Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Proper 18 C - Psalm 1
Monday, August 29, 2016
Proper 18 C - Deuteronomy 30:15-20
Thursday, August 25, 2016
Proper 17 C - Luke 14:1, 7-14
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Proper 17 C - Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16
“Entertaining Angels Unaware” is one of my favorite songs by
Erik Johansson, a Vermonter and part time Texan who restores pipe organs and
through his music and prayer the human heart as well, including my own I might
add. It was always my first request in the past when he would unpack his hand made harp, followed
closely by my second request for a whimsical, sweet song about fishing with a
child. They might be the same thing for when the human heart is healed by
hospitality the angels are entertained and in our restoration they rejoice. The
hospitable life of Hebrews is found in mutual love expressed by loving the
stranger, which is the literal meaning of the Greek. It means we remember those
in prison as if we were in their place. It is for one’s own being to be
tortured by the thought of another’s body violated, as well as grieving for the
spirit and soul and mind of the one who devises and inflicts pain upon another.
Honoring marriage, resisting the lure of wealth, contentment within one’s self,
being thankful for faithful leaders, doing good and sharing what you have are
all expressions of the hospitable life in which the angels rejoice and God is
pleased. So entertaining angels unaware is not a chance encounter with a cherub
but a life encountered and changed by Jesus, the same yesterday, today and
always.
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Proper 17 C - Psalm 112
Monday, August 22, 2016
Proper 17 C - Proverbs 25:6-7
The first thing to say is that whatever we say
about this proverb it was obviously written to those who had the ability to put
themselves forward in the presence of the king. The closest I’ve come to
royalty is the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace and since the royal
standard wasn’t flying above the royal apartment the Queen was being royal
somewhere else. Apparently no one told her I was coming. I don’t think I’ll be
using Solomon’s sage advice anytime soon. So what is to be said about two verses
which have little application to those who are not likely to stand or sit in
the place of the great? “Don’t think of yourselves more highly than you ought”
is how the apostle Paul might have applied the text to his audience, the vast
majority of whom would never get an audience with the king, unless of course
they were being martyred in the coliseum. But it is to those white robed
martyrs that the King of the universe says come up here while the kings of the
earth, and queens for that matter, are put down from their thrones. I am sure
that is not what Solomon meant to say in this proverb but then my guess is that
he might want to follow his own advice when ushered into the presence of the
KING of KINGS.
Friday, August 19, 2016
Proper 16 C - Luke 10:13-17
The woman set free
from being bent over praises God while the synagogue ruler standing up straight
remains bent over by the rules and regulations he is so keen on keeping. This
daughter of Abraham knew her need and for eighteen years had endured the stares
and whispers of those whose religious perspective placed the blame squarely on
her bowed shoulders. Bad things happen to bad people. The synagogue ruler, a son
of Abraham in a position of prestige and power, had no idea that the very
things he held as holy prevented him from being holy. God said it this way more than
once, “I desire mercy not sacrifice.” If the Sabbath is meant to return one to
the place of rest, modeled by the Creator on the seventh day, then the Sabbath
was always meant to reconnect the created to the God who commanded that rest be
observed. Jesus said it this way more than once, “The Sabbath was meant for
you. Not you for the Sabbath.” So the Sabbath that reconnects us to the One who
commanded it begins with an attitude of care and concern for all of creation,
beasts of burdens and daughters and sons of Abraham and everyone else for that
matter, which is meant to lead us to act in ways that bring healing and peace and
justice seven days a week. Or in other words: Sabbath sacrificed for mercy
praises God while mercy sacrificed for Sabbath is no rest at all.
Thursday, August 18, 2016
Proper 16 C - Hebrews 12:18-29
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
Proper 16 C - Psalm 103:1-8
The “all that is
within me” (or you for that matter) includes that which is less than
praiseworthy so how can the “all of me” praise God’s holy name? It seems to me
that one of images of Pauline theology – old Adam (Eve)
cohabiting and competing with the new Eve (Adam) has the unfortunate
consequence of a theology that does not allow for the “all of me” to praise
God’s holy name. But what if we were to accept the fact that the “all of me” is
comprised of the sum total of everything about us and that the aspects of me
and you that are less than praiseworthy are none the less worthy of praising
God’s name if for no other reason than the fact that God knows and loves the
“all” of you and me. And if the “all of me” and the “all of you” can praise
God’s holy name just as we are maybe we can stop hiding from ourselves and each
other and realize the biggest benefit that we are not to forget is that God
loves the “all of me” and the “all of you” so that we can love each other in
the same way. Which as it turns out is the way that God desires to be
praised.
Monday, August 15, 2016
Pentecost 16 C - Isaiah 58:9-14
Isaiah
58:9-14
We should not miss the connection between satisfying the needs of the hungry and calling the Sabbath a delightful holy day. We are tempted to reduce the Sabbath to an hour obligation on a Sunday morning and released by “Go in peace. Serve the Lord” go off to serve ourselves. Keeping the Sabbath has less to do with resting from labor and more to do with restoring relationships. We trample the Sabbath when our gatherings are yoked to the pointing of the finger and evil talk over slights and offenses real or imagined without making any attempt to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. (Ephesians 4:3) We trample the Lord’s day when our Sabbaths are wrapped up in respectability and self-righteousness and never call into question our relentless pursuit of our own way, our own interests, our own affairs and our neglect to care for the “least of these.” (Matthew 25:40) If calling the Sabbath a delight is delighting in the Lord then it follows that the day must be about whatever delights the Lord. I think what delights the Lord most is when the lines between you and me or us and them are erased and we see that God has given us to each other. When in our Sabbath gatherings we care more about what difference we make in this parched and dry land than any of the things churches argue about the Lord is delighted. Then living the love of Christ is a well-watered garden and a never ending spring and we refresh this weary world with acts of kindness and mercy to make every moment of everyday a Sabbath celebration. Young Calvary member Drew Thomas gets that which is why on his birthday week he invites all of Calvary to collect water for his homeless friends at the Fort Worth Day Resource Center. And I have no doubt the delighted Lord skips for the sheer joy of it.
We should not miss the connection between satisfying the needs of the hungry and calling the Sabbath a delightful holy day. We are tempted to reduce the Sabbath to an hour obligation on a Sunday morning and released by “Go in peace. Serve the Lord” go off to serve ourselves. Keeping the Sabbath has less to do with resting from labor and more to do with restoring relationships. We trample the Sabbath when our gatherings are yoked to the pointing of the finger and evil talk over slights and offenses real or imagined without making any attempt to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. (Ephesians 4:3) We trample the Lord’s day when our Sabbaths are wrapped up in respectability and self-righteousness and never call into question our relentless pursuit of our own way, our own interests, our own affairs and our neglect to care for the “least of these.” (Matthew 25:40) If calling the Sabbath a delight is delighting in the Lord then it follows that the day must be about whatever delights the Lord. I think what delights the Lord most is when the lines between you and me or us and them are erased and we see that God has given us to each other. When in our Sabbath gatherings we care more about what difference we make in this parched and dry land than any of the things churches argue about the Lord is delighted. Then living the love of Christ is a well-watered garden and a never ending spring and we refresh this weary world with acts of kindness and mercy to make every moment of everyday a Sabbath celebration. Young Calvary member Drew Thomas gets that which is why on his birthday week he invites all of Calvary to collect water for his homeless friends at the Fort Worth Day Resource Center. And I have no doubt the delighted Lord skips for the sheer joy of it.
Thursday, August 11, 2016
Proper 15 C - Luke 12:49-56
This is not a “What a
friend we have in Jesus” Jesus text, but then Jesus is more complicated than
any single hymn or Gospel text or bracelet that lets the wearer decide What
Would Jesus Do? Jesus may have died to save us from our sins but he was crucified
for being a trouble maker. That is not to say his offense was primarily
political even though the Romans were happy to crucify another trouble making
Jew between two common criminals. Jesus’ “crucify him” worthy crime was
ultimately a religious offense to people whose history made them worry about
anyone who colored outside the God defined lines. Remember the Babylonian
captivity? So the Romans killed him because he messed with the law and order
that they maintained to ensure a steady stream of tax revenue. The more
complicit of the Jewish leaders condemned him to death because he messed with
the profitable religion that the Romans allowed them to continue as long as they
contributed to the system. But the pious cried crucify because Jesus named the
God who could not be named, Abba, and there is nothing that breeds more bitter
hatred than someone who says they know your God better than you do. God help us
we have been crucifying each other over that since the beginning of time and
will do so until the end of time when God decides it is finally time for
everyone to get out of the pool. But until the last cloud rises in the west or
the last south wind blows maybe we could interpret the present time in light of
the future time and allow that Jesus is more complicated than a single hymn or
Gospel text or personal preference WWJD bracelet and that the divisions Jesus
talks about in Luke 12 are our own doing and not God’s design.
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
Proper 15 C - Hebrews 11:29-12:2
The great cloud of witnesses commended to us for their ability
to endure were less than perfect examples of faithful witnesses. The ones who
passed through the Red Sea made the golden calf. The ones who circled the walls
of Jericho until they fell down fell prey to greed and kept some of the
“dedicated things” from the forsaken city. Samson may have torn down the temple
but he also dallied with Delilah. David would have liked to build the temple
but was denied that honor because he violated Bathsheba and murdered her husband
Uriah the Hittite. The point is the great cloud of witnesses is remembered
because God remembered them despite their tendency to forget God. So we are
surrounded by a great cloud of folks a lot like us and the encouragement they
offer is that God gifted them with a reward they could not create and did not
deserve. That is why we look past the cloud and fix our eyes on the pioneer and
perfecter of faith who for the sake of the joy that was set before him – that
would be the world he came to save – endured more than the whole cloud of
witnesses put together. So by all means run with perseverance the race set
before you but recognize that when you stumble and fall the crowd might cheer
you on but it will be Jesus who picks you up.
Tuesday, August 9, 2016
Proper 15 C - Psalm 82
God doesn't care about the poor because they are
poor. God cares about the poor because they are people and God loves people. The trouble is people do
show partiality, fawning over the powerful while neglecting those with the
greatest need, i.e. the weak and the orphan; the lowly and the destitute. But
in God’s design for human community those who wield the greatest power have the
greatest responsibility to act justly in the same way that “to whom much is
given much is required.” (Luke 12:48) When Jesus’ half-brother James (influenced no doubt by his step-brother) wrote
about works produced by faith he put it in the context of providing for the
poor. “If a brother or sister is naked and lacks daily food and one of
you says to them, “Go in peace; keep warm and eat your fill,” and yet you do
not supply their bodily needs, what is the good of that?” (James 2:15,16) The
wishing the other well is equal to the providing for basic needs. That is one
of the reasons I make eggs to order for our room in the inn guests. When it comes down to it having the choice of how you like your eggs is of equal, if not more, value than the egg itself. And truth to be told I am always blessed by my
friends who tell me how they like their eggs. It’s all about
relationship.
Monday, August 8, 2016
Proper 15 c - Jeremiah 23:23-29
Jeremiah 23:23-29
“…let the one who has my word speak my word faithfully.” The Reverend Eric Schulze, my mentor, my colleague, my friend, was one who always spoke the word faithfully and in meeting the God who fills heaven and earth this morning received the reward of his faith, the salvation of his soul. He’ll be remembered for many things but I will always be eternally grateful to him for allowing me to be a pastor who spoke the word faithfully in my own way. There are clergy partnerships that do not work well together and congregations suffer when pastor personalities conflict. Pastor Eric was always better than me in that regard and even when he hated (and I don’t think that is too strong a sentiment) the ideas I had I think he always thought about Calvary first and was willing to think the future is not bound by the past and maybe the present reality has to accept that. Our capital campaign theme “Celebrate Tradition, Imagine the Future.” might be an apt description of the years Eric and I spent working side by side. I will miss him but I don’t mourn him. He has joined the vast cloud of Calvary witnesses and even now is cheering us on. Thanks be to God.
“…let the one who has my word speak my word faithfully.” The Reverend Eric Schulze, my mentor, my colleague, my friend, was one who always spoke the word faithfully and in meeting the God who fills heaven and earth this morning received the reward of his faith, the salvation of his soul. He’ll be remembered for many things but I will always be eternally grateful to him for allowing me to be a pastor who spoke the word faithfully in my own way. There are clergy partnerships that do not work well together and congregations suffer when pastor personalities conflict. Pastor Eric was always better than me in that regard and even when he hated (and I don’t think that is too strong a sentiment) the ideas I had I think he always thought about Calvary first and was willing to think the future is not bound by the past and maybe the present reality has to accept that. Our capital campaign theme “Celebrate Tradition, Imagine the Future.” might be an apt description of the years Eric and I spent working side by side. I will miss him but I don’t mourn him. He has joined the vast cloud of Calvary witnesses and even now is cheering us on. Thanks be to God.
Friday, August 5, 2016
Proper 14 C - Luke 12:32-40
Thursday, August 4, 2016
Proper 14 C - Hebrews 11:1-16
The trust in me theme of this week’s lessons continues with
what must be acknowledged as the trust poof text. :) Faith “the assurance
of things hoped for and the confidence in things not seen” is the version I
memorized and the meaning, no matter how it is translated, has served me well.
That being said I must confess that I am not a confident Christian even though I do
have confidence in Christ. By that I mean I have all kinds of doubts about
myself and my life of faith but no doubts about the One in whom I trust. But
that shouldn’t surprise you or me, nor should we lament the truth about
ourselves. I believe confident Christians are not all they are cracked up to be
and a healthy dose of doubt means the life of faith is no walk in the park
which may be what the life of faith is all about. I hope in things that have
been promised but not delivered. I have confidence in what I cannot see, the
better country for which I long, and believe it is more real than the one in
which I presently live. The Hebrews 11 list of those who lived by faith is not
a list of faith super stars, but rather a list of those who hoping against hope
lived as if the promise not realized had already been delivered and the things
not seen were fully visible. Put your name in the Hebrews 11 list, you less
than confident Christian, for the word to them is the word to us. Believe in
what you cannot see. Trust me.
Tuesday, August 2, 2016
Proper 14 C - Psalm 33:12-22
Psalm 33 continues the “trust me” theme of Genesis 15. Though
kings trust in the size of their army and warriors trust in the size of their
biceps the one who trusts in the Lord hopes in unfailing love. It means like
Abraham we look to the mystery of the unlimited heavens and stars beyond
counting to catch a glimpse of the One who looks down from on high and opens our hearts and
minds in holy waiting to abiding hope until unfailing love rests upon us. It is
unfailing love that satisfies our spiritual hunger, unfailing love that brings
us back from the brink of death dealing despair, unfailing love that is our
help and our shield in times of trouble. This would be a vain hope for
deliverance if the Holy One had only looked down from heaven, and in this we
rejoice, that when the time had fully come and the waiting world could wait no
longer God’s unfailing love left heaven and inhabited flesh and blood so that
we could know as we are known and see as we are seen. God’s word through the
psalmist is God's word to us. Trust me.
Monday, August 1, 2016
Proper 14 C - Genesis 15:1-6
Confirming
the covenant by looking at stars too numerous to count is hardly proof of the
promise but that is the way it has been with Abraham and God. After all, God’s
“trust me” was enough for Abraham to leave his people and his father’s
household for a promised land he had never seen so God’s starlit “trust me” is
enough for Abraham to believe what appears less likely with each passing year.
Abraham’s believing “trust me” despite the delay in God making good on the
promise is reckoned as righteousness which is a way of saying that the Lord and
Abraham are BFF because friendship is a relationship of trust. It is the same
for all who have not seen and yet believe; who following the Lord anticipate
the promise of eternal life in a land beyond without having been there; who
trust that despite the difficulties of each day prayers offered are heard and
God’s grace and mercy and love is as boundless as the stars that cannot be
counted. In my mind no one that I know has lived that more fully than Calvary
member Harry Herd who is very close to receiving the goal of his faith, the
salvation of his soul. (1 Peter 1:9) Although, truth to be told, Harry’s soul
was never in danger for Harry and the Lord have been BFF for a long, long time.
In ways he may not fully know he has been my spiritual inspiration for many years in
the same way his playing the harp in hospital rooms and on Via de Cristo weekends
have been windows into the forever future prepared for all who love the Lord. I have no
doubt he will be greeted by angel choirs and, who knows, there may be a chair
for him in the angelic orchestra. And so the word from the Lord to Harry and to
Abraham is the same word to us who walk in this life as yet by faith. Trust me.
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