Monday, November 16, 2020

Where were you?




In the name of God, Creator of all, Spirit that moved upon the waters, and Son, hungry and homeless, naked and thirsty, sick and in prison, king. Amen.

The abolitionist speaker and former slave, Frederick Douglass, looking back from freedom, recalled a friend who helped him in his first days out of captivity, Mr. Nathan Johnson, “of whom I can say with a grateful heart, ‘I was hungry, and he gave me meat; I was thirsty, and he gave me drink; I was a stranger, and he took me in” - literal application of today’s gospel. 

I’ve been wondering. What did Jesus really look like? Did he look like a king? When we think of Christ the king do we think of him on his throne, the nations prostrate before him at the end of time? Or do we think of him hungry, homeless, naked, thirsty, sick, a prisoner, in need of our help?

Some years ago on a Saturday I was getting into my crummy old car in downtown San Francisco when a man came striding up and asked me the way to Taylor St. I pointed the way: straight up Nob Hill. And off he went at a steady pace. Then I thought to myself, where on Taylor Street was he headed? So I got into my car and drove up to where I could talk to him. Glide Memorial Church, he said, near Eddy St. Oh! The bottom of the hill. He would have had a long sweaty walk for nearly nothing.

So I gave him a ride. (I had to apologize for the condition of my car: it had been stolen, driven into the ground, and then recovered by the Oakland Police.) It turned out he and I were much alike except for one small thing. He had just done fifteen years for armed robbery, mostly in Leavenworth, most recently at Lompoc, and had just been released. They gave him fifty bucks and a suit. So he spent the fifty in a bar and promptly got rolled. He went back and they gave him bus fare and the address of a re-entry program: at Glide Memorial.

Here he was. Not so different from me except that one mistake, is how it felt at the time. Now you know and I know that armed robbery came at the end of a long string of bad choices. But does that make him so different from me - or you? In any case Jesus does not seem to care. He just says, I was in prison and you visited me; I was recently released and you gave me a ride. You could have done more, but I’ll take it. Both of you, come on in.

***

In the 1920s in the era of Mussolini and Hitler, of Weimar and upheaval, the roaring 20s, the pope became concerned that the government was taking on itself almost divine pretensions. And so he decreed a new festival: Christ the King, that we now celebrate on the last Sunday before Advent. It foreshadows the theme of that season, indeed, as we anticipate the arrival of our true emperor but in the form of a baby. Nativity of our Lord we anticipate; in the meantime we have this reminder and summary of where the story ends: in a scene beyond dreams.

In fact the season of Advent, which we anticipate on the Sunday next before Advent, heralds the once and future king: the arrival of the infant and again the One who comes on clouds of glory at the consummation of time. 

This of course reminds us in salutary fashion of what it means to appear before the king: what have you been doing in my absence? We hear over the course of the church year numerous examples of a landlord who returns: the one, for example, who sets up tenants with a vineyard, winepress, and tower, and then sets off for a far country, only to return and summon his tenants to a reckoning; or the one who invests three servants with sums of money - talents - and then leaves for awhile, returning to ask how they have done with the wealth entrusted to them. 

There is hell to pay, or heaven to be enjoyed, depending on the stewardship of the ones holding trust.

Of course this does not just mean talents, as in large sums of money, or in the English-language pun, gifts and capabilities of said servants. It means all we are invested with, all we are given, as creatures of God and caretakers of God's creation. Genesis 1: dominion, meaning oversight, meaning care, with the obvious expectation, Don't wreck it! Take care of it!

Have we done so? Shall we do so? We are invited into this kingdom of harmony not discord, of wealth or at least not want, of freedom of joy not fear, of worship not obeisance, of a freedom not dependent on men or women, but on the ultimate service, the one that no other allegiance stands beside, our perfect freedom as ones who serve him and him only - all other allegiances are subject, contingent, on this first loyalty.

That does not mean of course that we exercise that allegiance by following our personal feelings at the expense of the legitimate duties of a citizen, a husband or father, a mother, wife, or daughter; it does mean that we know that these roles and services are in loyalty to something greater than themselves. All those laws, commandments, and prophecies that Israel collected in ancient days were indeed part of their covenant relationship with the Holy.

How we treat each other is how that relationship plays out. It is not just prayer; not just alms giving or charitable contributions, not even a pledge drive response, but our whole selves that God calls us to put into right relationship: with God and therefore with others and our selves. 

***

A friend of mine had a funny job: he called it "talking to murderers." To make it even funnier, that is what he did. He got in his car, said good-bye to his wife, drove over the hill, and went behind bars, into a maximum-security state prison. And there he would listen to someone say, when I get out of this place, I'm going to find the guy who put me here, and I'm going to kill him. And then, they would ask my friend, are you going to tell them I said that? And my friend would say, yes.

Because that was his job: he was evaluating their psychological fitness for parole. Over the years it got kind of wearing. Talking to murderers. Being alone with them locked up in a little room while they told you what they did, what they had done, what they were planning to do.

When Emma Lazarus wrote that poem "the new Colossus" that is on the base of the statue of Liberty, she left out a few things. "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore" - but she didn't say, give me your murderers, give me your rapists, give me your armed robbers, give me even the worst of your self. But that is what Jesus got, when he said, I was in prison and you visited me. That is who he meant.

Before my friend told me about his job, I found out about someone else, a combat veteran who would, after Sunday mass, get in his car, said good-bye to his wife, and head to that same prison, where he would talk to murderers. He did it, I discovered, because of something in the gospel that was read today. I was in prison and you visited me. Jesus didn't say, I won't look very nice. You won't recognize me. I stink and I will scare you. You will be afraid of me. No, he did not say that.

We don't expect to see the face of Christ in someone reprehensible. But I don't think Jesus left anyone out. His kingdom takes all kinds. Even us. Even the wretched refuse of our lives.

And somehow in those wretched awful people and the wretched awful parts of our own lives, still he is king.

Still when we get to the end of time and stand before the throne of God, we will find ourselves looking at - ourselves... and the worst of us, the worst of human nature, redeemed in what can only be divine strength.

For he embraces us, as we are. He does not crown us or condone us. No when he is talking to murderers, rapists, and armed robbers, he does not say, never mind, forget it, it does not matter, you do not matter: he says I love you nevertheless.

And so I love your friend too, this one over here, who has seen more firearms than most felons ever have, the one who came to visit me, the old veteran of a forgotten army, who heard what I had to say in the gospel: I was in prison and you came to see me.

Not very nice people. But somehow redeemed. Only one king can do that, the one we celebrate today.


JRL+

Last Sunday after Pentecost: Christ the King AProper29 Track Two (OT reading complementary to Gospel). https://www.lectionarypage.net/YearA_RCL/Pentecost/AProp29_RCL.html. Ezekiel 34:11-16, 20-24 , Psalm 95:1-7a , Ephesians 1:15-23 , Matthew 25:31-46

http://www.vatican.va/content/pius-xi/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xi_enc_11121925_quas-primas.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5TfrUAqh8w The Call, Scene Beyond Dreams (1984)

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46550/the-new-colossus


Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, Written by Himself. Boston: Published at the Anti-Slavery Office, 1845. Library of America, Slave Narratives, 2000, 360.


Libby Howe, Living by the Word, The Christian Century, https://www.christiancentury.org/article/living-word/november-22-roc-matthew-2531-46


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oB3PrB9Xwnc

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Meeting Jesus Again for the Last Time


For the Feast of Christ the King

In the 1920s in the era of Mussolini and Hitler, of Weimar and upheaval, the roaring 20s, the pope became concerned that the government was taking on itself almost divine pretensions. And so he decreed a new festival: Christ the King, that we now celebrate on the last Sunday before Advent. It foreshadows the theme of that season, indeed, as we anticipate the arrival of our true emperor but in the form of a baby. Nativity of our Lord we anticipate; in the meantime we have this reminder and summary of where the story ends: "in a scene beyond dreams" as Michael Been and The Call once sang. In fact the season of Advent, which we anticipate on the Sunday next before Advent, heralds the once and future king: the arrival of the infant and again the One who comes on clouds of glory at the consummation of time. 

This of course reminds us in salutary fashion of what it means to appear before the king: what have you been doing in my absence? We hear over the course of the church year numerous examples of a landlord who returns: the one, for example, who sets up tenants with a vineyard, winepress, and tower, and then sets off for a far country, only to return and summon his tenants to a reckoning; or the one who invests three servants with sums of money - talents - and then leaves for awhile, returning to ask how they have done with the wealth entrusted to them. 

There is hell to pay, or heaven to be enjoyed, depending on the stewardship of the ones holding trust.

Of course this does not just mean talents, as in large sums of money, or in the English-language pun, gifts and capabilities of said servants. It means all we are invested with, all we are given, as creatures of God and caretakers of God's creation. Genesis 1: dominion, meaning oversight, meaning care, with the obvious expectation, Don't wreck it! Take care of it!

Have we done so? Shall we do so? We are invited into this kingdom of harmony not discord, of wealth or at least not want, of freedom of joy not fear, of worship not obeisance, of a freedom not dependent on men or women, but on the ultimate service, the one that no other allegiance stands beside, our perfect freedom as ones who serve him and him only - all other allegiances are subject, contingent, on this first loyalty.

That does not mean of course that we exercise that allegiance by following our personal feelings at the expense of the legitimate duties of a citizen, a husband or father, a mother, wife, or daughter; it does mean that we know that these roles and services are in loyalty to something greater than themselves. All those laws, commandments, and prophecies that Israel collected in ancient days were indeed part of their covenant relationship with the Holy. How we treat each other is how that relationship plays out. It is not just prayer; not just alms giving or charitable contributions, not even a pledge drive response, but our whole selves that God calls us to put into right relationship: with God and therefore with others and our selves. 


***

A friend of mine had a funny job: he called it "talking to murderers." To make it even funnier, that is what he did. He got in his car, said good-bye to his wife, drove over the hill, and went behind bars, into a maximum-security state prison. And there he would listen to someone say, when I get out of this place, I'm going to find the guy who put me here, and I'm going to kill him. And then, they would ask my friend, are you going to tell them I said that? And my friend would say, yes. Because that was his job: he was evaluating their psychological fitness for parole. It got kind of wearing. Talking to murderers. Being alone with them locked up in a little room while they told you what they did, what they had done, what they were planning to do.

When Emma Lazarus wrote that poem "the new Colossus" that is on the base of the statue of Liberty, she left out a few things. "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore" - but she didn't say, give me your murderers, give me your rapists, give me your armed robbers, give me even the worst of your self. But that is what Jesus got, when he said, I was in prison and you visited me. That is who he meant. 

Before my friend told me about his job, I found out about someone else, a combat veteran who would, after Sunday mass, get in his car, said good-bye to his wife, and head to that same prison, where he would talk to murderers. He did it, I discovered, because of something in the gospel that was read today. I was in prison and you visited me. Jesus didn't say, I won't look very nice. You won't recognize me. I stink and I will scare you. You will be afraid of me. No, he did not say that. 

We don't expect to see the face of Christ in someone so reprehensible. But I don't think Jesus left anyone out. His kingdom takes all kinds. Even us. Even the wretched refuse of our lives.

And somehow in those wretched awful people and the wretched awful parts of our own lives, still he is king.

Still when we get to the end of time and stand before the throne of God, we will find ourselves looking at - ourselves... and the worst of us, the worst of human nature, redeemed in what can only be divine strength. 

For he embraces us, as we are. He does not crown us or condone us. No when he is talking to murderers, rapists, and armed robbers, he does not say, never mind, forget it, it does not matter, you do not matter: he says I love you nevertheless. 

And so I love your friend too, this one over here, who has seen more firearms than most felons ever have, the one who came to visit me, the old veteran of a forgotten army, who heard what I had to say in the gospel: I was in prison and you came to see me. 

Not very nice people. But somehow redeemed. Only one king can do that, the one we celebrate today.


Last Sunday after Pentecost: Christ the King AProper29 Track Two (OT reading complementary to Gospel).
https://www.lectionarypage.net/YearA_RCL/Pentecost/AProp29_RCL.html

Ezekiel 34:11-16, 20-24 , Psalm 95:1-7a , Ephesians 1:15-23 , Matthew 25:31-46 . 

http://www.vatican.va/content/pius-xi/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xi_enc_11121925_quas-primas.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5TfrUAqh8w The Call, Scene Beyond Dreams (1984)

https://www.christiancentury.org/article/living-word/november-22-roc-matthew-2531-46

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oB3PrB9Xwnc

Saturday, November 7, 2020

Reconciled

 Let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream!

 

Brother Roger of Taizé, during a pilgrimage of youth to the Washington National Cathedral in about 1980 or 1981, at the conclusion of the service invited anyone who wanted to come up and he would offer them a sign of reconciliation: and he would make, with his finger, the sign of the cross in the palm of your hand. 

 

Responding to the racial upheavals of fifty years ago, James H. Cone wrote his famous, fiery book Black Theology & Black Power. He said that reconciliation comes with the establishment of justice and righteousness, with telling the truth. 

 

James H. Cone reminded his readers that it is in Christ that reconciliation comes. And he cited the words of St. Paul: 

 

God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself. (2 Corinthians 5:19)

 

Two very different voices, but both call on God as the source and endpoint of reconciliation. 

 

If you want peace, work for justice.

 

Even last Sunday we were reminded, in the national service of prayer for healing and wholeness, to be brave, and seek the truth. (Valarie Kaur)

 

And in the truth, we will find our way toward justice, righteousness, and peace, the peace of reconciliation, to one another, and as these Christian witnesses would say, in Christ.

 

 

 

This Sunday, the second Sunday in November, I want to talk about reconciliation. Racial reconciliation is one of the three themes, along with creation care and evangelism, that the Episcopal Church has undertaken to address during this triennium, the three years between General Conventions. But of course that is not the only reason to talk about reconciliation today. Last Sunday at the suggestion of our local precinct captain, neighbors began to remove political yard signs from their yards, since there was anticipation of some unrest regardless of the results of the national general election. And this Sunday, November 8th, is the Sunday after Election Day. 

 

It is also the Sunday before Armistice Day, Veterans Day: a day to remember the efforts of veterans and others to practice reconciliation after armed conflict, beginning with the first World War. Among the returning veterans from that war were the founders of the Iona Community, notably George MacLeod, who began to work for justice, and work toward their own righteousness, in community, on the windy western island of Iona, in Scotland. Iona began to attract visitors and volunteers, and continues to be a pilgrimage destination to this day. 

 

After the second World War, in the small village of Taizé near the demarcation line which had divided France in two, a community gathered that became a place where people could seek reconciliation across national and generational boundaries, and seek the Spirit in guidance and celebration. Brother Roger came from there.

 

And on our minds this year in this country has been the overwhelming need to seek reconciliation between alienated people, of different races, classes, and political persuasions. 

 

When reconciliation seems most impossible, then it most needs to be sought: in the work and words of Jesus we find a way toward it; and his footsteps we follow toward that goal.

 

***

 

Among the impressive achievements of reconciliation in the past centuries has been the effort of old soldiers, veterans from opposing sides of past wars, to reconcile with some of those from the other side. This may be rare, and therefore celebrated all the more. Veterans from the first and second World Wars have gradually found each other; leaders of nations from that conflict have met each other. Veterans of the American war in Vietnam have journeyed back to meet the people from the other side. An American president laid a wreath at Hiroshima.

 

After the Civil War, widows and veterans north and south began to decorate graves on certain days; eventually these observances were merged into one national Memorial Day. Problematic as some of the monuments were and are, there were attempts also to see the resolution of the conflict in peace. 

 

Of course, “if you want peace work for justice” … which is why to move toward reconciliation we tell the truth, and strive for righteousness, and work for justice.

 

And that is what this day, between Election Day and Veterans Day, is about.

 

Working for justice, striving for righteousness, that peace may flow like a river, “flowing out from you and me, flowing out into the desert, flowing to the sea.”

 

 

****

 

So often with Old Testament (Hebrew Scriptures) prophets we want to know what the context is: when were they writing, to whom, what was going on around them. With Amos, in this passage, we know! He is writing to us, now, about what is going on around us. That seems to apply regardless of the immediate circumstances. And of course we cannot just cut and patch what he has to say into our own arguments. But we can use them as a prophetic distraction from our own concerns, our own perspective, and look beyond even his original readership to what God is doing in our listening to this ancient denunciation of vanity, hypocrisy, injustice, unrighteousness, and the lack of peace, truth, and reconciliation. Wisely, many have taken a page from the South African initiative called the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. And others no less astute have learned from mediation teachers like Hizkias Assefa, as they lay out and model the steps to peace. 

 

One time Dr Assefa waited all day at the edge of a jungle clearing, in southern Sudan, with representatives of the official government, as they kept an appointment with some one no one had see for ten years: the leaders of the Lord’s Resistance Army, an insurrectionary group famous for its violent methods. At the end of the day the sun was setting, everybody was getting nervous - they were in the middle of the jungle, far from safety -  and the LRA vice-president emerged from the jungle, clad in immaculate white safari suit. He had been watching from the jungle for signs of betrayal and only emerged when he was satisfied. And so, on a pad of group-process newsprint Dr Assefa, as mediator and facilitator, began to enumerate the ground rules of the conversation. No interrupting, yes, raise your hand, listen, but first: begin by not killing people or kidnapping children any more

 

What Amos does for us is remind us that 

we are not the ultimate, 

we are not alone, that in fact 

what God is doing and 

what therefore we are called to do, will always 

stand in judgment over our own perspective and our actions.

 

What does the Lord require? 

 

To do justice, to love mercy, to walk humbly with our God. (Micah 6:8)

 

What does the Lord require, of us, now? God is present in the present moment, the moment of freedom, of decision: what now shall be done? We don’t always know.

 

And so we seek wisdom from the ages not just our own. Even ancient wisdom of a faraway people in a time long ago, Amos in Israel... and next door. Right now.

 

χρόνος is out the window! καιρός is what is going on now. That is, clock time, twenty-four hour-a-day check-your-phone time, is no longer applicable. What matters is time in its fullness, the completion of time, the consummation of time. That is when the bridegroom arrives.

 

You may know people who operate like this - they arrive when they arrive. I’ve seen it everywhere from a Sufi imam to a group of Miwok dancers absorbed in a gambling game and missing their turn on stage at an acorn festival. It makes the manager types - the clipboard carriers - tear their hair out. And I’m not immune myself, having been to a wedding where the bride was twenty clock minutes late. 

 

Then, on the arm of her uncle, in she walked. Radiant. At last! and right on time.

 

And that is what is, was, is, will be, like when Jesus comes. At last! And at once.

 

The bridegroom. Here at last, after shaking as many hands as could reach him, making his way down the street from congratulatory bottle-happy well-wisher to cheek-kissing lipstick-planting auntie. 

 

All of it happens at once and for always. Every moment becomes the present moment, the moment of freedom. 

 

And now - as it is always now - we face the judge who is our friend.

 

That is the last scene that this gospel is leading toward, the scene beyond dreams that is the last judgment, when Jesus meets again for the first time those who have treated the least of these as they would have treated him.... Christ the King. And your neighbor.




Amos 5:18-24

Psalm 70

1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

Matthew 25:1-13

Proper 27 Year A (Revised Common Lectionary)

 

https://pima.bibliocommons.com/list/share/1102635677_pimalib_kindred/1747324749_the_power_of_the_black_vote

 

https://pima.bibliocommons.com/list/share/338799627_pimalib_nuestrasraices/1658182879_borderlands_a_scarred_landscape

 

https://www.library.pima.gov/blacklivesmatter/

 

Barack Obama, Dreams From My Father: a Story of Race and Inheritance (1995; Broadway Paperbacks, 2004)

 

Barack Obama, The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream (Crown, 2006)

 

Barack Obama, We Are the Change We Seek: The Speeches of Barack Obama. E. J. Dionne Jr. and Joy-Ann Reid, eds. (Bloomsbury, 2017)

 

Barack Obama, A Promised Land (Crown/Penguin Random House/Bertelsmann, 2020)

 

Martin Buber, I and Thou (1932)

 

James H. Cone, Black Power and Black Theology (Harper & Row, 1969; Orbis Books, 2018)

 

James H. Cone, Said I Wasn't Gonna Tell Nobody: the Making of a Black Theologian (Orbis Books, 2018)

 

King, Martin Luther, Jr., Where Do We Go From Here; Chaos or Community? (Beacon Press, 2010)

 

Wallis, Jim, America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege, and the Bridge to a New America (Brazos Press, 2016)

 

Taizé: The Beginnings (https://www.taize.fr/en_article6526.html)

 

November 1, 2020: 11am Sunday Worship Service at Washington National Cathedral (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zaoajBV890g&feature=youtu.be)

 

The Episcopal Church, November 1, 2020: Holding onto Hope: A National Service for Healing and Wholeness (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JXCaXNSrX8s)(https://episcopalchurch.org/posts/publicaffairs/presiding-bishop-michael-currys-sermon-holding-hope-national-service-healing-and)

 

The Call, Reconciled, LP (1986: WEA/Elecktra/Asylum (catalog#60440)

 

J. S. Bach, Wachet auf ruft die stimme BWV 140 (https://youtu.be/DqZE54i-muE)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9MXYTNgZFM