Sermon (Fr Peay) May 27, 2018

St. John Chrysostom Episcopal Church – Delafield, Wisconsin

The Feast of the Holy Trinity – May 27, 2018

The Very Rev’d Steven A. Peay, PhD

 

Patrick Dennis’ “Auntie Mame” said that, “Life is a banquet!” I think so, too. But I also agree with those who see life as a dance, and that’s no small thing for someone who has real trouble keeping the steps and the rhythm at the same time! The image of the dance is a powerful one and when one considers the world in which we live, we can liken so much of it to a dance. Even the jockeying of politicians in Washington or the negotiations of diplomats reflects the give-and-take, the movement that is intrinsic to dance. When someone is being evasive we say, “Ah, he’s dancing around the point!” And so it is; sometimes the movements are stately and formal, like the waltz. Other times the steps are exuberant, though ordered, like a polka or a schottische. Still other times, the steps just happen, like most of the dancing you’ll see at ‘Summer Fest,’ or at least so it appears.

                  As I thought about the Scriptures today and the great Christian teaching that we celebrate on this Sunday, the dance came to mind. Sometimes the liturgy is called the “dance of God,” especially in the Christian East. And I think there’s something to seeing creation and our experience of it as expressions like that of the dance. The encounter of Isaiah with the ALL HOLY GOD, Paul’s reflection on how the Spirit draws us into God’s life, and John’s recounting of Jesus’ time with Nicodemus where he reminds him that God has sent His Son into the world for the sake of love, all three scriptures draw us into the dance of relationship with God. It’s a metaphor that just seems to work, and to make a very complex doctrine – which St. Thomas Aquinas called the simplest – a bit more approachable.  

                  Carl Maria von Weber wrote a beautiful piece for piano, later orchestrated by Hector Berlioz, entitled ‘Invitation to the Dance.’ He offers a musical dialogue designed to evoke a gentleman inviting a lady to waltz. Then the dance unfolds and we hear the music, and their delight, swell. Finally, it draws to a close and there’s a little coda, just a little something there, and we can almost see the gentleman bow to the lady and offer thanks for a lovely exchange.  Perhaps that’s how we should look at this gradual unfolding of God’s self in Trinity, as an invitation to enter into the dance of relationship?

From the patristic period forward – the time of the great teachers or ‘fathers’ of the early church -- perichoresis has been used to describe the interrelations of the Persons of the Trinity. The noun comes from a Greek verb (perichorein) that means "to contain" or "to penetrate," and describes the three Persons of the Trinity as mutually "indwelling," "permeating," or "interpenetrating" one another. Each person both wholly envelops and is wholly enveloped by the others. A similar Greek word, perichoreuein, which means "to dance around," has been used as a metaphor for the relation of the Persons. In the Western Church, using Latin, the term was translated as circumincessio ("moving around") or circuminsessio ("sitting around"). Notice, though how both words describe relationship that is dynamic, not static; that moves and grows, rather than stands still.

The term perichoresis has also been used historically to describe God's relationship to the world, as a way of expressing God’s immanence (meaning to remain or operate within a domain of discourse, to be close) and transcendence (meaning beyond, or exceeding our ability to understand or to comprehend). It is important to understand, on the one hand, that God is contained by nothing, and is instead the One in whom we live and move and have our being — i.e., everything is contained by Him. Yet at the same time God is within all things, "omnipresent." This leads to the Christian notion of panentheism, that God is in everything and that everything is in God. As one of the early teachers of the church, Hilary of Poitiers put it, the Father is both "without" and "within" all things. This mutual indwelling and containment is a created extension of the mutual indwelling and containment of the Triune Persons. And this is part of the dance, the tension within One who is at once immanent and transcendent. Augustine pointed out in his book On the Trinity that we reflect the same tension within ourselves because we are at once spiritual and physical beings. Thus, we have yet another sign that we are made in the “image and likeness of God,” “little less than God.”

From the beginning God has been inviting creation, and humanity in particular, to the dance of relationship. I referenced Augustine a moment ago because when he tried to understand the Trinity he ended up looking at humanity. I think he was on to something because there are ways that we can still see the evidence of perichoresis in the created world and in ourselves in particular.

There is the realm of personal identity. We can well ask, “How can I be a distinct person, and at the same time be the product of all these influences from people who are other than me?” Don’t people say this about children, "I see his father in him"?  I know in my own case that this goes beyond physical resemblance, because the older I get the more I see and hear my father! Another way of seeing this personal identity point is when we speak of someone who is a son, a husband, and a father or a daughter, a wife, and a mother. What we’re talking about here is an economy of relationship

We can see that relationship in the “psychological analogies” of Augustine (the human qualities of mind, knowledge and love relating to the Divine persons) and that of later medieval theologians, like Richard of Saint Victor and Bonaventure who emphasized that the Divine Trinity is reflected in humans and their ability to relate and live in community. All analogies limp, especially when we’re trying to get our mind around God who is “uncreated” and according to Anselm, “greater than that which can be thought.” Yet, it’s important for us to talk and explore. I find it fascinating and encouraging that there are a whole raft of new studies being done on the doctrine of the Trinity, not only because it is a great excuse to visit the bookstore, but because it shows that we’re continuing to enter into the dance of life, of faith, and of understanding.

Another way we can see God’s “imprint” (the Latin term used by Augustine is vestigium) on us and our world is the use of metaphor. When we look at it, creation contains objects that are really distinct and separate from one another. Day is not night, waters above are not waters below, water is not land, birds are not fish, I think you get the point. That said, the Scripture still indicates that one thing can stand for, represent, or symbolize other things. Things in creation indwell other things. The Psalmist can say that a "righteous man is like a tree" not because we invent similarity between two essentially unlike things. Rather, there is a real mutual relation between them. So, the Son is the express image of the Father, and yet is not the Father. This perichoretic "is/is not" (man is/is not tree) structure is inherent in God, and is the very nature of metaphor.  And, ultimately, it is through metaphor that we can even try to talk about the Maker of All, the Source of All That Is, and the Ground of Being.

What’s the point? The point is that we talk about how God relates to us, how God has acted toward us and we have perceived that action. We can really only talk about the Trinity as the Divine economy, the manner in which God works and orders God’s affairs. God is inviting us into the dance of life, the dance of relationship and drawing us into the community that Creates, Redeems, and Sustains us and the world in which we live.

                  The world in which I want to live, the world I want to help to create is the one where we find interdependence, relationship, possibility, responsibility, becoming, novelty, mutuality, freedom, and I would add intentionality. I believe that this is the kind of world God created. I believe that this is the kind of world God wanted to heal and restore by becoming one of us in Jesus the Christ. I believe that is the kind of world God wants to continue by sending the Holy Spirit among us to be our companion, our advocate, and our teacher.              

The doctrine of the Trinity is not some outdated construct born of musty and abstruse philosophy and theology. The Trinity is about the dance of life, the dance of relationship, and the experience that each of us can have with the living God. It is an invitation to the dance, an invitation to move beyond ourselves and our narrow view of our world and our day-to-day experience and see the possibility, the hope, and the difference than can be made when we start to dance with God.

Pray with me, please: “Holy God, who created all things through the Son, with the cooperation of the Holy Spirit; Holy Mighty, through whom we knew the Father and the Holy Spirit dwelt in the world; Holy Immortal, the Spirit Comforter, who proceeds from the Father abides in the Son, Holy Trinity, glory to You!”  Amen. [Pentecost Hymn attributed to Emperor Leo VI (886-912) in John Meyendorff, Byzantine Theology, p. 184.]

 

 

Sermon (Fr Peay) May 20, 2018

St. John Chrysostom Episcopal Church – Dealfield, Wisconsin

The Feast of Pentecost – May 20, 2018

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

[text: John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15]

 

But when the Counselor comes, whom I shall send to you from the Father, even the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, he will bear witness to me: and you also are witnesses, because you have been with me from the beginning.

 

            One of the things Tony Robinson, a contemporary pastoral theologian,  has said that I like – and, actually there are many – is his observation of how Protestants tend to be ‘Unitarians’ of one or the other person of the Trinity. Most mainline Protestants are Unitarians of the Father; while Evangelical Protestants tend to be Unitarians of the Son, and Pentecostal/Charismatic Protestants are Unitarians of the Holy Spirit. What Tony points out is that we get caught up in one or the other, for want of an easier understood word, revelation of the Persons of the Trinity. As a result, we get stuck and miss the fullness of what God wants to open to us. What I’d like to emphasize on Pentecost Sunday is that the Spirit – the Counselor or Advocate (the Greek Paraclete – one called alongside to help) – proceeds from the Father and sent by the Son so that we can be drawn into and kept in the truth of God’s loving will-to-relationship revealed in Jesus Christ.

            Our brothers and sisters in the Christian East describe this mutual interdependence of the Divine Persons of the Trinity with the word perichoresis, which literally means to “go around”  and also describes a Greek folk dance. The contemporary British theologian Alister McGrath has written that this doctrine, "allows the individuality of the persons to be maintained, while insisting that each person shares in the life of the other two. An image often used to express this idea is that of a 'community of being,' in which each person, while maintaining its distinctive identity, penetrates the others and is penetrated by them." [Christian Theology: An Introduction, 3rd ed. Blackwell, 2001.] What I believe is that in God becoming one with us in Jesus, we are then kept in that oneness through the gift of the Holy Spirit.  The Divine dance continues and expresses itself in us as we grow and witness in God’s love. The Counselor, the Advocate, then, is the source of the dance, the movement toward oneness with God.

            I came across a story recounted by the late Jesuit spiritual writer Anthony de Mello in his book The Heart of the Enlightened.  He recounts how:

 

many years ago, a bishop on the East Coast of the United States paid a visit to a small religious college on the West Coast. He was lodged in the home of the college president, who was a progressive young man, a professor of physics and chemistry. The president one day invited the members of his faculty to dinner with the bishop so that they could benefit from his wisdom and experience. After dinner the talk turned to the future, and the bishop claimed that the “millennium” could not be far off. One of the reasons he cited was the fact that everything in nature had now already been discovered, and all possible inventions had been made. The president politely demurred. In his opinion, he said, humanity was on the threshold of brilliant new discoveries. The bishop dared the president to mention one. The president said he expected that within the next fifty years or so humans would learn to fly. This threw the bishop into a fit of laughter. “Rubbish, my dear man,” he exclaimed, “if God had intended us to fly, He would have provided us with wings. Flight is reserved for the birds and the angels.” By the way: The president’s name was Wright. He had two sons named Orville and Wilbur—who became the inventors of the first airplane.

 

Wright, by the way, went on to also become a bishop in the United Brethren in Christ and have a distinguished career in the church. It goes to show us that even people of faith can sometimes be scoffers.

            There are some who want to consign Pentecost and what it stands for to the pages of history; an unrepeatable act.  Could it just be that the One who would “lead us into all truth;” the One, as the early teachers of the Church said, points us to the face of the Father and the Son, is among us?  I think so. And I also think, believe, am convinced that the Church – and I mean across the board – needs to recover the wonder of the presence of the Counselor. If we are not as animated or as powerful as we should be in making a difference in the world, it is because we lack the breath – the pneuma, the ruah – of God in fullness within us.

            On this Pentecost Sunday we celebrate the Church’s birthday, but it shouldn’t be simply a ‘memorial,’ a remembrance of a great day long ago. No. The Church – and this parish of St. John Chrysostom in Delafield – needs to claim afresh what happened on that day, and happens on EVERY DAY that we open ourselves to God’s presence and power – the Holy Spirit. I was touched and moved yesterday by our Presiding Bishop, Michael Curry’s words to the now Duke and Duchess of Sussex on their wedding day. He reminded them that the God of love gives us POWER to transform the world. He quoted one of my favorite thinkers, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, who once said that when we unleashed the power of love we would have discovered fire for the second time. It is true!

God knows that the world in which we live – fraught with so much dishonesty, dysfunction, lack of reasoned discourse or civility, and outright violence – needs the FIRE of the Holy Spirit to fall fresh upon it! That fire, my dear sisters and brothers, will only fall if the people of God, the people called by Jesus’ precious Name, CHRISTIANS, open up and then step up to do God’s will. So today, as followers of Christ, as people of the Spirit, I pray that we open ourselves to the Counselor, to listen to what God’s Spirit has for us and then live accordingly – dance, fly, make a difference. The COUNSELOR is among us….and the DANCE GOES ON!

                       

Sermon (Fr Peay) May 13, 2018

St. John Chrysostom Episcopal Church – Delafield, WI
7th Sunday of Easter/Mothers’ Day – May 13, 2018
V. Rev. Steven A. Peay, Ph.D.
 
               Years ago John Lennon wrote a song with some rather fancy musical dynamics, but pretty straightforward words. The essential message was: all you need is love. I won’t sing it for you – though as I read these words I bet you’ll sing it in your head, because I have the whole time I worked on this – but here are the words:
Love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love.
There's nothing you can do that can't be done.
Nothing you can sing that can't be sung.
Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game
It's easy.
There's nothing you can make that can't be made.
No one you can save that can't be saved.
Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be you
in time - It's easy.
 
All you need is love, all you need is love,
All you need is love, love, love is all you need.
Love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love.
All you need is love, all you need is love,
All you need is love, love, love is all you need.
There's nothing you can know that isn't known.
Nothing you can see that isn't shown.
Nowhere you can be that isn't where you're meant to be.
It's easy.
All you need is love, all you need is love,
All you need is love, love, love is all you need.
All you need is love (all together now)
All you need is love (everybody)
All you need is love, love, love is all you need.

 

I’m not sure if John Lennon realized it, but he was singing what Jesus taught and lived.

John, the Gospel writer, records Jesus saying, “Those who love me will keep my word, and my Father will love them, and we will come to them, and make our home with them. Whoever does not love me does not keep my words. . .”  Those words from John 14 preface what we’ve been hearing the last several weeks.  What is being said here is that the essence of Christian faith is not about theological niceties – though that doesn’t mean that we’re not to be concerned about them. Rather, the truest theology is going to be lived out. Those who “get” what Jesus is teaching will live it out. God rest him, but John Lennon sang a good game, but didn’t live the essence of love. Because it’s not that easy, that’s where the words are wrong, it’s not that easy. Love that transforms, love that abides and is consistent – even when the loved one isn’t – that kind of love is very hard. That kind of love is also accountable and responsible. Jesus taught that kind of love and, more importantly, lived it – right to the Cross and through the Resurrection. He loved us, so that we might know, in a tangible way, how much we are loved and how we are to love in turn. It will do, that love, all the things the song talks about, but it isn’t easy, it’s work and it’s work that has to be done every day.

Jesus talks about he and the Father “making their home” with those who are living in this love. Jesus, elsewhere, will talk about “abiding” in him and in his love. When we live as we’re called to live we’ll be “at home,” comfortable in the everyday, ordinary showing of who God is by being who we are. Jesus invites us to share in the community that is the Trinity, to make our home with God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Augustine speaks of it this way in one of his Tractates on John’s Gospel:

The saints are distinguished from the world by that love which maketh the one-minded    Unanimes. to dwell [together] in a house. In this house Father and Son make their abode, and impart that very love to those whom They shall also honor at last with this promised self manifestation; of which the disciple questioned his Master, that not only those who then listened might learn it from His own lips, but we also from his Gospel. For he had made inquiry about the manifestation of Christ, and heard [in reply] about His loving and abiding.

You and I, we, are supposed to become the very dwelling place of God. And when the Church, God’s family, God’s community is gathered for worship, then that community is made real, manifest to the whole world. Here, among us, is where people should know they can find that love that is all you need – how sad that we, as Christians, too often fall short. We talk a good game, but don’t always live it out (especially if someone does something, or says something we don’t like). But there’s that love again, lifting us up, holding out the promise of forgiveness, of transformation, and of real change. We can “learn how to be you in time,” it’s not easy, but all we need is love.

            What we hear in John’s Gospel today is Jesus’s “high priestly prayer,” in which he is commending us to the Father. Continuing, and deepening, that love relationship we are to have. Part of that deepening is to really mean what we pray when we say, “thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth, as it is in heaven.” Jesus asks the Father to sanctify us …make us holy…in the truth, which is God’s own word. Which means doing and living as God wills, as God wants.

I came across another way of expressing this reality in a story by the Roman Catholic priest-sociologist-novelist Andrew Greeley. He told this story:

Once upon a time back in the last century there was a young woman from Ireland who had lost her parents and all her family. Some kind people wrote to their relatives in America and said we have this fourteen year old orphan here who is very bright and very pretty and very hard working, We don’t want her to go to the orphanage because she won’t have any opportunities there to develop her talents. Would you ever consider hiring her as a servant girl. You’d have to pay her way over on the boat, but she’ll work for nothing until she earns her fare. You won’t go wrong with her. So the Americans, who could afford a serving girl, but never had one and weren’t altogether sure what they would do with such a person talked about it and said, well, what have we to lose. So they sent the fare for the boat and the train. And waited for the young woman to come.

 She sailed from Kinsale. The last she saw of Ireland were the twin spires of the church as they faded into the background. Weeks later, sick and thin and exhausted, she arrived in the city where her master and mistress lived. They took one look at the poor child and said, Dear, we don’t need a servant, but we have room for another daughter. When they brought her home the other children hugged her and said, hooray! We have another sister. With their help she grew up to go to college and university and become very successful and was a great credit to those who took her into their family. (The Trinity is a family into which God has invited us) 

Jesus came among us to invite us into the family, to say to us, “Be at home with us” and to open us to the wonder of what we were created to be. To come to that, to accept the invitation, to made truly in the image and likeness of God; well, love is all you need.

It is appropriate to talk about this “abiding” and “home making” as we celebrate and honor mothers.  Mothers put up with a lot, but that love and desire to make a home keeps the door open. Love can find a home and love can make a home in us and then will make a difference. Perhaps that’s why there are so many medieval texts, including the Showings of Julian of Norwich that refer to Jesus as “mother”? That’s because God is not only our Father, but also our Mother and our Brother…..God is our family.

Today celebrate love that has built many a home and changed many a life. Love – unselfish, self-giving, open-hearted – love is all we need. It is offered to us freely by the God who is Father, Mother, family to us, if we will but respond and learn to be who we really are. Love is all we need. All together now……….everybody………all we need is love. Amen.