What is Philabuster preaching?
It is oppositional Phil-speak to delay the reader from making a choice to do something worse than reading Phil-speak.
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Sunday, May 27, 2012
The Holy Spirit, God's Breath as a Sign of Life
Day
of Pentecost May 27, 2012
Acts 2:1-21 Psalm 104:
25-35,37
Romans 8:22-27 John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15
Romans 8:22-27 John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15
I have a harmonica here. What
makes this harmonica make a sound? I
blow in the little holes, and my breath pushes across some little reeds. The
reeds in each hole are different sizes and that is what makes each sound higher
or lower. I also have a Pan Flute. And when I blow across these bamboo tubes I
can make many sounds. What is the
difference between a whistle and the harmonica and the Pan Flute? How many sounds can a whistle make, you know
that whistle that the referee uses at the soccer game. A whistle only makes one sound.
Today is a special feast day. It
is the feast of Pentecost. It means that the season of Easter is finished. It means that the season of Pentecost
begins. And what is the color for the
Day of Pentecost? How did you know?
Pentecost is the day when we celebrate the birth of the church. So it is
our birthday party.
And how was the church born?
Well, more than 2000 years ago after Jesus left this earth, his friends
were wondering if God was going to be gone and absent from their lives. But you know what they discovered? They discovered that God was still with
them. They discovered a wonderful energy
and a wonderful happiness and joy within them.
And even though Jesus was gone, they felt that God was very close to
them and with them.
And so when God was close to them and with them, do you know what they
called God? They called God the Holy
Spirit.
The word for Spirit means wind or breath. Can you blow air out of your mouth? What does blowing air out your mouth
mean? Does it mean that you are
alive? Can you see your breath when you
blow it? You can’t see it but you can
feel it, right. How do you know your
breath is there? You feel it against
your hand.
So do you see why people began to call God, the Holy Spirit. Even though God’s Spirit could not be seen,
the results of God’s presence was known.
So we can know God’s presence without seeing God or without seeing
Jesus, because God is the Holy Spirit.
And the Holy Spirit gave birth to the church, because the church feels
and knows the presence of God without seeing God.
Just as I blow into the harmonica and the Pan flute and make different
sounds. Can you imagine the breath of
God blowing through you? Can you imagine
God’s Spirit in you, living through you and doing something special in this
world? Just like each sound in my
harmonica is different when I blow through, so each one of us is different and
when the Holy Spirit blows through and lives through us, the Holy Spirit is
able to do something special and different through each of us.
Today, on Pentecost Sunday, let us each know that God’s Spirit is in us, teaching us to love and help this world
in a special way. I want you to remember
always that the Holy Spirit is living in you.
Can you remember that?
The Church as a Pipe Organ
Day
of Pentecost Cycle B May 27, 2012
Acts 2:1-21 Psalm 104:
25-35,37
Romans 8:22-27 John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15
The name of our parish newsletter is “In the
Spirit.” Where did that name come
from? The author of the book of
Revelation is St. John the Divine. And where have you heard that name before? St. John the Divine is the patron saint of
our parish. And why is he called the
divine and not the apostle or the evangelist?
The author of the book of Revelations was caught up in a visionary state
and he wrote that he was “in the Spirit.” It was such a unique visionary state that I
do not think that anyone can fully understand it. Being in the spirit, being in this visionary
state is what the ancients used to call divining God’s truth or being divinized
to some extent as a human being
The Feast of Pentecost is about being In the
Spirit, or to be more exact, being in the Holy Spirit. How did the early Jewish followers of Jesus
come to accept the religious experience of non-Jewish followers of Christ? They discovered that Jews and non-Jews could
be In the Spirit. They discovered that
Gentiles could be filled with the Holy Spirit.
As we consider the Holy Spirit in the church on
the feast of Pentecost, let us liken the
dynamics of the Holy Spirit to one of the most fascinating musical instruments
of all time, the pipe organ. What is a
pipe organ? It is essentially lots of
different sizes and shapes of whistles that make distinctive sounds when wind
or air is forced through them. Imagine a
very large pipe organ with more than 10,000 pipes in an old European Cathedral. A very old pipe organ that is still in use
today has most likely been rebuilt many times.
Each time an organ is rebuilt older pipes are retained and new pipes are added to present
the sound desired by the organ builder and organ tuner. An old
pipe organ then is a mixture of pipes of varying ages. In a pipe organ, the
sound comes from the wind of one blower and it is fed through bellows and wind
chests with many holes and a pipe sits on each hole. There is one wind source and that wind is
made to sound in 10,000 different ways, some times in harmony, and some times
in dissonance.
This is image that I would like for us to
ponder to consider the feast of Pentecost.
Let us think of ourselves as the pipes in the God’s pipe organ. And the Holy Spirit is the Wind of God that
plays through us to make us a beautiful work of art to benefit this world and
to prove the work of God in our world.
Imagine God as the Total Organ, the Spirit as the Wind within the Pipe
Organ and imagine Jesus as the composer and the organist who plays the
music. And so you have an image of the
Trinity on Pentecost Sunday.
When you hear a pipe organ play, you feel
like there is wonderful life within those apparent lifeless pipes. Those lifeless pipes can come alive with
power, beauty, grace, softness, thundering, trumpeting and rhythms fast and
slow. And the music is the end result of
the life of wind being blown through all of those different pipes.
Can you and I begin to see our lives as lives
that are given over to God and composed and played by Jesus and animated by the
Wind of God’s Spirit? Wouldn’t it be
boring if all of the pipes on a pipe organ were of one size and shape? Wouldn’t it be boring if God’s Spirit had
only one human body and personality proto-type that was cloned over and over as
a sort of robotic Christian?
On the feast of Pentecost we recognize that
we are not robotic and cloned Christians.
We are people of diverse shapes and sizes that represent our bodies,
souls and spirits and the special time and place where we find our selves
living. God has made us to be played by
the Holy Spirit in our special time and place.
So today on Pentecost Sunday, let each of us
find the special way that the Holy Spirit wants to sound through our
lives. Let us not worry too much that
the Holy Spirit makes different sounds through other people. Why?
Because we all have special places and ministries given to us by the
Holy Spirit because of the unique shape and constitution of our life
experience.
Let us pray that we will accept the One
Spirit, the one breath of God to blow through us to make wonderful music for
the benefit of our world through the ministry of our lives. And if we do this, we will know that Jesus
Christ is the Composer, and the music maker of our lives. Amen.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
The Risen Christ: Oracle of Prayer
7
Easter B May 20, 2012
Acts 1:15-17, 21-26 Psalm 1
1 John 5:9-13 John 17:6-19
1 John 5:9-13 John 17:6-19
You have seen the four letters
WWJD, meaning what would Jesus do? WWJP
could mean What would Jesus pray?
WWTAOJTTJWP would mean, What would the author of John think that Jesus
would pray? And with all of these unpronounceable
alphabetic acronyms, I hope that I am confusing you.
Today in our Gospel lesson we
have the longest recorded prayer of Jesus.
It is not in any other Gospel.
And one wonders how in the days when there were no hidden microphones,
how such a verbatim prayer of Jesus could have been remembered by someone
particularly if Jesus was praying alone.
The sheer logical confusion does
invite us to look at the oracular function in the early Christian
community. How did the early followers
of Jesus understand oracle or the channeling of the insights of Jesus within
the community long after he was gone?
Could the channeled words of Jesus through one of his followers be
regarded as the words of Jesus himself?
Such a question is only raised by us who live in the age of ownership of
so-called intellectual property.
The prayer of Jesus in the
seventeenth chapter of John requires us to ponder the conditional verb tenses
in if-then statements. The writer of John’s Gospel wrote the prayer
assuming a relationship with the risen Christ in this conditional mode: If
Jesus were here now, then he would be praying in this way. And now as we read it move to conditional
past-perfect tense: If Jesus had been present with the community of John, then
he would have prayed in the way that it is written in John 17.
I mean to be confusing because
art and oracle can make present those who are absent. Does Shakespeare become present when his
plays are read or performed? Does Mozart
become present when his music is played or performed?
The community of John took very
seriously this belief about being one with Christ and one with God the
Father. They believed that Christ was
their vine and they were branches and their branches were coursing with the
interior sap of the Spirit of Christ so that there was a sharing in their inner
life, the very life of Christ. And that
sharing of inner life could produce “words of Christ” and “prayers of
Christ.” And because of this oneness
factor, the spoken words and written words that came from the state of unity
with Christ could be regarded as the words of Christ or the oracle of Christ
who was alive and speaking within the community of followers.
Art and oracle confuse time; how
else could this Gospel quote Jesus as praying, “And now I am no longer in the
world….and while I was with them.” Where
is the physical location of such a Jesus who is praying these words? Where is Mozart when some musician is
channeling his music? Does Mozart attain
a trans-historical presence and immortality in his creations?
Today is Ascension Sunday; I
remind you that the Feast of the Ascension was celebrated on Thursday to a less
than standing room crowd. The ascended
Christ is the inspired imagination of the church’s dealing with the obvious
sense of Christ continuing presence even while he could no longer be seen or touched. But the ascended Christ could definitely
still be heard and could be known as a continuing oracle with the people who
gathered to pray in his name.
As we move on toward Pentecost
and Trinity Sunday, we see that it is Jesus who is responsible for the
Trinitarian confusion: “I and the Father are one,” said he. The Father-God aspect of the personality of
Jesus and his teaching of the Parent-God aspect of the personality of his
followers created this “alternate” family and this alternate way of being in
the world, but not just the world, but also an alternate world, the world into
which one was born by the Spirit of God.
Art, poetry and oracle confuse
time and space and for that reason I believe that the communities that
generated the New Testament writings as God’s word presented those words as an aesthetic
bending of the dimension of time and space.
The aesthetic bending of the dimension of time and space account for the
apparent logical confusion in the use of the same words in multivalent
ways. Take the case of the Greek word, cosmos or world.
Cosmos or world in John’s
Gospel is a world that is loved by God, but not supposed to be loved by the
followers of Christ. The kingdom of
Jesus was not supposed to be of this world; so the kingdom of Jesus was an
alternate and parallel world. The
followers of Jesus were to be in the world but not of the world. The writer of John’s Gospel believed that
Jesus taught us to live in two families, our natural and spiritual
families. Jesus taught us to live in two
worlds, the natural world and the spiritual world. The apparent confusion of language has to do
with the fact that every word can be interpreted from the point of view of the
natural world or from the spiritual world.
If we don’t understand this in John’s Gospel, we can find it to be a
very confusing book indeed.
Consistent with John’s Gospel
theme, “In the beginning was the Word” the Risen Christ is still the One who has ascended to a closer proximity
with his heavenly parent. And as the
older sibling, Christ is the one who prays words for us and for our success in
befriending each other toward the values of the Gospel. The Gospel of John portrays Jesus as an ever
present oracle of prayer who offers endless words of petition for our
well-being. In our recognition of Christ
as ever-present oracle, we in our attention to prayer try to enter into the words
of Christ who has gone to that other interior world which we can only partially
perceive and live in now but we can become more aware of it as we make the effort
to attend to this alternate world.
I hope that my words today have
confused you; made you bend time and space dimension not to some TV Twilight
Zone do-do-do-do reality, but to the reality of the sacred, which is a parallel
reality that all of us can experience in this very seeming “ordinary” world.
And if my words seem to confuse
you now, in just wait a few minutes and I’ll be selling you an even bigger Brooklyn bridge, when I hand you bread and wine and tell
you that they are the body and blood of Christ.
Good art, poetry and our
experience of their sublime effects seems to bend space and time and so does the
experience of the sacred. As we have
read what Jesus might have prayed, we see that the words invite us to know
another kind of relationship of oneness to a parent who is not an earthly
parent but who is a spiritual parent who is known because the metaphor borrows from the
notion of what an ideal parent-child relationship might be. What does a parent
want? A parent wants to be able to share
the very best with one’s child. Jesus
came to teach us that God wants to share everything of the Godly world with the
family of people who inhabit this earth.
Let us continue to go to the risen Christ as
our oracle; we need not claim that we have any infallible interpretations of
this oracle. We but ask for insights
from Christ as our oracle to get us through this day with the excellence that
we need to be the best we can be for the well being of the world that we live
in.
The writer of John’s Gospel believed that he
knew what Jesus would have prayed. And
now and you and I turn to Christ again as our oracle, and ask what Jesus would
pray even now? And what would the risen
Christ pray through us? To the answer of
this question we now give our lives.
Amen.
Sunday, May 13, 2012
The Origins of the Church? Mothering, Befriending Love
6 Easter cycle b May 13, 2012
Acts
Ps. 33:1-8,18-22
1 John 4:7-21 John 15:9-17
On Mother’s Day, it might be appropriate to
speak about love and the Gospel lesson certainly also gives us the occasion to
speak about love.
If we are to believe the Gospel lesson, we
might say that the Christian movement was founded upon love. The followers of Jesus came into a friendship
with Jesus. They understood that Jesus
call them his friends. The very word in
Greek for the word friend is another word for “love.” Philos is the Greek word for
friend and phileo is the verb form
for “love.” The Greek language has four
words for love, agape, phileo, eros and storge.
In English we might specify the kinds of love that encompass these four
notions of love; love as justice and respecting the dignity of all. Love as friendship, fondness, favoring
preference, affinity and affection. Love
as sensual attraction. Love as familial affection. And what more can I say about love that
Country Western Music has not already said?
There are many quotable phrases about love in
the Bible. We are to love God with all
our hearts and love our neighbors as we love our selves. We cannot say that we love God who is not
seen, if we do not love our brothers and sisters who are seen. Love is patient; love is kind; love is not
envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it
is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices
in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things,
endures all things. Love never ends. Love
is greater than faith or hope. We are to love our enemies. Love is also expressed in the negative: The
love of money is said to be the root of all evil. In the Gospel of John, we aren’t supposed to
love the world or the things of the world.
And also some people love darkness better than light because their deeds
are evil.
Love is one of those oceanic words that we
use all of the time and it has inspired lots of clichés because most people at
some time in their lives relate to the cliché of love. At some point in one’s life, the word love
seems to be the right word at the right time that says what needs to be said.
I think love is a word that in its most general
sense designates the cosmic personal glue of the universe. We cannot live in this world without
acknowledging that we are with other people and with other things. And love is one of those words that is used
to specify the quality of our relationship with everything in life. When we try to assess what we value in life
we must deal with the word love. Love
expresses how we are attached to the people and things in our life.
Why do we love someone? Why do we love sports? Why do we love baseball or football? Why do we love the San Francisco Giants, the
Forty-Niners, the Raiders, the Cal
Bears? Why do we love pizza and not love
broccoli? Why do some people like anchovies and others do not? Why do
we like certain fashions or clothes? Why
do we love the Episcopal Church? Or our
political ideas and affiliations? Why do
we like certain locations? Why do we
like Music? Not just music but certain
kinds of music? And not just certain
kinds of music but certain songs or tunes that are performed by certain
artists? How is it that people, things,
events, activities, beliefs come to be our favorites and our preferences such that
they become part of the repetitive patterns of our lives? How do we become attracted to what and whom
we like in life? I am not sure that even
as we acknowledge love as the glue of all life, that we ever understand how we
come to love what we do love or how other people come to love us. I think that we all must confess that we are
partakers in love without fully understanding all of the motivations of love.
For people who don’t think that they have
religion or belief, I ask them to take an exercise in discovering the loves of
their own life. And if they can discover
the loves of their own life they may discover their values, their gods and
beliefs. The way in which you and I can
analyze the loves of our lives in honesty is to be honest about the objects of
our desire? To track your own relationship
with love, sit down and write out an entire series of top ten lists.
What were the top ten experiences of your
life? Who are the top ten most
influential mentors in your life? Who
are the top ten friends or lovers in your life?
What are the 10 best things that you have done for other people? Best books you’ve read? 10 most influential people in world
history? 10 most wonderful places you
have been? 10 happiest occasions of
joy? 10 favorite meals? 10 favorite articles of clothing? 10 times you felt closest to God? On and on make your top ten lists and when
you’ve finished that make your “bottom”10 list.
List the 10 worst things in every category of your life. If you can produce a whole series of lists
you may be able to look at your relationship with what we call love or the glue
that keeps us connected to what we are experiencing in life.
And it will probably turn out that in many of
your top ten lists, it will involve other people. Such people will turn out to be those who we
might call friends. And if we understand
the notion of friend, we can understand the founding the church. The church began with the friendship that
Jesus had with his disciples. Friendship
was a quality of life together which involved the early followers of Jesus
using such expressions as love, joy and laying down of one’s life for the
other.
Friendship love is a mystery. How does it happen? It does involve what we call a projection of
our selves. Why do we love others? Because in some way we find our own personal
fulfillment connected with the people whom draw our desire. We find personal enjoyment or fun or
opportunity for the release of our mentoring gifts with the people who draw
from us our creativity. But in
friendship love we find our limitation since our profound desire expects much
more of the people, events and things of our life. Even while people, events, places and things
can provide great enjoyment, we still have a gnawing desire for more. And that should tell us something about love
and our capacity to love. St. Augustine
in his confession said that our hearts are restless until they find their rest
in God. Eventually we find that our
hearts are made for more than our environment can contain in terms of people,
events, or things onto which our desire can be drawn. Our hearts ultimately desire God who has no
environment, because God is the one in whom we live and move and have our
being. And in accepting our love for God,
we can learn to understand love as a way to regulate the enjoyment in life for
people, events and things so that we can learn the balance of justice. Justice is the eternal quest to give
everything and everyone proper dignity in life.
As such justice is never finished because love is never finished. Love is always a commandment for the next
occasion of doing justice to the people, events and things in our lives.
We are most fortunate in life if we had a
mother who befriended us with her love.
We are fortunate that Jesus came and befriended his disciples and
followers in such a special way that this Christian tradition of befriending
has continued for all of these years.
Befriending involves being drawn into relationship where we find it appropriate
to lay down our lives. The Greek word
for life here is psuche, our
psychological life or soul life.
Befriending is a love that makes us check our egos at the door so that
community and communion can occur.
Certainly, mothers lay down their lives for their children. They check their egos and give psychical
space to let the identities of their children come forth. This is what Jesus did for his friends and
the result was the communion of the church coming into being.
It is to this communion of befriending that
you and I have been called. And it is a
type of befriending that we dare to call Christian love. Amen.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
A Parable
A parable: There was a coastal city that had marvelous sandy beaches and each year they had sand sculpture contest in the summer. And each year they chose a theme for the sand sculpture contest. One year they chose the theme of “lakes” and so each sand sculpture had to incorporate water in their created sand cities or villas. So this meant running to the ocean and fetching buckets of ocean water to fill their miniature lakes. At the end of the day the entire beach was filled with marvelous sand structures of every sort, all incorporating miniature bodies of water. And so it was time for the judging to begin. There were judges from every age group and one judge happened to be a six year old girl. And the judges were reminded that they were to judge based upon the best incorporation of a body of water into their sand creation. When it came time for the young girl judge to render her decision, they ask her to go and point to her winner. And they were startled to see that she ran past all of the sand creations toward the ocean and she pointed at the ocean and said, “This is the winner!”
Sometimes we spend our time in religion filling our little human made lakes from the abundance of the ocean and we take those little lakes so seriously that we forget the plenitude from which they came. We do the same in our religious metaphors about God; sometimes we let the metaphors serve as a replacement for the plenitude of God, who is grander than even the ocean.
Riddle: The water of the beach lakes is and is not the ocean.
Riddle: The water of the beach lakes is and is not the ocean.
Christ as the Vine; a Baptismal Sermon for Children
5
Easter B May 6, 2012
Acts 8:26-40 Psalm 22:24-30
1 John 4:7-21 John 15:1-8
1 John 4:7-21 John 15:1-8
Today is a special day of Holy Baptism for
Bailey. And we are going to look at
Bailey's life as a branch growing out of the Vine of Christ. In the Gospel lesson, we read that Jesus said
I am the Vine, you are the branches.
What happens if a branch is cut off a
vine? Can it continue to grow or
live? No, why? Because the branch gets its food from the sap
that flow in the branch.
This parable was used as a teaching riddle by
Jesus and the early teachers about Jesus.
If a grapevine is going to produce good
grapes what is needed? You have to have
a good grape plant. You have to have
good soil and the right amount of water.
And you need a good gardener to make sure the grape vine is taken care
of. The branches have to be protected
from birds and insects and deer and any plant diseases so that good grapes can
grow on the vine. And the branch has to
be supported and not get cut off from the vine or the branch will die.
So what do Bailey and you and I need to be
good Christians? We need to have a good
source of life. Bailey has a good source
of life; her mom and dad. And even
though David and Taryn are almost perfect, all of us need a more perfect source
for our Christian life.
And that source of life is Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is the vine and we are his
branches. And we can know that we are
connected to Christ as our vine since way down inside of each of us we are
connected to the Spirit of God and the Spirit of Christ. And this is like a sap or an energy or a
power for our lives. And it is always
there, but sometimes we need to remember to go there for this energy or power
of life.
And so we are going to baptize Bailey today
and we are going to promise to remind her and ourselves about Jesus Christ as a
source of energy and power for our lives.
Just as a grapevine has to be taken care of
so that the branches do not get damaged or broken off from the vine; so we need
to take care of Bailey and each other so that we do not get cut off from Jesus
Christ as the Vine and the source of our lives of love and faith and joy and
hope.
So we are here today to remember that we can
find a wonderful connection with Christ.
And when we baptize Bailey, we are celebrating the fact that her life is
connected with Christ too. And we are
going to remind her every Sunday and every day of her life that her life is
connected to Christ. Can you make that
promise to her today? Can we make that
promise to each other? To remember that
our lives are connected to Jesus Christ because God’s Spirit is within us as a
place where we are connected to Christ.
Jesus said that he was like a Vine and we are
like his branches. He said this to
remind us how closely connected we are to him.
And today we are here to celebrate that Bailey too is a branch of the
Vine of Christ. Amen.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Sunday School, January 19, 2025 2 Epiphany C
Sunday School, January 19, 2025 2 Epiphany C Sunday School Themes Spiritual gifts. Have a discussion about the children’s gifts and...
-
Holy Saturday, March 30, 2024 God, on many days we wait while it seems like your beneficial present is dead and absent in our world of death...
-
Quiz of the Day, March 31, 2024 The blood of the Passover lamb was spread a. on the foreheads of first born sons b. on all family members...
-
Aphorism of the Day, March 31, 2024 Easter is a celebration of continuity when death seems like the event of greatest discontinuity because ...