Sermon (Fr Peay) March 29, 2018

“If I, then, your Lord and teacher have washed your feet, you ought also to wash one another’s feet. For I have given you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you.” John 13: 14-15

 

            Jesus gives the new mandate – “love one another, as I have loved you” – and then shows how it is to be carried out – through service. Jesus says that he gives us an example that we should do to each other what he has done to us. It seems straightforward, simple actually. Jesus tells us that servanthood, the act of being or becoming a servant, is following his word and his example.

            In addition to the example of washing feet, I believe he gave us another example of service in the institution of the Lord’s Supper. Whether we call it that, or communion, or the Eucharist (which is my own favorite name for it because it’s not only Biblical, but descriptive of what it is – a ‘good gift’ and a ‘thanksgiving’ or remembrance of what God does for us), it is a powerful symbol of what we are to be and to do for one another. Jesus became Eucharist for us on the cross – broken and poured out in unselfish love. That, to me, is true servanthood and what we’re to become for each other is Eucharist. Further, it means that we seek to nourish one another and to build one another up. To be a follower of Jesus Christ is to become Eucharist, to be a servant, so that others might live, grow, and flourish. In this scheme of things the role of the minister is rather clear, we are ‘set apart’ to serve the servants.

            I like what the contemporary English theologian Kenneth Leech wrote in his little book True Prayer: An Invitation to Christian Spirituality, “In the action of the Eucharist we can see the pattern of all spirituality: offering, blessing, breaking, and sharing. Our lives are offered to God within the redemptive offering of his Son. They are laid open to the sanctifying, consecrating power of the Spirit. They are broken and poured out in union with Christ for the life of the world. And they are, through Christ, brought into unity and communion in God with other lives which have been brought into Christ’s Body.” [p. 109] Here is the whole point of communion, it reminds us of who we are and what we are called to do. It is a graphic reminder, one that we can’t always take in with our heads, but one that speaks to us of the basic ‘stuff’ of human life and of that life in community. And, as the 17th century Puritan preacher Stephen Charnock wrote of the Lord’s Supper, “If it be a token of Divine goodness to appoint it, it is no sign of our estimation of Divine goodness to neglect it.”

            As we should not neglect this gift of God for the people of God, neither should we forget or neglect our mutual servanthood. Too often we treat our life together as church as we would any other club or civic organization. When it is convenient, we’re into it. When it isn’t – well, we’ll get back to it. This isn’t what Jesus commanded or instituted on that long ago night in the Upper Room. An example has been given. A new mandate set. If we are followers of Jesus, we are to be servants as he was. It’s that simple…and that difficult.

Sermon (Fr Peay) March 25, 2018

Why did Palm Sunday become Palm-Passion Sunday? It’s really an attempt to go back to the earlier tradition of the church’s worship practice. An ancient text written by a Spanish nun on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, The Travels of Egeria, records a procession with Palms and then the reading of the Passion. It clearly was an opportunity to open the doors to Holy Week, to all of its events, and to all of its significance for us as followers of Jesus Christ. It continues to be that – it opens the doors to a glorious and painful love.

            If we walk through those doors the ‘great week’ before us holds keys to understanding who we are and what it means to be followers of Jesus Christ. His triumphal entry quickly turns sour and by Wednesday Jesus is betrayed; traditionally called “spy Wednesday” and the reason why Christians used to fast on that day. He shares the Passover supper with his disciples and gives them a new commandment, mandatum novum, “to love one another as I have loved you,” instituting the ongoing symbol of that love in the Lord’s Supper or ‘Eucharist’ (thanksgiving). Thus we have Maundy Thursday. Then “God’s Friday,” become “Good Friday,” and the day of the cross and its self-giving offering which marks the essence of Christianity. Christ rests in the tomb and, according to tradition, goes to preach to the souls in the netherworld (the clause “he descended into hell” in the Apostles’ Creed refers to this) so that they might be freed. Then comes Easter and the Pasch, the Christian Passover from death to life is completed as God raises Jesus from the dead.

            I think one of the reasons we have Palm-Passion Sunday is also because in our day most people don’t get to the middle parts of the week. It goes from Sunday to Sunday. Palms and glorious entrance… “Hosanna to the Son of David!” and then to Resurrection … “He is Risen!” It’s “let’s get to the good part, without all of the other parts” and, quite frankly, it just doesn’t make sense without them. As the Biblical commentator Eugene Boring has said, “When the crowds cry ‘Hosanna to the Son of David!’ and ‘This is the prophet,’ they use the right words, but they still miss the point. They have all of the notes and none of the music . . . What one social psychologist said of university students is also true of the kingdom. . . . ‘It is possible to make an A+ in the course on ethics and still flunk life.’” [The New Interpreter’s Bible (vol. 8, Matthew), p. 404] This whole course of events only really makes sense if we allow it to effect our lives at their deepest point and transform us into the people God calls us to be – people who live lives of self-giving love, people whose lives give life to others. To not “flunk life,” as a Christian, is to live as Jesus did and that means knowing and understanding how and why he lived.

            Palm-Passion Sunday is about a painful and glorious love. The best way to say it is this, that God has loved us until it hurts. God has identified with us, in our weakest and most desperate moments. God knows our temptations. God knows our sufferings. God knows our hurts. God knows what it means to have trust betrayed and relationships broken. God knows and God cares, because God took those into God’s self in Jesus the Christ and transformed them through this painful and glorious love into a new way of intimacy. In Christ we are shown a way of life and love to which all of us are welcomed – if we choose to follow it. Thus Paul tells the Philippians, “Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus. . .” He’s talking about a mind, a heart, a life that is made one with God and shown in the concrete actions of self-giving, unselfish love.

So, why do we celebrate Palm-Passion Sunday? Because we need to remember this painful and glorious love that God has demonstrated for us. There is no better summary of this day or of the week ahead than the great hymn “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross.” Isaac Watts penned words which show forth the deep meaning of the events of this great and holy week which we begin today. And his closing lines tell us just what our response ought to be – especially if we want to not only ‘ace’ the course, but life as well. “Were the whole realm of nature mine, that were an offering far too small; love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all.” Walk through the doors of Holy Week, even if it’s while you’re off on Spring Break, and experience this painful and glorious love of God for you

 

Sermon (Fr Peay) March 18, 2018

“Sir, we wish to see Jesus.”

 

            I read somewhere that those words should be inscribed, facing the preacher, in every Christian pulpit. The request those Greeks made of Philip hasn’t left us. People come to churches, talk to spiritual directors, read books, watch television shows, spend time in meditation and lots of money seeking exactly what those seekers from Greece were – they want to see the One who can bring them to peace, make them whole and bring them to union with God. Over the last several weeks we’ve talked about the human condition as seeking and how God responds to it with the covenant and grace. Last time we talked about our first response – conversion. Now the second – communion.

            Those who would see Jesus would know communion. The word communion comes from the Latin word communio, which implies a mutual participation. Webster’s tells us that it is “an act or instance of sharing . . . intimate fellowship or rapport.” You can see where this is going, yes? That communion involves communication and results in community? Another way to talk about this would be to use the language of relationship and of intimacy.

            God gives the promise of a new covenant, and thus a new level of relationship and of intimacy to the prophet Jeremiah. God promises that He will “put my law within them and I will write it on their hearts.”  As a result, the people will know that God is their God and that they are the Lord’s people. Here is the answer to the Psalmist’s cry for a “clean heart” created within him.

Samuel Roberts points out, “The limits of human moral capacity become the beginning of divine provision. Jeremiah portends a realization that the great moral problem of humankind – that is, sin – is not cognitive, but rather concerns the sinful will. As Pascal writes, ‘God wants to motivate the will more than the mind. Absolute clarity would be no more use to the mind and would not help the will.’” It is God’s action that enables us to live in right relationship – this is grace lived out.

            The new covenant implies a new community, which means a new, a transformed way of approaching life. The One who ultimately makes this possible, who incarnates the Divine will to relationship, is Jesus. The early church saw in his life and actions the fulfillment of what Jeremiah had prophesied. That’s why the author of the book of Hebrews – long thought to be Paul, but now we realize we simply don’t know the author’s identity – makes the statement of who Jesus is. Moreover, how the fullness of God’s salvation has been made known through Jesus, the priest in the order of Melchizedek, whose priesthood was without beginning and without end, fulfilled in perfect obedience (deep listening/communion) to the Father.

            Jesus indicates this – and the writer to the Hebrews talks about it – when he says, “Very truly, I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” It is a lesson that has inspired many and brought even many more up completely short. It is one of those hard sayings of Jesus that makes us uncomfortable and places a demand on us that we don’t particularly want to hear. Jesus is telling us that we have to die to self. In fact, he comes right out and says it: “Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it to eternal life.”

            When the seed goes into the ground its hard outer shell slowly gives way and the germ of the plant is able to root and then to grow. As a result a single seed will be far more productive than if it had remained as it was, stuck in its individual shell. Believe it or not, spring is here and soon we will see the fruit of seeds pushing their way up in our gardens. Those of you who plant vegetable gardens know well the wonder of harvesting your own produce. I remember the cherry and the peach trees that we had in our yard when I was a child. There was nothing better than the fruit from those trees, each of which had been planted by my grandfather from a single seed. So it was with the life of Jesus. He was open to receive what the Father had for him. He was willing to take the risk of leaving self behind for the promise of a greater harvest. He planted his life and it continues to bear fruit.

            Several years ago Richard Jeske wrote something in the journal Interpretation which seems particularly apt for the times in which we’re living. He said that Jesus was the highest achiever imaginable, but that he accomplished his highest achievement by remaining open to the Father. He wrote: “The way of recipiency is a difficult way for those who are born achievers – and that means all of us. Not only are we born such, but particularly in our society are we conditioned to think, value, and practice achievement. In our society it is the high achievers who succeed, the high earners who are respected, the haves (not the have-nots) who are our heroes. Our society will always choose competition over cooperation, property rights over personal rights, concentration over distribution, and accumulation over purpose. Our education systems no longer have as their objective education for citizenship but rather education for competitive production in the marketplace. To accumulate more is the basic value lesson our young people are being taught in our society, and as one magazine put it, ‘More is Never Enough.’”

            Given what we’ve read in the papers, heard on television or seen on the internet this rings rather true, doesn’t it? Many sought the more that was never enough and now our country and indeed our world are again teetering. Why? Because self became more important than other; because my good, my desires, my way all became more important than the common good.

            The message of the Gospel stands in the face of this view reminding us, through the life and ministry of Jesus, that there is a different way, a different value, a law written on the heart which will lead us to communion, to union with God.  The new heart promised to Jeremiah is thus open to a level of relationship never-before thought really possible – we become the friends of God.

            One who had experienced suffering herself, Julian of Norwich sees the opportunity for being “oned” or united with God through it. In her Showings or Revelations of Divine Love the suffering Christ is the means by which God identifies with all suffering, human or otherwise. She records:

Here I saw a great unity[oneing]between Christ and us, as I understand it, for when he was in pain we were in pain, and all creatures able to suffer pain suffered with him. . . . And so those who were his friends suffered pain because of love and all creation suffered in general; that is to say, those who did not recognize him suffered because the comfort of all creation failed them, except for God’s powerful, secret preservation of them.[1]

As Kerrie Hide points out, “Furthermore, creation in Christ unites humanity to all creation. This bond is such a great oneing that as Christ experiences the pain of the Passion it reverberates over the entire cosmos.”[2] This, perhaps, is the point Jesus makes at the close of today’s Gospel lesson when he says, “And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself.” All suffer and now in Jesus, the “Suffering Servant,” God knows, shares and transforms it. Maybe that’s also why several people want us to remember that the cross is also a ‘plus’ sign as we are joined to God and God to us?

            Our response of communion then, is to open ourselves to God’s invitation to friendship and to intimate union. As we make our response, we’ll discover that we’re able to relate in a new and more open way to the people and even to the world around us. We’ll see each other with a renewed appreciation for the wonder that is the human person. We’ll see the “beauty of the earth” again because we’ll be seeing it as God meant for us to see it.

            Practically, then, take time this week – start today – to spend some time in prayer, open the Bible and spend some time with it and seek to show God’s love in the way you behave toward others. Every day we say the Lord’s Prayer, “forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive our trespassers.” It’s not rocket science; it’s simply living out what we say we believe every day. But if we live this, it will lead us to intimate rapport and to mutual sharing with God and with one another.

            If you would see Jesus, then look inside yourself and then look around. After all, didn’t he tell us that our actions toward others were as though they were done to him? “Whoever serves me must follow me, and where I am, there will my servant be also.” Our response is communion – with God and with one another. Begin today. Begin today.

 

[1] Julian of Norwich Showings The Long Text in Julian of Norwich Showings

Edmund College, O.S.A. and James Walsh, S.J., translation and introduction

Classics of Western Spirituality (New York: Paulist Press, 1978), p. 210-211.

[2] Kerrie Hide Gifted Origins to Graced Fulfillment: The Soteriology of Julian of Norwich

(Collegeville, MN: Michael Glazier-Liturgical Press, 2001), p. 100.