Friday, December 19, 2025

shepherd of the people


In the time of King Herod, after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, magi from the east came to Jerusalem, asking, “Where is the child who has been born king of the Jews? For we observed his star in the east and have come to pay him homage.” When King Herod heard this, he was frightened, and all Jerusalem with him, and calling together all the chief priests and scribes of the people, he inquired of them where the Messiah was to be born. They told him, “In Bethlehem of Judea, for so it has been written by the prophet:


‘And you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah,

are by no means least among the rulers of Judah,

for from you shall come a ruler

who is to shepherd my people Israel.’ ” (Matthew 2:1-6)


In the history of the churches three important obstacles to overcome have been:

  1. in ancient times, the incarnation

  2. in medieval times, the crucifixion

  3. in modern times, the resurrection.


In modern times many rational or sceptical minds have balked at the idea that a person could be raised from the dead. Not reincarnated, and not the resuscitation of a corpse, but resurrected. A problem for Easter preachers.


A problem for Good Friday pastors, at least in the West, has been the overwhelmingly abhorrent image of a crucified god, of the one who was and is and is to come fastened to a cross. And then of course its necessity becomes the new object of attention.


The ancient Mediterranean world had its problem with the feast of the Nativity, and the idea of incarnation. That in one unique moment into human history precipitously from above the one true and living God would blast into history leaving no remainder left over. In him the fullness of God was pleased to dwell. And in no other.


Of course in all these periods of history, modern, medieval, and ancient, there was another problem to be overcome.


Jesus is Lord. And there is no other.


Caesar is not Lord. No earthly sovereign can be an acceptable substitute for the ultimate claims of Christ.


He came out of nowhere, if you weren’t listening. If you were a Jew, or a God-fearing Gentile, he was long expected, and for some long feared. 


Jesus’ birth was as Matthew reminds us the fulfillment of the promise of ages. This was the king of kings, the one true scion of David’s lineage, who would rule forever. 


In ancient times, as  in the Iliad with its repeated epithet, “shepherd of his people”, applied to Hector, Agamemon, and Nestor, kings were supposed to be as faithful protectors and providers as a good shepherd was of a flock. David was called from the herds to the halls of kingship.


And so the long expected Jesus was anticipated to be the fulfillment of messianic prophecy, and a champion in the fashion of David and other warrior kings. He would liberate his people. 


But not like that. Perhaps a hint could be found in the humility of his birth. Sure, birth stories are origin stories, verification of our impression of the later adult. Mary Queen of Scots gave birth in a small panelled room in Edinburgh’s hilltop castle to a child who would become James VI of Scotland and I of England. Jenny Jerome Churchill gave birth to Winston Spencer Churchill in a not much larger room on the ground floor near the library in Blenheim Palace. And so the careers of magnificence began.


In a castle. In a place. Not in a manger. Or a shepherd’s cave. Or in a stable. Or a nearby inn. Or a guestroom in an overcrowded family home. 


Matthew in his story of the magi and their gifts provides a heralding fit for a king. Nobody got it  but Herod. 


Where is he who is born to be king of the Jews? “A ruler who is to shepherd my people.”


This was not a happy portent for Herod Antipas, son of a greater Herod, a client-king enthroned at the sufferance and for the service of Rome, and the emperor across the sea whose mighty hand could and would crush any rebellion coming from Jerusalem.


And Jesus was a bigger threat than that. He was more than a king like any other. He was indeed a king unlike any other. We've got the concept of kingship wrong if we think some earthly ruler fits the bill.



We are all stewards, from our moment of greatest power to our time of summary weakness. We share in the kingship of Christ in our care for his people. Sometimes it is our turn, in line at the supermarket, on the witness stand in court, in the privacy of voting, or in some greater public act. Our common humanity is our kingship. We share in that sovereignty as we are sovereign in the freedom of our acts and choices.


O little town of Bethlehem, birthplace of the greatest hero of antiquity, who was no hero in the mythic mode, but a savior and shepherd, servant sacrificial in love and obedience, fierce defender of the innocent.


Redeemer. Shepherd of the people.

JRL+

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Hope, peace, joy, love - and truth

Stir up your power, we pray - and with great might come among us. And he does, but that power is not evident at first. At first, he comes as a baby…

But the psalmist warns us, put not your trust in princes. 

2 Put not your trust in rulers, nor in any child of earth, *
    for there is no help in them.
 3 When they breathe their last, they return to earth, *
    and in that day their thoughts perish.
 4 Happy are they who have the God of Jacob for their help! *
    whose hope is in the LORD their God; 
5 Who made heaven and earth, the seas, and all that is in them; *
    who keeps his promise for ever;
 6 Who gives justice to those who are oppressed, *
    and food to those who hunger.

(Psalm 146: 2-6, BCP)

The help Jesus gives is the help of Christ the King, a king unlike any other, in fact subversive of the dominant paradigm of monarchy. If he is king, we have missed the meaning of "king" -- Jesus does not come among us like Saul, a mighty warrior, or David, a comely and pious and witty man. 

Jesus does come among us, as healer, savior, and thus king beyond kings. Jesus comes among us and we behold what it really means to be king. 

Today we return once again to the image of the fore-runner, of John the Baptizer, who, having proclaimed that the one who was to come has come, sends for reassurance that Jesus really is that one. 

What did you go out into the desert to see? What did you see?

What did you see? What did you hear? Testify to that, tell John that, says the Lord. 

And the signs he cites say who he is. And who he will be. And what his kingdom, call it that, will be.

Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, those with a skin disease are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them.

What was old news, that the day of the Lord would arrive, is new again; he is coming indeed, and in his coming is splendor.

And so today in the midst of Advent, our 'little Lent' of blue, we have a Sunday of rose. We have a day of joy.

Various people have asked me, what do you celebrate this season? Joy. Hope, peace, joy, love. And truth. And, therefore, justice.

For he is coming, and there is judgment. The word of the Lord, embodied in a baby, is the terror of kings. And more than that: as an old song says,

This little Babe so few days old 
is come to rifle Satan's fold;
all hell doth at his presence quake 
though he himself for cold do shake;
for in this weak unarmèd wise 
the gates of hell he will surprise.

Robert Southwell (1561? - 1595)

God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a city in Galilee, to a virgin who was engaged to a man named Joseph, a descendant of David’s house. The virgin’s name was Mary. When the angel came to her, he said, “Rejoice, favored one! The Lord is with you!” 

She was confused by these words and wondered what kind of greeting this might be. The angel said, “Don’t be afraid, Mary. God is honoring you. Look! You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be great and he will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of David his father. He will rule over Jacob’s house forever, and there will be no end to his kingdom.

Then Mary said to the angel, “How will this happen since I haven’t had sexual relations with a man?”

The angel replied, “The Holy Spirit will come over you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore, the one who is to be born will be holy. He will be called God’s Son. Nothing is impossible for God.

Then Mary said, “I am the Lord’s servant. Let it be with me just as you have said.” Then the angel left her.

(Luke 1:26-35, 37-38. Common English Bible) 

“Hail Mary, full of grace: the Lord is with you; blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.”

This Sunday we sing Mary’s response to the news:

Mary said,
“With all my heart I glorify the Lord!
    In the depths of who I am I rejoice in God my savior.
He has looked with favor on the low status of his servant.
    Look! From now on, everyone will consider me highly favored
        because the mighty one has done great things for me.
Holy is his name.
    He shows mercy to everyone,
        from one generation to the next,
        who honors him as God.

(Luke 1:46-50, Common English Bible)

Blessed. And then we celebrate the night she gave birth. She does not complain about pain, not focus on the travails she could expect; her attention is on what the Lord is doing, for her and through her.

Into the world is coming the kingdom of God, that was and is and is to come. In her womb she carries the paradox of salvation.

How can this be? How can all this holiness, all this grace, all this power, be so fragile and frail in its arrival? The fate of the world, found in a small small thing. 

Soon the powers that be, from Herod Antipas, client-king of the occupying empire, to the quislings whose interest lies with holding the people down, will be searching and seeking to destroy the small hope of humanity.

But as we have been reminded this season, in psalm and lesson, the powers of the earth are nothing next to the power perfected in weakness, the power that was kept in a cradle, then spread across the earth.

Wait till you see how Herod reacts, when he hears the Messiah is born.

Wait till you see how Rome responds, when they hear the words, Jesus is Lord (and Caesar is not).

Wait until you hear the words, I follow Jesus, and so I must show compassion to the poor, clothe the naked and feed the hungry, speak for the voiceless and innocent, and do justice in my daily life.

Wait until you see that, you see the hand of God at work in the people around you, the world about you.

Then you will know he is come; for he is certainly near. 

Come, Lord Jesus. Maranatha: O come, Emmanuel. Come among us. 

And let what we wish to see and hear be what is seen and heard of us: the presence of redeeming grace.

Hope, peace, joy, love - and truth.


Isaiah 35:1-10
Canticle 15  
James 5:7-10
Matthew 11:2-11

Sermon for the Third Sunday of Advent 2025 (10:30 AM)
Episcopal Church of Saint Matthew, Tucson (https://stmatthewtucson.org/)
YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWI48qhKGZc5dZVf5elsRPw

© John Leech 2025 


Tell out my soul

What did you go out into the desert to see? What did you see?

Stir up your power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let your bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.

Stir up your power, we pray - and with great might come among us. And, the psalmist warns us, put not your trust in princes. 

Put not your trust in rulers, nor in any child of earth, *

    for there is no help in them.

When they breathe their last, they return to earth, *

    and in that day their thoughts perish.

Happy are they who have the God of Jacob for their help! *

    whose hope is in the LORD their God; 

Who made heaven and earth, the seas, and all that is in them; *

    who keeps his promise for ever;

Who gives justice to those who are oppressed, *

    and food to those who hunger.

(Psalm 146: 2-6, BCP)


The help Jesus gives is the help of Christ the King, a king unlike any other, in fact subversive of the dominant paradigm of monarchy. If he is king, we have missed the meaning of "king" -- Jesus does not come among us like Saul, a mighty warrior, or David, a comely and pious and witty man. 


Jesus does come among us, as healer, savior, and thus king beyond kings. Jesus comes among us and we behold what it means to be king, what it means to be a man; in fact, what it means to be human. 

Remember when he wrote with his finger in the dust? "Neither do I condemn you," he said. Judgement, but judgment in the sense of establishing righteousness. And that meant for the woman accused and brought before him, and for all drawn to his throne, forgiveness of sins. Sin, yes, exists: but beyond it, grace.

“My grace is enough for you, [says the Lord] because power is made perfect in weakness.” (2 Corinthians 12:9)


Today we return once again to the image of the fore-runner, of John the Baptizer, who, having proclaimed that the one who was to come has come, sends for reassurance that Jesus really is that one. 

What did you see? What did you hear? Testify to that, tell John that, says the Lord. 

And the signs he cites say who he is. And who he will be. And what his kingdom, call it that, will be.

Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, those with a skin disease are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them.

We anticipate what has already arrived. We have outlived our obsolescence. What was old news, that the day of the Lord would arrive, is coming indeed, and in its coming is splendor.

And so today in the midst of Advent, our 'little Lent' of blue, we have a Sunday of rose. We have a day of joy.

Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say, Rejoice. (Philippians 4:4)

Various people have asked me, what do you celebrate this season? Hope, peace, joy, love. And truth.

For he is coming, and there is judgment. The word of the Lord, embodied in a baby, is the terror of kings.

This little Babe so few days old 

is come to rifle Satan's fold;

all hell doth at his presence quake 

though he himself for cold do shake;

for in this weak unarmèd wise 

the gates of hell he will surprise.


Robert Southwell (1561? - 1595)


***


This past week I was blessed to attend a holiday concert that featured three versions of Ave Maria and three of Silent Night. Sounds like overkill? Nah. Not when this Sunday we sing Mary’s response to the holy messenger who greeted her “Ave Maria” - Hail Mary. “Hail Mary, the Lord is with you; blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.”


Blessed. And then we celebrate the night she gave birth. She does not complain about pain, not focus on the travails she could expect; her attention is on what the Lord is doing, for her and through her.


Mary said,

“With all my heart I glorify the Lord!

    In the depths of who I am I rejoice in God my savior.

He has looked with favor on the low status of his servant.

    Look! From now on, everyone will consider me highly favored

        because the mighty one has done great things for me.

Holy is his name.

    He shows mercy to everyone,

        from one generation to the next,

        who honors him as God.


(Luke 1:46-50, Common English Bible)


Into the world is coming the kingdom of God, that was and is and is to come. In her womb she carries the paradox of salvation.


How can this be? How can all this holiness, all this grace, all this power, be so fragile and frail in its arrival? The fate of the world, found in a small small thing. 


***


In Bethlehem there is a place to think about all this, in a small room under the altar of the church of the Nativity. There is the place, you are told, where she laid the newborn child: the manger.


And soon the vulnerable child and new mother and her husband will be on the road, following the path of Jacob into exile in Egypt.


Soon the powers that be, from Herod Antipas, client-king of the occupying empire, to the quislings whose interest lies with holding the people down, will be searching and seeking to destroy the small hope of humanity.


But as we have been reminded this season, in psalm and lesson, the powers of the earth are nothing next to the power perfected in weakness, the power kept in a cradle, then spread across the earth.


***


Wait till you see how Herod reacts, when he hears the Messiah is born.


Wait till you see how Rome responds, when they hear the words, Jesus is Lord (and Caesar is not).


Wait until you hear the words, I follow Jesus, and so I must show compassion to the poor, clothe the naked and feed the hungry, speak for the voiceless and innocent, and do justice in my daily life.


Wait until you see that, you see the hand of God at work in the people around you, the world about you.


Then you will know he is come; for he is certainly near. 


Come, Lord Jesus. Maranatha: O come, Emmanuel. Come among us. 


And let what we wish to see and hear be what is seen and heard of us: the presence of redeeming grace.


Hope, peace, joy, love - and truth.


* * *


Hasten, O Father, the coming of thy kingdom; and grant that we thy servants, who now live by faith, may with joy behold thy Son at his coming in glorious majesty; even Jesus Christ, our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen.


Make a place for God in your hearts and in your lives, for he comes to you this day and always; and the blessing of God Almighty, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, be upon you and remain with you always. Amen.


(David Adam, Clouds of Glory. Prayers for the Church Year, Year A. SPCK, 2000, 11.)

https://www.lectionarypage.net/YearA_RCL/Advent/AAdv3_RCL.html

Thanks to the Rev. Colby Roberts for his sermon last Sunday at St Timothy's, Yakima. 
https://www.facebook.com/StTimothysEpiscopalChurchYakima
https://www.yakimaherald.com/news/local/community-q-a-new-rector-at-st-timothys-episcopal-church-brings-enthusiasm-spectacular-singing-voice/article_f4f3e7d6-e523-505d-a16b-02ca41fe2eb8.html

Patronato Christmas concert at Mission San Xavier, December 10, 2025, at 7:45 p.m. 

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

What did you see?

What did you go out into the desert to see? What did you see?

Stir up your power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let your bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.

Stir up your power, we pray - and with great might come among us. And the psalmist warns us, put not your trust in princes. The help Jesus gives is the help of Christ the King, a king unlike any other, in fact subversive of the dominant paradigm of monarchy. If he is king, we have missed the meaning of "king" -- Jesus does not come among us like Saul, a mighty warrior, or David, a comely and pious and witty man. 

Jesus does come among us, as healer, savior, and thus king beyond kings. Jesus comes among us and we behold what it means to be king, what it means to be a man; in fact, what it means to be human. 

Remember when he wrote with his finger in the dust? "Neither do I condemn you" he said. Judgement, but judgment in the sense of establishing righteousness. And that meant for the woman accused drawn before him, and for all drawn to his throne, forgiveness of sins. Sin, yes, exists: but beyond it, grace.

Today we return once again to the image of the fore-runner, of John the Baptizer, who having proclaimed that the one who was to come has come, sends for reassurance that Jesus really is that one. 

What did you see? What did you hear? Testify to that, tell John that, says the Lord. 

And the signs he cites say who he is. And who he will be. And what his kingdom, call it that, will be.

Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, those with a skin disease are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them.

We anticipate what has already arrived. We have outlived our obsolescence. What was old news, that the day of the Lord would arrive, ho hum, is coming and in its coming is splendor.

And so in the midst of Advent, our 'little Lent' of blue, we have a Sunday of rose. We have a day of joy.

Various people have asked me, what do you celebrate this season? Hope, peace, joy, love. And truth.

For he is coming, and there is judgment. The word of the Lord, embodied in a baby, is the terror of kings.

Wait till you see how Herod reacts, when he hears the Messiah is born.

Wait till you see how Rome responds, when they hear the words, Jesus is Lord (and Caesar is not).

Wait until you hear the words, I follow Jesus, and so I must show compassion to the poor, clothe the nake and feed the hungry, speak for the voiceless and innocent, and do justice in my daily life.

Wait until you see that, you see the hand of God at work in the people around you, the world about you.

Then you will know he is come; for he is certainly near. 

Come, Lord Jesus. Maranatha: O come, Emmanuel. Come among us. 

And let what we wish to see and hear be what is seen and heard of us: the presence of redeeming grace.

Hope, peace, joy, love - and truth.


 
https://www.lectionarypage.net/YearA_RCL/Advent/AAdv3_RCL.html

Thanks to the Rev. Colby Roberts for his sermon last Sunday at St Timothy's, Yakima. https://www.facebook.com/StTimothysEpiscopalChurchYakima
https://www.yakimaherald.com/news/local/community-q-a-new-rector-at-st-timothys-episcopal-church-brings-enthusiasm-spectacular-singing-voice/article_f4f3e7d6-e523-505d-a16b-02ca41fe2eb8.html
 
Psalms 146 (Book of Common Prayer psalter, Coverdale/1662)

1  Praise the Lord, O my soul; while I live will I praise the Lord *
 yea, as long as I have any being, I will sing praises unto my God.
2  O put not your trust in princes, nor in any child of man *
 for there is no help in them.
3  For when the breath of man goeth forth he shall turn again to his earth *
 and then all his thoughts perish.

4  Blessed is he that hath the God of Jacob for his help *
 and whose hope is in the Lord his God;
5  Who made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that therein is *
 who keepeth his promise for ever.
6  Who helpeth them to right that suffer wrong *
 who feedeth the hungry.
7  The Lord looseth men out of prison *
 the Lord giveth sight to the blind.
8  The Lord helpeth them that are fallen *
 the Lord careth for the righteous.
9  The Lord careth for the strangers; he defendeth the fatherless and widow *
 as for the way of the ungodly, he turneth it upside down.
10  The Lord thy God, O Sion, shall be King for evermore *
 and throughout all generations.

https://bible.oremus.org/

Sunday, November 23, 2025

"Who's in charge here?"

 23 November 2025

Last Sunday after Pentecost:
Christ the King
Proper 29
 Year C RCL Track Two
The Collect
Almighty and everlasting God, whose will it is to restore all things in your well-beloved Son, the King of kings and Lord of lords: Mercifully grant that the peoples of the earth, divided and enslaved by sin, may be freed and brought together under his most gracious rule; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

"Who's in charge here?" was the title and closing line of a science-fiction story I read in an oversize Ace paperback we bought in a drugstore in Chico, California, sometime in the last century. As I recall, in that story it was clear no one was in charge: just an urban wasteland, desultory and desolate, trash and stray dogs and stray survivors wandering about. A world without God, for sure. 

In the Lord of the Rings, toward the end, Sam looks up at the sky and realizes that behind the brooding clouds the stars are still shining, and would. There was good beyond the reach of evil and it would prevail.


Sunday, November 16, 2025

endurance

“Some people were talking about the temple and the beauty of its fine stones and ornaments. He said, ‘These things you are gazing at–the time will come when not one stone will be left upon another; they will all be thrown down.’ (Luke 21:5-6, Revised English Bible)

Twenty-three years ago I slapped my hand on the Romanesque wall, exposed by renovations, of Chester Cathedral and said to my host, this is the church Anselm knew. There has been a church on the site since the eighth century. The building now is Gothic in style, but that is wrapped around an earlier Romanesque structure. And so I knew that back when “Cur Deus Homo” (Why a God-Man?) was hot off the copying desk, its author, Anselm the Archbishop of Canterbury, was visiting, the wall he would have touched was the wall I touched. Ten years ago I placed my palm against a large well-worked stone in Jerusalem. It was part of the Western Wall, foundation stone of the third Temple, built under the direction (and the lash) of Herod the Great, just before Jesus was born. Despite our Savior’s words of prophecy, not every stone fell away from every other. The Romans, when they came in destructive fury, left a few standing, just a few. They are the largest and oldest and best-fashioned of the stones in the wall. Though I doubt the soldiers of Titus spared them out of respect for the stone masons. Stones last. Sometimes they are repurposed: they become spolia, salvaged or stolen from an old ruined (mostly) building and put to new use. Churches in Rome have pillars from pagan bath houses. Churches in Spain have stones that were once in mosques that were once churches. Sometimes they stay where they were put, for a very long time. Sometimes they are in ruins, evocative of earlier, lost ages, and forgotten rituals. Stones last. But not forever. And they don’t matter anyway. That is what Jesus tells us. “The Lord is faithful” - the steadfast love of God : that is what endures. ***

By your endurance you will gain your souls (NRSV) Or– By standing firm, you will win yourselves life (REB) Or– By holding fast, you will gain your lives (CEB) Or– By your perseverance, you shall gain salvation. (Luke 21:19) Do you remember the persistent widow from a gospel a week or two ago, how she persisted? And in persisting, she demanded justice against her opponent, or as the King James would say, to be avenged against her adversary. (Luke 18:1-8) Jesus calls his followers to endure and hold on in the midst of persecutions and says that by so doing they will save their souls and their lives. Early in the passage, he talks about what to do when someone says to you follow me because I am the one. I am the one who can save you and the time is near. He says don’t go after them, don’t follow that leader, that false leader. That is part of saving your soul, not to be seduced by false messiahs, false leaders. Today’s psalm ends with this verse: ‘In righteousness shall he judge the world, and the peoples with equity.’ (98.10) What does that mean? Are there other ways to say it? You can also say, he will judge with saving righteousness. You can say, he will establish justice; you can say, he will bring salvation and that that is his victory. And all of these other ways of saying it remind us that it is the Lord who is our king. Christ, the king. In the early days of Christianity within the pagan Roman empire, all you had to do to be convicted of treason was to say that Jesus is Lord —that Christ is King, not the emperor. And that is who we turn to, as our judge for the people who receive this message. It is joy to the world for the Lord to win himself the victory, for the Lord to win salvation. For him to come and judge the Earth means that we will be vindicated, that he will establish a saving righteousness with equity and justice. That is a pretty different sense of judgment from that of the persistent widow’s unjust judge who seemed simply to be awarding the victory to one side or another in a dispute. In the justice of God, salvation and righteousness are established for the world among all people. But it is for us to step out of that tight frame of jurisprudence that simply chooses a winner between opponents in a lawsuit and it is for us to step into a larger world in which justice rolls down like waters and the day of salvation is at hand. (Amos 5:24)

***

“But before all this occurs, they will take you into custody and harass you because of your faith. They will hand you over to synagogues and prisons, and you will be brought before kings and governors because of my name. This will provide you with an opportunity to testify. Make up your minds not to prepare your defense in advance. I’ll give you words and wisdom that none of your opponents will be able to counter or contradict.” (Luke 21:12-15, Common English Bible)

What would I say if I were hauled up before the magistrate to defend my religion? First of all, it doesn’t seem likely; after all I’m not a Christian in Baghdad or Bahá’í in Tehran or Muslim in western China or Buddhist in Tibet.

And what would I have done that might make them think they could convict me of being a Christian? Have I been comforting the bereaved, visiting the sick, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, or standing up for justice? Have I been doing those things? Have I been encouraging other people to do those things? Or is it guilt by association with people who do those things?

After all, I did sign that “Bear Witness Now” letter along with 100 other pastors that said, this is what Christianity is about, and included three main points.

And those points were about compassion and justice and charity. About God’s love for all people, God’s love for creation, God’s particular love for the poor.

● “For God so loved the whole world” ● “God created the world and called it good” ● "For the least of these”

(John 3.16. Genesis 1.4,10,12, 18, 21, 25, 31. Matthew 25.40, 45._

Maybe that's enough to get me busted. I hope so, cause I haven’t done a whole lot else. Nothing to stand out. Then again, what does stand up? How would we know?

There’s a story about an old Scottish pastor reflecting back on his life who worried that he’d never really had his words or his ministry turn someone’s life around; except maybe, he thought aloud, maybe that little Davy Livingstone. David Livingstone, you may know, devoted his life to a very dramatic ministry in Africa, missionary, physician, explorer, and anti-slavery crusader.

Maybe we won’t know what would stand up in court, if we were brought before kings and governors. Maybe we would slide by because of the modest nature of our commitments. Maybe we would. Maybe some of us will have to stand up and stand out, because of the nature of the gospel. Of the gospel, not our own bravery or detachment or internal virtue. Because he calls.

He calls us. As he called Nicodemus, and Andrew and Peter, and Matthew. And a blind beggar no one knows the name of. Of Mary and Martha. And of that saint we sang of, on All Saints, that we met at shops or at tea. (Love that.) Because the saints of God are just folks like we—

May the Lord direct your hearts towards God’s love and the steadfastness of Christ. 

(2 Th 3.5, REB)


JRL+


https://chestercathedral.com/about/heritage-culture/the-building-and-its-history

https://www.mezquita-cordoba.com/en

Lesbia Scott, “I sing a song of the saints of God”, Hymn #293, The Hymnal 1982, ‎page 515. [https://hymnary.org/hymn/EH1982/page/515]

[https://www.britannica.com/biography/David-Livingstone]

https://www.bearwitnessnow.org/

November 16th, 2025

Twenty-third Sunday after Pentecost
CProper 28

https://ctktucson.org/sermons/endurance/