Sermon (Fr Peay) March 31, 2018

Lake Country Joint Easter Vigil – Noble Victory Chapel – SJNW Academy,

 Delafield, Wisconsin/March 31, 2018

The V. Rev. Steven A. Peay, Ph.D.

 

            Christ is Risen!

            There’s a story some would say is beyond belief: Christ IS risen!

            Now, let’s see if we can amplify it a bit. Let me begin by telling you a story that I heard from Elie Wiesel. It is one of my favorite stories about four of the great Hasidic rabbis and it goes like this:

When the great Rabbi Israel Baal Shem-Tov saw misfortune threatening the Jews it was his custom to go into a certain part of the forest to meditate. There he would light a fire, say a special prayer, and the miracle would be accomplished and the misfortune averted.

Later, when his disciple, the celebrated Magid of Mezeritch, had occasion, for the same reason, to intercede with heaven, he would go to the same place in the forest and say: “Master of the Universe, listen! I do not know how to light the fire, but I am still able to say the prayer.” And again the miracle would be accomplished.

Still later, Rabbi Moshe-Leib of Sassov, in order to save his people once more, would go into the forest and say: “I do not know how to light the fire, I do not know the prayer, but I know the place and this must be sufficient.” It was sufficient and the miracle was accomplished.

Then it fell to Rabbi Israel of Rizhin to overcome misfortune. Sitting in his armchair, his head in his hands, he spoke to God: “I cannot even find the place in the forest. All I can do is to tell the story, and this must be sufficient.” And it was sufficient.

God made man because he loves stories. [The Gates of the Forest]

 

It’s true. God does love stories, and God loves us, which is what the story is all about. What is more, we love stories, too.

            We tell stories all the time. Holidays, like Easter, give us the opportunities to tell them. Sometimes the stories help us understand customs that we have as a part of our family life. I heard one that made that point come home to me. It was about the family that always began preparations for the Easter feast by cutting the ends off the ham. They had done this as long as anyone could remember; it was simply part of the Easter ritual. Finally, as children are wont to do, one of the little ones piped up and asked, “Why do we cut the ends off the ham?” Her mother didn’t know, she just had seen her mother do it. So she suggested that they ask grandma, which they did. Her answer? “I don’t know. Mama always did it. Let’s ask her.” So when great-grandma came they asked her . . . and she began to laugh. “Well. I know why I did it, but you know I’ve never understood why you girls have done it all these years.” Pressed for the answer, through her laughter, she told them, “Darlings, I cut the ends off the ham because the pan I had was too small to hold it when grandpa and I were first married and I liked the pan.” Ask some questions this Easter – find out about those customs. Listen to the stories.

            The power of stories was made fresh to me not long ago when I heard from several friends I’d not had contact with in years. Within minutes of finishing the obligatory catch-up stuff, we were telling stories. And as we told those stories the years melted away and it was as though we had never lost touch with one another. Stories draw us together as people. Stories help identify us and define the world in which we live.

            The essence of our Christian faith revolves around the story of one person’s life. At Christmas time we tell the story of Jesus’ birth and during Holy Week and Easter we tell the story of his passion, death and resurrection. Christian doctrine may seem pretty abstract or esoteric and, sometimes, Christian worship can be formalistic, but neither need be the case, because at root they are stories. In fact, the best definition of Christian worship I have ever heard goes like this: Gather the folk. Tell the story. Break the bread. Go out to love and serve. So, this evening we’ve gathered the folk and we’re telling the story. We are telling it by words and music and actions. We’re telling it because it makes us who we are – to be ‘Christian’ is, really, to be identified as a “follower of Jesus Christ,” a teller of the story.

            So, what is the story? We heard it a bit ago in the great narratives of the Old Testament that told us of our creation, our rebellion and the actions God took to draw us to become people of a new heart, dry bones reanimated, people gathered by God, with fortunes restored. We heard it in Paul’s words to the Church at Rome, reminding them, and us, that we are ourselves risen from the death of sin to the wonder of unselfish life. We heard it in the familiar words of Mark’s Gospel, the witness of three caring women and the testimony of an empty tomb. We will hear it – and witness it – again in the Baptismal rite as we are joined with Christ’s dying and rising with Eloise Claire Kramer.

             When the early church proclaimed its faith in the Risen Christ, it did so because people had a life-changing encounter with the one they thought dead, whom they discovered alive. As they thought about this reality it was more to them than just an intellectual proposition to which they gave their assent. As they understood the resurrection, this story touched the deepest point of the human experience and offered a new sense of self and a new sense of belonging, both to God and to the whole of humanity. We so often get wrapped up in trying to ‘prove’ the intellectual proposition that we miss the point. The resurrection is the climax, the fulfillment of God’s identification with humanity. The resurrection is the triumph of ‘Emmanuel’ – God-with-us.

            Irenaeus celebrated that triumph back in the second century by teaching, “God became man so that man might become god.” This is the point of the story – God shares all of life with us, even to the point that death is swallowed up in the Author of Life. God IS with us and with us at every point of our life’s journey and we become “partakers of Divine nature.”

I guess it’s a story beyond belief, though it comes right into the center of our life, because it is beyond words. This story is not “once upon a time” because it is about a present reality. When we greet one another – as I greeted you at the beginning of the sermon – we say, “Christ IS risen!” We are not talking about the past, but the present. The Lord IS risen – now, today, this very moment.

            The Lord IS risen and the story continues to be told as each of us encounters the Risen One in the midst of life and sees who it is speaking to us. And, for each of us, there is the joy, the wonder, and the possibility of life renewed and transformed as we, ourselves, rise to a life centered in God and in others. The resurrection is present-tense. It happens when we hear our names, see the Lord, and approach life here-and-now in a new way.

            The Resurrection, the Easter story, is a story beyond belief because it is a story that never gets over-told. You know stories like that; where we ask Uncle Stanley to tell the story about grandma and grandpa when they were young again. We want to hear the story again and again, because it is part of us, part of who we are, part of what makes us family. The Resurrection, the Easter story, is a story like that. The story we tell today affirms life and all of its possibilities. The story we tell today says that God loves us very much and that we, in turn, should love others in the same way. It’s a story that we can tell because it is our story, too. So, tell the story yourself today, for it is sufficient and, as you do, hear your own story; for Christ IS risen, in you, today!

Christ is risen! Christ is risen, indeed! Alleluia!        

Sermon (Fr Peay) March 29, 2018

Reflection on ‘Servanthood’

St John Chrysostom Episcopal Church - Delafield, Wisconsin

Maundy Thursday – March 29, 2018

V. Rev. Steven A. Peay, Ph.D.

 

 

“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 30, 2018

Good Friday – ‘God’s Friday’ originally – an important day; a day central to our faith, our salvation, our life as Christians. Yet we come to it as mourners and we are reminded that what we so often take for granted, or wear so lightly, comes at a great price.

The liturgy today is different. The building is stark, the altar bare, the tabernacle empty, no holy water in the fonts, all images are covered, and no candles are lit. Our attention is focused on the reality of WHO Jesus is, and WHAT he has done for us. Isaiah’s celebration of the “suffering servant” seems to weave together themes as diverse as the promises to David’s line and the Lamentations of the prophet Jeremiah. All of it designed to remind us that God is faithful – always. The Letter to the Hebrews picks up on the more liturgical aspect of Isaiah and amplifies it – showing us that the “suffering servant” is our high priest. A priest, one who stands between God and humanity making intercession; but now that HIGH PRIEST offers the sacrifice of himself, not the body of a dead animal. We are then drawn to John’s account of the Passion, showing us that Jesus’ offering is freely made and his priestly action undergirds, and enables, our own liturgical action: the blood and water from his side indicating Eucharist and Baptism.

It is a day focused on the centrality of the Cross, but with an eye to the glory that will come through it. The writers of the early Church often reflected on what this day meant and there are two brief excerpts from their writings I’d like to share with you. One comes from a third-century author, identified as Pseudo-Hippolytus, who, to my mind, writes one of the most moving reflections on the Cros and its implications for us: This tree is my everlasting salvation.  It is my food, a shared banquet.  Its roots and the spread of its branches are my own roots and extension.  In its shade, as in a breeze, I luxuriate and am cared for.  Its shade I take for my resting place; in my flight from oppressive heat it is a source of refreshing dew for me.  Its blossoms are my own, my utter delight its fruits, saved from the beginning for my harvest.  Food for my hunger and well-spring for my thirst, it is also a covering for my nakedness, with the spirit of life as its leaves.  Far from me henceforth the fig leaves!  Fearful of God, I find it a place of safety; when unsteady, a source of stability.  In the face of a struggle, I look to it as a prize; in victory, my trophy.  It is the narrow path, the restricted road.  It is Jacob’s ladder, the passage of angels, at whose summit the Lord is affixed.  This tree, the plant of immortality, rears from earth to reach as high as heaven, fixing the Lord between heaven and earth.  It is the foundation and stabilizer of the universe, undergirding the world that we inhabit.  It is the binding force of the world and holds together all the varieties that human life encompasses.  It is riveted into a unity by the invisible bonds of the Spirit, so that its connection with God can never be severed.  Brushing heaven with its uppermost branches, it remains fixed in the earth and, between the two points, its huge hands completely enfold the stirring of the air.  As a single whole it penetrates all things and all places. (Trans. Boniface Ramsey, Beginning to Read the Fathers, p. 81)  The other comes from the ninth century theologian Theodore of Studios. He wrote: How splendid the cross of Christ! It brings life, not death; light, not darkness; Paradise, not its loss. It is the wood on which the Lord, like a great warrior, was wounded in hands and feet and side, but healed thereby our wounds. A tree has destroyed us, a tree now brought us life. (Office of Readings, LITURGY OF THE HOURS, 2nd Friday in Easter)

Note that both show what has happened in the tragedy of the Lord’s Passion and Death works not DEATH, but LIFE! This day reverses the day of the Fall, it opens for us the way to life, and oneness with God. Today death IS “swallowed up” by the very Author of Life! We mourn, yes, because this day has been costly to God, but we rejoice because of the benefit it brings to us. Dietrich Bonhoeffer – who himself walked the road of self-giving love as a martyr at the hands of the NAZIs – reminds us of this in his book THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP. He makes an important distinction between “cheap” and “costly” grace. He wrote: Costly grace is the gospel which must be sought again and again and again, the gift which must be asked for, the door at which a man must knock. Such grace is costly because it calls us to follow, and it is grace because it calls us to follow Jesus Christ. It is costly because it costs a man his life, and it is grace because it gives a man the only true life. It is costly because it condemns sin, and grace because it justifies the sinner. Above all, it is costly because it cost God the life of his Son: 'Ye were bought at a price', and what has cost God much cannot be cheap for us. Above all, it is grace because God did not reckon his Son too dear a price to pay for our life, but delivered him up for us. Costly grace is the Incarnation of God. (THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP, p. 46)

Mourn. Adore the Cross, recognizing the instrument of “costly grace,” and receive the presanctified gifts of the Lord’s Body and Blood. Then leave this place remembering that, as St. Paul says, . . . your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, which you have from God, and that you are not your own? For you were bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body. This is ‘God’s Friday,’ an important day.