Sunday, January 21, 2024

Faith in America

Faith in America

January 16, 2024

In light of the encroachment of Americans who want to end the American practice of the separation of church and state, it is time to articulate more clearly and directly faith in America, not faith as being an adherent of one of the religious faith communities of  our country, but rather faith in the founding ideals of our system itself.

Why articulate faith in America among faiths in theistic Being or beings?  I would like to promote the similarity between faith in American and having faith in God or some other systems of holistic lifestyle practices.  I would begin this study of similarity by noting what is common in the New Testament word for faith, and the classical Greek word for persuasion found in Aristotle's Rhetoric.  The New Testament koine Greek word for faith is pistis.  The classical Greek word for persuasion is also pistis.  One of the goals of rhetoric is persuasion whether in politics, law, artistic speech, or public speaking events such as funeral discourse/eulogies.  The contexts in the way Aristotle used pistis and the way in which pistis is used in the New Testament are centuries apart but what is common is the notion of persuasion.  The New Testament writers defined their lives as having faith in Jesus Christ, and it could be synonymous to say that the New Testament writers were persuaded about Jesus Christ and the messages which attended his witness in the tradition derived from him.

I would like to promote faith in America as being persuaded about certain ideals of formation and identity as a country which originated in the experience of our founders and how those ideals were articulated in our founding documents.

The founders were aware of the practice of religious faith in England and on the Continent.  They were aware of how religious faith was established in the monarchies which made those who did not embrace the established religious faith non-conformists and less than equal in their rights within society.

The founders of our country proposed a persuasion about political practice which would prevent any person losing their rights and privileges as a free citizen because of their practice or non-practice of any particular religious belief.

The evidence of competing Christians harming each other, even to discrimination, persecution and the burning of heretics at the stake, was evidence of the consistent failure in practice of what one might call Christian charity.  The founders of our country proposed a political system of persuasion to referee among Christians who often fought with each other, but also a system to protect anyone of any system of persuasion.  The requirement of the founders in our political system was that our citizenry live according to laws which tolerated the differences in religious beliefs and other systems of persuasion.

In our time, we need to shore up the refereeing function intended by the founders of our system of political persuasion, and indeed we need to be renewed in our faith in America. 

January 17, 2024

The persuasion about American ideals that our founders proposed was informed by the influences of the Enlightenment with a dependence on reason for the practical governance of community.  The Enlightenment with an emphasis on reason gave the founders a different kind of discourse, a discourse which is more scientific or social scientific discourse than a religious discourse.  Just as the Enlightenment resulted in a more poignant division between the discourses of science and religion, so the American founders proposed a legal system a rule of law which would be freed from specific religious judgment criteria while being committed to impartial observations, observations which might be enjoined by people of all persuasions.  The discourse of faith in America, or persuasion about our ideals, is a discourse which admits/invites the discourse of people of religious persuasion to the conversation, but the American founders assumed that our government does not deliberate because of a specific religious faith, even though the values of justice might be the similar in any faith tradition.

Often interfaith groups in our country gather for local community benefit and participation in many things.  They gather not to try to convince each other to believe and pray the same; they gather to share what might be call orthopraxy, that is right practice of justice and charity within the community on which they agree.

One might say that the founders of America wanted us in a similar way to be a system of orthopraxy, that is, a system of right justice for our diverse citizenry.

January 19, 2024

As dignity for the states of being has come to awareness as to who deserves rights and inclusion in the equal benefits of human community, the power groups of community have been slow to to recognize and share rights and inclusion of many to the full privilege of membership.

How many religious denominations have been separating because of women, gay, lesbian, transgendered people wanting full inclusion?  The Holy Book interpretations, doctrine, and practice of many religious groups set a limit on the acceptance of persons with unchosen human conditions of being and even designate them as "sinful."

Some religious communities believe that the practice of persuasion about God and Christ needs to be inclusive of persons who discover themselves in unchosen states of being that still allow them to make vows of love and justice consistent with the love which Jesus showed to those who wanted to always be better and yet who were not given acceptance within religious community.

In a similar way our faith in our American system is being threatened with division, even civil war, by persons who do not think that they can tolerate the level of diversity which our citizenry is now presenting to us.  Many Americans seem to want a white, male, controlled society with a certain kind of Christian control.  They would return white males to seeming paternalistic roles on behalf of women, and minority groups.  In paternalistic practice, those who have the control by law, wealth, and power make the decisions on behalf of their version of a diverse society.

Having faith in American should mean being persuaded about a dynamic political system which is able to integrate the arising in awareness of the diversity of people who are now living within our borders.  Faith in America should be dynamic process to include and expedite the ideal expression of justice for all within our border.  Hence, faith in America has to be known as a refereeing faith among other faiths, especially religious faith communities which have a history of poor treatment of those with whom they disagree.  A single religious faith community cannot be the established faith community to negotiate among the other expressions of faith in our country.

January 20, 2024

As brilliant as our founding documents of our country are, the writers of these documents did not believe that they were final.  The documents themselves prescribe Congress as a legislative body to perform the continuous work of law making.  This means that faith in America requires the continuous work of articulating what is permanent about our ideals into the changing contexts of our American life.  If being originalist about our Constitution and Declaration of Independence meant the retaining of the cultural practices from which these document derived, it would be original to still practice slavery, not allow women to vote, and allow only muskets as valid arms to be permitted.  No one is naive enough to be strict originalists so as to assert that we maintain the exact cultural practices from which the founding document derived.  Being American is not like being Amish in trying to freeze cultural practices and technology to the cultural practices and technology of one "model" period in history.

Part of the wisdom of incorporating change in the America experience of justice has to do with creative advance in self-awareness.  What self-awareness often reveals is our hypocrisy, that is, the discovery that our ideals proclaimed have not/are not being lived up to in actual practice.  Where has America had to learn painful lessons of self-awareness?  We have had to admit that all "men" being created equal did not apply to women, native peoples, black Americans, and more recently people who have understood their gender identities different from binary or heterosexual designation.

As diversity increases within our populace and as collective minorities gain voting power, there is fear of the eroding of the dominant influence of the once privileged group.  As the popular vote can no longer guarantee the privilege of those who once controlled the political situation, there has been a retreat by some from democratic ideals to a proposal that our Constitutional democracy actually means that constitutional governing bodies can overturn the results of election.

Faith in America means that we can embrace new self-awareness which exposes our hypocrisy of the past in living up to our ideals of justice for all who are created equal.

January 21, 2024

The thesis of this writing is that "faith in America" is insightful about our political way of life.  By faith, I mean being persuaded about the founding ideals of our country that still lack achieving of what might be referred to as a perfect union.  Our hope is to be at the work of becoming a more perfect union, and such perfection in this union would mean a practice of common good which provides equal justice for all who are participants in this union.

By faith, I have harkened back to the New Testament work for faith, which in Aristotle's Rhetoric meant persuasion.  (pistis = persuasion). I have posited that our American founders proposed a political lifestyle to referee among the many persuasions in our lives.  Why do we need such a referee?  Because when our religious faith persuasion do not end up being universally persuasive, there has been the tendency for people of religious faith out of pride and fear of rejection of their cherished truths, to be prejudice toward, persecute, harm, or even kill people who do not practice allegiance to their faith perspective.  Our founder proposed being persuaded about a system of community interaction which involved having faith in a refereeing process for the many persuasions which people have in their lives.

I would argue for the benefit of faith in America as a refereeing or regulatory faith among the other persuasions of our lives, ones which if are not regulated can end up with the persecution of people who are are not persuaded.  To try to establish the Christian faith or any religious faith as the established faith of the government is to end in the persecution of members of the populace who cannot freely enjoin themselves to such an established religion.

In proposing defining faith as persuasion, I am casting faith as a definite rhetorical function.  And I would argue that faith in America involves rhetorical function, one of which is regulatory because it involves the generation of laws to fulfill the ideals of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness by all participants in this collectivity which we call a Union, or the United States.

As humans we exist within a rhetorical field, that is, we are constituted by the ways in which we have come to use language.  We express ourselves in language in different ways, and these ways of expression might be called discursive practices.  The various discursive practices which we use might have something in common with what Wittgenstein called "language games," in that they are practices within language which have their own specific rules.  We can name some of these discursive practices which have rules that pertain to their practice: religious discourse, philosophical discourse, juridical discourse, political discourse, psychological discourse, social discourse, ethics, and a vast array of aesthetic discourses such as prose, poetry, theatre, cinema, and music.   We cannot avoid embodied language, "word made flesh" expression of language, or the body language which represents actions with intended purpose and meanings.  We cannot avoid that our actions and the environments that we live in are completely coded with predesignated meanings because we use language and are choreographed by the ways in which we have taken on the language of our lives.

The American founders in their deliberations and attending documents are asking that each American for the purposes of attaining a more perfect union, check their others faith egos at the door, not for the purposes of their abandoning their own spiritual and religious lives, but for the specific purpose of living together in most adequate ways for the common good of all people.

Our religious faith egos are the most difficult ones to surrender.  What can claim to be more expansive than the divine?  How can having a faith in God, play second fiddle to faith in America as a most adequate way of living together?  Such would seem to diminish one's faith in God by a practice giving preference to faith in America over one's specific faith in God.  People who often oppose their faith in God to faith in America do so using an appeal to civil disobedience and they might cry like the evangelists in the Acts of the Apostles, "we have to serve God rather than man."  People who make that claim also have to be honest about the Gospel wherein Jesus is not presented as a person who is opposing the Roman Government authorities.  He is quoted as saying "render unto Caesar the things that belong to Caesar...."  St. Paul as a member of two religious minority groups in the Roman Empire, as a Jewish follower of Jesus, enjoined his church members to pray for the authorities, even as being ordained or established by God.  Apparently Jesus and Paul both knew how to be religiously faithful, and still be participants in a political system which did not establish their faith perspective as the official religion.

People of religious faith can have conflicting consciences on specific issues within the American system without having the Christian religion or any religion be established as the required religion of America.

Another insight to arrive at in the midst of dilemmas of conscience and apparent contradiction is the insight about the human person being a multi-discursive being.  Each discourse has its own rules and when one conflates rules which pertain to a specific discourse confusion, and conflict can arise.  If one tries to use the rules of chess in the game of checkers, confusion arises.  If one tries to treat poetic imagery as though it were empirically verifiable occurrences, then conflict, absurdity, and comedy can result.

The faith in America or being persuade about our American ideals means that one can be a multi-discursive faith being, having multiple kinds of persuasive practices in the many different discursive practices of our lives. The faith in America proposed by our founders asks of us a wise and mature multi-discursive mental and psychological soundness.  The ideals of our American faith persuasion allows us to be a poet, a scientist, an eye-witness reporter, night dreamers, day dreamers, religious, and much, much more because we are asked to act and be toward the common good.  Faith in America encourages us to keep our personal faiths personal and individual and practiced in families and smaller communities so long as they do not harm or injure the common good.

This of course sounds simplistic and we know that defining the common good is the continual process of justice in our quest of becoming a more perfect union.

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

A New Family Business?

3 Epiphany B  January 21, 2024

Jonah 3:1-5, 10 Psalm 62:6-14

1 Corinthians 7:29-31 Mark 1:14-20


 Lectionary Link


Can you imagine being on the shore of the Sea of Galilee where the fishermen have their boats moored? Perhaps there were some shingles with the business names on them. One might say, "Jonah and Sons fishermen," and another might read, "Zebedee and Sons Trawlers." For a long time, businesses were mainly family businesses and if one was born into a family, the sons in the family knew what their future vocations and callings would be.


There was no luxury of going to a liberal arts college for six years with undeclared majors in order to wait for one to discover one's true interest or be loaded up with so much college debt that one is forced choose to do something to start to dig out from under the debt.


When businesses are generational and handed on, the next generation of the business are important. One can imagine that Jesus of Nazareth going along the Sea of Galilee and enticing sons from their fathers' fishing businesses might be quite controversial.


Jesus himself, perhaps had left his father's carpenter business to pursue desert seminary training with his cousin John the Baptist.


It is true that a son may not have the same aptitudes as his father. Did Jesus say to his father Joe, "Dad, I don't like to do woodwork, can I do something else?" Could Zebedee have thought, "James and John, never had their hearts and minds into the fishing business; it's no wonder they were coaxed away by a rabbi preacher." Did Jonah think that Peter was too impatient for fishing and he was a hot head, and his brother Andrew always had to steer him in toward doing something more compatible with his personality.


The other possibility for both fathers, Zebedee and Jonah was that they were relieved to lose their sons to the calling of Jesus. It could be that there were other sons and the fishing business could only support so many, and so when Peter and Andrew, and James and John left, there was perhaps more to go around for the other brothers.


Whatever the circumstances, the call of Jesus upset the generational lines of the family business.


One might say that in the message of Jesus, we encounter a fatherization of God. Jesus called God his father, and he taught his followers to do the same.


So what does this mean as regard the main business of life? Jesus came to teach us that there was a new family business. It really was not a new business, but only a forgotten business or a neglected business or an undiscovered business. Adam and Eve in the creation story are proto-typical man and woman and son and daughter of God their maker. On them the divine image resided, the very spiritual DNA of God.


The phenomenon of sin is the habit of forgetting that we are supposed to realize our calling within the family business of God our Father.


Jesus left the carpenter shop, not because he did not love and respect his father and his trade; he left his carpenter vocation to promote the original but new family business, the family of God the Father.


The wonderful thing about the new family business of God the Father, is that you can be called and involved in all earthly business and still acknowledge the family business of God the Father-creator. But for a few, some had a particular vocation of going far and wide to proclaim the reality of this original but new family business of God the Father. This business was not about telling people that God was a human male figure in heaven; rather that God was divine originating personality of life who shared personal essence within each person by being the Word of God inhabiting the human community.


Peter, Andrew, James, and John were called from their fishing trade, in order to become involved in a persuasive trade of using words. They were to model and speak what it is like to be made in the image of God in the ways in which Jesus as God's unique Son showed them.


The stories, the history, and the legends regarding where their callings took them are many. But it's safe to say they went far beyond the Galilean Sea even to the capital city of the Empire and throughout the known world of their days.


They were called to go beyond their fathers' family businesses to the ends of the world to be people who reminded their listeners about God the Father's business, which is everyone's business to realize once one accepts oneself as a baptized son and daughter of God, with whom the Father is well-pleased.


The Gospel for you and I today is to embrace the Family Business of God our heavenly Originator and be energized to fulfill our family heritage which is stamped upon us as God's image.


So whether we're in ordained ministry or any vocation at all, let us realize that we are first in the family business of God, our heavenly parent, and Jesus is our CEO big brother on earth who has given us the business mission to proclaim membership in the family of God known through the practice of love and justice with each other. Amen.



Sunday School, January 21, 2024 3 Epiphany B

  Sunday School, January 21, 2024    3 Epiphany B


Theme:

The Call of Christ

What do you do in life?  What is your job?  What is your current responsibility?

I don’t have a job, but I am a student.  I am a son or daughter.  I am a friend.  I like to dance.  I like to play soccer and football.  I am a good citizen of my country.

A person has many jobs because in life we have many things that we have to do to live.

James and John were fishermen.  They fished in the Sea of Galilee with their dad Zebedee.  But they were given another job, another purpose in their lives.

Jesus visited them at the sea side while they were repairing their fishing nets.  He call James and John to follow him.  Peter and Andrew were fishermen too and Jesus called them to follow him and become his students and learn to become teachers of the Gospel.

James, John, Peter and Andrew were fishermen.  They never would forget how to fish.  But they could be fishermen and follow Jesus too. 

So whatever we do, we still have something else that we can do.  We can follow Christ.  When we are being a student at school we can follow Christ.  When we are playing soccer, we can follow Christ.  When we are dancing, we can follow Christ.  When we are playing, we can follow Christ.  When we are at home as a son or a daughter we can follow Christ.

So we always have the greater job to do in life and that great job is following Christ.  We do that by living with love and kindness and by teaching others to do the same.

Remember you don’t have to be a priest or a preacher to hear and follow the call of Christ.  Christ calls each us where we are.

Sermon

  How many of you have ever been fishing?  Why do you go fishing?  To catch fish, right?  It’s fun to catch fish but sometimes, fishing is a lot of waiting.  I probably quit fishing because I do not have the patience to wait.   One time, as a boy I went fishing in Minnesota, and a school of crappie were right under the dock.  And we caught fish as fast as we could pull them out of the water.  We caught so many fish that we had to designate limits for even the babies that went with us that day.  But every other time, I have gone fishing; it has not been that easy.  It has been a lot of waiting.  I can wait for lots of things but not for fish to bite so, I gave up fishing.
  Most of us fish for recreation and for fun but two friends of Jesus, Andrew and Peter, they fished because it was their job.  They helped their father Zebedee, who was also a fisherman.  And they used nets in the Sea of Galilee to catch fish and bring them ashore to sell in the towns.
  When Jesus met Peter and Andrew, he told them that he was going to give them another job.  He told them that they were going to fish for people.  What did Jesus mean when he said that they would fish for people?
  Jesus fished for people.  He caught Peter and Andrew.  What does that mean?  It means Jesus knew how to make friends.  He made friends by giving people hope.  He made friends by telling them that God loved them, God cared for them, God forgives them, and that God will preserve them forever, even after they die.  Jesus needed help from people to help get this happy news to as many people as possible.  So he asked Peter and Andrew to help him share this wonderful news.
  Peter and Andrew quit their fishing because they went with Jesus and they learned how to catch people and make them friends of God.  They learned how to tell people good news about God.
  Did yes know that God is fishing for us today.  God is not trying to catch us in a net or on hook.  God is trying to win our hearts and make us friends of God.  How is God trying to make us friends?  God wants us to believe in God’s love, God’s care, God’s forgiveness.  God wants us to have faith instead of fear; God wants us to have hope instead of worry.  God wants us to know that God will preserve our lives even after we die, so we don’t have to live in fear of the future.  That is good news for us, isn’t it?
   And God wants something else.  Just as God fishes for us and catches us.  God wants us to help share the good news with other people and to make them friends of God.  That is how we fish for other people.  We fish for other people by sharing with them the good news about God.
  Today, our message in the Gospel, reminds us that we are to learn how to make friends by sharing with them the good news about God’s love.  How many want to help make friends for God?  I know that you are going to be very good at fishing for people, because you are going to be good at making friends for God.  Amen.
 


Intergenerational Family Service with Holy Eucharist
January 21, 2024: The Third Sunday after the Epiphany

Gathering Songs:   Jesus in the Morning, He Is Lord, I Will Make You Good Fisher Folks, When the Saints 

Liturgist:         Blessed be God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
People:            And Blessed be God’s kingdom, now and forever.  Amen.

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

Song: Jesus in the Morning  (Christian Children’s Songbook,  # 134)
1.         Jesus, Jesus, Jesus in the morning, Jesus at the noontime.  Jesus, Jesus, Jesus when the sun goes down.
2.         Love him, love him, love him in the morning, love him at the noontime.  Love him, love him, love him when the sun goes down.
3.         Serve him, serve him, serve him in the morning, serve him at the noontime.  Serve him, serve him, serve him when the sun goes down.
4.         Praise him, praise him, praise him in the morning, praise him at the noontime.  Praise him, praise him, praise him when the sun goes down.
Liturgist:         The Lord be with you.
People:            And also with you.

Liturgist:  Let us pray
Give us grace, O Lord, to answer readily the call of our Savior Jesus Christ and proclaim to all people the Good News of his salvation, that we and the whole world may perceive the glory of his marvelous works; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

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

Liturgist:   A reading from the Prophet Jonah

The word of the LORD came to Jonah a second time, saying, "Get up, go to Nineveh, that great city, and proclaim to it the message that I tell you." So Jonah set out and went to Nineveh, according to the word of the LORD. Now Nineveh was an exceedingly large city, a three days' walk across. Jonah began to go into the city, going a day's walk. And he cried out, "Forty days more, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!" And the people of Nineveh believed God; they proclaimed a fast, and everyone, great and small, put on sackcloth.  When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil ways, God changed his mind about the calamity that he had said he would bring upon them; and he did not do it.

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

Liturgist: Let us read together from Psalm 62

He alone is my rock and my salvation, * my stronghold, so that I shall not be shaken.
In God is my safety and my honor; * God is my strong rock and my refuge.
Put your trust in him always, O people, * pour out your hearts before him, for God is our refuge.

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

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

Now after John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God, and saying, "The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news."
As Jesus passed along the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net into the sea-- for they were fishermen. And Jesus said to them, "Follow me and I will make you fish for people." And immediately they left their nets and followed him. As he went a little farther, he saw James son of Zebedee and his brother John, who were in their boat mending the nets. Immediately he called them; and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men, and followed him.

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


Sermon – Father Phil

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


Litany Intercession Phrase: Christ, have mercy. (chanted)

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

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

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



Offertory Song:  I Will Make You Good Fisher folk (Christian Children’s Songbook # 58)           
1.         I will make you good fisher folk, good fisher folk, good fisher folk.  I will make you good fisher folk, if you follow me.  If you follow me, if you follow me.  I will make you good fisher folk, if you follow me.
2.         Hear Christ calling, “Come unto me, come unto me, come unto me.”  Hear Christ calling, “Come unto me, and I’ll give you rest.  And I’ll give you rest, and I’ll give your rest.”  Hear Christ calling, “Come unto me and I’ll give you rest.”

Doxology
Praise God from whom all blessings flow. Praise Him, all creatures here below.
Praise Him above, ye heavenly host. Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.

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

The Lord be with you
And also with you.

Lift up your hearts
We lift them up to the Lord.

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

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

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

(All may gather around the altar)
 Our grateful praise we offer to you God, our Creator;
You have made us in your image
And you gave us many men and women of faith to help us to live by faith:
Adam and Eve, Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, Jacob and Rachael.
And then you gave us your Son, Jesus, born of Mary, nurtured by Joseph
And he called us to be sons and daughters of God.


Your Son called us to live better lives and he gave us this Holy Meal so that when we eat
 the bread and drink the wine, we can  know that the Presence of Christ is as near to us as  
 this food and drink  that becomes a part of us.


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

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

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

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

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

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

And now as our Savior Christ has taught us, we now sing,

Our Father: (Renew # 180, West Indian Lord’s Prayer)
Our Father who art in heaven:  Hallowed be thy name.
Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will be done: Hallowed be thy name.
Done on earth as it is in heaven: Hallowed be thy name.
Give us this day our daily bread: Hallowed be thy name.
And forgive us all our debts: Hallowed be thy name.
As we forgive our debtors: Hallowed be thy name.
Lead us not into temptation: Hallowed be thy name.
But deliver us from evil: Hallowed be thy name.
Thine is the kingdom, power, and glory: Hallowed be thy name.
Forever and ever: Hallowed be thy name.
Amen, amen, amen: Hallowed be thy name.
Amen, amen, amen, amen: Hallowed be thy name.

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

Words of Administration

Communion Song: He Is Lord  (Renew! # 29)
He is Lord, he is Lord.  He is risen from the dead and he is Lord.  Every knee shall bow, every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.
He is King, he is King.  He will draw all nations to him, he is King: and the time shall be when the world shall sing that Jesus Christ is King.
He is Love, he is love.  He has shown us by his life that he is love; all his people sing with one voice of joy that Jesus Christ is love.
He is life; he is life.  He has died to set us free and he is life; and he calls us all to live evermore, for Jesus Christ is life.

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

Closing Song: When the Saints Go Marching in (Christian Children’s Songbook,  # 248)
O, when the saints go marching in, O when the saints go marching in.  Lord I want to be in that number, when the saints go marching in.
O, when the girls, go marching in….
O, when the boys, go marching in…
O, when the kids, go marching in…

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

Monday, January 15, 2024

Ten Commandments

The Ten Commandments and Church and State

As regards the Ten Commandments and the State, it should be the Synagogue/Temple and State rather than the Church and State since the New Testament Christ-paradigm is a significant re-appropriation and re-interpretation of the Decalogue and all matters of the Hebrew Scriptures.

It is disheartening to observe the naïveté of persons who wish for the Ten Commandments to be displayed as icons of identity in government facilities meaning they would like for America to be a Christian-theocratic state.  This misses the obvious textual origins of the Ten Commandment, as well as the intentions of the founders of our form of government.

Does anyone believe that the American founders wanted something like the established religion of the Church of England in the English monarchy?  Do they think that our founders wanted a State-preferred and promulgated Christian religion, but just without the monarchy?

What is truer to our founders' wisdom is a form of government which prevented mainly Christians in disagreement about doctrine and practice from harming or even killing each other because of religious differences.  We know that when America had "local theocracies" like in Salem, Christian leaders were not prevented from persecuting and killing of people who were believed to have "heretical" practices, as defined by the local religious council that defined such heresies worthy of death.

The truth of Christian history in Europe is that Christians did not practice charity with each other especially when religion and politics got involved.  How many Christians were persecuted and burned at the stake by other Christians?  The American founders pondered the history of the failure of Christian charity of Christians hurting, persecuting and even killing each other as well as Jews in the name of their religious-practices.  For our founders, this lack of Christian charity or a more universal justice necessitated an outside neutral referee which the Constitution of the United States was intended to be.  The founders of our country were not anti-religion or even pro-religion, but pragmatic community builders who surveyed the kind of political practices needed for people with different religions, faith practices, and ethical values to live together without harming each other and further to promote the kind of humane values which people of any persuasion could enjoin.

The founders and anyone with any insight into applied jurisprudence knew that the Ten Commandments are unenforceable.  They are based upon ideal behaviors generated at a particular context in human history.  Is it always possible for children to honor parents?  Can the injunction against lying even be practically legislated except within the perjury rule of the courts?  Does the State want to legislate marriage relationships? And the last commandment is the most impossible one to enforce.  How could the State enforce the command not to covet?  Desire is an internal and invisible phenomenon and cannot be externally controlled.  It is one thing to regard the Ten Commandments as a model for recommended behaviors for the art of living in community, and therefore a teaching tool toward our better angels; it is quite another thing to regard the Ten Commandments as constitutionally and juridically practical to be enforced in American society.  One can have regards for the insights of the Ten Commandments without naively trying to make them the chief model of our Constitutional democracy.

Any attempt to depart from the wisdom of our founders regarding the separation of church and state is the subtle way of saying, "the homogeneous practices for me and those in my closest community" should be the enforced practice for everyone else.  

I would beseech us to allow the genius of our American system with a government to referee so as to keep us from any form of theocracy. 

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Christ As Jacob's Ladder?

 2 Epiphany B  January 14, 2024
1 Samuel 3:1-10  Psalm 63:1-8
1 Corinthians 6:11b-20  John 1:43-51

 

The Gospel of John is full of metaphors for Jesus Christ. Who is Jesus? Son of God, Son of Man, Word, Word made flesh, The Way, the Truth, the Life, Light of the World, The Door/Gate, The Vine, The Good Shepherd, The Resurrection, and The Bread of Heaven. When the poetic Pauline declares Christ to be all and in all, this poetic exaggeration finds another Johannine expression in Christ being the eternal Word of God, from the beginning who gives being to everything.


There is another metaphor in John's Gospel which is often missed and not highlighted. The Gospel of John presents a dialogue between Jesus and the regionally biased Nathaniel who asked skeptically in hearing about the boyhood town of Jesus, "can any good thing come out of Nazareth?"


Jesus impressed this skeptic with perhaps a phrase for which it is impossible for us to know its specific meaning. "I saw you Nathaniel when you were under the fig tree." It could be that Jesus was such an observer that he could perceive the character of a person from afar, perhaps even in the deliberateness of some very seemingly ordinary behavior.


The metaphor that I would like to highlight from the dialogue of Jesus with Nathaniel is this: Are you impressed Nathaniel because I said I saw you under the fig tree? You will see the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.


We need contexts to understand this seeming cryptic saying. This is a not so cryptic reference to the famous Jacob's ladder. Jacob had his famous dream in Beth-el in his dream about a ladder from heaven on which angels were ascending and descending.


Now if the oracle Christ of the Johannine community is indicating that Jesus as the Son of Man is the connecting ladder between the invisible and the visible sphere on which the messengers of God travelled, what would be the meaning of such an inference?


The meaning of Christ as ladder from heaven evokes images of what Christ as the eternal Word would mean? Word is the invisible ladder of connection between the interior invisible world and the external visible world. And upon this Word ladder which is the entire linguistically possible universe, specific messengers travel to make general words specific applied words in the external contexts of people's lives. The meaning of the word angel is messenger; particular words are messengers or context specific words to provide value, meaning, and guidance for people in their external worlds.


But aren't angels actual beings which can be seen? Indeed they are in that they are the holographic appearances of words or messages for people who also experience words through projected image modes. What we see from dreams, dream-states and visionary states is real, holographic and pictographically constituted, and it is related to what we actually see while being significantly different. Seeing is actually a language or text in "pictures or images." They are picto-syntax and picto-grammar in nature because language co-exists with seeing. Scientists can dream and believe that images in dreams are actual without them having external concrescence.


The angels have different message formats and the theme of this week and one of the themes of the Epiphany season is the call of God in Christ. How does specific vocation, insight, purpose, arise from the morass of the everlasting Word? By messages and by messengers? It is not enough to say that every human has language as God's communication within us; we need specific occasions of meaningful message within the circumstances and contexts of our lives. The specific messengers of communication must arise from the field of possible messages to become particular for you and me within the specific circumstances of our lives.


We understand the words of the Bible to be for us angels or messengers of God in textual form and these words about the call of God to the famous Samuel, the calling of Christ to Philip and Nathaniel are given to us, not to limit the words of God to words of the Bible, but to let us know that Word of God and calling are normative and available to each person, in all times and places. Now some specifics of word and calling may seem more pronounced, dramatic, seemingly life changing, because of the role that they play as seeming milestones in our life story. However, the word and call of God is equally important when we are like Nathaniel, "simply under the fig trees of our lives." Are we willing to process and receive the words, the messages of the inner divine significance in our lives within the very ordinary.


The Gospel for us today is that Christ as the eternal word of God is also the connecting ladder of the inner life and the outer life. And the messages and messengers travel on this ladder to articulate the specific values, meanings, callings, and purposes in our lives from the perspective of what love and justice means in practice.


Let us be open to angels or messengers or messages of the call of God in Christ to us today in both the ordinary events and the milestone events of our lives. Amen.


Prayer for Pentecost, 2024

Day of Pentecost, May 19, 2024 Christ, the Eternal Word, who is also Holy Spirit coming to all the languages of the world; let the peoples o...