Sunday, November 29, 2020

Two Poems and a Song: Sermon for Advent 1B

End and Beginning ©Jan Richardson janrichardson.com


We begin a new liturgical year for the church this morning, and most of us are ready to bid good riddance to the last one. Unfortunately for us, our readings this morning, which I have kept in the Revised Common Lectionary even though we are using the Morning Prayer format for our worship this season, are hardly brimming with straightforward joy or predictions about anticipating a sweet little baby who will become the Prince of Peace.
Rather, every year on the first Sunday of Advent, we get treated to descriptions of the apocalypse. It’s enough to unsettle even the most optimistic among us.

What we have just heard are words of discontent, not just longing. We have heard complaints about God’s absence when we need God most. The section from Isaiah we heard is a plea for God to ride down in rescue as the people face calamity—what their theology tells them is punishment at God’s hands—a fear that is echoed by our psalm portion from Psalm 80.

And then, we start our year’s exploration of the gospel of Mark at one of its most challenging spots: Mark 13 is sometimes referred to as “the little apocalypse,” which provides a break or a hinge between Mark’s discussion of Jesus’s ministry and the narrative of the passion. Mark’s audience, much like many people in the world today, lived at the center of a host of disasters.

Mark, chapter 13, begins with a prediction of persecution of Christians (which intensified in 64 CE after Christians were accused of burning down Rome under the Emperor Nero) and the destruction of the Temple (which did indeed happen in 70 CE). It felt, after all, like the end of the world.

And we’ve been being prepared for this reading for several weeks at the end of the last lectionary year, what with parables about vineyard workers and bridesmaids and such. So today’s gospel, too ends with a warning to be watchful, looking for Jesus’s return at every opportunity.

In the year 2020, this collection of readings, with their common theme of feeling abandoned by God, speak especially to our situation, nine months now into Coronatide. Nine months of us worshiping with fear of contagion swirling over us, including 8 months of online worship only. And I hear some of you when you tell me you are sick of it. I am sick of it too. But that still doesn’t mean we get to start acting like COVID-19 doesn’t exist. And so we can look at these readings we hear today as speaking directly to us. Some wonder where God is in this pandemic. They wonder what Isaiah wondered 3000 years ago and Mark’s audience wondered 2000 years ago—when will God come and be with us?

And if you have been paying attention at all this year, you know that almost exactly 100 years ago, a similar pandemic swept across the world, necessitating the closure of schools and churches and businesses, although at that time, with medical intervention still being in its infancy rather than something to take for granted, arguments about government overreach were not QUITE as hyperbolic as they are now. Nonetheless, the so-called Spanish flu that swept across the world carried by deploying soldiers at the end of World War I threatened to bring the world to its knees, just like today.

And 101 years ago, the Irish poet William Butler Yeats looked at the world as it was in 1919—violent rebellions in Ireland against British rule; the end of a modern, industrialized war that was filled with new, human-designed horror of chemical warfare and poison gas. And on top of it, he had nearly lost his pregnant wife to the Spanish flu.


In late November 1919, Yeats wrote a poem that brings together Jesus’s incarnation at Christmas and his Second Coming at world’s end, as the early Christians expected—but fueled by feelings of abandonment such as Isaiah expressed. So, he wrote this poem, entitled “The Second Coming,” and vented some of his anger at his feelings of helplessness as well as the presumption that a baby’s birth 2000 years prior could do anything to alleviate his anxiety:


Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert
A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blind and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches toward Bethlehem to be born?(2)


Yeats looks around his world and sees signs of apocalypse everywhere, much like a modern Isaiah. And he despairs, torn between his longing to believe in something redemptive to come out of all the suffering afflicting the world, and his angry skepticism of Christian promises that “everything is going to be all right.”

After all, the Hebrew scriptures are filled with stories of a God who leads a ragtag rabble through a howling wilderness with a pillar of fire and a pillar of cloud and causes the bread of angels and hailstorms of basically Cornish game hens to fall down at the feet of God’s beloved people. Why can’t we have a little bit of that right now?

We seek an answer to our longing for a respite, and our lectionary gives us dark portents. What are we to do with this?

Although Advent gives us the gift of hope and expectation, of learning to wait with grace with building excitement for what it to come, we are impatient. Surely just this once God can just accede to that plea from one of my favorite 80s rock bands, the Smiths, and written by their mad king, Morrissey, in the dreamy, brief musical gem “Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want.” As gorgeous music swirls in the background the singer morosely vents his frustration at losing out on what his heart most desires, and prays to a God he usually dismisses:


Good times for a change
See, the luck I've had
Can make a good man turn bad

So please, please, please
Let me, let me, let me
Let me get what I want this time…
(3)

Who can’t relate to this feeling of being on the losing end? And we set ourselves up for it, so much of the time. We are constantly caught in a conundrum of our own making. We want to proclaim our freedom and independence loudly—until a crisis comes. Then, too often, that same God we hold at arm’s length so that we don’t have to give up our autonomy and self-congratulatory belief in our own agency suddenly is the same God we cry out to solve all our problems like a genie when things go wrong.

However…. (There’s always a however, isn’t there?)

If you think waiting is hard for us to understand, just wait until you see the Incarnation.

That the same God who gives us free will means it, and chooses self-limitation in order to grant us our freedom to choose. A God who so often chooses the underdog, the youngest son to be the leader, the barren womb to give birth to nations, is telling us to WAIT, darn it, and that God is coming into this aching world to help us learn how to better tend to it and each other. But instead of the heavens torn open and a warrior God on a chariot from heaven, with white beard streaming over his muscular, warrior’s body swooping down to fix things, straight from the Sistine Chapel to your living room, what do we get instead?

A baby. One of the most helpless, squishy things on earth. That’s what we’re waiting on, while the world crashes down around our ears. A God who enters human history as a peasant baby in a backwater of Empire with an unwed teenaged mother.

Jyoti Sahi, Incarnation in the Anthill, 2019
We KNOW this story and how it is going to resolve itself at Christmas. But have we really SAT with how seemingly inconsequential Jesus’s entering into human life is? Mark’s gospel doesn’t even recount it. THAT’S how inconsequential it is to some early Christians.

Jesus’s shockingly unspectacular birth was a source of embarrassment for some of his earliest followers, those like Judas Iscariot, who maybe could get past Jesus’s humble birth but could not get past his refusal, as the rightful king of Israel to take up arms and foment a military coup in which the TRUE savior of Israel would restore the monarchy of King David and drive the invaders from Israel’s borders.

So one answer to our situation, especially in times such as these, is to see if there are spots where we can embrace mystery and wonder—the mystery and wonder of worshiping a God who does the unexpected.

One answer to Yeats’s howl of rage is given to us from another poet-- Denise Levertov. At age sixty, she converted to Christianity after growing up with a Welsh mother and a Russian Jewish Hasidic émigré father who became an Anglican priest. After her conversion, she wrote some of the most beautiful religious poetry of the late 20th century, in my opinion. And she answers Yeats’ dread and despair with wonder and awe in this poem, entitled “On The Mystery of the Incarnation:”


It's when we face for a moment
the worst our kind can do, and shudder to know
the taint in our own selves, that awe
cracks the mind's shell and enters the heart:
not to a flower, not to a dolphin,
to no innocent form
but to this creature vainly sure
it and no other is god-like, God
(out of compassion for our ugly
failure to evolve) entrusts,
as guest, as brother,
the Word.(4)


Levertov reminds us that God looks into our pain, our waywardness, and, instead of abandonment or punishment, answers with the best God has to offer: God’s own son to show us how to live a fully human life, and to show us how close to God’s heart we are, how to recover the divine spark that God enclosed in us from our beginning. That’s what Advent promises us, despite apocalypses all around.

The theme of Advent is "watching and waiting." These two attitudes can be filled with either hope or dread, and sometimes both at the same time, because sometimes an ending can lead to new life, new growth. Sometimes an ending can be a blessing—even if that comes later, and especially if it becomes a blessing only because our tendency as humans is to try to reshape our stories so that even our losses end up blessing us with new wisdom, new resilience, new inner resources.

It’s easy to take for granted God’s care of us when things are ticking along smoothly. It’s easy then to discount the safety net that God stretches beneath us, running alongside us as we wobble along from one adventure to another like a small child riding their bikes without training wheels. But this pandemic has brought us real heartache. It’s also called us to embrace minor inconveniences for the sake of the protection of others. And we should not equate the two. Real tragedies are job losses and health care coverage then disappearing and long term illness and a quarter million families dynamited by the loss of loved ones forever just in the US alone. We stand in the midst of millions of little apocalypses too, no less real because they are personal rather than global in scale.

Jesus’s entire life and career are wrapped in riddles and mystery, especially at first glance. There are some of us who have heard these stories dozens of times and are still no closer to penetrating their meaning for our lives.

Yet Jesus’s coming also reminds us of the power that God has handed to us as God’s children and agents for change and renewal in the societies in which we live—the fact that God is within US to act according to bring God’s healing presence into view in the midst of sorrow.

Advent reminds us of the truth of Jesus’s THIRD coming as much as the first two in this: Jesus comes into the world from within us, when we let him. A miracle, by definition, is often only recognized as a miracle AFTER the fact, when it comes from the unexpected—a miracle is itself a mystery, since it’s unexplainable by our normal tools of natural law and reason. The season we are called to observe for the next four weeks is stubbornly wrapped in miracle and mystery, even from our perspective 2000 years on the other side of it.

But here’s the blessing behind the currently unanswered longing we hear today: even in the storm surges of human existence, Jesus enters into human life and reminds us that God is not aloof from human suffering but knows it intimately. Jesus is Alpha and Omega, present at every beginning and cradling us to his shoulder in every ending. Jesus’s willingness to enter into this howling wilderness of human existence offers us the hope of healing and wholeness and peace—that beautiful state of release and rest our Jewish brethren call shalom—to bring our longing, aching hearts to rest and recovery, from our beginning to our end. Every ending also contains within it a beginning—and that IS good news, indeed. (5)

Stay awake and alert, therefore. Open your heart to Jesus, and allow Jesus’s power and love to work through you where others are hurting and lost.

Amen.


Preached at the 10:30 am online service of Morning Prayer on November 29, 2020 at St. Martin's Episcopal Church, Ellisville, MO.

Readings:

Citations
1) End and Beginning, © by Jan Richardson, janrichardson.com. Used by permission.
2) William Butler Yeats, "The Second Coming," in The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats, 1989. For a discussion of this poem, see here.
3) Steven Patrick Morrissey and Johnny Marr, "Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want," from the album Hatful of Hollow, 1984.
4) Jyoti Sahi, Incarnation in the Anthill, 2019, from Art and Theology blog.
5) Denise Levertov,  "On the Mystery of the Incarnation," from The Collected Poems of Denise Levertov, 2013. For a wonderful overview of her spiritual poetry, see here. For a collection of Levertov's religious poetry, see The Stream and the Sapphire: Selected Poems on Religious Themes, 1997.
6) Jan Richardson, "Blessing When the World Is Ending," November 23, 2014, at The Advent Door, at janrichardson.com












Prayer, day 2865: 1st Sunday in Advent



Most Merciful One,
we awaken before You
and offer our thanks and praise
for your hand that has held us
and renews our spirits in hope.

Come, Lord Jesus, come,
banish the curtain of darkness
and drive away the clouds that enshroud us
with the glorious light of your love.

Let all people
from the four winds of the earth
sing praises as we await your coming,
sing praises to the humble Prince of Peace.

Let us be watchful and wakeful
as our Holy One approaches
and seeks entry into our hearts
to guide us in ways of redemption and peace.

Send forth your angels
to spread the canopy of your wisdom over us;
that we may perceive the coming light of God
pierce the lengthening veil of darkness.

By the power of the Holy Spirit,
draw forth within us
budding leaves of faith and expectation,
that we flourish in righteousness and abundant love,
as is your will.

Lead us in the ways of your Word, O God,
and rest your blessing upon all whose hope is in You.


Amen.

Friday, November 27, 2020

Prayer, day 2862



Great is our God, and greatly to be praised: 
God's mercy is everlasting!

You welcome us into Your embrace, O God,
and there we take our rest and find new strength.

You number the stars and comfort our sorrows,
knowing us all by name.

You teach the sparrow its song
and fill our hearts with thanksgiving;
all creation sings its praise of Your goodness.

Let us abide with You in this moment, O Loving One:
Your love envelops us now and forever
as we lift up our intercessions
before your gracious countenance and pray.


Amen.

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Prayer 2859



For You Alone, O God, we wait in joy,
beneath the canopy of peace to which you call us:.
Let us raise up a song of gratitude
to the Lord of Life and Light of Our Salvation,
whose mercy endures from everlasting.

Beneficent One, gather your children to your embrace,
and comfort us as a mother comforts her young ones,
until they are reminded of the steadfast love that covers them,
that we may surrender to your care with overflowing hearts.

Take us by the hand and guide us into the path of life,
that we may embody your hope and testify to your glory,
O Living Savior.
May we model our lives after you, O Master and Teacher:
mold us and shape us tenderly
that we may be fit vessels for your truth.

Spirit of Truth,
inspire us to greater service to each other
that the Name of God may be glorified,
and grant the balm of your blessing to all who turn to you
especially those for whom we pray.

Amen.

Monday, November 23, 2020

Prayer, day 2858



Almighty God, we praise and bless You,
and glorify your Name
as we rise to take up our labors today.
Accept the offering
of our time, talent, and worship
that we offer before You,
and consecrate them to your service, we pray.
Lord Jesus, grant us wisdom and charity
to guide all our endeavors,
that our works may find favor in your sight
and help build your kingdom.
Strengthen the hearts of your servants, O Holy One,
that we may be united through love
to care for each other as our own.
Grant your comfort to all who are in need, O God,
and help us work
to bring justice and peace to the world.
Buoyed by your love and faithfulness, O Loving One,
we lift up these beloveds
and ask Your blessing upon them.

Amen.

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Serving Jesus in Everyone: Sermon for the Feast of Christ the King, Year A



In 2013, a piece of artwork based on our gospel passage was installed outside Regis College, the Jesuit School of Theology at the University of Toronto. But its journey there had not been straightforward.

It started when Canadian sculptor and devout Catholic Timothy Schmalz was creating meditating upon the passage “Whatever you did for the least of these, you did to me.”

And so, he began the work, and cast his first bronze of his piece. It depicted a life-sized park bench, about 8 or 9 feet long. On one end of it, with room for another person to sit down on the other end, is a human figure, huddled under a blanket drawn up like a cloak, no hands or face visible, lying on its side. The only part of the actual body visible are the feet, sticking out from under the blanket, bare. Two open wounds are visible on the center of the feet, gaping open slightly. The statue is called “Homeless Jesus.”

Casts of this statue have now been installed on five continents, including one in Capernaum in the Holy Land. One has been installed in Rome outside the Papal Office of Charities, where, when Pope Francis encountered it in 2016, he touched its knee, closed his eyes, and prayed.

But what is interesting is how people have reacted to this statue. Ironically, the first two cathedrals that were offered the statue, one in Canada and one in New York, both turned it down. It was too controversial. It was too shocking. They claimed that ongoing renovations prevented them from installing artwork.

When an Episcopal parish in North Carolina became the first home for a cast of the statue in the US, a neighbor wrote an angry letter, while another person in town called police, thinking that the person on the bench was real. Others complained that depicting Jesus as a homeless person was insulting to Jesus, and damaged the neighborhood esthetic. But the priest at St. Alban’s, Davidson, says that most people now who see the statue sit down on the bench alongside Jesus, place a hand on his feet, and pray.

Jesus, who admitted he had no place to lay his head, rejected by people for revealing who he is. Where have we heard that before? Two mighty cathedrals, rejecting an image of Jesus that isn’t an idealized one—but that may be actually a whole lot closer to the truth of who Jesus is and remains for us today. A Jesus who was put to death by empire because his message of love was dangerous to the forces of fear.

It may seem disconcerting, to say the least, on the day we celebrate his reign on earth and the claim that he is King. However, if you listen to the readings in today's lectionary selection, perhaps it's not so surprising after all. All four of our readings talk about leadership and the right use of power, especially political power, with once again the word “political” being used in its best sense as referring to the good of the community.

Our reading from Ezekiel begins with the denouncement of unfaithful priests and kings, those who held religious and political power over the people. Here Ezekiel was doing the most dangerous work that a Prophet could do at the command of God --to denounce the leaders. This is what usually got profits killed, to be honest. And Ezekiel spares no details in the verses before our reading today, listing a long line of offenses: they gorge in themselves while the people starve, taking the best and leaving the scraps answering the need for healing with harshness and cruelty. In fact, Ezekiel depicts the kings and priests as devouring those whom they were supposed to care for. Therefore, God has decided to step in and take charge of caring for the people, using the metaphor of God is the Good Shepherd That closely echoes Psalm 23.

In verse 16, God promises to feed both the weak and the oppressors with justice. Depending on where you stood, that promise was either comforting or ominous. The next verse makes it clear that God is judging between people who may look the same to the outward eye, but whose actions have brought either respite or rejection upon their heads.

In our gospel, one of my favorite passages from Matthew, the idea of comparison and judgment is carried forward, this time carried out by Jesus, sitting on his throne as the King of heaven. The subtitle that often accompanies this reading is the Judgment of the Nations. Once again, just like in our Ezekiel reading, we see a pastoral image, this time of sheep and goats. Jesus listeners would have known that in the Middle East it was a common practice to have the sheep and goats be together in one flock, since their grazing methods were complementary. But what we often don't understand when we hear this parable, in our North American context especially, is that in many parts of the world sheep and goats actually look incredibly similar, so much so that unless you can see their tails you might not be able to tell them apart.

In fact, mistaken identity plays a big role in this story. Jesus as King divides the flock in front of him not based on how they look, but based on what they have done --based on how they have embodied the gospel values that Jesus has been teaching throughout his life to his followers, even if they themselves may not have been able to identify as such. And what are those gospel values that Jesus expects his followers to fully embrace?

Feeding the hungry (for I was hungry and you gave me food,)

Giving water to those without it (I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink,)

Welcoming strangers and refugees (I was a stranger and you welcomed me,)

Clothing those without clothing (I was naked and you gave me clothing,)

Caring for the sick and injured (I was sick and you took care of me,)

Visiting the imprisoned rather than denigrating them as being subhuman for being “criminals” (I was in prison and you visited me.)

When Jesus separates the righteous and praises them, inviting them to enter into the Kingdom of heaven, you'll notice that even the righteous are confused. Jesus claims that they have cared for him devotedly. The funny thing is, they don't remember any of that—at least not that they did it to Jesus. Likewise, Jesus denounces the unrighteous for ignoring him.

The unrighteous likewise claim to have not seen Jesus anywhere before. That’s when Jesus makes it clear. They expect Jesus to look like them, talk like them, and judge like them. But God’s justice is not based on human ideas of respectability. God’s justice is grounded in restoring hope to the hopeless and love to the supposedly unlovable.

The righteous are willing to care for others, without any thought of what’s in it for them, even when they think no one’s looking. The unrighteous see no one outside themselves that don’t deserve their troubles, and so do nothing to alleviate the suffering that swirls all around them, if only they care to acknowledge it. If there’s nothing in it for them but time and expense, they are not interested. Even with their noses buried in scripture, their hearts have not been changed by Jesus’s call not just to belief, but to transformation.

For the last three weeks, we've been listening to part of Jesus’s discourse about the end of times and his eventual return, while in our epistles we've been hearing the disappointed hopes of those in the church in Thessalonica who thought that Jesus would return in their lifetimes. Now however Jesus makes a startling claim one that is intensely relevant for us today: Jesus has been here all along. There is no need to wait for a second coming. Jesus is present right now among the most marginalized and despised of people.

Once again, it is glaringly obvious that Jesus doesn't demand any statement of belief in order to be welcomed and celebrated as being faithful. The sheep don’t get claimed because they can recite creeds without crossing their fingers behind the back, or detail how many sacraments there are, or what exactly happens to the bread and the wine when it is consecrated. In fact, in bringing all the nations before Jesus for judgment, there would be plenty who had never heard of Jesus or ascribed to Jesus’s teachings. Nonetheless, they are celebrated for having served God if they have done those works of mercy and compassion that have sought to alleviate suffering in real and tangible, even if small, ways.

What's in your head is not important. What's in your heart most certainly is. And it is with your heart that you can see Jesus in every person, no matter how desperate, or despised, or degraded. In fact, Jesus specifically aligns himself as a king with those who are outcast by all decent folk.

Throughout the gospels Jesus makes it clear that the kingdom of God is within us, even those of us who are not exactly sure who Jesus is, and even those who are much too certain that Jesus is just like them, all buttoned-down and respectable. Serving Jesus in everyone around us—especially among the despised—reminds us of the immediacy of our work.

Bringing Jesus’s kingdom into being here and now is the call of discipleship. The question is, can we really embrace the beauty of the kingdom, knowing that it’s not going to be like a garden party?

God’s kingdom is about generosity, grace, and mercy. It rejects the calculus of “law and order” that insists that the denigrated deserve their fate.

Therefore, we create the kingdom when we feed the hungry and gave a drink to the thirsty, when we clothe those who are cold and naked, when we comfort the sick without worrying we will expose ourselves, and visit the imprisoned rather than justify their deaths even for petty disobedience.

We create the kingdom when we acted as if we saw Jesus in the exact people too many of claim to be “broken” or unworthy of dignity or compassion. We are called to serve our king the convict, our king the refugee, our beggar king huddling for shelter.

The kingdom of heaven is also not centered upon our own personal salvation. Making Christ our king means letting love and caritas rule our hearts. Once we accept Jesus as our Lord and king, we are not done. Making a choice to save ourselves is easy. That is why true salvation lies in what we do for others rather than what we do for ourselves by clinging to Jesus like a lifeline. As we are reminded, if we want to save our lives, we must be willing to look beyond ourselves. Proclaiming Jesus’ name will not bring about the kingdom of heaven—living out Jesus’ love among our fellow beings will bring about the kingdom of heaven and show that Jesus is our king. We acknowledge our king not by words but through what we do and how we serve him in each other.

Amen.

Preached at the 10:30 online service at St. Martin's Episcopal Church, Ellisville, MO in time of coronavirus.

Readings:

Prayer, day 2857: Last Sunday After Pentecost (Christ the King)



Lord Jesus Christ,
we bow before You
and offer you our humble praise
for Your countless blessings in our lives.
Reign over us and remake our hearts, O Savior,
that we may follow you wherever you lead us,
and joyfully bear your gospel into the world.
Give us the wisdom and will
to acknowledge you, O Holy One,
as our teacher, model, and guide,
that we may plant our feet firmly
in the path of justice and peace.
Supported by your grace and mercy,
may we serve You with faithfulness
and be a blessing to others, Mighty Counselor,
standing alongside the oppressed, the poor, and the marginalized,
the stranger and the seeker.
Prince of Peace, grant your healing
to all those in need,
and your blessing to all those we now name,
as we humbly pray.

Amen.

Saturday, November 21, 2020

Prayer, day 2856- Lord's Prayer Cycle, 8: Yours in the Kingdom, and the Power, and the Glory



Our Father in heaven, 
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
yours is the kingdom
and the power
and the glory!

We lift up our praises and thanksgivings
for your dominion within our hearts,
for your pursuit and love of us always,
as it is and as it shall be.
At your command all things are,
and the rising sun reveals
the glory of your creation and majesty.
May you reign in our hearts,
and may we glorify your Name
as your people.
Let us set our hands
to build your kingdom on earth
by living according your to commands,
establishing justice,
and loving always.

Hear our prayers and supplications
that we raise before You,
especially for those we now name.

Amen.

Friday, November 20, 2020

Prayer, day 2855- Lord's Prayer Cycle, 7: Deliver Us From Evil



Our Father in heaven,
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
deliver us from evil,
for we depend upon You wholly
when our courage falters
and our integrity is challenged.

Strengthen us in faith,
O Shield and Refuge of Refugees,
that we may renounce the sin
of claiming helplessness
rather than acknowledge our participation
in systems of oppression and inhumanity.

O Lord Our Banner,
Opener of Blind Hearts,
enlighten our hearts and minds
that You may set us free
from the miserliness of spirit
that besets us in the face of fear and division.

Teach us to walk humbly
in the Way of Jesus,
that we may seek to perfect our devotion
even when it is inconvenient.
Instead, may we ever embrace those fleeing evil
just as You embrace and sustain us each day.

O Loving One, hear our prayers
and grant your benediction and grace
to those whose needs we now raise before You.

Amen.

Thursday, November 19, 2020

The Beggar King: Speaking to the Soul, November 19, 2020



In 1925, the fires of World War 1 still smoldered in the memory of those who had lived through it. And yet, even with the memory of the suffering and destruction still vivid in the minds of millions on three continents, nationalism and fascism began to arise in Europe, political movements who sought to gain power by dividing people into victors and vanquished, that sought to claim the right to empire and oppression as the natural order for humanity.

Movements that sought to enslave or eliminate entire races of people based on hatred and fear. Movements that sought to co-opt the church, as in Italy and Germany, and blaspheme God by aligning God with national interests, serving human purposes. It was the continuation of the struggle between good and evil, fueled by technologies of death and worship of might over right unimaginable in human history up to that point.

It was in this context that the Feast of Christ the King was first proclaimed, and has continued to be observed annually. It is a feast that calls us to remember whose, exactly, we are, and the real power to which we owe our allegiance. It also reminds us how easy it is to be coopted into serving our own desires dressed up as true belief, to deify ourselves and our conception of power or human hierarchies. This feast was also established to remind us to identify and resist any attempt to divide us from God and from each other in pursuit of human political agendas.

The image of a king here in America is inevitably tainted by our last brush as being subject to one, an image that fills many of us with a mixture of repugnance and mockery, especially after we have watched Jonathan Groff strut around in heels singing “You’ll be back” as the delusional King George III in Hamilton. We treasure our autonomy and independence above all things. We don’t want someone telling us that, “when push comes to shove, I will send a fully-armed battalion to remind you of my love.”

But Christ’s reign in our hearts is founded upon entreaty rather than command. Proclaiming Christ as our King is a jubilant, grateful response to God’s plea to allow see ourselves as God’s own beloveds, as Psalm 100 reminds us, and to give thanks for God’s gifts of the good things in creation to bring us joy and a deep abiding sense of well-being.

But where and what is this kingdom? Throughout the gospels Jesus makes it clear that the kingdom of God is within us, and bringing it into fruition is our responsibility. And indeed, the gospel reading for this Sunday of Christ the King tells us the same thing: we created the kingdom when we fed the hungry and gave a drink to the thirsty, when we clothed those who were cold and naked, when we comforted the sick or the imprisoned. When we acted as if we saw Jesus in the exact people too many of claim to be “broken” or unworthy of dignity or compassion. Rather we are called to serve our king the convict, our king the refugee, our beggar king huddling for shelter.

It is also clear: the geography of this kingdom lies upon and within our hearts. The kingdom over which Jesus reigns is not in a place or in a time just as God does not exist within the boundaries of space or time. Jesus is God’s physical presence within space and time, within our understanding of the universe. Jesus’ power as king does not come from compulsion, or force, or power as earthly kings wield, but through the power of love and through example. Jesus’ power as king over our lives is not the power of demand but the power of love. We follow Christ and obey Christ through the choice of our will, which is what the root of the word, “voluntarily,” means.

The kingdom of heaven is also not centered upon our own personal salvation. Making Christ our king means letting love and caritas rule our hearts. Once we accept Jesus as our Lord and king, we are not done. Making a choice to save ourselves is easy. That is why true salvation lies in what we do for others rather than what we do for ourselves by clinging to Jesus like a lifeline. As we are reminded, if we want to save our lives, we must be willing to look beyond ourselves. Proclaiming Jesus’ name will not bring about the kingdom of heaven—living out Jesus’ love among our fellow beings will bring about the kingdom of heaven and show that Jesus is our king. We acknowledge our king not by words but through deeds.


This was first published at Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul on November 19, 2020.

Prayer, day 2854- Lord's Prayer Cycle, 6: Save Us From the time of Trial



Our Father in heaven, 
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
save us from the time of trial,
for we are prone to wander
and lose our way.

Make us stronger in our faith
and more willing to wrestle with the angel of doubt.
Guide us into living and loving more fully
according to your precepts.
Help us turn aside all vain ambitions
and concentrate fully upon your Word.
Give us courage to make our hearts bigger,
even if that makes them bigger targets,
for love is always the answer.
Help us to persevere
through the difficulties of life,
knowing that You are always with us.
Give us the sight to see hope amid darkness.

O Loving One, hear our prayers
and grant your benediction and grace
to those whose needs we now raise before You.

Amen.

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Prayer, day 2853- Lord's Prayer Cycle: As We Forgive Those Who Have Sinned Against Us



Our Father in heaven, 
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
strengthen us and soften our hearts,
for You call us to forgive others as much as You forgive us.

Help us let go of anger and resentment
when we have been wronged,
and nurture understanding
in place of feeding the weeds of rage.
Help us to understand
that all are wounded and in need of healing,
including ourselves.
Help us to lower our defenses
and not impugn the motives of those we love,
and remember they love us.
Help us to judge only as harshly
as we ourselves wish to be judged,
and no more.

For You are our loving God,
and You forgive us repeatedly when we fail You.
Teach us that in bearing grudges
we grip a weight that will sink us,
and when harboring anger
we risk loss in a sea of recrimination.

Let us embrace those who seek our pardon,
and repair mutual injury
with the balm of Love that never fails.
O Loving One, hear our prayers
and grant your benediction and grace
to those whose needs we now raise before You.

Amen.

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Prayer, day 2852: The Lord's Prayer Cycle, 4: Forgive Us Our Sins



Our Father in heaven,
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
we thank You for your forgiveness
of our manifold sins.

Again and again You call to us
when we have wandered from your ways,
and stubbornly separate ourselves from your Love.
We repent of the evil we have done,
the evil that is done on our behalf,
and the very real hurt we have caused.

Forgive us when we place our selves
as an idol in the sanctuary of our hearts,
which should be dedicated to worship of You alone,
O Redeemer.

Help us to acknowledge the sins done
because we do not try to prevent them,
and arouse in us the will to take action.

Teach us that the root of righteousness and salvation
is found in fully opening our hearts
to each other and to You.

Help us clothe ourselves
and our motives
in charity and obedience, O Christ.
Help us direct our wills
to the establishment of justice and peace.

Come into our hearts, O Spirit,
and guide us in matters great and small,
for your Love heals all our woundedness.

O Loving One, hear our prayers
and grant your benediction and grace
to those whose needs we now raise before You

Monday, November 16, 2020

Prayer, day 2851- Lord's Prayer Cycle 3: Give Us Tomorrow's Bread Today



Our Father in heaven, 
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
we ask that you give us tomorrow's bread today,
that we may lay down to rest in peace
and rise in strength and hope to do your holy work.

Help us to remember and help those who are hungry
each time we ourselves give thanks at table.
Bless the farmers with a bountiful harvest
and bless them and for their love and care of the earth.
Grant that all who produce our food
do so safely, sustainably and humanely.
You sustain us with abundant grace:
make us hunger for that bread that gives eternal life.
Bring us together at your table
for that heavenly banquet which unites all in your kingdom.
May we be strengthened and renewed
in communion with You and each other,
and inspired to spread your Love into the world.

Watch over those whose needs we now remember,
especially those we now name.

Amen.

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Worthless as a Slave; Faithful as a Disciple: Sermon for Proper 28A


I had a relative who had lost everything in a bank failure in the Great Depression. He emerged with a lifelong hatred of banks. Instead, he placed his money all around his house, and out in the barn,  in the most unlikely of places. This served him well, since he lived most of his life in a time before credit cards, in a small town where people knew his quirks—especially the bank president, who stayed out of his way. 

And then he passed away. Thankfully, his relatives who were left to clean out his house KNEW the old man’s system—although they did not know his actual hidey-holes. Therefore, every single thing that was going to be given away or sold was examined before it was given up.

And they found cash in the CRAZIEST of places. In an envelope taped to the back of drawers. In between the pages of his favorite books—even the Bible. In his rolled up old tattered socks. In his pillowcases. In plastic bags frozen into blocks of ice in the stand alone freezer in the garage, among all the filets of catfish. The tale was that he has even buried hordes of coins in jars in his backyard. The problem was, his backyard was over two acres, and he hadn’t left a map. Needless to say, the mailman delivered several metal detectors to his kin ordered from the Sears catalogue in the weeks after his death.

Burying your money is generally frowned upon as an investment strategy—but to Uncle’s mind, it also meant that he knew exactly where his money was, and “wasn’t no low-down SOB banker gonna take it and lose it lending it to some damn fool,” as he put it.

Today, we are confronted with a puzzling parable that also involves the strategy of burying one’s treasure rather than investing it—and that is how it is usually read. But I want to suggest a different angle today. We're going to engage in an act of imagination-- which is of course what all the gospel writers were doing in order to adapt the teaching of Jesus to the needs of their own communities.

I want us to try to hear this parable as Jesus’s followers did—to try to understand this parable through the lens of the economic systems that dominated 1st century Palestine. It was a system in which extremely wealthy absentee landowners sucked every bit of profit they could out of the poor that were on the land, especially by lending them tiny sums of money at huge rates of interest --between 60 and 400% annually --until eventually the poor lost their land and the landowner, who already was fabulously wealthy beyond the imagination of 99% of the people around him, would swoop in and take it in payment of the debt. Historically this is similar to the system of sharecropping that developed in especially the American South in the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries. More recently, it is also similar to the system of payday loans which bedevil the poor, even to this day. (1)

Jesus is telling this parable to those who were listed as blessed in the Beatitudes—those who were driven to the brink by people like the landowner. What if we view this parable from their standpoint? The characters in the parable would then be interpreted this way: the wealthy landowner is exactly that—an incredibly wealthy landowner who makes his money off the backs of the poor by charging them sky high interest. He could do this because there were no banks; and the system was set up for the lender to take their debtors’ possessions- their land, usually-- when they can't pay. The three servants to which he gives his talents –a single talent was equivalent to 20 years’ wages --are his middlemen or agents, much like the tax collectors who collaborated with the Roman Empire.

As we saw in the Parable of the Unjust Steward (Luke 16:1-13), the servant acting as agent was allowed to try to extract as much or as little money to settle the debt as he wanted --it was all a part of managing the master's affairs, business as usual, the art of the deal. In that parable, what we saw was that, knowing he was about to be fired, in order to both get some of the money back and to curry favor with the people who were going to be his neighbors once he lost his job, the unjust steward cut the amount of money owed. He was then praised for his boldness—and his shrewdness. What was more common in the time of Jesus, however, was that the agent for the wealthy lender would claim that the debtor owed even more than they actually did, and would pocket the difference for himself.

Here's how the system worked: the agents of the wealthy elite or of the Empire were allowed to make a little something on the side for themselves if they could get away with it. That's one of the reasons why tax collectors were so hated as we see in scripture--they were allowed to engage in practices which we would consider to be corrupt with our nice neat understandings of bureaucracy and tendency to see graft as a crime. They would claim a sum larger than what was owed—and keep the difference for themselves, kind of like collection agencies do when they buy up debt.

So say that a tenant, in desperation, had borrowed two days wages-- 2 denarii. That's a huge sum of money to a poor person, especially -- but worse is the interest rates that he would be charged. In no time at all this desperately poor tenant farmer owes the landlord 8 denarii-- in other words 8 days’ wages. But it was common for the agent to take advantage of the fact that the poor often had no way of knowing how to calculate interest, and then claim that the debtor actually owed 10 denarii. The agent would then keep two of the denarii for his own pocket. And often, the debtor would pay it off only by borrowing from others.

This system was accepted even by the wealthy elite --who didn't mind what we would consider to be corruption, as long as the money kept rolling in for themselves.

Tax collectors would do the same thing, as much as they could get away with. And always, always it was the poor who ended up having every little bit of value sucked out of their lives-- staying enslaved by debt that they could never escape, being paid wage is so pitiful they could barely keep body and soul together, and often failed. They were basically enslaved to their creditors for their entire lives. Their lives were nasty, brutish, and short, as Thomas Hobbes once remarked. And, sure, the sums of money being extracted from each individual family was small -- but given how vast a number of people were poor, great sums of wealth were nonetheless being extracted based on economies of scale.

So let's turn back to our parable. It's at this point I want to ask you if you can to get out your Bibles and turn to Matthew 25.

Looking at this parable from the context of the economic system in Jesus’s time, what if Jesus is actually condemning the landowner and the first two servants? The landowner and the first two servants once again are extracting wealth from the backs of the poor, regardless of the consequences and devastation left in their wake. Those talents --huge sums of money already --double as the result of probably hundreds or even thousands of transactions with impoverished families. Those profits—a 100% return on investment!-- represent the destruction of thousands of families’ lives—the loss of their land, and their utter fall from bare subsistence to the uncertain future of day labor that we have seen elsewhere in Jesus’s parables this year. (2)

The third servant now becomes a conscientious objector to this system of wealth extraction from the most vulnerable when he buries his talent in the ground. He refuses to participate in the oppression of people living on the very edge of maintaining their lives. And yet he makes sure he doesn't lose the Master’s money, knowing that he is a cruel and heartless man. Of course he is a cruel and heartless man—he’s a loan shark, and they’re not known for being cuddly and forgiving. No profit in that in his line of work.

Therefore, the Master comes to the third servant expecting to see the immense profit he saw with the first two --but instead sees only that his money has been sitting there in a hole in the ground, not getting any bigger, sure, but not getting any smaller. Technically, he hasn't lost anything --but too much is never enough for people like this. Therefore he throws the third servant out into the darkness, where he can live among the very poor from whom he up until this point has extracted the lifeblood of their living. He can share their fate. The third servant is thrown out where there is wailing and gnashing of teeth --in the midst of the most desperate poor --but at least he has begun to regain his integrity and has denounced the corrupt merry-go-round of oppression that governed Jesus’s time. That third servant has refused to play—but has regained his rightful concern for the effect his actions have on others, rather than merely on his own profit.

Wait a minute, you might say. Up until this point the phrase “outer darkness where there will be wailing and gnashing of teeth” has been used five times in Matthew to be understood as those who are cast out of God's Kingdom. What justification do we have to turn that understanding upside down now?

This is where getting out your Bible might be helpful. What is the very next story that comes immediately adjacent to this difficult, confusing one? Let's read on. Right on the heels of the words “wailing and gnashing of teeth” comes the section entitled “The Judgment of the Nations,” and it's a familiar passage-- but one we do not often set up against our parable for today. When we do that the results are interesting. Please follow along with me in your Bibles:

‘When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on the throne of his glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats, and he will put the sheep at his right hand and the goats at the left. 
Then the king will say to those at his right hand, “Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.” Then the righteous will answer him, “Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry and gave you food, or thirsty and gave you something to drink? And when was it that we saw you a stranger and welcomed you, or naked and gave you clothing? And when was it that we saw you sick or in prison and visited you?” And the king will answer them, “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family,* you did it to me.” 
Then he will say to those at his left hand, “You that are accursed, depart from me into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels; for I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me, naked and you did not give me clothing, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.” Then they also will answer, “Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not take care of you?” Then he will answer them, “Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.” 

Wow. What if the third servant is a representative of the values of the sheep in the passage that immediately follows our parable today? What if we understand him as refusing to participate in the death-dealing economy-- one that exists as much today and it did then, and all over the world-- that seeks to keep the poor as helpless as possible in order to keep them as captive, cheap labor for the enrichment of those who already have more than they know what to do with?

Instead of viewing the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the criminal, the homeless as being a sign of the system working as it should, producing a very few winners and a very large multitude of losers in order to get people to cooperate because they have no choice, the third servant instead throws a wrench into the works. He doesn't lose his master anything. But he also doesn't enrich him, either, by destroying the lives of hundreds or even thousands of people.

What are we to make of this as being instructive for ourselves, living in our time in context? Perhaps we're being asked to re-examine our acceptance of systems that create so much suffering and poverty in the world. That sounds like a very “Jesus-y” thing to do, especially in light of the judgment that follows this parable for accepting things the way they are while believing that your own personal salvation should be enough to get you across the finish line with Jesus.

Living in our time and place, we have to be careful about the interpretation of the last two verses in our parable especially. The ones that saw that those who have will get more and those that have nothing will never get anything. In my childhood, I have heard these verses twisted into a support for the oppression of the poor, claiming that somehow they have done something to deserve their poverty and that therefore being poor—and being rich—is merely a judgment of God. Nothing could fly more in the face of Jesus’s life and work and choice of companions than that.

It is important to remember that Jesus is not only talking money or political power. He’s talking about living in a way that is free from using fear and might as a weapon against the weak. He’s talking about using the tools of the world for the glory and growth of God’s kingdom here on earth for everybody. He is also talking about the slaves’ stewardship of something they did not earn, something they were given without merit. Some have used these verses in a straightforward materialistic way, condoning the idea that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer because that is what they each deserve. Instead, to put it simply: We need to pay attention to what we do with what we’ve got, and use what we’ve got to do the greatest good we can.

The word “economics” is funny. It originates in the Greek word oikonomos, which means “the management of the home.” The word was NEVER meant to be divorced from the values of love, compassion, and generosity that Christ urges us to live by. When it comes to economics as we understand it today, though, we are being led to recover that original meaning—and to see our household as including everyone around us—that is, after all, what an economy is all about nowadays.

Jesus is calling us as Christians to get our houses in order. To take care of our family’s needs, absolutely, and save for the future if we can—and hopefully to do that by investing in things that benefit us all—and also putting our blessings to work for a greater cause than mere material comfort.

I wonder if what Jesus is suggesting here is that our society’s tendency to view wealth as an insulator, rather than as a great and grave responsibility, as a plaything to be admired rather than as a tool to benefit everyone within the economy, although perhaps by carrying degrees, is part of our modern obstacle to completely turning our hearts over to the kingdom values Jesus keep throwing in front of us, again and again and challenging us to live by.

What we treasure can either help us or hinder us. It can help us if our treasures and our talents are put to the use of creating security and hope for all. Our treasures can hinder us if they become not just a means to a living, but a thing we worship in place of God. What we do with our money and what we invested in can have great benefit or great harm. This is an acknowledged fact behind the drive over the last few decades toward ethical investing--of investing in companies for instance that work on solutions to pollution, or clean energy, or cures for orphan diseases that normally would not get attention. of divesting from industries that support war or create products that cause cancer or other illnesses.

The question at the heart of this parable is “What is my responsibility as a faithful disciple living faithfully for Jesus? What is demanded of me as a Christian?” This parable implies that it is not as simple as knocking on doors and pressing pamphlets into often unwelcoming hands. The answer lies in HOW we live in every aspect of our lives and making that our greatest testimony. The answer lies in taking the gifts we have been given, and using them not to assuage our own fears, but to support the mission of God in reconciling all the world to Godself. And the first gift is the gift and challenge of living by love and putting what we have to work for love.

Amen.


Preached at the 10:30 online worship at St. Martin's Episcopal Church, Ellisville, broadcast on FaceBook Live, in time of rising COVID19 cases.

Readings:

Sources:
1) I am indebted to Debie Thomas for her essay on our gospel today, "The Good Kind of Worthless," at Journey with Jesus, and for reminding me of the work of William Herzog, whom I studied in seminary.
2) See William Herzog, “The Vulnerability of the Whistleblower: The Parable of the Talents,” chapter 9 in Parables as Subversive Speech: Jesus as Pedagogue of the Oppressed, pp. 187-208.

Prayer 2850: Twnty-fourth Sunday after Pentecost



Holy One, 
You are the author of all our hopes 
and the ground of our Being: 
we rise to give you thanks and praise. 

We thank you for this day to come: 
may we serve you in newness of heart with joy.
May we offer You 
our talents, time, and treasure, 
transformed by the power of your love.
May we work for justice and mercy, 
having faith in each other 
and in Your holy goodness and lovingkindness.
May we strive to purify ourselves inwardly, 
to be worthy vessels 
for your gospel of peace and compassion.

Live in us, Lord Christ, 
and make us wholly yours: 
take all that we are
and renew it through your love. 
Send forth your Spirit 
to lead us into new life, 
that we may walk in the way of Jesus 
prayerfully, reverently, and mindfully. 
Heal us of our hypocrisy, 
and open our hearts to your truth and transformation 
as children of Light.

Bless us and all those whose hope is in You, O God,
especially those we now name.

Amen.

Saturday, November 14, 2020

Prayer, day 2849- The Lord's Prayer Cycle 2: Thy Kingdom Come

Our Father in heaven, 
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
we pray that your kingdom come on earth 
as it is in heaven. 



Reign over us, Almighty God, 
that we may live our lives 
in service to You and to each other. 
Let us always remember that You are God, 
and we are not. 
Make us humble, compassionate, and unified,
re-enacting the broadness 
of God's table of kinship in heaven.

Let us be dedicated to doing your will 
by being a holy people 
founded upon mercy and fellowship. 

Let us denounce and end the systems of oppression
of which we are a part,
that steal from the poor to enrich the powerful,
that justify the terrorization of the marginalized;
that imprison children and rips apart families
who seek refuge from famine and wars from which we profit.
Let us instead work 
to bring your dream for humanity to life,
and demand justice and equity 
of ourselves and of our leaders. 

Watch over those 
whose needs we now remember, 
especially those we now name.

Amen. 

Friday, November 13, 2020

Prayer, day 2848- The Lord's Prayer Cycle, part 1- Our Father in Heaven


Our Father in heaven,
loving Parent and Creator,
tender Mother,
we pray that your name be made holy. 

Let what we do hallow your Name,
for it is through our actions that You are made known.
Let the words of our mouths enlighten darkness,
dispel enmity,
and heal ancient wounds. 

Let us act honorably and compassionately
toward the least in our society,
that all may live together in justice and peace.
Let us remember that your Love is a sacred calling,
and that as your people
we minister in Your Name in everything we do.
Grant us the strength to be gentle
and the wisdom to be foolish
in the name of Love. 

Watch over those
whose needs we now remember,
especially those we now name.

Amen.

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Talents and Gifts: Speaking to the Soul, November 12, 2020




This Sunday we will hear the Parable of the Talents. I will be honest: when I was a child and heard this parable, I had a hard time with it, and I am not sure that I have ever outgrown that. But one word in the reading always caught my attention: “Talent.”

It was usually not explained to me that a talent was a unit of currency. Instead, as I would listen to the preacher drone on and on, I would think about what I understood to be talent: an ability with which you are born, a potential for excellence in some endeavor such as sports, or music, or art. My Mom raised us to believe that our talents were gifts from God, and that it was a sin to not use them to the glory of God.

That is why I, who did not like to draw attention to myself with my homemade haircut and homemade dresses which I hated, found myself with my siblings shoved up in front of my mother’s adult Sunday School class, playing guitar and singing in harmony the 70s folk-rock classic “Put your Hand in the Hand of the Man from Galilee,” trying to avoid eye contact with the parents of my friends and classmates, and knowing that this was going to be legendary in the halls of my junior high by the time Monday rolled around.

Talents were gifts. But they were also responsibilities.

Now I look at this year, and the irony that I am a priest and, in order to stretch the restriction on attendance due to the Coronatide restrictions on worship, I am called upon sing and play guitar in worship frequently, and worse, to do it on camera. Ha ha ha, God. Thanks for your faith in me.

But seriously, talents and the gospel are both gifts from God—and they are both things I do believe we are called to share with others, no matter how uncomfortable that may make us. And it does make us uncomfortable. Actually thinking of these things as gifts rather than obligations might help encourage us more in overcoming out natural circumspection in using these gifts to the glory of God, who gave us memory, reason, and skill, as Prayer C in the Book of Common Prayer so beautifully puts it. And so, perhaps we could ask God to help us have the faith and courage to share God’s gifts that have been given to us with those around us.

Holy One,
You are the author of all our hopes
and the ground of our Being:
we rise to give you thanks and praise.
We thank you for this day to come:
may we serve you in newness of heart with joy.

May we offer You
our talents, time, and treasure,
transformed by the power of your love.
May we work for justice and mercy,
having faith in each other
and in Your holy goodness and lovingkindness.
May we strive to purify ourselves inwardly,
to be worthy vessels for your gospel
of peace and compassion.

Live in us, Lord Christ,
and make us wholly yours:
take all that we are
and renew it through your love.
Send forth your Spirit
to lead us into new life,
that we may walk in the way of Jesus
prayerfully, reverently, and mindfully.

Heal us of our hypocrisy,
and open our hearts to your truth and transformation
as children of Light.

Amen.



This was first published at Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul on November 12, 2020.

Photo: Guitarist at Parc Guell, Barcelona.