Saturday, December 17, 2022

Joseph

 

These days if you are out in a boat on the sea of Galilee you may be buzzed by a C-130, or if you are in the small hill town of Nazareth by an F-16. Back in Joseph’s day when Zebedee was out on the lake with his two small boys, James and John, teaching them to mind the nets and watch the currents, and when Joseph was using his hands to hew a piece of furniture for a neighbor or build a wall for the nearby new town of Caesarea Philippi, there were no airplanes. There were, however, powerful forces that you could not ignore. 


And that had been true before, and Joseph knew it. In the time of Isaiah the prophet, when Ahaz was king in Jerusalem, the powerful forces that threatened were from the north, the then kingdom of Assyria, and trouble was brewing. Joseph would have known about this, perhaps, and then he would have known about the prophecy that Isaiah gave to his king. Ahaz was probably trembling in his boots - or sandals - knowing much larger kingdoms were arrayed against him, threatening his little hilltop capital. And he would have hoped, as Will Willimon puts it, for an army. But that is not what the Lord sent him. 


And that is not what the Lord sent Joseph, in his day. Joseph lived in the time of Roman occupation and Roman overlordship. Sure, there might have been a king in Jerusalem - but he was Caesar’s buddy Herod. And Caesar had troops handy, as close as Damascus, or closer, to back up Herod. 


So what did the Lord send Ahaz, trembling in his boots, looking to the hills, wondering from whence his help would come? No army. No present help at all, but a promise: a hope. A baby. For behold, a virgin shall bear a child. And that child shall be called “God with us”. 


Linger on that for a moment. Take a break from the threat, the lowering clouds. God with us. That is a promise. That is what the people of God always looked for, always look for: the presence of God among us. That is where salvation lies.


And that is what Isaiah the prophet promised his king. God is with us. And in yet a little while, the threat you fear shall be gone, as certain as the summer sun melts the snow. “Before the child shall know to refuse the evil, and choose the good,” the threat you worry about will be past.


Joseph may have known this history. Of course he knew the rest of history and he knew that history was not over. There was a more modern threat in his time, one more systematic, organized. It was the hegemony of an empire that lasted a thousand years. Rome. (Add another thousand, if you count Constantinople.)


And it was not to be turned over lightly. (Indeed, it was to be shaken - and changed.) 


But there was that promise again. A young woman, a girl, shall conceive and bear a child.


It sounds so passive. All Joseph had to do was wait, right? The summer sun would melt the snow, the oppressive occupiers would fade away, and all would be well.


Not so fast.


And not so easy.


The kingdoms that Isaiah faced, and the empire that Joseph faced, did not disappear with only a promise. Joseph had a hand in what happened next. He took on the challenge. He was not passive, but powerful, with the power only a pair of hands that shaped a future could hold. 


He did not merely accept a promise, and an unwanted challenge, he rose to take them in those work-worn hands of his, and made a future, and made a family. With the family God gave him, he made a future. A future not only for them but for Israel, for the whole people of God.



*** 

In his gospel, Matthew tells the story of the birth of Christ with five significant dreams, and four significant dreamers. The first dreamer, and four of the dreams, belong to Joseph. 

(The other dream, and dreamers, come with the arrival of magi from the East. There will be another dream, and dreamer, in Matthew's Passion.) 

Joseph's first dream was monumental and simple.

Do not put away this woman. Marry her. Raise her son. For in him and in her is the hope of ages. And you have a job to do, a role to play, that is essential to its fulfillment.

And he did.

Joseph, in his dreams, takes place toward the end of the long line of prophets, prophets including Noah, Moses, Elijah, and others. The warning dreams - flee, go back, turn aside - could be those of a troubled man tossing and turning, deciding what to do - and finding the answer in emerging consciousness. The first dream, however, is this and more: for Joseph sees beyond the moment to its deeper meaning.

A professor of mine used to distinguish between what is happening - like little waves on the surface of a lake - and what is really going on - in those deep currents and upwellings of great significance that breach the surface of time in critical moments.

This, Joseph perceived, was one of those moments. This was not just an ordinary occurrence, the unexpected pregnancy of a young woman. If it had been, his initial plan of 'putting her away quietly' - so she could bear her child in rural obscurity - would have been the familiar and highly recommended route. But there was more going on than what just appeared to be happening on the surface. This was the beginning, if Joseph was as docile to the spirit's leading as Mary had been, of the redemption of time.


A woman gets serious about life when she marries, that same professor of mine once said. And a man when he becomes a father. 

Twenty years later his widow, with a wink, said that was certainly true in his case. 


When I think about Joseph this week I think about the trust that was handed to him. The tremendous gift and responsibility of being a husband to Mary and raising her son. The joy and the sorrow that were to come. Of perhaps seeing ahead to her widowhood and bereavement. 


For now though and for years to come he had a wife to care for and a boy to raise. 


Not just any boy. For in him was embodied the promise of ages.


Joseph had an extraordinary trust. This child to raise. This woman to protect, and to love.


God had entrusted him with this charge. It would change the world. And it would change him.


What would it mean, one can only guess, to realize what his dream meant. What a solution it was to the apparent dilemma he had gone to bed with. What a challenge it meant on waking. 


This one, after all the ages, will carry forward what God had been doing all along.


For Joseph was, as a scion of the house of David, an heir to the promise to Israel of a new hope, a messiah, one anointed to bring them freedom from fear, freedom to worship, freedom of speech, freedom from want. Those days of destitution, of oppression, were to end. Freedom as a people. 


It was not to be, not yet. But in this hope of Israel was carried a greater hope: that the joy of God, the life of people in communion with their creator, redeemer, and sanctifier, would encompass all the people of the earth. 


Come to me all ye that are weary and heavy laden, the son would say, and I will give you rest.


Israel had all these centuries carried the trust, the hope and joy and burden and sorrow, of being God’s people, chosen to bear witness to the truth and bear it forward into the world.


God is one. One who loves what God has made. One who does not forget his promise. One who brings hope to the world.


In Jesus, in what he did, the signs and splendors of that hope became visible in the world. It was not the end of suffering but it was the presence of God with us in the midst of travail. 


It was the beginning of the completion of the hope begun in Eden and carried on the cross at Calvary and discovered at the side of an empty tomb, and awaited everywhere after Easter.


The one who was, the one who is, the one who is to come. The hope of the world. 


And it all began with this little baby.


Hold him Joseph, hold him close. And hold his mother beside you.




JRL+


DREAMERS


Purify our conscience, Almighty God, by your daily visitation, that your Son Jesus Christ, at his coming, may find in us a mansion prepared for himself; who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

To keep a Dream Journal was the one requirement of an 'easy pass' course at my college, until the lecturer added a preface to the list. You missed so much if you only took the easy way out. The teacher himself was a poet, and incantatory only begins to describe the recitations of his own poetry that occasionally broke through the drowsy fog of my inattention. The lectures were all recorded, videotaped and transcribed, and published by Black Sparrow Press as "Birth of a Poet" (1982). Yes, these were the lectures of William Everson, beat poet and correspondent of Thomas Merton, known in religion as Brother Antoninus. He believed in dreams' power to speak to us: he was a Jungian, and recommended reading "Three Archetypes" to inform our understanding of ourselves. There was more to the class and to him than I grasped but I do know now that he sought to invite us into our dreams, and into our desires they revealed, and into our own nature in its depths of unconscious longing and fulfillment. 

There have been great dreams. And nightmares. Did you think I would begin with Martin Luther King, Jr., speaking at the Washington Monument in 1963? Or perhaps a 'nightmare' portrait of Romance? But Joseph's dream was different, even unlike the dream of Joseph's interpretation in the land of Egypt, or Jacob's at the bank of the Jordan. It was monumental and simple.

Do not put away this woman. Marry her. Raise her son. For in him and in her is the hope of ages. And you have a job to do, a role to play, that is essential to its fulfillment.

And he did.


*** 

In his telling, his gospel, Matthew tells of the birth of Christ with five significant dreams, and four significant dreamers. The first dreamer, and four of the dreams, belong to Joseph. (The other dream, and dreamers, come with the arrival of magi from the East. There will be another dream, and dreamer, in Matthew's Passion.) 

Joseph, in his dreams, takes place toward the end of the long line of prophets, prophets including Noah, Moses, Elijah, and others. The warning dreams - flee, go back, turn aside - could be those of a troubled man tossing and turning, deciding what to do - and finding the answer in emerging consciousness. The first dream, however, is this and more: for Joseph sees beyond the moment to its deeper meaning.

That same professor of mine used to distinguish between what is happening - like little waves on the surface of a lake - and what is really going on - in those deep currents and upwellings of great significance that breach the surface of time in critical moments.

This, Joseph perceived, was one of those moments. This was not just an ordinary occurrence, the unexpected pregnancy of a young woman. If it had been, his initial plan of 'putting her away quietly' - so she could bear her child in rural obscurity - would have been the familiar and highly recommended route. But there was more going on than what just appeared to be happening on the surface. This was the beginning, if Joseph was as docile to the spirit's leading as Mary had been, of the redemption of time.

It meant the fulfillment of the promise of ages, that Zechariah had greeted in the birth of his son John, and that Anna and Simeon would embrace at the dedication of our Lord in the Temple; that the wise men from the East came and sought, and found, in a cradle. 


http://www.lectionarypage.net/YearA_RCL/Advent/AAdv4_RCL.html

http://edgeofenclosure.org/advent4a.html

https://members.sundaysandseasons.com/Home/TextsAndResources#resources

Donald Nicholl, Holiness in World Religions. Course at the University of California, Santa Cruz, 1979.

 

Friday, December 16, 2022

getting serious

 

A woman gets serious about life when she marries, a college professor of mine once said. And a man when he becomes a father. 

Twenty years later his widow, with a wink, said that was certainly true in his case. 


When I think about Joseph this week I think about the trust that was handed to him. The tremendous gift and responsibility of being a husband to Mary and raising her son. The joy and the sorrow that were to come. Of perhaps seeing ahead to her widowhood and bereavement. 


For now though and for years to come he had a wife to care for and a boy to raise. 


Not just any boy. For in him was embodied the promise of ages.


Joseph had an extraordinary trust. This child to raise. This woman to protect, and to love.


God had entrusted him with this charge. It would change the world. And it would change him.


What would it mean, one can only guess, to realize what his dream meant. What a solution it was to the apparent dilemma he had gone to bed with. What a challenge it meant on waking. 


This one, after all the ages, will carry forward what God had been doing all along.


For Joseph was, as a scion of the house of David, an heir to the promise to Israel of a new hope, a messiah, one anointed to bring them freedom from fear, freedom to worship, freedom of speech, freedom from want. Those days of destitution, of oppression, were to end. Freedom as a people. 


It was not to be, not yet. But in this hope of Israel was carried a greater hope: that the joy of God, the life of people in communion with their creator, redeemer, and sanctifier, would encompass all the people of the earth. 


Come to me all ye that are weary and heavy laden, the son would say, and I will give you rest.


Israel had all these centuries carried the trust, the hope and joy and burden and sorrow, of being God’s people, chosen to bear witness to the truth and bear it forward into the world.


God is one. One who loves what God has made. One who does not forget his promise. One who brings hope to the world.


In Jesus, in what he did, the signs and spenders of that hope became visible in the world. It was not the end of suffering but it was the presence of God with us in the midst of travail. 


It was the beginning of the completion of the hope begun in Eden and carried on the cross at Calvary and discovered at the side of an empty tomb, and awaited everywhere after Easter.


The one who was, the one who is, the one who is to come. The hope of the world. 


And it all began with this little baby.


Hold him Joseph, hold him close. And hold his mother beside you.






Thursday, December 15, 2022

Ahaz

Isaiah 7:10-16 (Common English Bible)

Again the Lord spoke to Ahaz: “Ask a sign from the Lord your God. Make it as deep as the grave or as high as heaven.” But Ahaz said, “I won’t ask; I won’t test the Lord.” Then Isaiah said, “Listen, house of David! Isn’t it enough for you to be tiresome for people that you are also tiresome before my God? Therefore, the Lord will give you a sign. The young woman is pregnant and is about to give birth to a son, and she will name him Immanuel. He will eat butter and honey, and learn to reject evil and choose good. Before the boy learns to reject evil and choose good, the land of the two kings you dread will be abandoned.


These days if you are out in a boat on the sea of Galilee you may be buzzed by a C-130, (“reminding you who’s boss”, as one of my fellow pilgrims said in January 2015), or if you are in the small hill town of Nazareth by an F-16. Back in Joseph’s day when Zebedee was out on the lake with his two small boys, James and John, teaching them to mind the nets and watch the currents, and when Joseph was using his hands to hew a piece of furniture for a neighbor or build a wall for the nearby new town of Caesarea Philippi, there were no airplanes. There were, however, powerful forces that you could not ignore. 


And that had been true before, and Joseph knew it. In the time of Isaiah the prophet, when Ahaz was king in Jerusalem, the powerful forces that threatened were from the north, the then kingdom of Assyria, and trouble was brewing. Joseph would have known about this, perhaps, and then he would have known about the prophecy that Isaiah gave to his king. Ahaz was probably trembling in his boots - or sandals - knowing much larger kingdoms were arrayed against him, threatening his little hilltop capital. And he would have hoped, as Will Willimon puts it, for an army. But that is not what the Lord sent him. 


And that is not what the Lord sent Joseph, in his day. Joseph lived in the time of Roman occupation and Roman overlordship. Sure, there might have been a king in Jerusalem - but he was Caesar’s buddy Herod. And Caesar had troops handy, as close as Damascus, or closer, to back up Herod. 


So what did the Lord send Ahaz, trembling in his boots, looking to the hills, wondering from whence his help would come? No army. No present help at all, but a promise: a hope. A baby. For behold, a virgin shall bear a child. And that child shall be called “God with us”. 


Linger on that for a moment. Take a break from the threat, the lowering clouds. God with us. That is a promise. That is what the people of God always looked for, always look for: the presence of God among us. That is where salvation lies.


And that is what Isaiah the prophet promised his king. God is with us. And in yet a little while, the threat you fear shall be gone, as certain as the summer sun melts the snow. “Before the child shall know to refuse the evil, and choose the good,” the threat you worry about will be past.


Joseph may have known this. Of course he knew the rest of history and he knew that history was not over. There was a more modern threat in his time, one more systematic, organized. It was the hegemony of an empire that lasted a thousand years. Rome. (Add another thousand, if you count Constantinople.)


And it was not to be turned over lightly. (Indeed, it was to be changed.) 


But there was that promise again. A young woman, a girl, shall conceive and bear a child.


It sounds so passive. All Joseph had to do was wait, right? The summer sun would melt the snow, the oppressive occupiers would fade away, and all would be well.


Not so fast.


And not so easy.


The kingdoms that Isaiah faced, and the empire that Joseph faced, did not disappear with only a promise. Joseph had a hand in what happened next. He took on the challenge. He was not passive, but powerful, with the power only a pair of hands that shaped a future could hold. 


He did not merely accept a promise, and an unwanted challenge, he rose to take them in those work-worn hands of his, and made a future, and made a family. With the family God gave him, he made a future. A future not only for them but for Israel, for the whole people of God.


****


A version of this article, entitled "Look for the presence of God", was published in the Keeping the Faith feature of the Arizona Daily Star, Sunday, December 25, 2022.


https://tucson.com/lifestyles/faith-and-values/look-for-the-presence-of-god/article_5d25ab5c-8079-11ed-8162-bfebc05400f5.html




_______

1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Caesarea Philippi: CAESAREA PHILIPPI, the name of a town 95 miles N. of Jerusalem, 35 miles S.W. from Damascus, 1150 ft. above the sea, on the south base of Hermon, and at an important source of the Jordan. It does not certainly appear in the Old Testament history, though identifications with Baal-Gad and (less certainly) with Laish (Dan) have been proposed. It was certainly a place of great sanctity from very early times, and when foreign religious influences intruded upon Palestine, the cult of its local numen gave place to the worship of Pan, to whom was dedicated the cave in which the copious spring feeding the Jordan arises. It was long known as Panium or Panias, a name that has survived in the modern Banias. When Herod the Great received the territory from Augustus, 20 B.C., he erected here a temple in honor of his patron; but the re-foundation of the town is due to his son, Philip the Tetrarch, who here erected a city which he named Caesarea in honor of Tiberius, adding Philippi to immortalize his own name and to distinguish his city from the similarly-named city founded by his father on the sea-coast. Here Christ gave His charge to Peter (Matt. xvi. 13). Many Greek inscriptions have been found here, some referring to the shrine. Agrippa II. changed the name to Neronias, but this name endured but a short while. Titus here exhibited gladiatorial shows to celebrate the capture of Jerusalem. The Crusaders took the city in 1130, and lost it to the Moslems in 1165. Banias is a poor village inhabited by about 350 Moslems; all round it are gardens of fruit-trees. It is well watered and fertile. There are not many remains of the Roman city above ground. The Crusaders’ castle of Subeibeh, one of the finest in Palestine, occupies the summit of a conical hill above the village.

Looking for Jesus


“My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really know myself, and the fact that I think that I am following your will does not mean that I am actually doing so. But I believe that the desire to please you does in fact please you. And I hope I have that desire in all that I am doing. I hope that I will never do anything apart from that desire. And I know that if I do this you will lead me by the right road though I may know nothing about it. Therefore will I trust you always though I may seem to be lost and in the shadow of death. I will not fear, for you are ever with me, and you will never leave me to face my perils alone.” ― Thomas Merton, Thoughts in Solitude.


Love is our true destiny. We do not find the meaning of life by ourselves alone - we find it with another. 


Yet it is in this loneliness that the deepest activities begin. It is here that you discover act without motion, labor that is profound repose, vision in obscurity, and, beyond all desire, a fulfillment whose limits extend to infinity.  


A life is either all spiritual or not spiritual at all. No man can serve two masters. Your life is shaped by the end you live for. You are made in the image of what you desire.


December 11, 2016.


Sunday, November 20, 2022

Keep Christ in Advent

 


Today a parishioner handed me a plastic bracelet that read, “Keep Christ in Christmas” - and a couple of weeks ago an eager young person in line at Starbucks asked me if I was ready for the holidays: are you Christmas or Hannukah? And I had to admit I wasn’t over los Días de los Muertos yet. But of course I’m getting ready: the Hallmark Channel Christmas Movie is doubtless playing 24/7 refreshing every two hours. (Hint: watch the first five and last five minutes. Executive summation: She finally meets the right guy. Just in time for Christmas! There will be grandchildren. Grandma is happy.) But then, we just said goodbye to the first day of the last week of the church year. This morning, November 20th, we observed the feast of Christ the King. (There really is no other.) And what begins next, outside the mall - and Starbucks, is not Christmas but Advent, the anticipation and preparation for the arrival once again for the first time of that King as a Baby. I’m gladly retrieving my Christmas materials and Advent resources: The Martin Luther Christmas Book, The New Oxford Book of Carols, Run Shepherds Run! (a poetry anthology for the season), and For the Time Being, a Christmas Oratorio, by W. H. Auden… this last, written during the Blitz, and newly sadly relevant. (What must they make of it in Kosovo - or the Crimea.) Gladly too I’m putting away on the shelves the last of my Pentecost season references, including sermon helps, commentaries, prayers. And I’m keeping handy Prayer Book and Hymnal. What all this means is that I’m getting ready. It’s a bit premature for that first flower in the snow, the crocus or the yellow flower in the children’s book, but it’s like that in a way. Advent begins a whole new year, a bit early, as we await the turning of the year, just in time for Christmas.



to him all of them are alive

Jesus said to them, ‘Those who are considered worthy of a place in … the resurrection from the dead … cannot die any more, because they are like angels and are children of God, being children of the resurrection. And the fact that the dead are raised Moses himself showed, in the story about the bush, where he speaks of the Lord as the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. Now he is God not of the dead, but of the living; for to him all of them are alive.’ (Luke 20:34-38)


For me the key words in this Gospel passage are “children of the resurrection” and, even more so, “to him all of them are alive.” 


As we approach the Lord’s Table we go to meet the Lord — who is alive and those too who are alive in Him, alive in the Resurrection. And even, I’ve been thinking, we go to meet those who are yet to come.  


Hope for the future, as well as peace about the past, and faith — both comfort and challenge — for the present, are all proclaimed to us in this gospel.


For in Christ we are in communion with all the saints, all who live and die and are raised with him. 


So as we go up to the altar to take communion we go up not for ourselves only but for all who share in the joy of the saints.


This is a sacrament that we take never so for much for ourselves as when we take it as members of the body of Christ: one bread, one body.


From Isaiah (25:6) we receive this vision of a feast at the end of time:


‘On this mountain the Lord of hosts will make for all peoples

   a feast of rich food, a feast of well-matured wines,

   of rich food filled with marrow,

   of well-matured wines strained clear.’


The heavenly feast! If we take resurrection seriously, a couple of things happen. 


For if we take resurrection seriously, we take each other seriously. How shall I regard you if I know you are an eternal being, that you will live forever, that in Christ you have a home in his heart? And how then shall I look at myself - at my own actions, at my self-regard or self- envy, my self-criticism or my downward looks, if Christ is real? 


“Eternal life starts here” could be written over the gates of your life - today, any day, as you enter the church, as you approach the communion rail, as you start again, today, to live life as you want it to be lived. 


Even the sorrow of life cut short — or spent badly — is redeemed in the resurrection. And its hope is in us, and we in it. So we can resist despair and live on, live now, in the fullness of that hope, the assurance of redemption.


Father Fuller (from St. Frances Cabrini) said: “Our faith in our future resurrection must affect our lives now.” Knowing who we are and believing in the future changes how we treat each other, how we treat ourselves, how we approach life. 


We are called to live in the fullness of confidence that death is not the end — the end is in Christ — the finality of the goal of all life… as all things are gathered to him.


To live now with the resurrection life before us means living now not only for ourselves but for others: in our sacramental life, in our workaday life, in our home life, in our social and political life…


How we treat one another,  how we treat ourselves, how we live— is in the light of the life of Christ, that frees us, empowers us, and leads us — into strange, new places.


Now, we may not all agree on particular actions — I’m thinking of the social-political realm — but we know of one another who sends us, why and what is behind our actions, the source of our motivations.


The Baptismal Covenant calls on us “to seek to serve Christ in all persons” — and uphold their dignity as children of God, affects how we conduct our public lives — not just how we vote, but in how we speak to others with whom we disagree. Our attitude of certitude or frustration or despair or even anger over public policy must be leavened with hope — with knowing that we are children of God.


How are we then to live? as God’s children, as transcendent beings of infinite value, — as creatures of dust and glory whose mortal acts of the moment are significant in light of our immortality, of the hope of the resurrection, that is, of our presence now in Christ. 


And this presence of Christ in us, which we enact and celebrate as we go up to communion, motivates us, not only to kneel or stand before him Sunday morning, but to stand with him in all the moments of our lives.


In Christ we are all one people. Using political divisions or election anxiety to separate us does not, ultimately, work. For we know that our redeemer lives, and on the last day he will triumph — and we with him. 


We begin to realize, as Christ draws all people to himself, that we are already one in the Spirit, and those boundaries we may seek to draw will all evaporate, dissolve, and blow away in the wind of the Spirit. That Holy Breath that in the Beginning moved across the face of the waters has not been still since creation’s dawn — it is still moving. And as it moves, what the world puts up against it will not stand.


The Rev. Dr. John Leech serves as priest associate at the Episcopal Church of Saint Matthew, Tucson.


The Arizona Daily Star published a version of this essay in the Keeping the Faith feature of the Home + Life section on Sunday, November 20th 2022, page E3, under the title “Stand with him in all moments.”

Sunday, November 6, 2022

The God of the Living



For me the key words in the Gospel lesson for today are “children of the resurrection” and, even more so, “to him all of them are alive.” 


As we approach the Lord’s Table we go to meet the Lord — who is alive and those too who are alive in Him, alive in the Resurrection. And even, I’ve been thinking, we go to meet those who are yet to come.  


Hope for the future, as well as peace about the past, and faith — both comfort and challenge — for the present, are all proclaimed to us in this gospel.


For in Christ we are in communion with all the saints, all who live and die and are raised with him. 


So as we go up to the altar to take communion we go up not for ourselves only but for all who share in the joy of the saints.


This is a sacrament that we take never so for much for ourselves as when we take it as members of the body of Christ: one bread, one body.


From Isaiah (25:6) we receive this vision of a feast at the end of time:


On this mountain the Lord of hosts will make for all peoples

   a feast of rich food, a feast of well-matured wines,

   of rich food filled with marrow, of well-matured wines strained clear.


The heavenly feast! If we take resurrection seriously, a couple of things happen. 


For if we take resurrection seriously, we take each other seriously. How shall I regard you if I know you are an eternal being, that you will live forever, that in Christ you have a home in his heart? And how then shall I look at myself - at my own actions, at my self-regard or self- envy, my self-criticism or my downward looks, if Christ is real? 


“Eternal life starts here” could be written over the gates of your life - today, any day, as you enter the church, as you approach the communion rail, as you start again, today, to live life as you want it to be lived. 


***


Even the sorrow of life cut short — or spent badly — is redeemed in the resurrection. And its hope is in us, and we in it. So we can resist despair and live on, live now, in the fullness of that hope, the assurance of redemption.


Father Fuller (from St Frances Cabrini) said: “Our faith in our future resurrection must affect our lives now.” Knowing who we are and believing in the future changes how we treat each other, how we treat ourselves, how we approach life. 


We are called to live in the fullness of confidence that death is not the end — the end is in Christ — the finality of the goal of all life… as all things are gathered to him.


***


To live now with the resurrection life before us means living now not only for ourselves but for others:

 — in our sacramental life,

 — in our workaday life,

 — in our home life,

 — in our social and political life…

How we treat one another, 

how we treat ourselves, 

how we live - 

is in the light of the life of Christ,

 that frees us,

 empowers us, and

 leads us - into strange, new places.


Now, we may not all agree on particular actions — I’m thinking of the social-political realm — but we know of one another who sends us, why and what is behind our actions, the source of our motivations.


[see Statement of Faith Leaders United for Peaceful Elections in Arizona]



Our Baptismal Covenant calls on us “to seek to serve Christ in all persons” — and uphold their dignity as children of God, affects how we conduct our public lives - not just how we vote, but in how we speak to others with whom we disagree. Our attitude of certitude or frustration or despair or even anger over public policy must be leavened with hope — with knowing that we are children of God.


How are we then to live? 

— as God’s children, 

— as transcendent beings of infinite value, 

— as creatures of dust and glory whose mortal acts of the moment are significant in light of 

our immortality, 

of the hope of the resurrection, that is, 

of our presence now in Christ. 


And this presence of Christ in us, which we enact and celebrate as we go up to communion, motivates us, not only to kneel or stand before him Sunday morning, but to stand with him in all the moments of our lives.


***


In Christ we are all one people. Using political divisions or election anxiety to separate us does not, ultimately, work. For we know that our redeemer lives, and on the last day he will triumph — and we with him. 


We begin to realize, as Christ draws all people to himself, that we are already one in the Spirit, and those boundaries we may seek to draw will all evaporate, dissolve, and blow away in the wind of the Spirit. That Holy Breath that in the Beginning moved across the face of the waters has not been still since creation’s dawn — it is still moving. And as it moves, what the world puts up against it will not stand.


Readings for Year C, Proper 27. The Third Sunday before Advent:


TRACK ONE

Haggai 1:15b-2:9

Psalm 98

2 Thessalonians 2:1-5, 13-17

Luke 20:27-38


Faith Leaders United for Peaceful Elections in Arizona

In partnership with the Arizona Democracy Resilience Network


As faith leaders from across Arizona, we come together from different religious and political backgrounds to express our support for safe, fair and secure elections. With early voting for the November election just days away, we are concerned by the hateful rhetoric and threats against election workers, activists, supporters of the candidates, public officials and even places of worship.  


The values of our faith traditions drive our belief in this cause.  All of our constitutional freedoms, including our religious freedom, depend on the integrity of our elections – the foundation of American democracy.


We support the following fundamental principles for safe, secure and fair elections and we ask everyone – from public officials to civic leaders, people in a position of power to voters everywhere – to commit to the same:


Candidate Principles for Trusted Elections 


We ask candidates to be guided by the following principles: 


  1. Honest process: Cooperate with election officials, adhere to rules and regulations, and refrain from knowingly propagating falsehoods about the electoral process. 
  2. Civil campaign: Encourage a peaceful election atmosphere during the pre-election, polling, counting, and post-election periods. Denounce any attempt to intimidate, harass, threaten or incite violence against opponents, their supporters, and election workers. 
  3. Secure voting: Respect voters’ freedom to exercise their lawful rights to register and vote, free from interference, obstruction, or intimidation. 
  4. Responsible oversight: Encourage political parties and others to train poll-watchers on the election process and appropriate roles and behaviors, responsibilities, and obligations. 
  5. Trusted outcomes: Make claims of election irregularities in accordance with the law and acknowledge the legitimacy of the outcomes after the results have been certified and all contestations decided. 


These principles are key to sustaining our healthy democracy and they are supported by a majority of Americans but they are being threatened today as we enter a new election cycle. We invite everyone to join us in our support of the fundamental principles of our democracy.


[You can show your support by endorsing these principles at this link: https://principledcandidates.org/]