Showing posts with label Easter Vigil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Easter Vigil. Show all posts

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Latest Stage in the Easter Relay Race

Easter Vigil      April 8, 2023
Ex.14:10 Canticle 8, Ez 36:24-28 Psalm 42:1-7
Rom.6:3-11 Luke 24:1-12

Lectionary Link

I would like to use the metaphor of a relay race tonight with a variation.   A relay race consists of runners who run a prescribed distance and then pass off the baton to another runner until the race is complete.  But for the Easter relay race, I would propose that our history includes many prior runners who have handed the baton of the Easter tradition to us and we tonight hand the baton of tradition to the next persons to are to run the next stage.

Tonight in the Easter Vigil, we are those in the current and latest stage of the tradition of Salvation history which has been handed to us throughout the generations.

We commemorate some of the various stages of Salvation History by reading the many Scriptural lessons and Psalms, and by praying the Collects or prayers of the Easter Vigil.

These writings came from people in the ancient past, who have been given insights about the meaning of God and salvation.  They were written down to share continuously.  As inheritors of these writings, we read them again and promulgate them into the future.

These are the great stories which provide us with our salvation identity.  They beginning by positing a Divine Being who uses language to speak into creation everything that has come into being, thus bearing the insight that creation and word happen together.

Word gives identity and being to what we know to be.  The word was to inhabit our bodies as body language in how we were to conduct ourselves.

Our great salvation story lets us know about our perpetual failure to conduct ourselves in the best possible way, in the ways of love and justice.

Our great salvation story provide us with the messages of continual education and correction that have arisen to show us how to amend our lives in the direction of excellence.

The salvation story came to us through the Hebrew people and has been known through their textual tradition.  They were to understand themselves as a paradigmatic people who would live so well as an example to all people that they would by a sort of  moral osmosis influence the rest of the people of the world.  The task of their being an exemplary people was too much to require of them and among the many unfriendly nations they came to suffer many setbacks, even slavery, occupation, and exile.

And yet even with such setback, the story of deliverance and salvation was made evident even as it has always been evident that salvation is never finished, but always ongoing and progressive.

In our salvation story, it has fallen to Jesus Christ to offer a program of direct access to the love of God.  But the profound selfishness of humanity was not ready for the profound love of God which Jesus came to bring.

Jesus has brought to salvation history a universal appeal; he could not be limited to a particular time or particular people.

When Jesus loved profoundly, he threatened people who did not want love and preference to be so widely shared.  And so he was killed when people thought that profound goodness and love could be stopped or limited.

And we again embrace our leg of the relay race tonight.  We come to receive again the message of Jesus living again after his death.  We come to testify that goodness and love cannot be ended by death.

And tonight we accept our next leg of the Easter race into the future.  In hope we proclaim that love cannot die and that it will out live us in this world, and embrace us freshly when we die.

Let us with thanksgiving receive the sacred tradition of hope that has been passed on to us tonight.  Let us pass on this tradition through baptism, healing, teaching, and loving care.  Let us tonight be conduits for the Easter message being passed on into the future.

Tonight we make the hopeful shout into the never-ending future: "Alleluia, Christ is Risen!  The Lord is Risen Indeed!  Alleluia!"  Amen.

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Easter Vigil Liturgy of the Word with Comments


The Great Vigil of Easter



Following the blessing of the new fire, the lighting of the Paschal Candle and the chanting of the Exsultet, members are invited to a reading of Salvation History with responses from Canticles and Psalms followed by the corresponding Collect.

The Liturgy of the Word


The Celebrant may introduce the Scripture readings in these or similar words

Let us hear the record of God's saving deeds in history, how he saved his people in ages past; and let us pray that our God will bring each of us to the fullness of redemption.

I will read two of the lessons including the requisite lesson from Exodus.  On the others, I will provide, a “CliffsNote” abstract of the lesson and the response.  I would like for us through Easter to focus on “Receiving an identity,” which culminates in “We are an Easter People and Alleluia is our song.”



Link for all the Vigil Readings:



The story of Creation


Genesis 1:1-2:2

The creation story establishes human identity.  We are made in the “image” of God and therefore made to live up to that image.  Image=icon.  We are God’s icons.  In the world of freedom we are “tricked” by our underdeveloped state into knowing good and evil in the wrong way.  We discover that as people alienated from our “image” we can only live as imperfect beings in an imperfect world, but still a very, very God-created good world.  Evicted from Eden and alienated from our true identity as God’s children, we look for “salvation,” or a path to return to the original blessing of God’s image upon us.



Psalm 33:1-11, or Psalm 36:5-10

Psalm 33 is a Psalm which expresses rejoicing in God as the creator of the world

Psalm 36, is about God’s love, righteousness and faithfulness.  And since Light was first act of creation, the Psalmist says about God, ”In your light, we see light.”



In the Collect, we asked to be restored in our intended image and dignity.


Let us pray. (Silence)

O God, who wonderfully created, and yet more wonderfully restored, the dignity of human nature: Grant that we may share the divine life of him who humbled himself to share our humanity, your Son Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.





The Flood

Genesis 7:1-5,11-18; 8:8-18; 9:8-13


The Story of Noah’s Ark presents the sense of God personally acting in the events of nature.  Nature is treated as being in symbiotic relationship with God, except God’s can’t get humanity to comply because of the willful freedom of humanity to forsake the sacred image upon their lives.  The results are disastrous and so God is presented as One who does not give up, but rather, who starts over with a remnant on the Ark.  Noah, his family and pairs of animals, are destined to survive a worldwide flood.  It ends with a rainbow as a promise that God will not destroy the world with such events. (This can be understood as the wisdom of the writer discerning not to accept the freedom of events of nature as direct "acts of God.")  In Christian symbols, the waters of the flood are presented as dying with Christ in being immersed in the waters of baptism.  The rainbow is the promise that the waters of death are not God intended and will not destroy us.


Psalm 46

Psalm 46 is about how God is our refuge (like the Ark) in the storms and tumults of life. 



The Collect picks up the baptismal theme.  Please note how the Vigil indicates how we have Christianized the Hebrew Scriptures, which have a different presentation in synagogues today.



The “Rainbow” Collect is about it being a sign of God’s covenant not to destroy humanity and how we live under the covenant of water baptism.



Let us pray. (Silence)

Almighty God, you have placed in the skies the sign of your covenant with all living things: Grant that we, who are saved through water and the Spirit, may worthily offer to you our sacrifice of thanksgiving; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Abraham's sacrifice of Isaac


Genesis 22:1-18

Abraham and Sarah had a marvelous birth of an only son, Isaac, the promised heir to continue the line of Abrahamic people.  But God told Abraham in secret to sacrifice his only son away from home in the land of Moriah. (Probably if he had told Sarah, she would have prevented him and thought him crazy).  Kierkegaard called the time of the call to Abraham to sacrifice his son, the “teleological suspension of the ethical.”  Abraham had to abandon the ethical “thou shalt not kill,” and trust God for another kind of “telos” or end.  Kierkegaard called this suspension, a “leap of faith,” and in that obedient leap he discovered that God provided the ram to sacrifice in place of Isaac.  In terms of human anthropology, one could look at this event as wisdom writers understanding that God did not require human sacrifice.  The age of human sacrifice was replaced with an age of animal sacrifices, which is diagnostic of how people regarded what God required.


Certainly, Christians, borrowed the sacrifice of only son Isaac, in understanding how God the Father was seen as being in the  role of Abraham in offering his only Son to death.  And in the case of Jesus, there was no substitute for him being the Perfect Offering.  It should be an evolution in human understanding that the God does not require bloody sacrifices because to assume God needed such would be to diminish divine perfection.



Psalm 33:12-22, or Psalm 16

Psalms 33 including waiting on God for his loving kindness to be known.  Abraham waited on the Lord even as he obeyed.



Psalm 16: “For you will not abandon me to the grave,  nor let your holy one see the Pit. You will show me the path of life;”  This turned out to be true in Isaac’s rescue from death.





Abrahamic Collect

The Paschal Sacrament can be baptism and Eucharist coming to the newly baptized and to all people of the world who are invited to partake.



Let us pray. (Silence)

God and Father of all believers, for the glory of your Name multiply, by the grace of the Paschal sacrament, the number of your children; that your Church may rejoice to see fulfilled your promise to our father Abraham; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.



Israel's deliverance at the Red Sea
The Hebrew Scriptures present the selection of the Abrahamic line as being chosen as exemplars in the world to show the rest of the world how God’s image on humanity was supposed to be lived out.  Israel was to exemplify God’s grace of selection.  How was this shown?  By giving them examples of his power acting on their behalf in very threatening times.  God’s exemplifying deeds were to give Israel a reason to believe, and the rest the peoples of the world, a reason to respect the God of Israel.



The escape from the Pharaoh of Egypt and the parting of the Red Sea is a Root Story event in the identity of the people of Israel.  In the regular recounting of this event of deliverance, especially at Passover time, the people are renewed in their identity as God’s people and renewed in the dynamic remembering of the power of God's deliverance.  If God did it then, then we too can access that power as we remember it afresh in our time.  The followers of Jesus Christianized the waters of the Red Sea as the baptismal path through probable death, but surviving.





Exodus 14:10-15:1

As Pharaoh drew near, the Israelites looked back, and there were the Egyptians advancing on them. In great fear the Israelites cried out to the Lord. They said to Moses, "Was it because there were no graves in Egypt that you have taken us away to die in the wilderness? What have you done to us, bringing us out of Egypt? Is this not the very thing we told you in Egypt, 'Let us alone and let us serve the Egyptians'? For it would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the wilderness." But Moses said to the people, "Do not be afraid, stand firm, and see the deliverance that the Lord will accomplish for you today; for the Egyptians whom you see today you shall never see again. The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to keep still."

Then the Lord said to Moses, "Why do you cry out to me? Tell the Israelites to go forward. But you lift up your staff, and stretch out your hand over the sea and divide it, that the Israelites may go into the sea on dry ground. Then I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians so that they will go in after them; and so I will gain glory for myself over Pharaoh and all his army, his chariots, and his chariot drivers. And the Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord, when I have gained glory for myself over Pharaoh, his chariots, and his chariot drivers."

The angel of God who was going before the Israelite army moved and went behind them; and the pillar of cloud moved from in front of them and took its place behind them. It came between the army of Egypt and the army of Israel. And so the cloud was there with the darkness, and it lit up the night; one did not come near the other all night.

Then Moses stretched out his hand over the sea. The Lord drove the sea back by a strong east wind all night, and turned the sea into dry land; and the waters were divided. The Israelites went into the sea on dry ground, the waters forming a wall for them on their right and on their left. The Egyptians pursued, and went into the sea after them, all of Pharaoh's horses, chariots, and chariot drivers. At the morning watch the Lord in the pillar of fire and cloud looked down upon the Egyptian army, and threw the Egyptian army into panic. He clogged their chariot wheels so that they turned with difficulty. The Egyptians said, "Let us flee from the Israelites, for the Lord is fighting for them against Egypt."

Then the Lord said to Moses, "Stretch out your hand over the sea, so that the water may come back upon the Egyptians, upon their chariots and chariot drivers." So Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and at dawn the sea returned to its normal depth. As the Egyptians fled before it, the Lord tossed the Egyptians into the sea. The waters returned and covered the chariots and the chariot drivers, the entire army of Pharaoh that had followed them into the sea; not one of them remained. But the Israelites walked on dry ground through the sea, the waters forming a wall for them on their right and on their left.

Thus the Lord saved Israel that day from the Egyptians; and Israel saw the Egyptians dead on the seashore. Israel saw the great work that the Lord did against the Egyptians. So the people feared the Lord and believed in the Lord and in his servant Moses.

Then the prophet Miriam, Aaron's sister, took a tambourine in her hand; and all the women went out after her with tambourines and with dancing. And Miriam sang to them:

"Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously;

horse and rider he has thrown into the sea."



Interesting that the ecstatic song of Miriam gets entitled the “Song of Moses.”


Canticle 8, The Song of Moses

 Cantemus Domino

Exodus 15:1-6, 11-13, 17-18



Especially suitable for use in Easter Season

I will sing to the Lord, for he is lofty and uplifted; * the horse and its rider has he hurled into the sea.

The Lord is my strength and my refuge; *

 the Lord has become my Savior.

This is my God and I will praise him, *

 the God of my people and I will exalt him.

The Lord is a mighty warrior; * Yahweh is his Name.

The chariots of Pharaoh and his army has he hurled into the sea; * the finest of those who bear armor have been drowned in the Red Sea.

The fathomless deep has overwhelmed them; *

 they sank into the depths like a stone.

Your right hand, O Lord, is glorious in might; *

 your right hand, O Lord, has overthrown the enemy.

Who can be compared with you, O Lord, among the gods? * who is like you, glorious in holiness, awesome in renown, and worker of wonders?

You stretched forth your right hand; * the earth swallowed them up.

With your constant love you led the people you redeemed; * with your might you brought them in safety to  your holy dwelling.

You will bring them in and plant them *

 on the mount of your possession,

The resting-place you have made for yourself, O Lord, * the sanctuary, O Lord, that your hand has established.

The Lord shall reign * for ever and for ever.

Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit: * as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be forever.  Amen.



The Red Sea Collect, Christianizes the Red Sea Waters as a Sign of Baptism.  Remember one of the key event of the Vigil is Baptism, so the baptismal theme is pronounced in all of the lessons and teaching.



Let us pray. (Silence) 


O God, whose wonderful deeds of old shine forth even to our own day, you once delivered by the power of your mighty arm your chosen people from slavery under Pharaoh, to be a sign for us of the salvation of all nations by the water of Baptism: Grant that all the peoples of the earth may be numbered among the offspring of Abraham, and rejoice in the inheritance of Israel; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.



God's Presence in a renewed Israel 


The prophet Isaiah is a Utopian, envisioning ideal worlds, especially for the people of Israel who have known continuously bad times with the division into two kingdoms and threats from invading conquerors.  The vision of renewal was obviously an analgesic to people in suffering and pain.  The utopian vision, “though it means “no such place,” gives the ideal direction in a world of freedom where good and evil happening co-exist.  The image of God upon our lives include hope, not to taunt us, but to witness to the direction of perfection.  Don’t mock utopian vision or hope.  Hope provides the positive direction of our lives.



Isaiah 4:2-6



Psalm 122

Psalm 122 presents Jerusalem as the ideal city of peace where unity resides.  We are to pray for the peace of Jerusalem, not because God doesn’t love the other cities on the earth, but Jerusalem stands as the ideal city of humanity all living in peace.  This Psalm is coupled with the utopian vision of the prophet Isaiah.



Cloud and Pillar Collect


The cloud and pillar were “markers” of God’s apparent presence to God’s people.  We live toward moments when God’s Presence is apparent and the utopian visions are visions of that hope for the totally Apparency of God, when indeed tears will be wiped away.



Let us pray. (Silence)


O God, you led your ancient people by a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night: Grant that we, who serve you now on earth, may come to the joy of that heavenly Jerusalem, where all tears are wiped away and where your saints for ever sing your praise; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.



Salvation offered freely to all


Christian faith was born from understanding of universal or catholic salvation offered to everyone.  This means beyond those who were adherents of Judaism and inhabitants of Israel.  Israel as God’s people were to be the “leavening agent” of salvation for all of the people of the world, but in the reality of conflict and the fear of assimilating into the practices of their neighbor of being assimilated by them, it was difficult for Israel or any people to fulfill that role of being the leavening agent of salvation offered to everyone.  Early Christian readers of the Hebrew Scriptures jumped on the themes of “universal” salvation that they found in the prophets.



Isaiah 55:1-11



Canticle 9, The First Song of Isaiah, or

In this Canticle from Isaiah the universal theme is expressed directly:  Make his deeds known among the peoples;  see that they remember that his Name is exalted. (peoples would mean more than Israel).


Psalm 42:1-7

In this Psalm: The image of God on each person means that the soul is athirst for the living God.  "As the deer pants for the water, my soul longs after Thee."



Collect of Renewal


In this Collect both water and Spirit are used in a way that is explicit in the discourse of Jesus with woman at the well, in John 4.



Let us pray. (Silence)


O God, you have created all things by the power of your Word, and you renew the earth by your Spirit: Give now the water of life to those who thirst for you, that they may bring forth abundant fruit in your glorious kingdom; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


A new heart and a new spirit



In Ezekiel, the prophet sees a time when God become accessible to everyone.  Obviously with the destruction of the Temple and people carried into exile, how could “God identity” and “Torah identity” be maintained when not in one’s land or having a Temple to go to?  God was to be portable into the human temple.  I will give you a new heart and a new spirit.

Certainly, the post-Pentecostal church relied upon this understand of what was happening in the experience of the Holy Spirit.


Ezekiel 36:24-28


Psalm 42:1-7, or Canticle 9, The First Song of Isaiah (see above)

Let us pray. (Silence)



Reconciliation Collect


In this collect, there is a petition for us to live lives congruent with the faith we confess, because we have been given access to this new covenant which provided us with a new heart and new spirit.


Let us pray. (Silence)



Almighty and everlasting God, who in the Paschal mystery established the new covenant of reconciliation: Grant that all who are reborn into the fellowship of Christ's Body may show forth in their lives what they profess by their faith; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.



The valley of dry bones


This is the portion about “dem dry bones” of Ezekiel.  A question during the time of Jesus among religious parties was about the resurrection from the dead.  The Pharisees believed in it; the Sadducees did not because they did not think they could find reference to such in the Torah.  The Pharisees and others believed that beliefs could be established with reference to the other Hebrew Scripture writings and not just limited to the Torah.  The dry bones passage of Ezekiel is one such “resurrection” passage from the Hebrew Scriptures.  Obviously hope dwells in people who experience great disappointment and great injustice.  How can a just God be believed in when the hope of justice is not realized?  Well, God has a way of putting flesh back on the bones, a sort of reverse aging, but you get to keep all the wisdom gained from aging.  The Spirit is able to breathe new life and reconstitute a person and a people so that they can know their own continuity into the future in some way.  St. Paul referred to the Holy Spirit as the assurance or down payment of the resurrection.



Ezekiel 37:1-14


The hand of the Lord came upon me, and he brought me out by the spirit of the Lord and set me down in the middle of a valley; it was full of bones. He led me all around them; there were very many lying in the valley, and they were very dry. He said to me, "Mortal, can these bones live?" I answered, "O Lord God, you know." Then he said to me, "Prophesy to these bones, and say to them: O dry bones, hear the word of the Lord. Thus says the Lord God to these bones: I will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live. I will lay sinews on you, and will cause flesh to come upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and you shall live; and you shall know that I am the Lord."


So I prophesied as I had been commanded; and as I prophesied, suddenly there was a noise, a rattling, and the bones came together, bone to its bone. I looked, and there were sinews on them, and flesh had come upon them, and skin had covered them; but there was no breath in them. Then he said to me, "Prophesy to the breath, prophesy, mortal, and say to the breath: Thus says the Lord God: Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live." I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood on their feet, a vast multitude.

Then he said to me, "Mortal, these bones are the whole house of Israel. They say, 'Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are cut off completely.' Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus says the Lord God: I am going to open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people; and I will bring you back to the land of Israel. And you shall know that I am the Lord, when I open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people. I will put my spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will place you on your own soil; then you shall know that I, the Lord, have spoken and will act," says the Lord.



Psalm 30, or Psalm 143


In Psalm 30, the Psalmist says, “You brought me up, O LORD, from the dead;  you restored my life as I was going down to the grave.”  One can see how these words were appropriated by Christian resurrectionists.


Psalm 143 includes a request for personal revival: "Revive me, O LORD, for your Name's sake;  for your righteousness' sake, bring me out of trouble."



Sealed by Spirit Collect


This collect refers to the “Passover” of Jesus from death to life, and in the waters of baptism we ritually go into the water of death and are raised from the water by resurrection in identity with the “Passover” of Christ.  And we received our Christian Brand on our forehead:  “You are sealed by the Holy Spirit in baptism and marked as Christ’s own forever.”



Let us pray. (Silence)


Almighty God, by the Passover of your Son you have brought us out of sin into righteousness and out of death into life: Grant to those who are sealed by your Holy Spirit the will and the power to proclaim you to all the world; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.



The gathering of God's people



The prophet Zephaniah is like Isaiah, a utopian, and envisions a rescue and a return of all the people of God to their homes.  When the people of Israel could not have their own freedom in their own land, they still had the identity of hope.  And the prophet Zephaniah feeds the reality of hope with a narrative utopian vision.  Obvious, everyone wants to be “home;” home as the very best place to be, a place of familiarity, safety and comfort.  St. Paul, was not sure about comfort in earthly places or home, and he as a utopian said that we were citizens of heaven.  This is true even as we ask that God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven.


Zephaniah 3:12-20


Psalm 98, or Psalm 126

In Psalm 98, the poet anthropomorphizes nature and has nature shouting and praising God for what he has done for his people.


Psalm 126 is about restoring the fortunes of Zion and seems to be written in the captivity of exile away from home.  But in exile, the identity with the home place of Zion formed the identity of many people who never did see Jerusalem.  Zion and the Hope of Zion seem to be the same for the Psalmist poet.



The Plan of Salvation Collect


In this prayer we understand the church as God’s providence in furthering a plan of salvation for the whole world to see.  It is a collect of admitting that we are not yet finished in the quest of perfection.


Let us pray. (Silence)


O God of unchangeable power and eternal light: Look favorably on your whole Church, that wonderful and sacred mystery; by the effectual working of your providence, carry out in tranquillity the plan of salvation: let the whole world see and know that things which were cast down are being raised up, and things which had grown old are being made new, and that all things are being brought to their perfection by him through whom all things were made, your Son Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.



The Vigil ends here.  We will begin our Easter liturgy with the Renewal of our Baptismal Vows and complete our Vigil with our Easter Eucharistic liturgy. 




Sunday, April 16, 2017

Hope Is the DNA of God's Image on Us

Easter Vigil         April 15, 2017
Ex.14:10 Canticle 8, Ez  36:24-28 Psalm 42:1-7
Rom.6:3-11         Luke 24:1-12
Lectionary Link

Tonight I welcome you to a celebration of hope.  Hope is a wonderful feeling.  Hope is the wonderful feeling that we will always have a future.

The Bible tells us that we have been made in God's image.  And one of the ways in which we are made like God, is that we have hope within us.

But sometimes life can be very difficult and hard.  We can become sad because we can know the loss of people in our lives.  And when life become difficult, we need to remember that first of all we are made with Hope.  And so we have to keep stirring up hope within us.

How do we keep hope alive?

We remember light.  Tonight we lit the new candle, the Paschal candle and we shouted that Christ is the light of the world.  As long as we have light we know that we keep hope alive.  Even though at night it can be darkness, we can still light candles and turn on the light to know that hope is light and is our life.

We keep hope alive by hearing the stories of how people who came before us received God help and hope.  We remember Adam, Eve, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, David, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, Elijah, Elisha and many more.  By hearing the stories of hope in the past we can be encouraged that hope will still be with us in our lives.  Grandfathers and grandmothers and moms and dad can tell you their stories of hope too.

We keep hope alive tonight, by passing the life of hope on to new people.  When we baptize people we are giving them our very best message of hope.  We are telling them that God loves them, God forgives them, God gives them gifts to share with this world to make it a better place, and God will preserve their lives forever, even after they leave this world.

We keep hope alive by having our first Easter Feast to remember how God showed us that we can be hopeful.  The Easter feast is our family meal.  In this Easter feast we celebrate our hope because Christ promised to be with us even after he left this earth.  Christ promised to be with us when we gathered to celebrate his resurrection.

Finally, we have hope because Jesus came back to life after he died.  And he showed us that God will preserve our lives in a special way after we die too.  And what that mean?  It means we don't have to live with fear.  It means we can live with hope because we know that we will always have a future.

And don't you agree with me that this is wonderful?

So we make our happy shout tonight:  Alleluia Christ is Risen.  The Lord is Risen Indeed.  Alleluia!
Amen.

Called to be Prevenient Grace

Easter Vigil         April 15, 2017
Ex.14:10 Canticle 8, Ez  36:24-28 Psalm 42:1-7
Rom.6:3-11         Luke 24:1-12

Lectionary Link
Why do we baptize infants and children who don't have the ability to choose to be baptized?  We do so because we are confident that God always chooses us and is more graceful to us before we know and appreciate the wonderful gift.

The fancy name for the grace that God gives us before we choose it is "prevenient grace."  It is the grace that we have before we understand or choose it.

But how does this unchosen grace work?  First God's grace is given to us by the very fact of our existence.  Our existence itself is evidence of God's grace.  But how can we know it?

Knowing God's grace is what tonight is about.  The Gospel of John tells us that in the beginning was the Word and the word was with God and the word was God.  All things were created by the Word and the word became flesh and dwelled with us.

Our entire existence is known because we are people with words.  When we see, we see things that have the names we have been taught.  When we act, we act with body language which speaks as loud as words.  And when we speak and write we use words.  We live lives filled with words. 

And since there are so many words in our lives, we need to know how use words with great quality, the quality of the very best human values.

Tonight in this Vigil we are celebrating the very best words of our lives.  And we want those who are baptized to have our very best values.  And what are those values?  The first value is the hope of knowing that God will preserve our lives forever and we know that because of the resurrection Christ.

What are other best values?  We have the best values of a very good heritage.  The Bible story tells us about our wonderful heritage.  There have been heroes and saints who lived their lives to preserve and hand on the wonderful knowledge of God.  And we have read tonight some of the stories of our salvation history.

What are other values?  We teach the value that God loves us.  God forgives us.  God cares for us.  God is near to us within our heart as God's Holy Spirit.  God also gives each of us special gifts.  God asks us to find our special gifts and to share them with each other.

We gather as a church and we baptize because we want to keep the very best values alive and accessible.  We as members of the church are to be examples of God's prevenient grace to each other and to those whom we baptize.  We are giving and living the very best values of our lives to those who are baptized and to each other.

If you and I live graceful lives sharing the very best values of life, when our younger members get older it will be easy and natural for them to join to share these wonderful values with the person in their lives.

Remember you and I are called to be prevenient grace in each other's life.  We need to be expressions of God's grace to each other so that we make it easy for everyone to choose and accept that God is our creator, God loves us, God forgives us, God gives us gifts, and God gives us the hope to know that what we can't finish in this life, we will finish in our afterlives?

Why, because God is the only one who is great enough to preserve us forever.  On this night, we celebrate the preserving power of God.

So with great hope we celebrate tonight:  Alleluia Christ is Risen.  The Lord is Risen Indeed.  Amen.

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Candle, Story, Citizenship and a Meal


Easter Vigil         March 26, 2016
Ex.14:10 Canticle 8, Ez  36:24-28 Psalm 42:1-7
Rom.6:3-11         Luke 24:1-12


  A Candle, A Story,  A Citizenship Ceremony, and a celebratory Meal.  These are the events of this evening, the most important evening in the life of the Church.

  Why a Candle?  A candle is the symbol of light piercing the darkness.  Jesus Christ was called by the early church, the Light of World.  Why did we need this light?  Because the world lived in the darkness of half a life.  The world lived in only the natural world; it was not enlightened about another world, the interior world of the kingdom of God.  Jesus Christ came to awaken the world to the spiritual world.  Jesus came to show us that we are spiritual beings and in knowing this we suddenly have lights turned on in our darkness.  When we are awakened to our spirits we are awakened to our everlasting essence and this enables us to live in the world of time where everything is changing and passing away.

  Tonight is a night of our story.  The Light of Christ happened within a Story.  And we read a portion of that Great Story tonight.  We read about Moses and the Red Sea about Ezekiel and the Dry bones.  If we did all of the readings, we would read 12 long readings.  Jesus is not just drop out of heaven in a vacuum, he arrived in a family with a genealogy and a story.  Jesus was continuous with a spiritual tradition but the people needed a boost of light to highlight what had been missing in the lives of people.  We read the story of the past as a way of tracing the genealogy of our human experience and remembering how our identity has been formed.

  Next, tonight is a citizenship ceremony.  When one becomes an American citizen, one has studied and then one takes an oath and one is received as a citizen of our country.  Tonight is the chief occasion of baptism in the Church.  It is a heavenly citizenship ceremony.  So you think that you have only been born into a human family; no, you are also a son or daughter of God.  You were born into the kingdom of God since God is the creator of the world.  So baptism is a celebration that each of us can know ourselves to be a son or daughter of God and our family invites us to God’s family in baptism as a citizenship ceremony.  Tonight we welcome persons into this wonderful experience of being known as children of God.  Everyone is always a child of God but in Baptism the church has a celebration ceremony of this primary fact of human identity, namely, we are all made in the image of God.  We have God’s DNA as a part of us; God’s Spirit is in us.  Tonight in our citizenship ceremony we are welcoming Jaiden, Adam and Melina.

  Now what do we do when the family gets together?  We eat the family meal together?  And so tonight we move from Baptism to Eucharist.  The Eucharist is the family meal.  It is the meal of our gathering.  When we gather for the Christian meal we are being renewed in our family identity as members of the body of Christ.

  Finally, why is this evening important?  Why is lighting the Paschal Candle important tonight?  Why is reading our family Story important tonight?  Why is Baptism important tonight?  Why is Eucharist important tonight?

  All of these are important tonight because tonight is when we celebrate the perpetuity of what we do?  Why do all of these things have perpetuity?  Because the Resurrection of Christ has given us evidence of our afterlife?  We will continue our identity as sons and daughters of God forever, even beyond our mortal lives. And so with great joy we offer again the Easter Shout.

  Alleluia.  Christ is Risen.  The Lord is Risen indeed.  Alleluia!  Amen.

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Baptismal Sermon at the Great Vigil: God loves you! Deal with it!

Easter Vigil         April 19, 2014
Ex.14:10 Canticle 8, Ez  36:24-28 Psalm 42:1-7
Rom.6:3-11         Luke 24:1-12

  Tonight we are gathered to celebrate something wonderful about grace.  The most wonderful thing about grace is that you and I don’t have any choice about it being offered to us.  Grace is given to us whether we want it or not. 
  And so Peter and Payton are here tonight to be initiated into God’s wonderful grace.  They like us do not have any choice about Grace being offered and given to them.
  Peter and Payton do not have any choice tonight about being loved.  Their parents, grandparents and family and friends have and will continue to love them.  They have no choice about that.  They may grow up and try to resist this love and grace but they can never take it away nor can they deny that it has been given to them.
  Tonight baptism at the Easter Vigil expresses the grace of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.  This grace has been known by all of us. This grace that has already come to Payton and Peter in the love of their parents, grandparents, family and friends.  The grace of the resurrection of Christ   is expressed in the lives of the people who are letting themselves be the hearts, the hands, the feet of the risen Christ tonight.
  Jesus did not remain in a tomb; Christ rose and entered and energized the countless numbers of people.  Christ has taken us over to the point of we cannot help but be expressions of the love and grace of Christ toward Payton and Peter and towards each other and towards even our enemies.
  This is the living Gospel of the resurrection of Christ.  We are to be the living proof of the resurrection of Christ in how we offer active grace and love to Peter and Payton and to everyone tonight.
  We, church are gathered tonight, to confess to Peter and Payton and to the entire world:   People, you have no choice; you are loved, by God and by us, even in our fumbling and feeble efforts to do so.  No, we are not perfect in our love but we are perfect in having the heart of the risen Jesus Christ within us to inspire us always to be at the work of loving better.
  A major reason why we baptize babies and children and people of any age is this: People you do not have any choice about these fact.  God loves you.  God cares for you.  God forgives you.  God gives you many wonderful gifts to develop.  And when you finish your life in your body, God is going to give you eternal life.  Folks, just accept it.  You don’t have any choice about whether God loves you.  Deal with it.
  Lots of religions over-emphasize the human choice in choosing baptism or faith or religion.  If someone offers me a million bucks, am I to be profusely congratulated for graciously deciding to take the million bucks?  “O, Phil you are so wonderful for graciously deciding to take the million bucks.”  Absurd right?  What is marvelous is the generosity of the giver and not the minor event of my decision to take the money.
  That is the nature of God’s love and grace for Peter and Payton tonight and for you and me and for all of the people of this world.
  We have the privilege of receiving this generous grace and love and we as the church have the responsibility not to make this grace and love look bad because of the way in which we live.  We are called tonight to be the very proof and evidence of the resurrection of Christ.
  Can you say, “Alleluia, Christ is Risen?”  And now say, “He’s risen in Me!”  Can we also be fully committed to let this resurrection life of Christ in us be grace and love to Payton and Peter and to all whom God would bring into our lives?
  Alleluia!  Christ is Risen in You!  And in Peter.  And in Payton.  Let us rejoice that we have no choice about whether this resurrection power and grace and love is given to us.  But let us humbly accept it and be conduits for the grace, the love and the power of Christ tonight.  Happy Easter to you!  I can see Easter shining in your eyes tonight.  Amen. 

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