Showing posts with label 7 Easter C. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 7 Easter C. Show all posts

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Ascenion and Attaining the Abstract Insights of Prayer


7 Easter         May 8, 2016
Acts 16:16-34   Psalm 97
Revelation 22:12-14,16-17,20-21    John 17:20-26            

   "In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God.... and the Word was made flesh and dwelled among us."
  In the Creation story God spoke words to create all things in this world and in John's Gospel we are told that the spoken and creating Word of God also was God.  The Gospel of John is about how the life of Jesus was what God as Word would look like in a human life.
  The Gospel of John is the last canonical Gospel written.   The writer of John's Gospel  assumed that Christ has risen and gone in his ascension and he has returned to the status that he had before the foundation and creation of the world; he has returned to be the eternal Word of God.  I think that this means that God as eternal Word is always creating and sustaining the human world as we have come to know it precisely because we have words.  We are most like God because we use words, and using words is how we ourselves become co-creators with God in how we articulate our thinking, speaking, writing and acting.
    The Gospel of John could be seen as a study in the many forms of word or language permeating our lives.  The Gospel is an affirmation that word and language are central to what it is to be human but it is not enough simply to possess language.  We need to know how to use language real well.  We need to know how to articulate body language with our moral and ethical behaviors.  We need to appreciate all of the diverse forms of how we use language.  Word use has so many nuances; if we use words wrongly we can harm our lives and the lives of others.  Violent acts and careless deeds are wrong uses of body language.  Wrongful use of language can also lead to foolish thinking.  If we take poetic language to mean something literal then we can misrepresent our faith and bring it into public scorn.
  Today is Ascension Sunday and the reading from the appointed portion of John's Gospel is part of the longest prayer attributed to Jesus in the Gospels.  What are we to learn from this prayer of Jesus?  The prayer of Jesus shows us that prayer is a valid discourse of language use.  Prayer as communication with the unseen and the invisible is a discourse found in people of all times.  And one might think that it is crazy to speak or try to communicate with those whom one cannot see, but it is perhaps a crucial development in abstract and imaginative thinking to be able to express a sense of empathy beyond one's own limitation.
  Smoke signals and writing are forms of communication which take place between persons who are not physically present to each other.  Telegraphy, telephones, email and now texting are developments in communicating without being physically present to another person.
  Prayer is the discourse that is based upon having empathy with someone greater than us whom we sense is with us and enough like us to be able be in relationship with.  One of the chief presentation of Jesus in the Gospel of John is his relationship with his Father.  And the disciples were thinking, "Jesus, who are you talking to and about?  We can't see the Father, show us your Father and we will be satisfied."  The goal of the Gospel of John was to show us an ideal relationship between Jesus and God his Father and from this modeling, each disciple of Christ was to learn how to activate and enter into this kind of personal relationship with God which can attain the level of intimacy of the very best possible relationship that a parent and child could have.
  Who are you praying to Jesus?  Show us your Father and we will be satisfied.  My Christian friends, who are you praying to?  Show me your invisible God and my preference for using the scientific method will be satisfied.
  People who are angry about God and about prayer as a valid discourse are people who have not developed this specialized discursive practice expressing another kind of abstract thinking.  And yet people who pray too much and engage in excessive abstract thinking can often lose balance in their lives and such fanatics can then become the one who misrepresent people of faith to the world.
  Jesus told his disciples, "If you have seen me, you have seen the Father."  This is an expression of how human life bears the image of one who is greater than human life.  We could say, "If you have seen humanity, you have seen God because we bear within us the invisible which is greater than us because of our connection with great Invisible."
  The resurrection of Christ and the ascension of Christ have come to the language which the church came to use about how they could account for how it happened that Jesus was no longer present in the world.  And even though Jesus was not present in the world, the church survived, grew and even flourished.  How could the church be so successful if Jesus was unseen and invisible?
  Jesus had both a Risen appearance and an ascension presence.  The ascension presence of Christ was the transforming of the body of Jesus into the Spirit of Christ who could dwell within the inner space of each person.  And how can this Christ be accessed?  Through the abstract discourse of prayer.  You Christians are crazy!  To which Christians responded,  "but it works!"  We are able to access through this practice of prayer the sense of the exalted divine personal presence within us which we call the presence of Christ.  And as we practice access to the presence of Christ, we have the power to transform our lives, our words, our behaviors and how we live together with each other through love and justice.
  Jesus taught the church that prayer is a valid way for us to experience his life when he was no longer visible to us.  Prayer is a different discourse than face to face discourse but because it is different we don't have to apologize for our practice of prayer.  We can assert that it helps to access a different kind of abstract thinking and an empathy with hope which is attached to a future which is not yet seen.  The abstract function of prayer which activates imagination to know a surpassing perfect person and ourselves as surpassing ourselves in the future gives us the ability to practice a valid judgment upon the current imperfections in our lives and our world.  With this abstraction and empathy toward who and what we are not yet, we can be given inspiration for creative advance, and we need this inspiration for personal transformation.
  Let us embrace the truth of the poetics of the ascension.  In our modern age of space travel we know that up and down is based upon a very limited visual perception.  We know that the sky is not a hard dome on which rise and set the sun, moon and stars.  There is not a trap door at the top of a dome through which one gains access to a physical heaven with thrones.  The language of the ascension was the poetics of prayerful relationship with God expressed in the Pauline poetics as being seated with God in heavenly places.
  The ascension is a celebration that we have access to Christ in the heaven of our inner space.  Why?  Because God still resides in each of us because our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit.
  Let us know that the visible and seeming physical ascension of Jesus was the Gospel writer using physicality as a metaphor for emphasizing the profound and real effects of spiritual transformation of the lives of many people.
  The Ascension of Christ, invites us to the life of prayer and in this prayer we are called to the inner space of a heavenly perspective.  We are invited continually to enter into a perspective on our lives which includes more than what we can actually see.  And we access this perspective with the faculty of faith.
  Today you and I can honor the ascension of Christ through the practice of prayer.  Prayer is a valid discourse in the use of our words.  It can teach us another level of abstract thinking which can provide us with new answers and new insights to assist us with the everyday issues of our lives.  It can help us edit our faulty versions of each other and this world toward better seeing.  And when we attain better versions of each other and life; we live better.
  Let us not use prayer to make us religious fanatics who create wrong abstractions of our actual world.  There are plenty of fanatics doing that today.  Let us use prayer to participate in the abstractions of hope, a hope of a surpassing future which gives us the insights to act with faith in the present toward the practice of the love and justice of Jesus Christ.  Amen.

Friday, May 6, 2016

Sunday School, May 8, 2016 7 Easter C Ascension Sunday


Sunday School, May  8, 2016     7 Easter C  Ascension Sunday

Themes of the Day

Mother’s Day
The Ascension of Christ

Question:

What happened to Jesus after he rose from the dead and appeared to his friends, but then left this world?
The early Christian believed that Jesus left this world to be with his Father.

What does Christ do now that we can no longer see him?

One of the things that Jesus does is to pray and he asks him friends to pray.  When you’re mom and dad are not with you, they have feelings of hope and love for you and they say prayers for you.  And even though they do see you all of the time they feel connected with you.

And your parents want you to feel connected with them even when you are not with them and don’t see them.  And they want you to pray for them.

Today we read a prayer that Jesus made with his Father.  And in his prayer he was asking that his friends could know the same Father that he knew.  He was wanting his friends to know that they were sons and daughters of God.

And he wanted his friends to know that they could be connected to God when they talked to God and when they prayed.  Our prayers with our thoughts and our spoken words come from an place within us and they connect us to God the Father and with Jesus even when we do not see them.

Jesus left with his friends the gift of prayer.  It is a way to talk to God and to know God even when we don’t see him.  And if we practice prayer enough, we will teach ourselves to know how close God is to us.  If we avoid God, then we will not know how close God is to us.  Jesus said that if we wanted to have a relationship with God as our Father, then we need to talk to God.

When Jesus ascended and was no longer seen, we believe that he has God to be with God the Father and he continues to pray for us.

On Mother’s Day, it is a good time to remember that our mothers pray for us and they feel connected to us even when we don’t see them.

Children’s Sermon

What do we call talking to God?  We call it prayer don’t we?
  And when do we pray?  Do we pray when we come to church on Sunday?  Yes, we pray when we gather together.
  Do we pray before we eat?  We say table grace.  Do you have favorite table grace?  Why do we say table grace?  Because we are very thankful for our food.  We know that there are many people who don’t have enough to eat.
  Do you pray when you go to bed at night?  Yes, because we want to sleep well.  We don’t want to be frightened by our dreams.  And we don’t want to be frightened by imaginary things that can come into our mind.  So we pray and ask God to keep us safe.  And we pray for our family and friends too.
  Why do we pray?    Why do you talk to someone?  You want to get to know them don’t you?  Or you talk to someone because you need something, so you ask them to help you get what you need.
  Who are the people that you talk to the most?  You’re your mom and your dad and your grandparents, your aunts and uncles, your brothers and sisters and your friend.  Why do you talk to them?  Because you like them and also you need them sometimes to help you with important things in your life.
  Today, we heard a prayer that Jesus said to his father.  Jesus believed that God was so close to him that he could talk to him just as he would his father.
  And when Jesus prayed to his father, he asked for some things.  He asked that his friends would do well.  And you know what else he asked?  He asked that his friends might know God to be their father too.  He wanted his friends to know that God was close to them and that they could pray to God as their father in heaven.  And they could talk to God, just like they talked to their own fathers or their mothers or their own best friends.
  And so that is what Jesus wants us to do.  He wants us to practice our prayer and to talk to God as the father of the entire world.  Jesus wants us to know God as a great but very friendly father, who cares about our lives.
  You are never too young to learn how to practice to pray.  And if you learn to pray as a young child, it will carry all through your life.
  How you pray?  Well, you pray by talking to God.  But you don’t even have to talk.  You can think prayers as well, because God is so close to us, God can read our minds.  That’s a good reason for always thinking good thoughts.
  Prayers can be short or they can be long.  My most-used prayer is very short.  I just say, “Help!”
  Remember when you pray, you are believing in God and believing that God is close to you.  And remember you don’t have to always be asking for things from God.  You don’t always want your friends to be asking to play with your toys.  You like them to say other things as well.  So, you can say other things to God like, “How are you doing today, God and what can I do for you to make you happy?” 
  I believe all of your prayers will make God happy.  Remember Jesus prayed to God whom he believed to be his father.  And he taught us to pray too.  Can you remember to pray?

St. John the Divine Episcopal Church
17740 Peak Avenue, Morgan Hill, CA 95037
Family Service with Holy Eucharist
May 8, 2016 : The Seventh Sunday of Easter

Gathering Songs: Hallelu, Hallelujah; Seek Ye First; Come My Way; Sing a New Song

Liturgist: Alleluia, Christ is Risen.
People: The Lord is Risen Indeed.  Alleluia.

Liturgist:  Oh God, Our hearts are open to you.
And you know us and we can hide nothing from you.
Prepare our hearts and our minds to love you and worship you.
Through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.

Song: Hallelu, Hallelujah, (Christian Children’s Songbook, # 84)
Hallelu, Hallelu, Hallelu, Hallelujah, Praise ye the Lord. 
Hallelu, Hallelu, Hallelu, Hallelujah, Praise ye the Lord. 
Praise ye the Lord, Hallelujah.  Praise ye the Lord Hallujah. 
Praise ye the Lord, Hallelujah, Praise ye the Lord.

Liturgist:         The Lord be with you.
People:            And also with you.

Liturgist:  Let us pray
O God, the King of glory, you have exalted your only Son Jesus Christ with great triumph to your kingdom in heaven: Do not leave us comfortless, but send us your Holy Spirit to strengthen us, and exalt us to that place where our Savior Christ has gone before; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.

First Litany of Praise: Chant: Alleluia

O God, you are Great!  Alleluia
O God, you have made us! Alleluia
O God, you have made yourself known to us!  Alleluia
O God, you have provided us with us a Savior!  Alleluia
O God, you have given us a Christian family!  Alleluia
O God, you have forgiven our sins!  Alleluia
O God, you brought your Son Jesus back from the dead!  Alleluia

A reading from the Revelation to John

And let everyone who hears say, "Come."  And let everyone who is thirsty come.  Let anyone who wishes take the water of life as a gift. The one who testifies to these things says, "Surely I am coming soon."  Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!  The grace of the Lord Jesus be with all the saints. Amen.

Liturgist: The Word of the Lord
People: Thanks be to God


Liturgist: Let us read together from Psalm 97

The LORD is King; let the earth rejoice; * let the multitude of the isles be glad.
The heavens declare his righteousness, * and all the peoples see his glory.
Rejoice in the LORD, you righteous, * and give thanks to his holy Name.

Litany Phrase: Thanks be to God! (chanted)

Litanist:
For the good earth, for our food and clothing. Thanks be to God!
For our families and friends. Thanks be to God!
For the talents and gifts that you have given to us. Thanks be to God!
For this day of worship. Thanks be to God!
For health and for a good night’s sleep. Thanks be to God!
For work and for play. Thanks be to God!
For teaching and for learning. Thanks be to God!
For the happy events of our lives. Thanks be to God!
For the celebration of the birthdays and anniversaries of our friends and parish family.
   Thanks be to God!


Liturgist:         The Holy Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ according to John
People:            Glory to you, Lord Christ.

Jesus prayed for his disciples, and then he said. "I ask not only on behalf of these, but also on behalf of those who will believe in me through their word, that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me. The glory that you have given me I have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me. Father, I desire that those also, whom you have given me, may be with me where I am, to see my glory, which you have given me because you loved me before the foundation of the world.  "Righteous Father, the world does not know you, but I know you; and these know that you have sent me. I made your name known to them, and I will make it known, so that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in them."

Liturgist:         The Gospel of the Lord.
People:            Praise to you, Lord Christ.

Sermon – Father Phil

Children’s Creed
We did not make ourselves, so we believe that God the Father is the maker of the world.
Since God is so great and we are so small,
We believe God came into our world and was born as Jesus, son of the Virgin Mary.
We need God’s help and we believe that God saved us by the life, death and
     resurrection of Jesus Christ.
We believe that God is present with us now as the Holy Spirit.
We believe that we are baptized into God’s family the Church where everyone is
     welcome.
We believe that Christ is kind and fair.
We believe that we have a future in knowing Jesus Christ.
And since we all must die, we believe that God will preserve us forever.  Amen.


Litany Phrase: Christ, have mercy.

For fighting and war to cease in our world. Christ, have mercy.
For peace on earth and good will towards all. Christ, have mercy.
For the safety of all who travel. Christ, have mercy.
For jobs for all who need them. Christ, have mercy.
For care of those who are growing old. Christ, have mercy.
For the safety, health and nutrition of all the children in our world. Christ, have mercy.
For the well-being of our families and friends. Christ, have mercy.
For the good health of those we know to be ill. Christ, have mercy.
For the remembrance of those who have died. Christ, have mercy.
For the forgiveness of all of our sins. Christ, have mercy.

Youth Liturgist:          The Peace of the Lord be always with you.
People:                        And also with you.

Song during the preparation of the Altar and the receiving of an offering

Offertory Song: Seek Ye First, (Blue Hymnal, # 711)
Seek ye first the kingdom of God and its righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you Allelu, alleluia.  Refrain: Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, allelu, alleluia.
Ask, and it shall be given unto you, seek, and ye shall find.  Knock and the door will be opened unto you; allelu, alleluia.  Refrain: Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, allelu, alleluia.
Doxology
Praise God from whom all blessings flow. Praise Him, all creatures here below.
Praise Him above, ye heavenly host. Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.

Prologue to the Eucharist
Jesus said, “Let the children come to me, for to them belong the kingdom of heaven.”
All become members of a family by birth or adoption.
Baptism is a celebration of birth into the family of God.
A family meal gathers and sustains each human family.
The Holy Eucharist is the special meal that Jesus gave to his friends to keep us together as the family of Christ.

The Lord be with you
And also with you.

Lift up your hearts
We lift them to the Lord.

Let us give thanks to God.
It is right to give God thanks and praise.

It is very good and right to give thanks, because God made us, Jesus redeemed us and the Holy Spirit dwells in our hearts.  Therefore with Angels and Archangels and all of the world that we see and don’t see, we forever sing this hymn of praise:

Holy, Holy, Holy (Intoned)
Holy, Holy, Holy Lord, God of Power and Might.  Heav’n and earth are full of your glory.
Hosanna in the highest.  Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord. 
Hosanna in the highest. Hosanna in the Highest.

(All may gather around the altar)

Our grateful praise we offer to you God, our Creator;
You have made us in your image
And you gave us many men and women of faith to help us to live by faith:
Adam and Eve, Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, Jacob and Rachael.
And then you gave us your Son, Jesus, born of Mary, nurtured by Joseph
And he called us to be sons and daughters of God.
Your Son called us to live better lives and he gave us this Holy Meal so that when we eat
  the bread and drink the wine, we can  know that the Presence of Christ is as near to us as  
  this food and drink  that becomes a part of us.

And so, Father, we bring you these gifts of bread and wine. Bless and sanctify them by your Holy Spirit to be for your people the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ our Lord.  Sanctify us by your Holy Spirit that we may love God and our neighbor.

On the night when Jesus was betrayed he took bread, said the blessing, broke the bread, and gave it to his friends, and said, "Take, eat: This is my Body, which is given for you. Do this for the remembrance of me."

After supper, Jesus took the cup of wine, gave thanks, and said, "Drink this, all of you. This is my Blood of the new Covenant, which is shed for you and for many for the forgiveness of sins. Whenever you drink it, do this for the remembrance of me."

Father, we now celebrate the memorial of your Son. When we eat this holy Meal of Bread and Wine, we are telling the entire world about the life, death and resurrection of Christ and that his presence will be with us in our future.

Let this holy meal keep us together as friends who share a special relationship because of your Son Jesus Christ.  May we forever live with praise to God to whom we belong as sons and daughters.

By Christ, and with Christ, and in Christ, in the unity of the Holy Spirit all honor and glory is yours, Almighty Father, now and for ever. AMEN.

And now as our Savior Christ has taught us, we now sing,
(Children rejoin their parents and take up their instruments) 

Our Father: (Renew # 180, West Indian Lord’s Prayer)
Our Father who art in heaven:  Hallowed be thy name.
Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will be done: Hallowed be thy name.

Done on earth as it is in heaven: Hallowed be thy name.
Give us this day our daily bread: Hallowed be thy name.

And forgive us all our debts: Hallowed be thy name.
As we forgive our debtors: Hallowed be thy name.

Lead us not into temptation: Hallowed be thy name.
But deliver us from evil: Hallowed be thy name.

Thine is the kingdom, power, and glory: Hallowed be thy name.
Forever and ever: Hallowed be thy name.

Amen, amen, amen: Hallowed be thy name.
Amen, amen, amen, amen: Hallowed be thy name.

Breaking of the Bread
Celebrant:       Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us.
People:            Therefore let us keep the feast. 

Words of Administration

Communion Song: Come, My Way (Blue Hymnal, # 487)
Come my way, my truth, my life: such a way as gives us breath; such a truth as ends all strife; such a life as killeth death.
Come, my light, my feast, my strength: such a light as shows a feat; such a feast as mends in length; such a strength as makes his guest.
Come, my joy, my love, my heart: such a joy as none can move; such a love as none can part; such a heart as joys in love.


Post-Communion Prayer
Everlasting God, we have gathered for the meal that Jesus asked us to keep;
We have remembered his words of blessing on the bread and the wine.
And His Presence has been known to us.
We have remembered that we are sons and daughters of God and brothers
    and sisters in Christ.
Send us forth now into our everyday lives remembering that the blessing in the
     bread and wine spreads into each time, place and person in our lives,
As we are ever blessed by you, O Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Closing Song: Sing A New Song (Renew!  # 21)
Refrain: Sing a new song unto the Lord; let your son be sung from mountains high.  Sing a new song unto the Lord, singing Alleluia.
1-Yahweh’s people dance for joy; O come before the Lord.  And play for him on glad tambourines, and let your trumpet sound.  Refrain
2-Rise, O children, from your sleep; your Savior now has come.  He has turned your sorrow to joy, and filled your soul with song.  Refrain
3-Glad my soul for I have seen the glory of the Lord.  The trumpet sounds; the dead shall be raised.  I know my Savior lives.

Dismissal:   
Liturgist: Alleluia!  Alleluia!  Let us go forth in the Name of Christ.
People: Thanks be to God!  Alleluia!  Alleluia!



Sunday, May 12, 2013

Prayer as Meaningful Discourse


7 Easter    C     May 12, 2013
Acts 16:16-34 Psalm 97
Revelation 22:12-14,16-17,20-21    John 17:20-26            

   If one says that something is true if and only if something can be empirically verified then this is a denial of lots of things that occur which are meaningful for us.  One can understand why people would want to put such a limitation upon truth.  It is an effort to control and certify meaning so that communication can be precise.  It is an attempt to bring the replication ability of the scientific method into all human use of language.  But really why would we want to do this even if we could?  If this were all that we aspired to in language then we might as well be happy that robots could take over, but human language gets colored in many more diverse ways in the fullness of human experience.  Moods, emotions, dreams, love, fantasies, music, intuitions and much, much more enter into our use of words and we are in fact complex language users with subtle upon subtle use of various discourses that arise from the endless variety of human experiences.  For us to limit meaningful truth to only what can be verified by scientific method would be a serious denial of what words do to communicate the fullness of human experience.
  Today’s Gospel is another reading from John’s Gospel on the Sunday after the Ascension.  And really all of the Gospels are post-Ascension word art that pertain the experience of knowing Christ in his resurrection.
  The events of the past are never empirical because as we relate the words about them, they are no longer here.  And everything before our eyes is rapidly becoming the immediate past tense much as looking at a river and assuming one is looking at the same water; oops, the water I was staring at has already gone downstream, the current flowing water only looks like what has already flowed past.
  And so we have recounted a prayer of Jesus, a prayer that Jesus would have said as it was shared by some people who believed that they knew Jesus rather well.
  John’s Gospel as I say endlessly is a confession about Word.  I find it very conducive to our postmodern period when we have begun to recognize the most obvious insight of all, namely, that words mediate every human experience.  Word accounts for the nano-second time delay between experience of something and the word that constitute our experience of something.
  The old insight was that things exist independently and before words rather than co-extensively and at the same time with people word-users.  Now we understand that things exist for us as humans because we use words.
  Let us try to force the prayer of Jesus into empirical only word use.  Jesus is praying?  Empirically it looks as though he would just be speaking to himself.  Or is he praying out loud so that his disciples taking dictation can record the words and then spend 2000 years trying to interpret a theology from the words of prayer by Jesus?
  Okay, by the content of the prayer of Jesus, Jesus is not just speaking to himself; he is speaking to a Being whom is addressed as Father.  And like Philip is quoted in the same Gospel as a preeminent doubter, we might ask Jesus, “Show us the Father and we’ll be satisfied.”  This is another way of saying, “Jesus, use language in only empirical ways and we will be happy.  Keep it simple.  Don’t go all poetic on us and refer to people and things that we cannot see.  Jesus, where is your Daddy to whom you are speaking?” 
 And of course Jesus had already answered, “If you have seen me, then you have seen the Father.”
  And this answer raises all kinds of questions for empiricists and monotheists.  An empiricist wants to say, “So Jesus you are Jesus and you are also Father and if you are Father, we assume that within your skin is the God the Father.”  So is not this an incredible limitation on where God could be? 
And if one is a radical monotheist, one believing that God could not be identified with anything in human experience since that would make God something empirical and thus limited and thus an idol.
  And of course we know the solution offered by the writer of the Gospel of John.  God is Word who is flesh in Jesus and Jesus gave us the model of how we are functioning, living and having our being in the reflexive play of words because the entirety of human life is constituted by a continuous performance of words about former words.  John’s Gospel is about how we find ourselves in the variations of how we know ourselves and our world in and through the word.
  Do you see how reflexive word is?  By word I say that I have human experience and then I turn around and say that it is human experience to use words.  We are caught in total circular word reflexivity and I think the acknowledgement of this is the great secret of the Gospel of John.
  Word is monumental; by word we attain the type of poetic oneness that Jesus was speaking about in his Prayer.  By word Jesus can say that he is in the Father and the Father is in him.  By word Jesus can ask that his disciples and all of the future disciples might be in the Father and in him.  But do you see how if one is a literalist about words and deny the explosive poetic meanings of word, how limiting this would be on Jesus as a user of language and upon us who desire to have the manifold expansive types of human experience that draw from us all many kinds of word use?
  So Jesus prayed that his disciples would be one and all in the future would be one.  And one wonder if it isn’t like a desperate request of mother about her children, “Can’t you all just get along?”
   The writer of John’s was well aware that there was a world outside of the writer’s community who did not understand his community and their language and their confession of a relationship with a risen Christ.  I believe that he was accounting for different language identity communities, something of what we call today a paradigm.  Why do bird of feather flock together?  Because they share a “paradigm” of word use that have them to believe that they are unified.  This happens in science, in politics, nationalism, in sports or any time there is a group identity.  What is it that gives group oneness or cohesion to a community?  It is an interior practice of a sense of agreement about how words unify around what is regarded to be a common experience.  The writer of John is very much aware about the unity that can come because of words.  Through words we get the closest to one another as is humanly possible.  The closest literal physical union between two people is in their child, but they lose their person identity because a new person comes into an independent existence.  So the way that people become closest is in the exchange of words; words go deeply into that mingling processing center within us and then goes throughout our entire being in becoming flesh in the action and presentation of our lives.  John truly understands the significance of Word and its vital comprehension of our lives.
  And if word is so vast as to encompass many discursive practices, can we admit that the discourse that we call prayer is a discourse that has a long history of practice in the history of humanity?  Prayer one of the best ways we can be involved with other people.  Sometimes it is better for us to express our thoughts about someone else to God rather than directly to the person.  Prayer is to practice a relationship with a person as preparation to actual interaction.
  Today is a day when we celebrate probably the most significant prayer force in the world, the prayer force of mothers.  Don’t mess with mother’s prayers, amongst other things.  The prayers of mothers are like long reaching tentacles that surround their children wherever they go.  The prayers are so pervasive probably most children ask first in all that they do, “What would Mom do or what if Mom is watching?”
   Let us remember today to accept the expansive use of word; let us not limit meaningful language to only what we can verify with our eyes.  Let us accept the discourse of prayer and accept that Jesus prayed and we should too as a way of acknowledging our visible and invisible connection with all things and everyone.  And because we have specific location within the group of people to whom we've been called let us pray for one another as we mobilize our desire for the mutual well-being of each other.
  And let us not get too theological and scientific about God and try to figure out God as Father and Son as theological doctrine.  Let us accept the example that Jesus called his inner guide, his Father and he invites us to this identity with our inner Guide and Parent whom we know as God.  And let us confess that we never want to be separated from God at all and so we can say like Jesus, if you have seen us you can see God as the originator of all life.  Amen.

Prayers for Easter, 2024

Friday in 5 Easter, May 3, 2024 Jesus Christ, Friend of humanity, let friendship come to the people who need it the most today and in the fo...