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"The Next Reformation"-- Exodus 34:1-12, Matthew 22:34-46-- Oct. 26,
2014

"The Next Reformation"-- Exodus 34:1-12, Matthew 22:34-46-- Oct. 26, 2014

 

One can only imagine the racket it made–a mighty pounding on the great door of the Church of All Saints in Wittenberg, Saxony. The Castle Church, as it was also called, held one of the greatest collections of holy relics-- purportedly "including vials of the milk of the Virgin Mary, straws from the manger [of Jesus], and the body of one of the innocents massacred by King Herod." [wikipedia] It was said that if a penitent believer came to the church and paid a fee called an indulgence, it would guarantee relief of their souls from purgatory.

It was in protest of this and many other practices that on All Hallows Eve, Oct. 31, 1517, Martin Luther dramatically nailed his 95 Theses on the Wittenberg church door and then followed up with a letter to the bishops. Just a couple years shy of 500 years ago this Friday.

Of course, the Protestant Reformation didn’t begin on Oct. 31, 1517, nor did it end the next year nor was Martin Luther the only one protesting and calling for reform. The Reformation had quietly yet relentlessly been building in various parts of Europe, and it took on a life of its own beyond Luther and John Calvin and Ulrich Zwingli. And not only did "Protestant churches" then take shape, but the Roman Catholic Church itself underwent great reforms.

"About every 500 years," the retired Anglican Bishop Mark Dyer observed, "the Church feels compelled to hold a giant rummage sale...[when] the empowered structures of institutionalized Christianity, whatever they may be at that time, become an intolerable [hard casing] that must be shattered in order that renewal and new growth may occur." [Phyllis Tickle, The Great Emergence, p. 16] "We are living in and through one of those five-hundred-year sales," the bishop concludes.

Historian Phyllis Tickle calls this period that we are going through The Great Emergence, and the reformation of the church is only one aspect of a much larger "re-formation" of society and the globe. You’ve probably noticed it. The rise of global militant Islam, reaching the peaceful streets of Ottawa, Canada this week. The rise of sea waters, threatening the very existence of island nations and re-drawing coastal maps, super-storms, record-breaking droughts, all part of the massive climate change. The growing, gaping disparity between the ultra-wealthy few and the increasingly restless majority poor and middle-class. The technological revolution that has literally changed the nature of global community, let alone how you communicate with your children and grandchildren. So, of course, the church–Second Congregational Church–is not and certainly won’t be your parents’ or grandparents’ church any more.

Mike Piazza, our coach from the Center for Progressive Renewal, told us about a young man in his church in Atlanta. Todd’s grandmother–his mother’s mother-- died, and so he traveled to Philadelphia to join his family in mourning her death and celebrating her life. While there, he learned that his other grandmother–his father’s mother–had also just died. He e-mailed Mike, who was away from home on one of his consulting jobs, with the news, and Mike e-mailed back his condolences and support. I think he may also have tried to talk with him on the phone, but in the midst of both of their crazy circumstances, they were never able to speak more than briefly. So Mike then posted on the church’s Facebook page his concerns for Todd and asking his church community to keep him in their thoughts and prayers. Instantly, support and connection surrounded Todd, so that when he finally returned home to Atlanta, he posted on his Facebook page his thanks and appreciation that he had felt so loved and supported by his church family in his family’s time of loss. Up until that time, Todd had not seen his pastor or other members of his church family face to face, and yet he was overwhelmed by the love and support he felt from them. The church is re-forming.

And yet, what must be at the heart of the church, the church that is worth re-forming and revitalizing, are those two "great relationships," as Marcus Borg calls them–love of God and love of neighbor. "‘Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?’ one of the Pharisees, a lawyer, asked Jesus. He said to him, "‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets."

Jesus knew that the law was not about rules but about love. The reformation of the church is less about technique and technology but essentially about love, and biblical love is less about warm, fuzzy feelings but rather, as Douglas Hare puts it, "stubborn, unwavering commitment." [cited by Kate Huey in weeklyseeds, 10/26/14] What is the setting, the orientation, of our hearts, what do we choose to do, to convey the love of God? Nadia Bolz-Weber, a Lutheran pastor of the Emergent Church movement, says that we are to love our enemies, but we don’t have to mean it. What she means is that we don’t have to "feel loving" toward our enemies, we just have to treat them lovingly. [onbeing interview with Krista Tippett] Kate Huey writes about the witness and testimony of two older women in her church who tithed to their church. Inspired by them, but a little nervous about making such a financial commitment, Kate decided to give it a try–to commit to giving a tenth of her income to the church. She found that while she did have to make some adjustments, instead of resenting her church, what she found was that her love for her church grew.

"Love God with all your heart and soul and mind and strength; and your neighbor as yourself–on these two hang all the law and the prophets," Jesus said. "Justice is love made public," Cornell West said. Out of the Protestant Reformation came reformers and the re-formation of the church, but scholar of church history and current trends Diana Butler Bass urges us that "it’s time to put the protest back in Protestantism." ["A Great Awakening," Patheos, 2011] While we in the Protestant church have enjoyed our status as a majority, that is no longer the case, and Bass urges us to "rediscover the courageous part of [our] identity too long hidden under a veneer of cultural success." What if we were to "start a church-based movement to challenge two things[she wonders]–bad government and cruel capitalism?" The size of government isn’t the issue she says; it’s whether it’s good government or bad government. Does it work for the common good, or does it simply serve the elite? Is our capitalism based on share-holder profits alone, or might we develop a nurturing capitalism that "recognizes the diversity of our environmental, spiritual, social, communal capital as part of a universal economy of human flourishing...where financial capital is only a small part of interconnected web of capital that nurtures life for all instead of amassing resources for the few." What if the Protestant church took on that challenge, coming out of our love of God and love of neighbor? "On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets," Jesus said.

Just as the Protestant Reformation didn’t start and end on Oct. 31, 1517, so too has this current upheaval and necessary re-formation of the church been coming for a long time, and it is further along than we may be aware. Did you know that Second Congregational Church is one of 5 churches left in the Southwest Association, one of 23 in the whole Vermont Conference,* that can currently afford a full-time pastor? Mike Piazza noted that last year our average weekly attendance was the lowest it’s been in several years. It might just be a one-time thing, he said, but two years in a row is definitely to be taken seriously. Since people don’t attend Sunday worship with the same frequency they once did, nor do they support it at the same level they once did, the number of people who consider our church "their church" must increase if we are to continue to maintain a vital and significant ministry in our community. We must commit ourselves to communicating the love of God to people in a way that they have a chance to receive it–not just in the language and music and customs that we on the "inside" find meaningful. First-time visitors must be treated as VIPs, for we not only want them but need them to help us re-form our church to better carry out God’s ministry of love and justice in the world in the 21st century. In her address at Andover Newton Theological School’s spring convocation last May, Diana Butler Bass urged the ministers and other religious leaders to "be active seekers of new connections and not to [just] wait for people to show up, especially young adults... If you keep dawdling, [she said], you die." [News from the Hill, Annual Report 2014, p. 12] Being a disciple, after all, means being open to serious re-formation. You might even say that re-formation is at the essence of being human [Karoline Lewis, op cit.]–our bodies re-form every 7 years, we re-form when we take on a new relationship or a new job. We re-form after we lose a job or our health or a loved one.

As I talked with and listened to Mike Piazza last week and with our small group of folks who also met with him, I found my excitement and energy level rising. He was affirming of much of what we’re already doing and thinking about, but he was able to ask us questions like, "Is there a First Congregational Church in Bennington?" And when we told him there was, but that we were the only United Church of Christ in Bennington, he said, "then I was wondering why you’re holding on to the name ‘Second’. Why not, First United Church of Christ of Bennington, or something more descriptive, like Hope United Church of Christ?" Wow. Why not? What if we were Hope United Church of Christ? How might we live into that name?

"Reformation can be exciting!" writes one Lutheran minister. "It can also be exhausting. It’s exciting when you find yourself witnessing change and newness and hope...And something extraordinary comes out on the other side. But it’s exhausting when you find yourself observing, even experiencing in your own self, resistance and suspicion and rejection." [Karoline Lewis, Dear Working Preacher, 10/26/14] I would also add to exhausting a certain level of grieving... a grieving of a necessary letting go of customs and language and music that have been so nourishing for so long. Mike Piazza says, "you can always have your way if you have enough ways." If you’re open to a number of ways, you can always have your way.

"Love God with all your heart and soul and mind and strength; and your neighbor as yourself." It does all come back to love. How do we reach out in love to a neighborhood and a world desperately in need of it? "Reformation is a state of being," that Lutheran pastor says.

*[I mis-spoke on Sunday, saying we were one of 5 full-time ministries in the Conference.]

"Reformation cannot just be a looking back–by its very definition it demands a vision for the future." [Lewis, op cit.]

As our reading from Hebrew Scripture this morning told us, the story of Moses comes to an ending on a mountaintop. After "40 years," that is, as long as it took, a rag-tag band of slaves was at last re-formed into something like one people, and up on top of a mountain overlooking what had become for them "the Promised Land," Moses their leader rests his eyes upon their final destination and then goes to his final rest in an unmarked and unknown grave. It is the passing of the generations. Moses led the people up until this point, but it was for a new generation to take them into the Promised Land.

We heard the story last week of the Jewish sage Choni who found a man planting a carob tree that would take 70 years to bear fruit, but he was doing it because he knew that the fruitful land he came into had been planted by his forebears. Similarly, Martin Luther was asked, if the world were to end tomorrow, what would he do? "I would plant a tree," he replied. All of us are planting the seeds of tomorrow by what we do today. Many of us will not cross over into that Promised Land – that "new form" of the church --ourselves, but we can trust in God’s vision for the people and for the next generation to walk on, as we plant the seeds of love and hope and justice and mercy that will eventually blossom and bear fruit in a new day and time. In the company of all the saints who have gone before us, and all those who will come after us, let us go forward, rejoicing. Amen, and amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark
Second Congregational Church, UCC celebrates Reformation Sunday during our 10 o’clock morning worship.  All God’s children—young and young at heart—are welcome, regardless of age, race, sex, economic condition, disability, or sexual orientation.

This Sunday morning worship includes a Time for the Children in All of Us.  Children up through grade 5 are then invited to Godly Play, and the Middle- and High-school Class meets.  Nursery care is provided throughout worship.

A time of fellowship and refreshment  for the whole church family follows worship in Webster Hall.  At 11:30, a time of remembrance and celebration of the life of Kathryn Marsden takes place in the sanctuary.  All are welcome.

Rev. Mary Lee-Clark’s sermon is entitled, “The Next Reformation” for ourselves and the church.
October Highlighted Items

October Highlighted Items

Highlighted Events and News:



  • We have closed the P.O. Box, please mail all correspondence to the church at 115 Hillside Street, Bennington.

  • 5pm Sunday Supper – every Sunday! This supper is open to the community.

  • Sun, Oct. 26 - Empty Bowls Supper at St. Peter's. Cost is $10 at the door for a handmade ceramic bowl and tasty soups from local restaurants. Two of this year's featured soups are Indian Spinach soup from Spice Root and Lobster Bisque from Thyme Tables. Yumm!

  • School Nurses are collecting new or gently used underwear, socks and sweat pants for girls and boys ages 6-12. If you would like to help but are not sure what to get, donations are gladly accepted and we will do the shopping for you. Please contact Sue DeLucia.


 

Looking Ahead:



  • SCC Adventures in Reading 2014-2015: If you picked up a list of books last week, please change its date for the first meeting to discuss books to November 23. If you haven’t gotten your list yet, they (with the corrected date) are available in Webster Hall. Please take one and put your name on the sign-up sheet.


 

  • PRE-ADVENT BOOK SALE: We will have our annual sale of worthwhile books, children’s books, Advent calendars, etc. November 9 and 16. Once again, the books will be selected for us by the Hopkins Book Shop which is located in the Episcopal Cathedral in Burlington. Also, one again, we would be delighted if someone who happens to be going to or near Burlington a few days before the ninth or after the sixteenth would be willing to pick them up or return the unsold ones. Volunteer cashiers are also needed. If you can help, see David Durfee.


 

EARTH ADVOCATES GROUP



  • Did you know...Putting a STOP to your junk mail can help save the planet?? Think of all the resources wasted on stuff we all throw directly into the recycling! If you take a few minutes to put a stop to unwanted catalogs and solicitations, individually you might not save many trees, but if all of us take the time we can save a forest hillside somewhere in Indonesia! HERE'S YOUR CHANCE to make a difference with minimal effort: On the Fourth Sunday of each month, ( October 26th is the next collection date) bring the catalogs and solicitations you DO NOT WISH TO RECEIVE EVER AGAIN to Second Congregational and place them in a collection box. WE will make the contacts to end delivery FOR YOU, and we'll recycle them, too!  *All you have to do is bring them in*!  Two provisos:1. It takes several weeks for companies to take you off their lists permanently, so once you've brought in the catalog or solicitation, please be patient.2. If you have EVER bought anything from a particular company, or made a donation to an organization, they have the right to continue to keep you on their mailing list so we might not be able to remove you.  But many will remove names upon request just because it's good business. 


 

ONGOING NEEDS 



  • On Communion Sundays, you are invited to bring non-perishable food items for the BROC food shelf.  Baskets will be available near the communion table.


 

  • All Church Fellowship would like to encourage folks to sign up to host Sunday Fellowship throughout the year.


 

  • The Flower Calendar is wide open.  Please sign up on the calendar if you would like to share some flowers from your garden.


 

Planning Ahead:


The following is a list of things to have on hand in case of a storm emergency:

  • Water (1 gal/person/day),

  • Food (non-perishable and easy to prepare and/eat–don’t forget a can-opener),

  • Flashlight and extra batteries, Battery-powered or hand crank radio,

  • First-aid kit that includes a pain reliever,

  • Sanitation and personal hygiene items (toothbrush, toothpaste, anti-bacterial hand-sanitizer),

  • Copies of important personal documents,

  • Family and emergency contacts (written down, not just in your cell phone),

  • Blankets. Additional items depending on your family situation: extra doses of medications, diapers/baby food, games for children, pet food/medication, etc.

Uniquely UCC

Uniquely UCC

Want to know more about the national United Church of Christ that we’re a part of?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8rzSYvWH8A
"Promises, promises..."-- Matthew 22:15-22-- Oct. 19, 2014

"Promises, promises..."-- Matthew 22:15-22-- Oct. 19, 2014

 

We’ve done it again. We have promised. We have committed "ourselves to live our faith in such a manner that our lives and our words may draw children towards the love we know in God. We [have] reaffirmed our commitment to the life of Christ in our midst, as together we advocate for the nurture, safety and protection of this child and all children, and strive for righteousness, justice, and peace for all people." That’s what we said. What were we thinking?!

According to the Children’s Defense Fund, "Each day in America, 4 children are killed by abuse or neglect, 5 children or teens commit suicide...Each day in America 7 children or teens are killed by guns, 24 children or teens die from accidents....Each day in America 847 babies are born to teen mothers, 1241 babies are born without healthcare, 1392 babies are born into extreme poverty...Each day in America 1837 children are confirmed as abused or neglected, 4028 children are arrested..." Vermont was ranked 10th in all 50 states in the percentage of children who were poor, 14th in the percentage of children who live in food insecure households. (CDF Website) What was that we committed our lives to?

The theme for this year’s Children’s Sabbath is "Precious in God’s Sight: Answering the Call to Cherish and Protect Every Child." Perfect! We just committed ourselves to advocate for the nurture, safety and protection of Lindyn and all children, so we are with the program. Now, if we only knew what that meant and how to do it, let alone if we only had the courage, wisdom, and faith to do it.

There is a story in the Jewish tradition that says:

While the sage Choni was walking along a road, he saw a man planting a carob tree. Choni asked him: "How long will it take for this tree to bear fruit?" "Seventy years," replied the man. Choni then asked, "Are you so healthy a man that you expect to live that length of time and eat its fruit?" The man answered, "I found a fruitful world because my ancestors planted it for me. Likewise, I am planting for my children."

It is just such a faithful, longterm perspective that is required for us to begin to discern how we will live out the promises we’ve made this morning, and a couple weeks ago when we baptized Emma Bishop. This story is part of a larger passage in which the rabbis are discussing Psalm 126, which says that when God returns the captives to Zion, "They will be like those who dream." So the story goes on--"Can one dream for 70 years?" Choni wondered. So after his encounter with man on the road, Choni fell asleep for 70 years and awoke from his decades of dreaming to find the tree grown to fullness, bearing fruit for the generations that followed him." (Told by Marian Wright Edelman in the Welcome to 2014 Children’s Sabbath)

Can you even begin to imagine what fruit our grandchildren and great-grandchildren will be presented with in 2084, 70 years from now? What trees are we planting now? Lindyn, God willing, will be almost 72. Will there be a Second Congregational Church in Bennington? If there is, maybe it will have a different name. Surely it will look very different and will do things very differently from the way we’re doing them. A number of us had the opportunity to dream and listen to Mike Piazza this week, hearing what a church for the 21st century might look like. I’m afraid that we are primarily a church for the 20th century, but we got a glimpse at the fruit tree seed catalogue this week, and are excited about some of the seeds we might plant that will bear fruit.

You may (or may not) be wondering what any of this has to do with our gospel reading for this morning, where Jesus is confronted by the Herodians and Pharisees and asked whether it is lawful to pay taxes to Caesar. "Money, politics, and religion, oh my!" is the way one commentator reacts to this passage. (David Lose, inthemeantime, 10/13/14) Well, money, politics, and religion are all involved in living out those baptismal vows as well, but let’s first try to understand what Jesus’ response to the question might tell us.

"The enemy of my enemy is my friend," it is said, which also describes the current situation we find ourselves in in the Middle East, especially in regard to the coalition against ISIS. In the passage in Matthew, Jesus has already made his entry into Jerusalem and cleansed the Temple, so he has made some powerful enemies. There is no other reason why the Pharisees and the Herodians would have come together, other than to entrap Jesus, and after a little fauning, they ask him a question designed to get him into trouble with one or the other groups. "Teacher,...tell us then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?"

This tax was the Imperial tax, one of many taxes that the Jews of Palestine were required to pay. There were Temple taxes, land taxes, custom taxes, and this Imperial tax, paid as a tribute to Rome to support its occupation of their country. Each Palestinian had to pay a denarius, about a full day’s wage, to the Emperor, and it had to be paid with a coin that bore Caesar’s image on it, as well as the words "Son of the Divine Augustus." To the Pharisaic or observant Jew, that meant you broke the first 2 commandments in one shot– using an idol and proclaiming another god’s name.

"Teacher, ...so sincere, so impartial, tell us, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?" Jesus knows their game and plays it skillfully. "Show me the coin used for the tax," he says, and when they produce a denarius, it is no doubt from a Herodian’s pocket. A Pharisee would never carry one, but Herodians, like their name implies, were complicit with Rome’s rule. Jesus forces their hand. Then he challenges them both–"Whose image or ikon is this, and whose title?" They answered, "The Emperor’s." "Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that are God’s." Both groups of Jews would have affirmed that all things are God’s, and also would have understood immediately Jesus’ reference to "image," that formative verse in the first chapter of Genesis which says that God created human beings, male and female, in the divine image, in God’s own image. Whose image do you bear? Jesus is asking.

As usual, Jesus does not offer pat answers. And the way this passage has been used to justify all sorts of approaches to church and state questions is often way too blunt and cut and dried to really be true to what Jesus was saying. Religion, politics, and money do mix and challenge and inform one another. If we believe that all things belong to God, and that every child is precious in God’s sight, how do we provide quality education, health care, and security for the children we have promised to care for? If politics comes from the word "polis" or community, how can we as a community do what we need to do for the common good?

We know that 80% of a child’s brain is developed in the first 3 years of life. 700 new neural connections are formed every second, through the interaction of genes, environment and experiences. "Children who are given quality early experiences have better relationships with classmates and friends, and develop better language, math, and social skills. They score higher on school-readiness tests, are 40% less likely to need special education, and 70% less likely to commit violent crimes." (Let’s Grow Kids website) An investment in early childhood services and education has a much greater return than paying for incarceration, or prolonged special remedial services, or various other social implications. Is that politics? Or religion?

"Whose image is on the coin?" Whose image is on you? If we agree that everything is God’s, then everything we do and have is God’s as well. One church passed out markers during the service, and folks were asked to put a cross on their credit cards. Then every time for the next couple of weeks they used their credit cards, they were reminded that this purchase, too, belonged to God.

(You may be interested to know that one characteristic of a 21st century church will no doubt be the availability of direct deposit giving, as well as payment through credit cards. People are carrying less and less cash and do almost all their financial transactions online or with credit cards.)

So where might we invest our time, talents, and resources now, so that they will bear fruit in the future? If what we know about early childhood development is true, and I have no reason to believe it isn’t, then investing in early childhood programs is essential. Our relationship with Headstart in North Bennington, supporting them with Boots on the Ground, is a start. I can imagine all sorts of other ways we could directly connect with those children and their families. Volunteering in classrooms, setting up reading programs–just reading with kids, or singing with kids–volunteering with the Seedlings Program–a joint venture of Community College of Vermont and Retired Senior Volunteer Program–which connects a "pod" of 7 first-graders with 5 or 6 adult tutors and mentors who follow them through 5th grade. Walking, hopping, or sponsoring in the CROP Walk provides funds for hunger and development programs that benefit children. Joining in the work of Eaarth Advocates to address climate change and the earth we are leaving to our children and gradchildren. Signing up to be in the Godly Play classroom – we really do want to have 2 adults each Sunday. The list of immediately available possibilities could go on and on.

And we need to invest in making ours a 21st Century church, so that the children and parents of this and future generations will find a welcome in our church family that communicates to them. The language we use, the technology we use, the music we worship with, the activities we engage in–all need to be looked at through the eyes of those who haven’t heard much good news coming from the church and who aren’t sure what we’re talking about when we do communicate.

We commit ourselves to live our faith in such a manner that our lives and our words may draw children towards the love we know in God. We reaffirm our commitment to the life of Christ in our midst, as together we advocate for the nurture, safety and protection of this child and all children, and strive for righteousness, justice and peace, for all people.

May God help us to keep our promises. Amen, and amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark
Crop Walk 2014

Crop Walk 2014

CROP WALK 2014 - click on image to view video


About 25 walkers and 2 hoppers raised just over $4,000 for the CROP Walk last Sunday while enjoying a dry, cool fall afternoon. Thank you to all who donated!

cropwalk2014
"Celebrate!"-- Matthew 22:1-14, Philippians 4: 1-9-- Oct. 12, 2014

"Celebrate!"-- Matthew 22:1-14, Philippians 4: 1-9-- Oct. 12, 2014

 

I am sometimes asked about the process I go through in writing sermons. How do you know what to preach on every week? Where do you get your ideas? How long does it take? Where do you get your title? I imagine that the process is different for every preacher, and for any one of us, the process isn’t exactly the same every week.

As you may know, I do generally follow the Common Lectionary–the set of Scripture texts assigned for each week by an ecumenical committee so that on any given week, a good portion of the Church is dealing with the same texts. The exceptions to that practice are when it’s a special occasion–like last week’s World Communion Sunday, or a baptism, or an event that’s happened during the week that begs to be addressed–or the occasional sermon series, like a Lenten series on earthcare or spiritual disciplines or various other topics.

This week I read and discussed the lectionary texts with fellow members of my Clergy Support group, which meets once a month. Our church settings are all quite different, and we often approach the texts very differently. Still, our discussions are almost always rich and stimulating.

When we read this week’s gospel lesson–Matthew’s parable of the Wedding Banquet– we all looked at each other and said, "Yikes!" It’s not the Wedding Banquet parable from Luke that we may have expected and which, while challenging in its own right, doesn’t leave you with a pit in your stomach like Matthew’s. You remember Luke’s version?

Someone gave a great dinner and invited many to it. But when the slaves went out to issue the invitations, one person excused himself saying, "I’ve just bought some land..." Another said, "I’ve just bought a new pair of oxen, I have to go try them out." and still another said, "I’ve just gotten married, and,...well, you know..." So the owner became angry and said, "go out at once into the streets and lanes of the town and bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind, and the lame." And when that was done, there was still room in the hall, so the owner told his servants, "Go out into the streets and lanes and compel people to come in, so that the house may be filled; for I tell you, none of those who were invited will taste my dinner."

The Gospel of Thomas has a similar version of this parable, and when the invited guests all give excuses, with various things to sell or trade, the owner tells the servants to "go out to the roads and bring those whom you find, that they may dine. Traders and merchants [shall] not [enter] the place of my Father."

Both of those versions have their own "zing," but not quite the violence and ruthlessness of Matthew’s version.

At any rate, I had a few ideas of where I might go with the text, having to do with the nature of wedding feasts (After all, wasn’t George Clooney’s wedding on our Joys list just a couple weeks ago?) As well as a few ideas about what it might mean to be dressed appropriately. So, when the time came, all too soon, on Wednesday morning to give a sermon title to the Banner, I non-committally came up with "Celebrate!"

Then I began to dig into the commentaries, the blogs, and websites. "There are seventeen parables in the Gospel of Matthew," one commentator began. "If you had to choose one that was the hardest to interpret, this week’s Parable of the Wedding Banquet is a good candidate." (Dan Clendenin, Journey with Jesus) Another one asked,"Why would anyone choose to preach on Matthew’s version of the Great Banquet parable?" (Deborah Krause, in weekly seeds, 10/12/14) It began to feel like that journey of Dorothy and her 3 friends in The Wizard of Oz when they walked into the enchanted forest around the wicked witch’s castle. "I’d turn back if I wuz you," the sign read. "Either deal with the distinct and unattractive particularity of this text," a third writer advised, "or choose one of the other three more attractive and far more edifying passages appointed for this day." (David Lose, inthemeantime, 10/6/14) Well, as they say, fools rush in where angels fear to tread, and I had already put the title in the newspaper. I decided to deal with it, just as any of us might have to deal with the strange, often unattractive passages that are in our Bible, and someone might challenge us to tell them what we think about that.

So, let’s make sure we know what this parable says, not what we vaguely may remember about "some wedding parable" we heard once. It’s basically, as one writer puts it, the old "‘That’s good! That’s bad!’ schtick-

A wedding banquet–good!

No, that’s bad; the invited guests didn’t come!

But the king sent people to look for them! That’s good!

No, that’s bad; they killed them and burned their city!

But then they went into the streets and invited everyone they found! That’s good!

But then the king saw a guy who wasn’t wearing a wedding robe, and he had his attendants throw him into the outer darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth!

Oh, that’s bad. Definitely very bad." [Jan Richardson, painted prayerbook]

This is different from Luke’s and Thomas’ versions–this part about killing and burning cities and binding up the poor schmuck off the street who wasn’t wearing a wedding robe and throwing him into the outer darkness. What is Matthew doing here? Why would he add these details, although it must be noted that the seizing and killing of servants is a familiar pattern in many of Matthew’s parables.

"It’s as if Matthew’s version of the story got taken hostage in the Jewish War with Rome," one writer says. "All the joy has been wrung out of the party, and in its place Matthew builds in anger, violence, destruction, dread, and eternal damnation...It seems to bear the trauma of Matthew’s context," which is after the utter and brutal destruction of Jerusalem by the armies of Rome and the siege and final suicide of the Jewish remnant at Massada. (Deborah Krause, ibid.)

Scripture may be "God-breathed," as someone has described it, but it is transmitted through human hands and mouths, which are never isolated from their human context. When a passage sounds particularly "un-God-like," you might want to check the human context and see what’s going on in the writer’s world.

This is a tough story for tough times, when the systems and structures seem to be set up with hierarchy and brutality in mind. The residents of Ferguson, MO, and African-American citizens in many other places, know something about systems and structures of violence. Walter Brueggemann, the great Biblical scholar who used to teach at Eden Seminary in St. Louis, was interviewed recently and was asked, in light of the recent events in Ferguson, to talk about the prophets of Israel. The language of the prophets, he said, "has an honesty that can challenge contemporary North American interpreters out of their ‘bourgeois cocoon of niceness.’" (Krause)

Ouch. I don’t know about you, but I confess that much of the time I’d just as soon curl up in my "bourgeois cocoon of niceness." Most of the people in the world don’t have that option.

Jesus stood in that line of prophets, whose speech was often brutally honest. "Rome didn’t execute Jesus for telling feel good stories," one writer says. "We shouldn’t be shocked by a parable that shocks." (Dan Clendenin, op cit.) We might even view this parable as a mirror for the violence of our own society, with structures that are inherently violent to those without power or money or the right color skin or gender or sexual orientation. Most of us benefit from those structures, and so when the invitation comes to a banquet, it may appear as just one more invitation to an appealing event, but honestly, we’ve got plenty of things to do, many of which are quite appealing. "That’s nice," we say, "but no thanks." Who of us feels so passionate about the reign of God that we’re willing to dedicate our whole selves, our whole lives to bringing it about? That, by the way, is what "jihad" means–total dedication to the will of God.

The kingdom of God, though, which Jesus talked about over and over, is for everyone. Everyone in this story receives an invitation. Some try to enter on their own conditions–when it’s convenient, when I’m ready, when I’ve taken care of everything else, when I can fit it in–but the consequences of refusing the invitation are disastrous. The king has them killed and burns their city. The consequences of refusing the invitation into God’s love –outside the parable--are equally disastrous. People who refuse to be loved–by the God known by any name, people who maybe believe they aren’t worthy of love, people who have never experienced love from fellow human beings–people who refuse love live lives that are miserable, and often act out in terrible ways. I know that my life feels pretty miserable when I’m feeling unloved or can’t recognize love or refuse to love. We are all invited to the banquet.

On the other hand, by adding on the parable of the poorly dressed wedding guest, Matthew shows that he "knew how easily grace can melt into permissiveness," a wise preacher said. [Fred Craddock, cited by Stan Duncan in If You Lived Here...] "We mustn’t lose the distinction between accepting all persons from condoning all behavior." While it seems cruel that a poor man picked off the streets to attend the king’s wedding banquet should be thrown out and punished because he wasn’t dressed properly, one commentator does note that wedding robes were usually provided at the door, so that, for some reason, he had refused to take one. (Janet Hunt, Dancing with the Word, 10/5/14)

I’m pretty sure this isn’t advocating a stricter dress code for church, but it did get me thinking about what our choice of clothes–if we have a choice–means. I remember reading that one teacher chooses what she will wear so that poor people will not feel humiliated in her presence. People sometimes ask me if I wear a robe on Sundays, and I do–not because of what it might say to other people, but because of what it says to me. This is your role for now, it says to me. Put aside your concerns about what you’re wearing or how you appear. "Clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience," we read in Colossians. Through-out the biblical story, clothes are symbols of relationship with God–be clothed with righteous-ness, put on Christ. Clothing is about intention. How do you intend to be? We "put on" the words of our commission as we go from this place each Sunday. If you don’t have the right clothes on, you can’t be fully present to the celebration.

Grace-- which the invitation to the banquet is about-- grace is free but not cheap. One writer says that Matthew’s parable of the wedding banquet "demands a loss of innocence of the Reign of God as a table that is passively set for us."[Krause] It might challenge us to be about the work of dismantling those structures of violence and rebuilding a society where there truly is dignity and justice for all. Matthew’s parable reminds us of the free nature of the invitation but demands that we recognize the significance, the awesome opportunity, of this banquet. Do not underestimate its power, its beauty, its joy, its depth. "Eye has not seen nor ear heard nor human imagination envisioned what you have prepared for those who love you," Paul writes. We may not really believe that, and so we consider the invitation just one of a number of attractive invitations in our lives.

So, is "Celebrate!" an appropriate title for this sermon? Maybe not in the way I was thinking of it on Wednesday, but today, this morning, with all its sharp edges and warnings included, Matthew’s parable still reminds me that this is an invitation worth taking seriously. The celebration is bigger, more challenging, more multi-layered than just a first reading reveals. The world is still a violent, often brutal place, but we mustn’t let its violence and brutality seduce us into believing that’s all there is. So it is that we would do well to also turn to that other, "more attractive and edifying passage appointed for the day," Paul’s letter to the church at Philippi, not as a place of permanent escape, but as a reminder and source of strength.

8Finally, beloved, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. 9Keep on doing the things that you have learned and received and heard and seen in me, and the God of peace will be with you.

May it be so.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark
Next Level Congregation process

Next Level Congregation process

Mike Piazza from the Center for Progressive Renewal is our consultant in the Next Level Congregation process, through the Vermont Conference, helping us discern and move our congregation to an even more vital level.  You are invited to meet with Mike on Wed October 15 either over a brown lunch at noon in Webster hall or join us for dinner or hors d'oeuvres at Madison's Brew Pub at 6pm.  Please sign up on the sheet in Webster Hall or call the office by Tues morning if you plan to join us at Madison's so we can be sure to reserve enough space.

 
"Come to the Table"-- Matthew 26:26-30-- Oct. 5, 2014

"Come to the Table"-- Matthew 26:26-30-- Oct. 5, 2014

 

Some of you remember the dark times at the beginning of the 1930's. Fascism, communism, economic depression. In 1933 the folks at Shadyside Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh launched a proposal that eventually became Worldwide Communion Sunday, now celebrated each year on the first Sunday in October, an expression of unity among Christians amidst all the forces that would tear the world apart.

The case could be made that we are living today in no less dark times–do I need to list the forces tearing at us today? The rise of Islamism, climate change that seems to be moving us inexorably toward a very different planet, the spread of ebola, the growing chasm between the world’s wealthiest minute percent and the majority of the poor and diminishing middle class, a U.S. congress riddled and paralyzed by blind partisanship, persistent racism that imprisons and kills African American youth, the list goes on, you know the drill... This year’s Worldwide Communion celebration lifts up the plight of Christians throughout the world who are persecuted and killed, in greater numbers now than ever before, in Africa, in the Middle East, in Asia.

For the first followers of Jesus, sharing the bread and wine was a way of gathering together, in times as dark as ours. "Join us for the meal," they would say to one another or to strangers who asked about their fellowship. It was the meal of sharing that set them apart, that defined their reality and their relationship to one another and with Jesus. [Richard Rohr, "The Living Body of Christ" blog, 9/22/14]

Later, as the persecutions increased, communion "became the secret ritual by which the community defined itself and held itself together in its essential message." [Rohr, op cit.] "The Lord Jesus gave us this meal," they said. "We become his body and blood when we share it. He is present with us and present in us." "We are who we eat!" St. Augustine wrote in the 3rd. C.

So today, in many different traditions, in many different places and settings with many different kinds of bread and drink, we remember who we are. We are one; we are broken; we are to be poured out and offered for others. God is incarnate, enfleshed, present in earthly things like human bodies, bread, wine, juice, creation. Over the centuries, the church has debated what "actually happens" in this ritual–do the molecules of the bread and wine become actual molecules of flesh and blood? How is Christ "really present"? Does it matter if the celebrant–the minister or the priest–is flawed and sinful? [Thankfully, the church decided it didn’t, otherwise we could never celebrate communion!] Who can take communion? Only "believers"? Only adults who understand what’s going on? You can see how these kinds of discussions have a tendency to go in circles.

But the power of this sacrament–these ordinary things made extraordinary–goes way beyond chemical or intellectual reactions. Its effect is deeper than data. Not only do we, in some way, "re-enact" what Jesus shared with his disciples, — he blessed, he broke, he gave – but we also become–in all our many different parts and expressions–we become one body–His body–one loaf, one cup. And around this table, there is always room for another...and another...ad infinitum... All are welcome.

A young widow writes that mealtimes are among the times she misses her husband most–"his empty space at the table is too stark and too raw just now," she writes. "In this long and sorrowing season, I am thankful for the solace of other tables, for those spaces of welcome where there is always room for me." (Jan Richardson, paintedprayerbook, "The Solace of Other Tables," 9/30/14)

How many others–how many of us–long for a place at the table, a place of welcome, a place of nourishment, where they–where we–belong? The fictional Boston bar Cheers knew this–"you wanna go where everybody knows your name." When too many churches exclude and condemn, is it any wonder there are more regulars to neighborhood bars and pubs than there are to neighborhood churches?

Nadia Bolz-Weber, 6-foot tall, tattooed Lutheran pastor of House for Sinners and Saints in Denver, tells the story of a young woman who had found a welcome, a place at the table, at ). When you walk into the meeting place of All Sinners and Saints, even for the first time, you may choose to be assigned a part in the service–a reading, taking up the offering, greeting people, even helping with communion, which is celebrated in the Lutheran tradition every Sunday. So this young woman came to treasure the weekly gathering around the table where she was welcome. And just as she had become accustomed to looking forward to that weekly celebration, she had to travel home for some family obligation. It happened to be on World Communion Sunday, so she looked forward to celebrating the sacrament in her home church, knowing that her friends and church family at Sinners and Saints would also be celebrating.

But Nadia reports that she received a desperate text message that Sunday from the young woman, saying that she had been refused communion in her home church. She wasn’t one of the them, it seemed, she had gone too far astray, she had joined an "unwashed" denomination, maybe she was gay, I can’t remember now what the reason was that she was refused the bread and the cup. But it had literally torn her apart. When Nadia shared the news with her congregation, they immediately responded. "We have to go to the airport with communion tonight," they agreed. "We have to let Rachel know that she is part of the Body."

And so that evening, at the Denver area, a group of tattooed, pierced, motley folks from House met their sister Rachel with some of the communion bread and wine from their service. And they all wept and embraced.

Come to the table. Take and eat. Take and drink. You are welcome here. What more gracious and welcome invitation than the offer of "abundance to give solace to our sorrow and to stir our joy"? [Richardson, ibid.] We are not to linger here forever, but are to be sent out to offer this welcome, this nourishment, to those we meet. People are hungry for hope, hungry for meaning, hungry to be known and accepted, hungry to be helped to become all that they are meant to be. Hungry for blessing.

So come "as children who trust there is enough." Come "unhindered and free," where your "aching will be met with bread...and your sorrow met with drink. Let us open our hands to the feast without shame...and turn towards each other without fear. Let us give up our appetite for despair. Let us taste and know of delight. Let us become bread for a hungry world and drink for those who thirst. So may we be blessed. So may we become a blessing. May the feast be everywhere. [from Jan Richardson’s "A Blessing for World Communion Sunday"–And the Table Will Be Wide] Amen, and amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 

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