Sermon Jan. 14 2018-Father Cunningham

         So today, as I prepare to deploy in a few hours, I wanted to share some parting words of wisdom to sustain you in my absence.  But the only thing that I could think to say was to be on your best behavior and don’t turn the parish into a seedy nightclub with a name like The Copa Chrysostom.  So instead I will just focus on the bit we have from Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians, without delving too much into the prostitute bits – because that might get kind of awkward.

         There is a lot going on in this passage, but the overall theme on which Paul is focusing, has to do with our behavior and what we should and should not do and in some cases how much we can do of certain behaviors.  And this last part is really the piece I want to discuss today, because that is often the place where decision-making is at its most difficult.  For I assume most of us would not be at a loss about whether or not to become the kingpin of a Belarusian drug cartel, but how about taking that second brownie or buying an expensive watch?  The question, I think many of us run into is just how much of worldly things are we allowed to indulge in.  Where is that line between in the world and of the world?

         Paul puts it like this, “‘All things are lawful for me,’ but not all things are beneficial. ‘All things are lawful for me,’ but I will not be dominated by anything.”  Now the background for this probably relates to the very early Christian question about just how Jewish you had to be in order to be a Christian.  Did you have to follow the law or where you now set free?  And in that one of the things that often came up were the Jewish dietary laws – did you have to stick with the Mogen David or could you branch out a little, and maybe enjoy a nice Argentinian Malbec now and then.  And it seemed that as people abandoned dietary laws some might have been indulging a bit too much.  This is why Paul follows up the opening statement by saying, “Food is meant for the stomach and the stomach for food.”  And since we are on the subject of food it would seem as good of place as any to get this conversation started about the proper amount of worldly things that the Christian can and should partake in.  And the good thing with discussing food is that it does a very nice job of framing the question, because we all eat.  So let’s take a moment and think about our relationship with food. 

         At its most basic we need food to live or as Django said in the movie Ratatouille, “Food is fuel. You get picky about what you put in the tank, your engine is gonna die. Now shut up and eat your garbage.”  But we of course know that for most people food is more than just fuel, it is one of life’s great pleasures (that is if it is not prepared by Norwegians).  And therein lies the issue.  If we simply looked at food as fuel we could treat ourselves like a car and fill up the gas tank when needed and avoid it when not needed.  But because it can bring such joy there is the temptation to over-indulge and to give food too great of importance in our lives.  After all gluttony is one of the seven deadly sins.  And so the question becomes; where is the line?  Where is the balance between having enough to be properly nourished and gluttony?  And this is not an easy thing to judge.  Some Christians across the ages have pushed towards asceticism arguing that food should be viewed as simple fuel and should not be tasty lest it become too tempting.  In fact, one of the Desert Fathers by the name of Evagrius Ponticus stated, “Keep to a sparse and plain diet, not seeking a variety of tempting dishes. Should the thought come to you of getting extravagant foods in order to give hospitality, dismiss it, do not be deceived by it: for in it the enemy lies in ambush, waiting to tear you away from stillness.”  In other words Satan lurks in every jelly donut and deluxe nacho platter.  But that is not a universal sentiment.  Others have not followed such an ascetical line of thinking, after all Dom Perignon was a Benedictine monk.  Now, I really don’t know how good of monk Dom Perignon was, but still it points to the fact that some Christians have been very comfortable with food for mere pleasure.  For unless I have been seeing the wrong doctor, I don’t think that anyone has ever received the medical diagnosis that they were not drinking enough champagne.  And so the point is that even in the Christian community there is no consensus on where the line is between appropriate eating and gluttony – so what are we to do?  How do we make sure that we are not being dominated by anything as Paul says?  Well since we have been on the subject of champagne, let me bring in an example that, while not providing a definitive answer, I think can help guide our thinking. 

         A few years ago in the Wall Street Journal there was a sort of humorous article about various countries and how much their government said was an appropriate amount to drink on a given day.  The funny part in the article was that there was no consensus and there was a huge variance.  Some countries said you should only have a half of a drink a day while others said that you could have as many as six drinks.  I believe the six drinks came from the Basque region in Spain or maybe it was Northern Wisconsin.  But, anyway, the author of the article’s conclusion was not so much about which one was right but rather argued that the answer was probably more personal.  That is, most people know when they have had enough and if that is one drink and you live in the Basque region of Spain you shouldn’t have five more because the government says that it is okay.  And I think finding the line in our Christian walk is much the same, the limit will have to do with our interaction with whatever we are dealing with.  We need to sort of know when we are beginning to have an unhealthy relationship with something in our lives; when something becomes more important to us than God.  And this will vary from person to person.  And while I know this may not be the most satisfying answer, because it puts the responsibility back on us, it is probably the right one. 

         Paul this morning is most likely addressing those who have said that by Christ replacing the law they could indulge as much as they wanted.  But it would seem that in this indulgence they were being dominated by their cravings.  Somehow through the death and resurrection of Jesus they found a new god as Paul states in Philippians, “their god is the belly.”  The real issue being addressed today is when something that is not God becomes more important than God.  If we use the freedom found in Christ to replace him with something else we have missed the entire point.  But beyond that the question comes down to whether or not we have made anything in our lives more important than God?  And while I know we have used food as our primary example anything can fall into this category, even seemingly pious things.   The question that we all must ask when doing anything is do we still love God above it or in our love of the worldly has God been relegated to a second position.  And I wish I could give you a step-by-step program to identify such things, but I cannot.  We must spend time in prayer and reflection so that we may see if we are loving God first, so that we may be his both now and forevermore. 

Sermon Dec. 31 2017-Father Cunningham

               As many of you who know me may realize I can be a bit cynical - sometimes this cynicism is merited like when watching a Brad Pitt movie, but other times it can be a bit much and may lead to me making small children cry.  Anyway in my defense, I do have to say though that the Bible does sometimes back me up in my cynicism, like with what we have today in Isaiah.  It may not seem cynical at first blush but let me just read a brief snippet and see if you can see it.  Here goes:

I will greatly rejoice in the Lord,
my whole being shall exult in my God; 

for he has clothed me with the garments of salvation,
he has covered me with the robe of righteousness, 

as a bridegroom decks himself with a garland,
and as a bride adorns herself with her jewels.

For as the earth brings forth its shoots,
and as a garden causes what is sown in it to spring up,

so the Lord God will cause righteousness and praise
to spring up before all the nations.

 You shall be a crown of beauty in the hand of the Lord,
          and a royal diadem in the hand of your God.

 

Okay, for the less cynical of you out there it might take a minute to spot.  I mean it does sound pretty nice – it is full of phrases like, “robe of righteousness” and “My whole being shall exult in my God.”  But still it is there.  So let’s start by taking a look at the theme of the reading.  What it is basically saying is that at some point in the future we will be a crown of beauty in the hand of the Lord.  And the reason why we will be this crown at some point in the future is because we will be pure and righteous.  And therefore by being pure and righteous we will give off this sort of radiant glow like the jewels in a crown.  And I admit this does not seem very dark and brooding.  In fact, it sounds like we are pretty awesome, but let’s go back a little ways and see how it is that we actually get to this point of being a royal diadem.  And ask did we get there of our own accord or was it because of something that God did?  And while I will not go as far as saying that the narrative implies that God is going to put some lipstick on a pig it is somewhat similar.  Just look at some of the verbs that are used to describe this procedure.  God is said to clothe, cover, adorn and to deck us.  We end up being a crown of beauty, because God essentially dresses us up as one, not because of any qualities of beauty that we possess ourselves.  In today’s reading there is no understanding that we are capable of doing any of this by our own will.  All of which paints a not terribly rosy picture of humanity.  We are awful until God does something about it. 

         And so what is going on here and why exactly do we have this reading on the first Sunday after Christmas?  Well believe it or not it really is a distillation of the Christmas message, which posits in the words of John’s Gospel that God so loved the world that he sent his only begotten son to the end that all that believe in him should not perish.  You see the only way we do not perish is because of what God has done.  The message of Christmas is that God of his own will has figured out a way to save us from ourselves through the birth of his Son in Bethlehem of Judea.  And what is so interesting and yet so wonderful because God has a very realistic opinion of us – we are not fooling him.  What a strange and marvelous thing and how counter our prevailing culture.  To love people despite knowing all of their problems and shortcomings.  To come to rescue a people who are in no way deserving of being rescued.  If that doesn’t fill you with gratitude I don’t know what will. 

         But if God comes to save a people not worthy of saving what does that tell us about how we are to behave?   Well it rather obviously points out that we should also love those who are unworthy of being loved.  Because obviously if God does that for us who are we to say that we are not interested in such behavior?  God announced on Christmas that he loved us despite the fact that when left to our own devices we are not very loveable.  But God is willing to make us righteous or to cover us with a robe of righteousness as Isaiah puts it.  And therein lies the second lesson from Christmas.  The first being the joy and gratitude that we should exude over Christ coming into the world, the second is for us to act towards humanity the way that God acts towards us. 

         And that seems to be a real problem for us because we seem to be very good at justifying in our minds why other people simply are not worthy of being loved.  It may be because they have different political opinions than we do – perhaps they have committed the unforgivable sin of having a different view on tax policy than we have or it may be something else, but whatever the issue we are very adept at putting people in categories that make it okay for us to not love them. For while on some level we know that we are to love one another as God loves us we very easily come up with a list of caveats to explain why others do not really fall into the category of one another.  But based on what we hear about humanity today in Isaiah it is exactly because we know terrible things about other people that we should love them, not despite. 

         I once had a parishioner proudly tell me that she would never forgive her son because of how he had treated her late husband.  I don’t recall exactly what the son did, but I think it was fairly rotten, but that is kind of the point.  As Jesus says in Luke, “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? For even sinners love those who love them.” 

         And all of this may sound like we are setting ourselves up to be doormats for Jesus, that we should just sit back and take abuse and love people anyway.  And the answer to that question is both yes and no.  There is evidence of both answers in the life of Jesus.  We have Jesus overturning the tables in the temple, which is not terribly meek and mild, but we also have Jesus going willingly to the cross despite the fact that he had done nothing wrong.   And so there is obviously a balance to be struck.  And I think the problem nowadays is we error on the side of overturning the tables.  We really like to tell others the things that they are doing wrong.  But nowadays there does not seem to be enough of us who will willingly go to the cross.  Sometimes we may need to step back and say that we are going to love others simply because they are created in God’s image just like us.  God has no illusions about humanity and its capacity for horrid behavior – I mean this baby which we celebrate this season will be crucified in just a few short months.  And while we are not God and cannot clothe people in garments of salvation we can look at people as being capable of such, capable of being made righteous by God.  Christmas is about an unearned gift and our reaction to it should be to give unearned gifts to the rest of humanity so that we may be God’s both now and forevermore. 

Sermon Dec. 24 2017 (Christmas Eve)-Father Cunningham

           There is always a question I have when we read the Christmas narrative from Luke and that question is: Who was keeping watch over the flocks by night when the shepherds decided to go to Bethlehem to see this thing that has taken place?  Maybe there was a shepherd apprentice who they left to take care of things, with a cute non-threatening name like Tommy.  You could almost making a catchy novelty Christmas song out of it like Tommy the Apprentice Shepherd.  The only issue is that there are very few things that rhyme with shepherd.  The only words I could come up with were leopard, peppered and former House majority leader Dick Gephardt.  So I think I will have to keep my day job.  But back to the shepherds.  The most likely thing that happened is that the Shepherds just left and had no contingency plan.  The birth of the Messiah was, in the words of our president, so “huge” that it overwhelmed everything else.  They forgot about their livelihood and rushed to see the birth of the Messiah without regard for anything else in their lives.  And I think on some level we can understand this.  We have probably dropped everything at some point, but generally speaking it is usually for something negative.  At least for me it is.  The last time I can remember dropping everything was when the planes hit the World Trade Centers in 2001. Sadly it seems that if something horrible has happened we will forget everything else and run and see it, but not always when something wonderful has happened.  But just listen to some of the ways that Isaiah describes what is happening tonight:

The people who walked in darkness
have seen a great light;

those who lived in a land of deep darkness--
on them light has shined.

For a child has been born for us,
a son given to us;

authority rests upon his shoulders;
and he is named

Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.

His authority shall grow continually,
and there shall be endless peace

for the throne of David and his kingdom.
He will establish and uphold it

with justice and with righteousness
from this time onward and forevermore.

 

And so the question for us this night, this night on which the shepherds rushed towards Bethlehem is: Can we get this excited about something wonderful?  Can we drop everything to rush to something that is pure and beautiful or will we be too consumed by the mundane, the routine and those things that offer us distorted images of the divine?  In a world that is so consumed with acrimony and anger can we rush to the light to this thing that must be seen? 

         Before I go into the next section I need to issue a disclaimer and say that I tend to limit my knowledge of what celebrities are doing to the checkout line of the grocery store, but I happened upon a very curious celebrity spat the other day.  It seems that Taylor Swift, who is a singer of some sort, went on the Twitter and announced in a greeting for her birthday that she could not have asked for a better year.  Which to me seemed innocent enough and even kind of nice, but I guess it was not.  She was immediately attacked for her tone deafness for not realizing just how horrible of a year it was.  I did not read enough to see what her detractors were demanding she put on sackcloth and ashes about, but it appears in some people’s mind there can be no light to shine in the darkness.  And what a strange world we live in where there is an incessant desire to rush to the awful and claim it as a full representation of reality.  And just in case you do not believe my theory, let me give you another data point.  On a different other day I was waiting for an oil change and as I sat in the lounge I picked up a copy of the magazine GQ.  I had not looked through this magazine in years but as I recall it used to give you tips on new pants for spring and the best exfoliating products to give your skin a radiant glow.  Anyway it now appears that they have decided that well groomed men have important views too.  And so the magazine was filled with sophomoric political observations. But the point is in looking at the deep thoughts of GQ, I read in one of their rather glib articles that 2017 was the worst year in recorded history.  Yes, that is right, it would have been better for you to have experienced year zero in Pol Pot’s Cambodia or have had your village sacked by Attila the Hun than it was to have experienced the blood dimmed tide that was loosed upon suburban Milwaukee in the year of the beast that that was 2017.  And anyway in thinking about GQ and Taylor Swift, which I honestly try not to do very frequently, but in thinking about these incidences I have to wonder when did we decide to be such a bunch of sad sacks?  Has the whole world turned into that kid in college in your dorm who would not go out to a party because there is just so much pain in the world?    

         But tonight is Christmas Eve - a perfect night to proclaim that all is not lost in the year 2017.  For tonight is the night when God burst into the world and we were brought good news of great joy.  God has come and declared to us that we are worth saving.  No matter how many stupid things we do or bad things happen to us, we worship a God who came into human history and declared that humanity was capable of being in communion with the creator and sustainer of the universe.  Because in the incarnation human and divine lived together in the one body of Jesus Christ.  I really don’t know where 2017 lies on the list of worst years because I don’t have an electrified bad year measurer, but I do know because of the Incarnation (and resurrection but we will have to wait until Easter for that), but because of the Incarnation nothing can ever be that bad.  And the reason it cannot be that bad is because God has not only declared it as such, but has demonstrated this fact on this night in Bethlehem of Judea were unto to us a savior was born. 

         In a world where everyone seems in a rush to out misery one another maybe it might just be time for some joy.  Sure there are things that are wrong with the world and certainly there are things yet unimagined that will go wrong with the world.  But tonight the shepherds, who had one of the worst jobs around and were living in a country occupied by Roman oppressors, literally dropped everything they had and rushed to see this momentous and joyful thing that had taken place.  For those who lived in a land of deep darkness – on them a light has shined.  Tonight is a night of unmitigated joy, a night where wonder and beauty are so overwhelming that they consume everything else. 

         And since as best I know none of us have flocks in the fields that we are watching over, I would ask of you what is there that you should leave so that you may experience the fullness of joy that tonight is all about.  What needs to be left behind so that all of us may see the incarnation in all of its wonderful and strange beauty?  We should rush to a manger in Bethlehem on this evening so that we may see the glory of God as revealed in his son, Christ the Lord, so that we may be his both now and forevermore.