Sunday, January 22, 2012

The Transforming Call of Christ


3 Epiphany B  January 22, 2012
Jonah 3:1-5, 10 Psalm 62:6-14
1 Corinthians 7:29-31 Mark 1:14-20


   Jesus said to the fishermen, “Follow me and I will make you fish for people.”
What if Jesus walked onto the football field at Candlestick today about 3:30 p.m. and said to the professional football players, “Follow me and I will make you score touchdowns for all people.”  What do you think that they would say?  Perhaps, one would say, “Jesus could I have the same deal that the Denver quarterback, Tim Tebow has?  He gets to keep his day job and moonlight as a Jesus representative; could I do that too?”
  For the fisherfolk of Galilee, the call of Jesus meant that they left their day jobs to follow the itinerant Rabbi Jesus on the road.  You really can’t do too much fishing on the road and so one wonders about how those disciples and Jesus were fed and clothed.  If their message was successful, then their audience probably fed them.
  The call of God in Christ has as many scenarios as it does people who have actually heard the call of Christ and who have responded to it.  Historically, we have given a distinction to the call of Christ for those who enter the priestly or pastoral professions.  The contexts of the call of Christ have changed as well.  The years around the time of Jesus of Nazareth were apocalyptic times; that is, many people believed that the end of the world was drawing near.  And they believed God’s great interventionist, the Son of Man and Messiah would appear to establish a different kind of order in this world.
  If this catastrophic intervention was about to happened, then who needed families?  Why have children if the world order was going to drastically interdict all personal and family lifestyle.
  The method of the call was to recruit an itinerate group of on-the-road preachers to get the message out as quickly as possible and to cover as much territory as possible.
  And now about 2000 years later we can say that the catastrophic intervention did not happened but the Gospel message of Jesus Christ catastrophically intervened in the entire history of humanity.  The Gospel message and the call of Jesus Christ has become much more than what was intended by the apocalyptic preachers who surrounded the itinerate Rabbi Jesus.
  The direct and catastrophic intervention of God has turned out to be the imaginations of deliverance by peoples who faced incredible suffering and needed intervention narratives of hope as a way of coping with their dire circumstances.  There was no catastrophic ending of the world in the years after Jesus appeared but the life and the call of Christ has had a catastrophic effect upon the peoples of this world.  That little seemingly insignificant mustard seed of Jesus of Nazareth is now seen as a towering tree that has taken over people and cultures.  The intervention of God has not been a catastrophic ending, it has been the consistent and gentle call of God as the Holy Spirit active in the hearts and lives of people.
  And this inside job of the Holy Spirit of God in the world is the universal call of God to all people.  This universal call sounded most clearly in the life of Jesus Christ whom we know to be God with us in human experience.
  And what does the call of God in Christ offer to us today?  The call of God in Christ is a baptismal call.  It offers us the process of burying in death all that is past and a resurrection to a new moment and a new future where we can surpass ourselves.  This death/life process that is ritualized in the baptismal event is the process of the continual renewal of our lives through repentance: Leaving old states of mind to take up new ones with attending behavioral consequences for our lives.  Repentance and renewal is also what we call transformation.
  The promise of the call of Jesus Christ is to transform our lives.
  The early suffering apocalyptic people of the Jesus movement desired a catastrophic transformation of life as they knew it.  What actually happened has not been a one event catastrophic intervention; it has been a subtle and drawn out process of the call of God at work in this world.  Transformation has not been sudden and dramatic, it has been subtle because it involves the Godly lure to humanity to choose what is good and better and not be forced into some catastrophic outcome that did not involve genuine freedom in the world.
  How do you and I approach the call God in our lives today?  How is God seductively luring us into the gradual transformation of our lives?  How are the interior sweet spots of our lives being touched and registering what is sublime in our lives?  The call of God is everywhere and can become evident at any moment; a laughing, playful child, a sleeping baby, a sunset, falling rain, pride in the achievement of one’s child, the discovery of friendship and the endurance of a friendship, the joy of creativity and the sense of being useful to the lives of others, the looking back in gratitude at events, and wondering, “How did I get through that?”   On and on the events of the call of God in Christ break into our lives, if we are but ready to switch our method of reading the events of lives and begin to interpret God’s loving involvement with us.
  And what is outcome of the call of Christ?  Our lives get transformed and God takes our natural gifts and makes them supernatural when complemented by the Holy Spirit who gives us a different kind of motive for living our lives.
  Transformation means that a football player can have a calling from Christ and still play football.  So too a banker, a lawyer, a teacher, a mason, a builder and a hedge fund manager.  Once we perceive the call of Christ we begin the transformation of our lives into the Gospel motives and Gospel purposes of life.
  Learning to understand that all that we do is ministry is the result of God’s call being successful in our lives.  Often the call of God is promoted as great sacrifice and giving up lots of things in life.  Seeing and understanding life differently may at first seem like a sacrifice, but once we are converted by the call of God and once the Gospel motive comes to our lives, the transforming effects of God’s Spirit pay us great reward.  There is a great relief and peace that comes when we adopt the Gospel motive for everything that we do in our lives.  Saying “yes” to God’s call makes us wonder why we ever wanted to ignore God in our lives.  God is going to accompany us in our lives whether we want God to or not, so it is much better to just surrender to the fact of God’s call.
  We can indeed change our lives by taking on the Christ-motive, the Gospel motive for everything that we do.  And the end result is that we will enjoy what we have and are in a more appreciative way.
  I would invite each of us to listen closely for how the call of God in Christ has been given to us.  Let us not fret about what we might have to give up; let us with hope look to how the call of Christ will work transformations of our lives to our own benefit and for the benefit of the people in our lives.  Amen. 

Sunday, January 15, 2012

The Call of all Callings


2 Epiphany B  January 15,2012
1 Samuel 3:1-10  Psalm 63:1-8
1 Corinthians 6:11b-20  John 1:43-51


  The lessons that we have read today from the first book of Samuel and from John’s Gospel are about what is often referred to in religious terms, a call from God.
  The young boy Samuel heard God speak to him at night.  Philip heard the call of Jesus and shared it with his skeptical friend Nathaniel.  And Philip was not sure how to convince him so he simply offered an invitation, “come and see for yourself.”  And Nathaniel went and showed his skepticism to Jesus and Jesus was impressed with how he spoke his mind and Nathaniel became impressed with Jesus.
  In the religious world sometimes a call from God is used to refer only to those who go into the official ordained ministries.  And so priests, bishops and pastors have callings from God.  But that is truly a very limited notion of calling, since the call of God is available to everyone and obedience to the call of God must mean more than the ordained ministry of the church, since if all people became ordained, it would be like joining an all tuba band; lots of bass without any variation.
  What can the call of God mean for you and me today?
  I would suggest that our lives are made up of many callings.  Those callings arise from the circumstances of our lives.  I did not have any choice to be a son.  That happened as soon as I was born.  And since I have an older brother and sister, I did not have any choice in being a brother.  The circumstances of our lives provide us our social definitions and in many ways we find ourselves to have as many callings as we have roles in life.  In the household division of labor, one gets the call to be the cook, the dishwasher and the one who gathers and takes out the trash.  Our situations and the requirements of each social obligation in some way define the various calls of our lives because as social beings, whether we want it or not, we have obligations to other people.  And since we are not islands, there are people who are called into our lives who have responsibility to us.  Indeed, we have some freedom in where we live and with whom we live, but all of the details of the roles that we play in life are not always completely pleasant or inspiring; in fact lots of our roles require tolerating or even enjoying a certain amount routine drudgery. 
  We don’t usually see our roles as citizen, spouse, brother, sister, son or daughter as callings in life but we know that to be successful in life requires a certain amount of multi-tasking shifting in and out of the time that we must give to the fulfillment of the various roles in our lives.
  What we normally refer to as our life’s calling is the profession for which we have trained and from which we earn our livelihood.  Hopefully our professions are chosen because we have discovered and developed our personal gifts and then can express those gifts in a vocation that can provide for us the means of livelihood.  And even our professions are not always completely satisfying.  We may feel burned out because we are forced to earn a higher standard of living and end up taking positions that do not really express our true life passion.  Sometimes we earn a living in a job and express our life passion in a hobby or avocation.
  Whatever our relation is with our life work, our life work is very important.  After we say hello, what is your name, how are you, we ask, “What do you do?”  What we do is a very important identity question in our lives.
  I would suggest to you that we do many things in our lives based upon the roles that define in our place.  Spouse, parent, sibling, student, citizen, pet owner….all of these are callings in our life.  They require our time and each role require a degree of proficiency or even excellence in order to satisfy and be satisfied.  I would also suggest that we spend our entire lives dancing with all of the various callings in our lives, and we know success and disappointments in all of our various callings of life.
  And since you and I are caught in a web of life callings, we need a Calling of callings.  And that is place for the call of God in our lives.  We can disappoint people in our lives because the way we execute our life role may not please the people who are most effected by us.  And other people can disappoint us even when they have important roles in our lives.  We can also know great joy and success in the various roles of our lives but if we try to place all of our expectation upon a particular role, we are bound to be disappointed.  That is why we need a Calling of callings.
  The call of God is the Call of callings.  We believe the call of callings is what is expressed in our baptism.  We are primarily called to be sons and daughters of God and the realization of this is to become aware of the call of God to us in our lives.
  And if we can hear and heed the call of God in our lives, then we can find the wisdom to do the balancing act which is required by all of the other calls that come to us in our life roles.
  The call of God tells that we are made first and foremost for God and that we should try to please God first, in all that we do.
  If we learn how to perform all of the roles and callings in our lives as unto God, then we will be able to weather the uncertainty that all of us have to face in all of the roles that we must fulfill in this life.
  You and I through prayer and worship are invited to attend to this call from God, a call that is universal, but unheard, if not attended to.  If we can attend to the call of God, we can find an inner place of love, peace and joy, and from this inner place of peace and joy, we can execute the requirements that meet us each day in our circumstances.
  Today, you and I have many roles and many callings, but one call from God.  And if we can hear and heed the call of God, we can find the wisdom and the ability in all of our life’s callings.  We should not expect equal success or disappointments in all of the callings of our lives; but we can expect God to be equally presence with us in all of the times and places in our lives and we can know that God is a success in our lives even when we don’t seem to be.  The call of God can make us know a kind of equalizing success in all that we do.
  I wish each of us many great adventures in the callings of our lives; but I hope that each of finds the call of God in Christ, at all times and places in our lives.  Amen. 

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Baptism: Cosmic and Particular Identity


1 Epiphany B  January 8, 2012
Genesis 1:1-5   Ps. 29
Acts 9:1-7   Mark 1:4-11



  Did you ever really wonder about the meaning of Baptism?  Historically, the church has argued about baptism a lot.  Should a person be immersed?  Sprinkled?  Stand in water to the waist and have water poured down one’s head?  Should authentic baptism only be done in the Jordan River?  Should it be done in any river or natural body of water?  Should baptism be preceded by forty days of fasting with some salt sprinkled on the candidates and some exorcisms performed?  Should only adults who can fully and rationally choose baptism be the legitimate candidates for baptism?  Is baptism only a public testimony of a personal profession of faith?  Is baptism a supernatural infusion of God’s grace whereby one is made a Christian once and for all?  Can one lose baptismal grace?  We are told that the Emperor Constantine did not become baptized until his death bed because he was sure that he was going to have some post-baptismal sins, and some in the early church were very concerned about post-baptismal sins.
  What is baptism for us today?  A cute little rite of passage for baby and family with an opportunity to make little baby boys don white dresses so that the pictures can be brought out later to make their faces red?
  There is some meaning of baptism found in all of the baptismal practices of Christians.  I guess today, I am more interested in what baptism means to me and to you and to our lives as a community who call ourselves the body of Christ.
  Might I suggest that baptism is very much a belief about our creation by God and the type of good stuff of which our human lives and the life of the world are made?  In the creation, we are told that God looked at all that had been created and God said, “It is good.”
   I believe that baptism is a public rite of celebration that affirms that the creation of the life of the baptized, is good, very good.  And it is good and filled with dignity. . Even while we don’t attain full goodness at any moment of our lives,  baptism is the invitation to actualize our full human potential.
  And what might that potential be?  I would liken the human life to be lived on a continuum between particular experience and cosmic experience.  We are very much made of dust in that we have a body and each body has a location in time and space.  And there are detailed descriptions of the particulars of our existence; our families, languages, cultures, societies and countries.  Yet we are made of mysterious stuff that we call spirit and so we have godly-potential.  We have cosmic potential.  So we live our lives in the dynamic between the particulars of our physical location and our cosmic spiritual locations.  And we need both to live up to our human potential.  In our baptism, we celebrate our cosmic potential because if we are only determined by our material, physical and historical circumstances, then we may find ourselves trapped; trapped by the imperfections that we find in us and around us.  We can get so burdened by the imperfections in us and around us that we can believe that we are negatively determined toward death, entropy and despair.
  But the experience of hope and joy and the sublime cannot allow such imperfection to define our destiny in an absolute sense.  So, we have our cosmic side, our cosmic identity, our birthright, not just into flesh and blood families, but our birthright as children of God.  And
that is what is celebrated in our baptism.  We celebrate our cosmic birthright so that we might rise above mere material determination.   And how often do we need to rise above mere material determination.  The experience of pain and losses of all kinds shout out to us to be what is powerful to determine our lives and our fate and that is where we need to turn to our cosmic destiny so that we do not get buried in the despair of any particular state of imperfection.
  At the baptism of Jesus, the heavenly dove descended and the heavenly voice declared, “You are my Son, the beloved.  With you I am well pleased.”  Isn’t that what God said after creation.  “With you I am well pleased.”
  Mozart got more than the average or above average share of cosmic musical ability at an age that baffles our ability to understand, so we declare him a musical genius.  Jesus of Nazareth was so much overwhelmed with the realization and actualization of the cosmic dimension in his life, we have had no other human language to use except to say that Jesus was extra-human, supra-human, even divinized.
   He was divinized more than any other human being, yet we undertake baptism too, because Jesus did not keep likeness to God or divinization to himself; he shared it fully.  He told his friends and disciples to go and baptize.  And as God abided in Jesus, Jesus promised to abide with his friends until we could not longer speak of time in the way that we do.
  We baptize, not because we will ever be as cosmic as Jesus was, but because the risen and cosmic Christ is shared with us to awaken the cosmic dimensions of our own souls.
  And we need to experience our cosmic dimension to help us to rise above our mere material existence and to have our vale of tears touched with the sublime of love, friendship, joy, beauty and insights that move and inspire us to keep on keeping on, because in the end our lives will be determined by love, faith, hope and resurrection and not by demise, loss, despair and death.
  And so we baptize and have been baptized into our cosmic identities as son and daughters of God and our lives are changed if we can but hear the whisper of God behind the scenes of our lives say, “You are my beloved child; you are good, you are no mistake, you are wonderfully put together, and I am pleased with you.”
  We baptize in order to be a baptismal community to baptize others.  Why?  Because the people of this world need to discover their cosmic identities as sons and daughters of God.  This is the way to world peace; to rise to our cosmic identity beyond our oft pitiful worlds of material determination.
    Today you and I are invited to live in this dynamic between our particular identity and our cosmic identity.  We need a balance of both; we cannot be purely spiritual or cosmic beings; if we try, we become world denying, dreamy, cosmic space cadets.  And take the “s” out of cosmic and we become “comic space cadets” living in escapism.
  But if we deny the cosmic and live only a reductionist material existence then we will live solely at the whim of happenstance.  If we’re lucky, all is well.  If were unlucky, all is ill.  We need our experience of the cosmic to help us rise above the particulars of our happenstance so that we can tap into a source of wisdom that helps us have the creative freedom to choose our particular futures with wisdom.
  Baptism invites us to our cosmic identity as sons and daughters of God, so that we can not just survive our particular circumstance but live with some inspired actions.  Jesus was baptized and his true cosmic identity was known.  You and I have been baptized and we are part of a baptismal community to share the knowledge of the cosmic family of God with this world.  In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

What's in the Name of Jesus?


Holy Name              January 1, 2012  
Ex. 34:1-8            Ps.8        
Rom. 1:1-7           Luke 2:15-21  


  Today is a day we mark on our secular calendars as New Year’s Day.  Also, today is the First Sunday after Christmas, but on this year, the Feast of the Holy Name falls on a Sunday.  And when a feast of our Lord falls on a Sunday, it takes precedence over the Sunday on the Church Calendar. (That is some liturgical trivia that you are thrilled to get).  The older name for the Feast of the Holy Name was called The Feast of the Circumcision of Our Lord. And that event is an elective surgery that no 8 day old boy would elect if he could speak,(“Rabbi, you’re going to do what?”) Since we would have to explain the meaning of Circumcision to our young children, the Feast of the Holy Name is a more comfortable name for this feast. So it is the eighth day of Christmas, but following the Jewish custom the son of Mary and Joseph was presented to be circumcised but also he was given his name on that day.  The eighth day was the day that Mary attained the required level of ritual purity after giving birth.  The custom of naming was adopted in baptismal practices of the church as well, for at a baptism a person receives ones Christian name.  That is why baptisms are often called christening because one of the meaning of christen is to receive ones name.  Although the literal meaning of christen is to be made to be “in Christ.” Or to be anointed with the oils of chrism.
   When we name a child we do so for many reasons.  We may want to connect a child with the past.  Sometimes we name after a father, mother or family member.  Sometimes we name after a friend.  Some people name based upon how a name sounds.  Some people like to invent new names and new spellings of names, emphasizing that their child is unique, special, one of a kind. My child is going to be a “one of a kind” just like a one of kind snowflake; and sure enough my child certainly goes on to prove that there is no one like him or her.   Native Americans often named their children after a contemporary event that occurred at birth.  From the Hebrew Bible, we know that places and people were named according to the narrative of significant events that occurred at a place or with the birth of a person.  Names were given in response to people and places that were seen as signs of God.
  Do you know what your name means?  Are you living up to your name?  My name means “lover of horses,” and Philip of Macedonia, father of Alexander the Great was a great horseman.  I really have never lived up to my name….it’s not that I dislike horses.  I have never spent that much time with horses to be able to develop a special love for them. I think that my parents probably had Philip the Evangelist in mind when they named me; probably not an Episcopal priest.   The failure to live up to my name has made me even more presumptuous; I use the shortened name “Phil,” which means, “lover.”
  In the case of Jesus; his name was given to Mary by the Angel at the annunciation.  So on the occasion of his circumcision he was given the name of Jesus or Yeshua.  Meaning in Hebrew: The Lord God Saves.  God saves.  God is our salvation.
  So today we ponder the meaning of the name of Jesus:  God saves.
  Salvation is not necessarily all that it is cracked up to be.  Many people don’t use their garages for their cars because they save everything.
  Our memories save quite a bit too.  And many of our saved memories come back to haunt us if we experienced trauma in our lives.
  We know our life is transitory and much is passing away.  But do we really want someone who can save everything?                     Maybe we should consider the word saves as meaning: God rescues.  Probably rescues is closer to the meaning intended than a common
notion of the word save.  Some Christians think that saving and salvation refers mainly to being saved from hell after one dies.
  I think that the notion of redemption is probably closest to the meaning of the name of Jesus.  God is our salvation.  God is our redemption.
  You and I know that everything that we have done and everything that has happened to us makes up who we are now.  While we would like simply to erase some of the past deeds and events of our lives, we know that all of these deeds and events are saved because these very deeds and events constitute who we are right now.
  The notion of redemption is that God embraces and accepts our lives as they are and then helps us to come to a positive outcome without regretting what we have actually done or had happen to us.
  To me this is the most positive notion of salvation, because it is not based upon denying the facts of our lives.  It is a redemption that says in spite of everything that we have done or has happened to us, we can use all of it to make good positive decisions for our future.  And we are not ashamed of our past life, because we have integrated the events of our past life to be used to help us minister to others.
  Let us embrace the holy name of Jesus today, not just as a name, but as a functioning spiritual reality of our lives.
  God places before each of us a vision of ourselves in future states as more fully integrated and spiritually mature persons.  All that we will become preserves what we have been but it also does so with integration and wisdom regarding all of the experiences of our life.
  The Holy Name of Jesus shows us the personal salvation to which each of us is called.  The experiences of the present and past may not yet be integrated or may still seem without purpose.  But by faith in the Holy Name of Jesus, we can know that we are on the path to realize the full purpose of our lives.
  I do wish each of us events in 2012 where new purpose of our past lives is discovered.  And I wish for St. John the Divine Episcopal Church further discovery of why received our name as a parish 55 years ago.  And in the Holy Name of Jesus, I wish you a Happy New Year.  Amen. 

Sunday, December 25, 2011

John's Gospel: An Entirely Different Christmas Story


Christmas Day        December 25, 2011    
Isaiah 52:7-10   Psalm 98
Hebrews 1:1-4, (5-12)  John 1:1-14


  There are two of the Gospels that do not include the Infancy Narratives of the Christmas Story.  The Gospel of Mark begins with the adult ministry of Jesus.  And the Gospel of John does not include the stories of the manger, the stable, the wise men and Mary and Joseph.  The Gospel of John is the last of the Gospels to come to its textual form and so many more years of making Christian theology had occurred.
  St. Paul spoke of the Christian life as living in Christ, by Christ, for Christ, with Christ and to Christ; in short St. Paul believed that we lived in an “In-Christed” world and that it was our wonderful favor to discover this mystery.
  The Christmas story elevates the Virgin Mary as the paradigm of all Christians since the spiritual path of each Christian is to realize the birth of Christ in ones lives.  St. Paul said that the mystery of the ages was to realize that Christ in us is the hope of glory.  And Christ is known to be in us as our lives are known to be over-shadowed by the power of the Holy Spirit.
  The Gospel of John has moved the metaphor of the physical town of Bethlehem to the speculative origins of human consciousness itself.  What is it that has given birth to what makes us distinctively human in the order of all other beings?  It is the Word that is indeed the very order of human existence in how we know ourselves.  We receive Word without asking for it; it is our past and present ability.  Even when we are not good users of Word, it uses us because even before we can speak or read or write, we have come into a completely worded human world. 
  Adam in the beginning was given the task of naming everything in his world.  Humanity has been engaged in the task of naming everything for as long as we have been human.
 And our naming of this world is still the human task.  Even when we say the word tree we are reaffirming how this tree is recreated in a new moment of our lives since each moment in one sense is a new beginning, a new birth and a new creation.
  So the writer of the Gospel of John identifies that the telling aspect of Jesus of Nazareth to be WORD made flesh.
  Each of us in our own way is Word made flesh too since we have received the creative understanding of our lives from the Eternal Word that always, already was.
  The way that Word was made flesh in Jesus of Nazareth has changed our world.  And the Word made flesh is still an invitation to us to change our world in the direction of the values of Jesus of Nazareth:  Love God with all of our hearts and love our neighbors as ourselves.
  The Christmas Story can be an invitation to childlike wonder as found in the narratives of the birth of the baby Jesus, or it can be a fully adult appreciation of a poetic, linguistic, philosophical Christ who is the eternal Word who has given birth to human consciousness itself.  And I like all of the Christmas presentations since each presentation appeals to a different way in which I am human.
  Let us be thankful for Christ as the eternal Word and let our Christmas gift to God be the finding of our Voice to use our words to tell our good news and let the body language of our lives speak the kind deeds that our world surely needs to hear.  The Gospel presentations of Christmas say to us in many ways:  “Merry Christmas!”  Amen. 

Christmas: Being Renewed in Wonder


Christmas Eve         December 24, 2011    
Is. 9:2-4,6-7          Ps.96:1-4,11-12        
Titus 2:11-14        Luke 2:1-14  


   Did you know that one of the most popular toys in the Toy Hall of Fame is the stick.  We spend lots of dollars on PlayStations, Wii’s, Xboxes, and a kid wants to play with a stick.  How high tech is a stick?  Parents can remember Christmas mornings when two and three year old children have been forced to open their expensive educational toys and what do they do?  They play with the boxes and the ribbons.  And we are aghast and humored at the same time; why can’t we just exorcise from them their native childhood and make them to be the instant prodigies that we want them to be?  We want them to achieve quickly extreme adulthood intelligence so that they can be ahead of the curve at their young age.
  Even as we want our babies to grow up, the power of the baby and of infancy and of childhood prevails and exerts its winning influence over us if we are behaving as we should as adults.
  I think that it is the power of the baby that makes the Christmas feast a feast of renewal for us at the end of the year when the natural light of the sun is shortest and when cold prevails.  At the winter solstice the sun has been reborn in our part of the world.  Our secular calendars make the Christmas feast come at the end of the year and so it is a time when we are tying up loose ends in our fiscal year.  It is the right time for a feast of renewal, and how we need a feast of renewal!  How we need a sense of all things coming together at the end of our year.
  The feast of the baby Jesus has grown and accrued so much that it has become a global celebration far away from the religious moorings of our biblical faith.  And that’s okay, since a great event will always ripple and effect life far from its intended purpose.  Great events accrue lots of different meanings and cultural responses.  And in the snowballing of all that has accrued, Christmas has grown for now about 2000 years. It is our duty as the church to dig, as it were, an archaeological shaft through all of what has accrued and imagine that we tonight can arrive at something of the original wonder; the wonder we knew as babies and young children and the wonder that still lives in babies and children today.
  The genius of the Christmas story is that it is able to bear what we project upon it in our spiritual aspirations.  A good story demands retelling over and over again because it is able to bear the projection of the audience.  And the silliest question to ask is, “Is the story true?”  If you have to ask that question, then you just don’t get it.  It’s like asking a little girl if the Disney Princess movies are true.  That is not the question to ask.
  What is true of the Christmas story is that it has the power to awaken wonder.  To be awakened to wonder is perhaps the essence of the Christian faith: To know that we are touched in a favorable way by someone greater than us and whom we cannot control with our limited understanding.
  The Gospels were written much later than the writings of St. Paul.  And since they were written later, they were crafted in such a way that the actual spiritual practices and teachings could be encoded through the metaphors of the narratives of the life of Jesus.
   Dominant metaphors in the presentation of the Gospel were motifs of birth, infancy and childhood.
The renewal of one’s life by the Holy Spirit is called the new birth.  The annunciation, conception and birth story of Jesus is the story of how the world is renewed by realizing God’s intimate presence within human experience.  The story is a personal invitation of renewal for each of us to know how God’s presence is made intimate to us.
  Infancy and childhood are also motifs of the Gospel.  Jesus said that wise adults could not understand God’s kingdom; but it was given to infants to have it revealed to them.  Jesus also said that one had to be childlike to understand and enter the kingdom of God.  Here again we find the dynamic of   wonder.  We can become so adult in the wrong ways that we limit our experience of truth; we limit our experience of wonder.  And that is where we need the power of the baby to renew us again.  We adults have been evicted from the Garden of Eden of childhood innocence for so long and in so many adult ways that we have forgotten wonder and that wonder aspect of our personality needs to be awakened afresh.  We often try to awaken it in the ways that lead to addictive behaviors, but this feast of renewal is an invitation to return to the gift and power of wonder that is as close to us as everything that is retained within us from our first coming into this world. 
  Babies, children, our pets, the beauty of Nature and the Christmas story are drawing from us the power of nascent Wonder.  It is very near and we but need to let it be evoked and arise in us.  And sometimes it has arisen and we need to be reminded of how it has arisen within us.  Ironically, it arises even in Christmas sadness; the type of sadness that we feel because we miss people and pets who have been in our lives but have died.  The experience of wonder even in this kind of sadness is the sudden realization of how much love, joy and response that these people and pets have drawn from us.  They awakened our wonder and if our wonder has been awakened, we know that we can open ourselves to new wonder in new people, pets and events in our lives.
  And so we are invited to this festival of renewal tonight; let us not find that our infant and child aspect of personality to be incompatible with our adult lives.  The wounds of hard knocks in life that often make us react with our “bah humbug” cynicism need to be healed with a fresh encounter with wonder.  And this is the Christmas truth.
  Dear friends, please let the Christ Child call us to a fresh encounter with wonder and the power of this wonder will help us to re-embroider the tapestry of all of the events of our lives to discern a new and fresh purpose of God in our lives.
  Let the warmth of Wonder arise in us tonight, as we whisper, “O Christ, be born in us!”  Amen.
  

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

What Does the Christmas Story Encode?


4 Advent  B       December 18, 2011
2 Samuel 7:4,8-16     Ps.89       
Romans 16:25-27     Luke 1:26-38  


   St.Paul in the Epistle lesson to the Romans, writes about the "revelation of the mystery that was kept secret for long ages but is now disclosed."     And the Gospel of Luke is a story of that disclosure of this wonderful mystery.    And what is the wonderful mystery that drove and motivated the people of the early church?    The mystery that they wanted to share is this:   God is not far from the world.... God is not  aloof from the lives of people.... rather, God is  intimately involved in the lives of people. In fact God is with us.... God is Emmanuel.    What is the best way for humanity to know that God is with us?  If God's life could be found to be in a person, then we would have the nature of God put in human terms so that we could understand what God is like.    And that brings us to the infancy stories of Jesus; in these stories are hidden spiritual direction for those who read them.   The story of the annunciation and the conception of our Lord Jesus Christ encodes within it the mystery that God has for every person.    Let us look at the features of the annunciation story and see if we can find in it relevant events for our own lives.   
  First, the Angel Gabriel sought out Mary to deliver a message. Do we believe that God seeks us out?  Part of the Christian attitude in life involves an esteem based upon an understanding that God cares for us enough to seek us out.   God's angels to us may not be winged figures, but God’s messages are always being issued towards us.  Are we in the practice of being able to discern the message of God to us?
    Next, God's messenger had a special greeting for Mary.  He called her a "favored one."  He said, "The Lord is with you."  You know every person needs to have this experience of being God's favored one.  Imperfect parents could not give us all of the emotional strokes that we needed.  Spouses, families, friends, and colleagues just can't give us the intensity of attention that we need to feel good about ourselves. There are people who need to be universally adored, and the people around them often are at lost to even know how to satisfy that need to be adored.  Christians need to know God's favor and when we put ourselves in the place to know God's favor; we will cease to make impossible demands for adoration on the people around us.
    A third story element is the action of the Holy Spirit upon the life of the Virgin Mary.  In this story form, the Christian has encoded the central belief of Christianity, in short, "Christ in you the only hope of God."  Mary is the paradigm for every Christian soul.  God's life is upon our life, and it is a divine life.  God's Spirit mingles with our spirit.  This is not our own doing but it is a work of God.
    A fourth element of the story is that Gabriel told Mary that her child would be the Son of God. The goal of Christianity is for you and me to realize our selves as sons and daughters of God.   Jesus did not regard "Son of God" a title that was to be kept to himself.  Adam and Eve were God's son and daughter; and like them we lose our family identity with God in estrangement.  The Gospel is a story about how that estrangement has been overcome and how we can realize our restoration into God's family.
   The last element of the Story is Mary's attitude.  "Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word."  Let it be. Let it be. Mary's attitude is the Christian attitude.  We will not know the esteem of God's favor, we will not regard ourselves to be sought out by God, we will not discern the life of God in us, we will not reclaim our identity as sons and daughters of God, unless we have a receptive attitude.
  The story of the annunciation to Mary, encodes for us the entire teaching of the Christian faith. God so desired to be with humanity, that the divine presence was found in Jesus of Nazareth.  But God did not regard Jesus of Nazareth to be the exclusive and exhaustive presence of God. It pleased God to let humanity know that Christ is available to be born or realized in the heart of every person.
  As we approach this Christmas, let us make the Christmas story live again in us. Let us develop an attentive, prayerful, and receptive attitude, so that we, like Mary of old, will know the life of God to be born in us.  Christ in us, the only hope of Glory.  This too, is the contemporary Christmas Story.  Amen. 

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