their back in the parking lot." It’s a very pro-active, engaged, courageous prescription. Do what you can to restore your relationship. And, oh, by the way, the last resort? – "If they won’t listen to the congregation, let them be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector"? Lest you think this gives permission for shunning or excluding, consider who the author of this gospel is, according to tradition–Matthew, a tax collector. How did Jesus treat Gentiles and tax collectors? He sat at table with them, he drew the circle wide.

Even in the Hebrew Scriptures, what we Christians tend to call "the Old Testament," which was, of course, the only testament Jesus knew, the sweeping generalization about the God of Hebrew Scriptures is that "He" merely orders Israel to wipe out their enemies or does it Himself, as in the story of the Passover, which some communities are reading today, about the angel of death passing over the houses of the Israelites whose lintels are smeared with lamb’s blood and killing all the firstborn of the Egyptians. That is how the Israelites understood their exodus from slavery in Egypt, writing the story down hundreds of years later, but in a violent world of competing gods, how else could they understand their impossible escape?

That’s not the only way they thought of God. The story of Jonah, with his commission by God to go preach to the Ninevites and warn them of the consequences of their evil ways, shows God with quite a sense of humor as the whale swallows Jonah up when he tries to shirk his assignment, and then, after being vomited up on shore, and reluctantly preaching to Ninevah, Jonah hides out under a tree and pouts. God presses him saying, "You don’t think I can desire the repentance of the wicked?"

God gives Ezekiel a similar command.

So you, mortal, I have made a sentinel for the house of Israel: whenever you hear a word from my mouth, you shall give them warning from me. If I say to the wicked, ‘O wicked ones, you shall surely die,’ and you do not speak to warn the wicked to turn from their ways, the wicked shall die in their iniquity, but their blood I will require at your hand. But if you warn the wicked to turn from their ways, and they do not turn from their ways, the wicked shall die in their iniquity, but you will have saved your life.

Here God seems to be saying, "your life is wrapped up with the life of the wicked. If what they’re doing has disastrous consequences for their souls or for others, then you are obligated to warn them. If they don’t listen to you and don’t change, you have done what you can and they get what is coming to them. If you don’t engage them at all, however, and they continue in their wicked ways, you bear part of the blame.

I confess I have never watched the show, but a friend commented that the patriarch of the Duck Dynasty has declared his recommendation for dealing with Muslims: "Convert ‘em or kill ‘em." I’m pretty sure that’s not the kind of engagement God had in mind when speaking to Jonah or Ezekiel. And how would that make us any better than ISIL or the Taliban or Al Qaeda?

In his letter to the Romans, in the section suggested as preparation for worship today, Paul writes, "Let us then lay aside the works of darkness and put on the armor of light." This is a call to a pro-active, engaged response to the presence of evil, just as Jesus recommended in that well-known but often misinterpreted passage about turning the other cheek or giving one’s cloak or walking the second mile, not resisting evil with evil but with creative, engaged response. "You cannot drive out darkness with darkness," Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote; "only light can do that. You cannot drive out hate with hate; only love can do that."

Listen to part of this letter written by a teacher at Richboro Middle School in Bucks County, PA, to the students there who were reeling from the tragic death of three of their schoolmates–

You, I love you, and I believe in you [Mr. Cunningham wrote]...These are tough times. You need to know that these tough times did not come to stay, they have come to pass. You need to know it, and you need to believe it. They will pass and you will be left to decide your future...

When I say, "these tough times will pass" I do not mean that we will forget the boys. What I am saying is that eventually the sadness you have inside of you will subside. When it subsides it will leave a void. You may already feel a void inside of you. An emptiness that you feel can seemingly never be filled. However, it will be filled, and we must decide with what. Unfortunately, some of you may choose to fill it with substances. Some with anger and frustration. I am challenging you to make sure that everyone around you fills this void with empowerment. A sense of purpose and clarity that you cannot even imagine. Purpose to look despair in the face and say, ‘You can’t stop me.’ Purpose to wake up everyday with an overwhelming sense of ‘I can do it!’...

... You can, you will, and you must be empowered. The very nature of our survival is dependent on it. The way to honor the boys is to walk out of the dark corner that we are all sitting in, step out into the light, and be stronger than ever before. Finding your way out of the dark corner is a process. A process that may take weeks but eventually you will walk out. And when you walk out, you can, will, and must reach into the darkness and pull others out as well...

(--posted on Facebook)

What wise words to speak to middle-schoolers! Or middle-agers...or anyone in the midst of life.

What will you choose to fill the void with? Will you let Love and Light come in, or block it with substances or numbing or rage or fear?

And of course there’s always the wise words of Mr. Rogers to children experiencing tragedies – "Look for the helpers," his mother told him. "There are always helpers in the midst of these situations. What will you look for? What will you focus on?

Or what about our response to the horrendous killings of Scott Sotloff and James Foley? Maren Tirabassi, the UCC pastor in Portsmouth, NH, near where James Foley lived, wrote this prayer in response to this death–

God shelter his soul under the wings of your presence.

God hold Scott Sotloff as a life to be known and remembered in honor

not for the violence of his death, but for the beauty of his life, for the kindness of his care for children, for the honesty and imagination of his journalism, for the love of those who loved him and for the courage in his death.

God, shelter his soul under the wings of your presence.

God hold Scott Sotloff as a life to be known and remembered in honor

not for the responses to his death to be played out on the international stage, nor for the Rachel-chorus weeping for this child of us all, but for the man he was. Amen.

How do we fill the void? Where do we put our energies?

"Truly I tell you," Jesus said, "if two of you agree on earth about anything you ask, it will be done for you by my Father in heaven. For where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them." No wonder Annie Dillard warned that we have no idea what we’re doing when we come together for worship! We’re like kids playing with a chemistry set–we ought to have crash helmits and kevlar vests. What incredible power is available to those who come together not just in the "name" of Jesus, like some kind of magic word, but in the spirit and power of Jesus. "If two of you agree on earth about anything you ask, it will be done for you by God in heaven"! This isn’t like Janice Joplin singing, "O Lord, won’t you buy me a Mercedes Benz?" Jesus is saying that if we come together in the Christ-energy, adding our energies together, and direct those energies toward someone or something, God will fulfill that request! That request may be fulfilled by filling us with the courage and power to act or it may change us and direct our energies toward continuing to send Love and Light into those dark corners or places of wickedness. If we put on the armor of Light, or a cloak of Light, we may avoid getting seduced or sucked into all the negative energies and evil that seem to be everywhere around us, and so free us up to direct our energies toward making a positive difference, being part of the Light.

...These tough times did not come to stay, they have come to pass. You need to know it, and you need to believe it. They will pass and you will be left to decide your future..."The night is far gone, the day is near," Paul wrote. "Let us then lay aside the works of darkness and put on the armor of light...Put on Christ,"; and take in Christ, in this bread and this cup. May these words be hope and strength and courage for us, for the living of these days. Amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

"Breaking Our Hearts"-- Ex. 3:1-15, Matthew 16: 21-28-- Aug. 31,2014

"Breaking Our Hearts"-- Ex. 3:1-15, Matthew 16: 21-28-- Aug. 31,2014

 

A wise old preacher said to a young one, just beginning his ministry, "Take both praise and criticism with a grain of salt." Wise words that have come back to me many times. You’re probably not as great as somebody would lead you to believe, and you’re probably not as bad as somebody else–or maybe the same somebody–would have you believe. "Take both praise and criticism with a grain of salt."

So I think about Peter in last week’s and today’s readings from Matthew. Remember last week when Jesus asked the disciples, "But who do you say that I am?" And when Peter answered, "You are the Christ, the Messiah, the Son of the Living God," Jesus praised him saying, "Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven. And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock, I will build my church, and the powers of death shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."

Wow! Kind of hard to remember salt at a time like that!

So, imagine the bitter, salty taste in his mouth, when Jesus began to explain to them just what it meant that he was the Christ, the Son of the Living God, "that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things from the elders and chief priests and scribes , and be killed,..." Imagine Peter’s heart breaking at each one of those phrases–"suffer many things, and be killed..." I imagine that his blood was pounding so loudly in his ears that he probably didn’t even listen all the way to the end, when Jesus said, "and on the third day be raised."

Peter thought that what had been revealed to him, not by flesh and blood but by Jesus’ own Father was that Jesus was going to save them and all of Israel, that being the Christ, the Messiah was a good thing, not something you suffer for, that the God whom Jesus was the Son of was powerful and just and righteous.

So Peter took Jesus aside and said, "God forbid, Lord! This shall never happen to you!" But he turned and said to Peter, "Get behind me, Satan! You are a hindrance, a stumbling block to me; for you are not on the side of God, but of men." More than a grain of salt stung Peter’s eyes with tears and humiliation. "Satan!" he had called him. The Tempter. Now, apparently, the voice in his head was Satan’s, not God’s.

"If anyone would come after me," Jesus went on, "let them deny themselves [‘they must

leave self behind,’as another translation puts it] and take up their cross and follow me. For whoever would save their life [or cares for their own safety] will lose it, or [is lost]; and whoever loses their life for my sake will find it. [or, lets themselves be lost for my sake, they will find their true self]. For what will it profit a person , if they gain the whole world and forfeit their life? [What will a person gain by winning the whole world, at the cost of their true self?’] Or what shall a person give in return for their life [ or their true self]?"

Boy, these are tough words to contemplate in the middle of the final long weekend of summer! (Or anytime, for that matter.) The closest thing to salt we want to taste is a bag full of chips and a cold drink.

But here it is, the crux of the gospel in the middle of a fading summer weekend. No wonder people aren’t standing in the aisles and forming lines out to the street. "Sign up here to suffer!" we might as well advertize. "Lessons in dying here." "We’ll break your heart."

A clergy friend of mine posted an image on Facebook this week of a semitic looking

man–broad nose, piercing dark eyes, dark hair sticking up–and over the face were these words:

"Things Jesus Wasn’t" and then scattered across the page, the words–"White, American, Indifferent, Christian, Middle-class, Blonde, Homeowner, Nice, Tame, Overly Pious, Legal Citizen, Humorless, Polite, Exclusive, Violent, Obsessed with Sex, English-speaker, Mild"–Things Jesus wasn’t.

When Peter told Jesus that bad things must never happen to him, the salt that he was had already lost its flavor. His inspired imagination about God had already been domesticated, just like ours is most of the time, especially if we listen to our culture. God is all-powerful, God never lets bad things happen to really good people, God will rescue us from the mess we’ve made, God will punish the bad people and reward the good. Really? That’s all you’ve got? Nothing more than a relatively competent military dictator? The "I am who I am"/ "I will be who I will be" who spoke from the burning bush is way beyond that.

"The coopted imagination," one commentator observed, " assumes that there is a way to gain life other than by losing it.’ (Texts for Preaching, Year A, p. 469)

"Whoever cares for their own safety is lost; but if you let yourself be lost for my sake, you will find your true self. What will you gain by winning the whole world, at the cost of your true self? Or what can you give that will buy that self back?" The self that you need to lose is your small s self, the one that stops at your own boundaries, that refers only back to yourself, that’s all about you. But what you gain when you lose this small s self is your true Self, capital S, the beloved, precious Self that lives and moves and has its being in the Great Self, in God. That is a life worth living for. And dying for.

A nurse who works in palliative care, with people who are nearing the end of their lives, compiled a list of the top 5 regrets that dying people expressed. The number one regret was, "I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me." "Whoever would follow me must leave the "little" self behind, must take up their cross and follow me." Notice Jesus didn’t say, "Must take up my cross" or "your neighbor’s cross." Make sure the cross you’re picking up is yours to carry, not one that someone else says you should bear. As Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton said, "Bear your share." "I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me." If you lose your self in me, you’ll find your true Self.

By the way, the other top 4 regrets of the dying? "I wish I hadn’t worked so hard." Every male patient said this, thinking of all the moments in their children’s and loved ones’ lives they’d missed. "I wish I’d had the courage to express my feelings," instead of always trying to keep the peace and settling for a mediocre life. "I wish I’d stayed in touch with my friends." and finally, "I wish I had let myself be happier." "This was surprisingly common," the nurse wrote. So many didn’t realize that happiness is a choice, and instead stayed stuck in familiarity, old habits. (Huff Post, 8/3/13) No need to wait until you’re dying to make adjustments. Regrets belong to the past, not to the present.

"Get behind me, Satan!" Jesus said to Peter. The rock that you are has become a stumbling block for me. It couldn’t be more blunt. But one translator says that the Greek word for "get behind" is the same as the word used a little earlier when Jesus was talking about "binding things" in heaven and on earth. Perhaps Jesus is telling Peter to "bind himself" to Jesus. [Mark Davis, Left Behind..., 8/31/14) "Stick with me," in other words. "Yes, it’s going to get nasty." The Messiah, the Christ, the Fully One must suffer at the hands of the powers that be because the majority of human beings suffer at the hands of the Powers That Be. Yes, your heart will break, your knees will get weak, you’ll be blind with fear, but I’ve got your back. You will never be alone. That’s what the cross is about. There is nothing you can go through, no place you can go, that I haven’t gone and that I won’t be with you. Get behind me. I’ll go ahead of you. Bind yourself to me. When you make the sign of the cross on yourself, you’re taking it into you, not on you. I always thought that was "a Catholic thing," but really, what a good reminder!

Peter’s heart broke not only when he was rebuked by Jesus but when he heard what following Jesus really meant. It wasn’t what Peter wanted it to be. And honestly, it’s probably not what we want it to be...comfortable, exciting, respectable, easy. But, as David Lose notes, "Even though our hearts may break when we discover we’re not getting the God we want, we will come alive again as we realize we’re getting the God we need." (Lose, inthemeantime, 8/31/14) ...the God we need when we’ve wandered too far away from what we know is right, from our true Selves, the God we need when it feels like we’re being crucified, the God we need when the diagnosis or the pink slip or the eviction or that phone call comes, the God who will stick with us through thick and thin, on a summer Sunday or a bleak Tuesday afternoon in winter.

"If you let your self get lost for my sake, you’ll find your true Self." "Jesus didn’t come here to die," a wise man said, "but to love." (Peter Woods, I am listening, 8/31/14) Dying isn’t really an option–we all will–but loving is a choice, the choice that makes life worth living. So let us choose love–and life. Amen, and amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

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