Sunday, February 15, 2015

WHAT DOES IT MEAN?

February 15, 2015
Epiphany Last
Mark 9:2-10
(prayer)
µ       Six days earlier Peter called Jesus, Messiah.  But Jesus spoke discouragingly about that language.  In Mark, Jesus seemed to prefer the title Son of Man when talking about himself: in the world, not over it.
µ       Peter may have been discouraged by Jesus' rebuke.
µ       But on that private mountain, Peter saw something that touched his soul:  Jesus - beyond even grandest hopes.  It rekindled his insight that Jesus was Messiah.
µ       Peter: "let me put up tents for you".  Hospitable for Jesus, Moses, Elijah and/or so the moment would last (for him, us).
µ       Challenge: when it didn't last, discouraged from sharing in (Marken messianic secret).
µ       But what did it mean?  Moses - liberation, law?  Elijah - prophet, eternity, sign of messiah?
µ       Followers of Jesus (through history of church), still discussing what it all means.
//
//
//
µ       That was great.  Let’s do it every year.
µ       Kennon Callihan: Marathoners; Sprinters.
µ       Appreciate the moment - in the moment.
µ       Make plans - set goals, expectations, but know that - until they occur, actual future events are not know.
µ       UCC future. Explain as much as I can.  Changes and n Canadian church realities - urbanization, corporate farming, travel, technology, securitization.  Church was slow to accept change was happening (spent too long lamenting), little lone embrace the changes - live in the present.
µ       Relate to 1925 (Union), 1994 (GC38), 1998 (ANWC) - MMM; Jasper; YHP regions.  All NEW things.
µ       "Behold, I am doing a new thing!" Isaiah 43:19 - 'IN' exile, not afterwards.
µ       My original plans when Called to SDUC; my future plans now.
µ       Star Trek: Boldly go...
µ       Messianic Secret no longer applies.  We can openly wonder what it all means.
µ       WonderCafe.  EZ Answer Squirrel.  Linnea Good: "Answers are many and questions too few."
µ       What does it all mean? is not simply a question of learning (the one true answer is out there; someone already knows it) - it is an invitation to learn,  discern, and discover.
µ       Context.  Context.  Context.
µ       Learn (then), discern (now) and confirm (in time).
µ       Pass it on - so future learning discerning and confirming can happen,

Let us pray:
Open our hearts to see your glory, O God - shining in Christ, shining in all of your prophets, saints and teachers throughout the ages.  Refresh our commitment to follow Jesus’ Way.  Amen.


#289VU “Pass It On”

Sunday, February 8, 2015

THE NEXT TOWN


February 8, 2015
Pentecost 5
1 Corinthians 9:16-23
Mark 1:35-39
(prayer)
For Jesus (and later for the Apostle Paul), there was always another pulpit from which to preach  - another town to visit and share goodnews.
//
Paul - some 20-25 years after the end of Jesus’ life, was a travelling teacher of the Christian Gospel - a storyteller of goodnews.  Paul’s mission was to share what he had come to understand about who Jesus was (for the people of the regions of and near Galilee and Judea) and who Christ had become for the whole world.
//
As we heard from the book of Mark today, Jesus was an ‘itinerant teacher’ - he took his message from place-to-place.  I have to thank composer John Bell for that phrase - as part of the Iona Community in Scotland he wrote (#110MV):
Firstborn of Mary,
provocative preacher,
itinerant teacher,
outsider’s choice.

Jesus inspires and
disarms and confuses
whoever he chooses
to hear his voice.
Jesus was an itinerant teacher.
He was the original creator of the 'flash mob' - he would show up and amazing things would just happen, spontaneously.
He took his show on the road.
//
There is a strong hint in our bibles about why that may be.  You may recall that all four biblical gospels begin with Jesus being with John the Baptist.  There is very little back story to this - we don’t get to hear how long Jesus and John had known each other (although Luke’s gospel says they were cousins, it never talks about them knowing each other before Jesus is thirty years old).
John the Baptist was the opposite of an itinerant teacher.  Instead of going to the people, he set up shop by the Jordan River and people came to him.
Matthew’s gospel (in particular) seems to imply that Jesus was one of those people who sought John out - Now when all the people were baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized... 
John the Baptist was a teacher/preacher; he had disciples - learners. 
We don’t know how long Jesus spent with John listening to his messages.
What we do know (from Mark’s gospel - just a few verses ahead of what we heard this morning) that it was after John was arrested that Jesus began to teach and preach himself: Now after John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God.
John was a static teacher - and he got arrested: easy for authorities to find him.
Maybe Jesus intentionally chose a different path from John, hoping to avoid John’s fate.
Jesus took his goodnews on the road.  
Both Matthew and Luke quote Jesus as saying: Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests; but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.
Itinerant Teacher. 
Always on the way to the next town.
//
//
Jesus’ context was constantly changing.  Although, Capernaum was likely his homebase,  Jesus willingly traveled new roads after he felt the call to ministry and proclaimed (like John the Baptist had before him): The kingdom of God has come near.
As our text this morning said, Jesus went around to other towns ‘proclaiming the message’ in the local synagogues (believe in the good news that the Kingdom of God has come near - cf. Mark 1:15) and performing healings (‘casting out demons’).
//
Perhaps Jesus could have had a busy ministry if he stayed in one place - it might take time for word to spread, but it might eventually impact several highly motivated people, willing to journey to Jesus.
What a wonderful image it is for us to realize that Jesus reached out in order to welcome in.
//
There are some things in life that we will not be able to experience if we only wait for ‘it’ to come to us.  I do believe that there is much that we can learn and do in the world right around us - but I also believe that there is even more beyond our home bases.
I think that this is a basic truth in many practical, everyday respects, but it is also true as far as our spirituality goes.
I’m not saying that we should all be going on mission trips or pilgrimages, but there is value in having an active and diverse interaction with God.
Just sitting back and expecting God to be made known to us is selling our faith short.
//
So, how do we spark engagement with Holy Mystery - from our end?
Rather than only waiting for God to engage with us, what can we do to find God?
This brings us to the topic of what is sometimes called ‘Spiritual Disciplines’.  Basically, these are things we teach ourselves to do that allow us to be open to the Spirit.
There are many - some make more sense for some people than others.  Some may be unique to a particular person.  If we are at a point on our own faith journey when we want a deeper connection to our God, we will want to find two or three spiritual disciplines that work well for us.  I would suggest that all of us need more than one - because within ourselves, we have different needs for Spirit in different times.
What works for me, may not work for you.  And... what once worked very well for me, might become less effective as I move through my life.
//
I want to offer two basic examples for us to build on, which (ironically) call for opposite postures.
//
One can seek to engage the Spirit within a community of faith.  We call church’s congregations for a reason - as the old Sunday School song taught me:
a church is not a building;
a church is not a steeple;
a church is not a resting place;
a church is people.
It is the gathering (congregating) of people into community that creates ‘church’.
A basic (and readily available) spiritual discipline is to be among those who congregate as church - creating a community of faith.
Every culture, in every age, has come to know that there is something special about the public sharing of stories: tales that teach, epics that inspire, songs that encourage, writings that endure.
When we are able, we can open ourselves up to knowing God through coming to church.
So, one spiritual discipline is to seek holiness in community with othersTo some people, this is the be all and end of ‘religion’.  You are religious, if you go to church.
But, I am sure that - many of you have already had experiences - where you have caught a glimpse of God - in the midst of a community, that was not a Sunday Church gathering.
ÿ    The spirituality of the coffee shop;
ÿ    Holy encounters through service among others;
ÿ    Other people are with you in times of extreme emotions - great joy and deep sorrow - and you realize that God is among you as well.
God can be known in community. 
//
The ironic second discipline is to seek God in quiet solitude.
This is a very common way that people look to deepen their spirituality.  Whether one follows
a formal meditative practice or if on simply allows the mind to wander in on 
the midst of the sound of sheer silence, mystics throughout the ages have appreciated solitude’s ability to create a thin place between us and God.
I suspect that many of us have had that ‘I am part of something greater than myself’ experience while appreciating a wonderful natural setting - time in the mountains, walking through a wood, being mesmerized by the sound and sight of water (streams, rivers, lakes, oceans), etc.  
There does seem to be a greater possibility of enlightenment, when we get away from human-created surroundings - back to nature.
And yet, a spiritual discipline can be to practice having those kinds of experiences wherever we are - on a busy city street, in a store, at school or work, in the bleachers of a sporting event...
anywhere.  Can we discipline ourselves enough to filter out the distractions and find God in that moment?
//
I would suggest that we, each, need to find a balance between the disciplines of God in community and God in solitude. 
I hope that we are all encouraged to tinker with the variety that these two disciplines can bring to life.
//
This past Friday, I began the discipline meeting with half a dozen other as an intentional spiritual community.  For the next year or so, we have committed to gather regularly (about every five or six weeks) along with a outside person we have asked to be our Spiritual Director.
It is a new discipline for me.  I am looking forward to discovering how open I will be to the Spirit in these times.
//
//
Jesus didn’t wait for people to come to him so that the Spirit could move in this world - he went and found those places and people that were hungering and thirsting for God.
//
Part of this Good News can be that - as we are seeking Holy Mystery - it is also seeking us.
//
//
Where we are now in our life is not necessarily where we will be. Life is a voyage – a path we travel. Often we make choices about the direction of our life and other times, we end up on a road that we did not expect. Yet, every place that we are in a given moment is a space that will
nurture who we are – the good news (which Jesus preached) is that we are never alone – the kingdom of God is in our midst.
//
Thanks be to God.
//
(prayer)
Let us pray:
God, our maker, as we come to recognize meaning in the unfolding story of our lives, may we be grateful for all you provide for us along The Way.  Amen.

#510VU “We Have This Ministry”

Sunday, February 1, 2015

CONTEXTUAL AUTHORITY


February 1, 2015
Epiphany 4
1st Corinthians 8:1-13
Mark 1:21-28
(prayer)
Last Sunday, there was soup and biscuits to eat after church.  Today, there is lunch as well - so that we can be nourished as we meet together as a congregation.
St. David’s is not a unique church when it comes to the place of food in our life together.
Although it may seem a bit anit-United Church of Canada to have to hear the reading this morning that says food will not bring us closer to God.
From the age when the earliest humans gathered as families and tribes, meals have been a cordial time - time, not simply to consume food and drink for the body, but also to connect with each other.
It is still very common today that at times of great celebration or even times of deep sorrow, there is food - whether our bodies need it or not.
And, if you are like me, very often, what is on the table is not nearly as important and who is around the table.
//
//
Today, we will (again) be sharing in what we call the Lord’s Supper - remembering what was reported to be the last meal Jesus shared with his closest followers.  This church event is sometimes called ‘eucharist’, which is a word that means grateful thanksgiving.  Most commonly in this church, we refer to this event as ‘communion’ - which literally means unity together.
In the oldest new testament record of the practice of communion (from Paul - 1st Corinthians 11), the language is plural - this (bread/cup) is for ‘you’ (second person plural).
The holy meal planned for today is intended not to be a private affair, but a communal experience.
Not that personal spiritual experiences have not place - they are essential to nurturing one's faith.  But, there is a synergy created when God is know within community.
Jesus knew this.
Where two or three are gathered in my name, I Am there. (Mt 18:20)
//
//
Let's keep all of this in mind as we look at the passage from First Corinthians chapter eight.
//
Although we title this letter of Paul "First" Corinthians, it is not the first letter the Apostle wrote to the diverse greek church.  We know this because in chapter five, verse nine, he makes reference to a previous letter.  As we read from this book of the Bible, we are actually eavesdropping on the middle of a conversation - we are witnesses to ‘community engagement’.  Even though, history has not preserved them for us, it is obvious that there were letters that the Corinthian church leaders sent to Paul.
Within the 1st Corinthians letter, there are distinct sections where new topics are addressed.  Several times, Paul begins those sections with the words "now concerning..."
Many biblical scholars postulate that Paul had a list of questions from the church and the 1st Corinthians' letter is his response.
Paul is attempting to answer the corinthians' questions. 
//
Now concerning food sacrificed to idols.
As I have mentioned before Corinth was a diverse city - it was located at a crossroads of land traffic in Greece as well as two sea ports each serving a different sub-sea of the Mediterranean.  In Corinth, people were exposed to a variety of nationalities and cultures and languages and religions.
What is behind today's passage is a practice of one of these religions where food offerings to presented to their god.  Physically, people of that faith would place the food at the foot of a statue or a monument of some kind.  And then, in an act of social equality, presumably after it had been blessed or consecrated, people were encouraged to take the food home.
And it appears that this opportunity was available beyond the community of that particular faith.
//
The question: should the followers of Jesus be eating food that has been offered to another god?  Is that an offense to our God?
//
The Apostle's answer is a bit complicated in that he has a different response as it relates to an individual and to the church as a whole.
//
Appealing to the individual, Paul makes the point that the followers of Jesus believe that there is only one God.  Although, in the plurality of the world, there may appear to be many gods and many lords, Paul argues that only Jesus' God actually exist.
So, food sacrificed to an idol of a foreign god is really not presented to a deity at all.  It is as if Paul is saying, there is nothing special about that food and an individual filled with the knowledge of the Oneness of God ought to be able to eat such food without any conflict of faith.
But...
Not everyone is as strong in their convictions.  So, Paul extends the discussion and wonders how eating this food would impact the whole church community.
//
From all accounts, it appears that it was a common practice in the early church that the people got together for meals occasionally - they were trying to be faithful to Jesus' call to remember him when they eat and drink.  From what we read in chapter eleven, in Corinth, people meet for a community picnic of sorts.  People would bring their own food and eat their meals together. In chapter 11, Paul laid out his concerns about how some people behaved when they did that, but that can be for another sermon some other time.
I suspect that Paul's concerns over the eating of food from idols was less about what people did in the privacy of their own homes, and more centred on what food people were bringing to these communal meal times.
//
Paul recognized that there were some people within the Corinthian church that had once been followers of these religions that had this practice of offering food to idols.  Paul can imagine that since they turned away from that religion to become Christian, it may be hard to return to those practices without feeling an unease.  They may need to abstain from eating such food to keep their new faith as strong as possible.  Paul worries about imposing a crisis of faith on another member of the Christian community. When some choose to follow a practice, others might still believe this practice is an act of devotion to another god.
In his answer, Paul was asking people to consider whether what they chose to bring to the community meals might be having a negative influence on others.
//
Paul's somewhat ironic answer is:
There is nothing wrong with eating food that was sacrificed to an idol (that represents a god that doesn’t even exist).  So, I wouldn't do it if I were you!
//
I would liken this to: would you invite someone struggling with sobriety to a wine tasting party? 
[I believe that this was a storyline on a recent episode of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.]
//
//
The welfare of the community matters.
To quote a well-known Vulcan proverb: The good of the many outweighs the good of the few.
//
We should be careful to notice that Paul is NOT suggesting that individuals be forced to refrain from eating idols' food.  He is simply laying out the argument and inviting people to make their own decision about what to do.  He goes as far as saying how he would respond in that situation, but he leaves the choice up to the individuals.  They are to ask themselves what is more important to me... free food or the spiritual well-being of others.
//
//
Sometimes, the question of what teachings have authority for us will vary depending of the context of the moment.
//
It is good for us to always be asking ourselves: what is right in this moment - contextual ethics!
//
Contextual ethics force us to consider where the basic tenets of our authority lie.
//
Basic tenets of authority can often be summed up easily - in short memorable phrases, like the good of the many outweigh the good of the few.
Maybe you noticed it in the announcements on the screen before the service:  before you speak, T.H.I.N.K. - where think is an acronym for a contextual eithic:
·        Is it True?
·        Is it Helpful?
·        Is it Inspiring?
·        Is it Necessary?
·        Is it Kind?
T.H.I.N.K. - True, Helpful, Inspiring, Necessary, Kind
Jesus had a couple of ‘words to live by’ phrases like this.
When he was asked what was the most important commandment in the Torah, Jesus spoke about a love for God (Dt 6:5) - You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might.  And he said that there was more - along with loving God, you shall love your neighbour as yourself.  (Lev 19:18b)
That is a contextual ethic that can hold authority in any situation.
Jesus even came up with one of his own when he said to his disciples (John 13:34): Love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.
It should not be lost on the followers of Jesus (including us) that the basic tenets of Jesus’ ethics is deep and full compassion (aka ‘love’).
//
In today’s gospel reading Jesus helped a person suffering from a deeply troubling ailment.  From Jesus’ perspective, this was an act of compassion, of love of neighbour.
We might diagnose the person as suffering from some form of mental illness (schizophrenia?); in Jesus time, they blamed the outward behaviour of the illness on demons or evil spirits invading the body and mind.
When the person is healed, the crowds are amazed at Jesus’ abilities and almost immediately heap ‘authority’ on him - a ‘new’ teaching.  Jesus’ reputation as a skilled healer and teacher began to spread throughout the land.
//
Authority can be gained in one or both of two ways:
1.     Ex officio - by virtue of one’s position or training; and
2.     Experiential - by virtue of what one does.
Everyone we have ever viewed as authoritative is viewed that way based on a combination of who they are and what they do.
So, which means to authority is the more significant?
They are both important, but experiential authority always trumps ex officio authority.  The mighty fall - when their behaviour can’t justify their authority. 
Ask OJ Simpson.  
Ask Bill Cosby. 
Ask Allison Redford.
//
I have had the personal experience of being deeply disappointed by a mentor.  When I was newly ordained, there was one particular minister that I saw as a good example to follow.  A few years later, I had to sit in judgement over him in light of accusations of pastoral sexual misconduct.
Authority is not a given.  And it is never given permanently.
//
How we behave ultimately dictates how much authority we can carry.
That is where contextual ethics becomes important.
ÿ    Whose good can I serve?
ÿ    Will I be loving God, neighbour and self?
ÿ    THINK before I speak and act.
ÿ    What Would Jesus Do?

Let us pray:
Praise be to you, O God of all creation.  We exist in you and through you and for you.  Through love, may we learn what it means to be your people.  Amen.

***offering***