Here is my sermon from Sunday. The texts were Ephesians 1:15-23 and Luke 24:44-53:
There is a church in Albuquerque, and on their marque it
says “church like it used to be,” and I have a guess what that mean by that,
but I’m not quite positive that I understand what that means. Several years
ago, I took a month off in order to study worship, and in that time I went to
12 different churches in the Albuquerque area. One of the 12 was the Greek
Orthodox Church. As I was listening to the divine liturgy, which, except for
being primarily in English now, has been the basically the same for the last
1500 years or so. Is that what they mean by church like it used to be? Probably
not. But I do think much, or even all, that church like it used to be has to do
with worship. Indeed, when someone says they are going to church, what they
nearly always mean is “I am going to worship”, the immediate circumstances being
an exception. I heard last week that 90% of churches have gone to some type of
alternative worship, with the vast majority being online. I don’t know about
the other 10%, perhaps some of them never stopped worshipping in person, or
more likely they stopped worshipping at all. Can you be church and not have
worship? I think the two are inherently linked together, and worship is at the
heart of the matter for who we are as a people.
What we hear in the passage from Luke for today is that
after the disciples watch Jesus ascend, which Luke doesn’t really describe,
that they then worship him. This has been a common theme of the post
resurrection Christ, and then they return to Jerusalem with great joy and end
up in the temple blessing, or worshipping God. Luke’s gospel both begins and
ends in the Temple, but there is a distinct difference between the beginning
and the ending, of course because of Jesus. In the first temple, or under the
old covenant, sacrifice is made at the temple with animals, but under the new
covenant, under the covenant of Christ, in which we are called to make
sacrifices of praise of adoration to God in acknowledgment for what God has
done for us. Joy in celebration of love and forgiveness. Jesus has already
given a preview of this change when he encounters a Samaritan woman in the
gospel of John, also sometimes called the story of the woman at the well. She
says to Jesus that her people have worshipped God on their mountain, but that
he says that people should worship on the mountain in Jerusalem, meaning the
Temple. But Jesus says, the time is coming when people will no longer worship
on either mountain, but they will worship the Father in Spirit and truth, and
that’s where we are, no longer in the temple, but worshipping in spirit in
truth, making worship the heart of the matter. But what does that look like?
Monday, May 25, 2020
Monday, May 18, 2020
Heart of Righteousness
Here is my message from Sunday. The text was John 14:15-21 and 1 Peter 3:13-22:
In our series looking at the heart of the matter, so far we have looked at having a heart of peace, based on Jesus’ post resurrection greeting of Peace be with you, and the heart of love, with the example of the travelers on the road to Emmaus offering hospitality to the stranger, who turns out to be the risen Christ. And we looked at a heart of generosity, with the early church sharing things in common so that those who were in need would be provided for, and the heart of comfort, where God comforts us like a mother comforts her child, and we are to do the same, and today we turn to a heart of righteousness.
In our series looking at the heart of the matter, so far we have looked at having a heart of peace, based on Jesus’ post resurrection greeting of Peace be with you, and the heart of love, with the example of the travelers on the road to Emmaus offering hospitality to the stranger, who turns out to be the risen Christ. And we looked at a heart of generosity, with the early church sharing things in common so that those who were in need would be provided for, and the heart of comfort, where God comforts us like a mother comforts her child, and we are to do the same, and today we turn to a heart of righteousness.
Now righteousness is almost exclusively a church word. Besides
for Crush in the movie Finding Nemo and 80’s surfer dudes who wanted you to know
about righteous waves, it’s not really a word that gets used in normal
conversation. We do talk about people being self-righteous, which is thinking
themselves morally superior over others, but that doesn’t really match what
righteousness is about. And it turns out that we don’t really even talk all
that much about righteousness in church, even though it’s an incredibly
important theme in scripture, both in the Hebrew Bible and in the New
Testament. The word righteous, or righteousness, appears in the Bible 630
times, and to give you a comparison, love appears 872 times, so it’s there a
lot. And those are the times in which the Greek and Hebrew words are translated
as righteous, rather than something else. So, at the cross, after Jesus dies,
the Roman Centurion, played by John Wayne in the Greatest Story Ever Told, says
“surely this man was innocent.” The Greek word translated as innocent, could
also be translated, and perhaps might be better translated, as righteous. That
is someone who followed the law, or did the right thing, someone who lived a
righteous life.
Labels:
1 Peter,
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Zan Holmes
Monday, May 11, 2020
Heart of Comfort
Here is my sermon from Sunday. The text was Psalm 31:1-5, 15-16, 1 Peter 2:2-10 and John 14:1-14.
Mother’s Day is always a difficult service to plan and prepare for, because there are so many pieces that have to be remembered and taken into account. Of course we celebrate our mothers, but there are those whose mothers are gone, and they mourn, and there are those who never had a mother, or lost their mother early, or those whose mothers were unable to be a mother or to love as we expect mothers to. And then there are those who desperately wanted to be mothers, but who were unable to, and others who feel judged and thought of as less than a woman because they didn’t have children, and there are the mothers who have known the pain of a child dying, or that have lost a child in other ways. Although worship attendance tends to be higher on Mother’s Day, because mom’s say “I want you to come to church with me today”, and the family does, I also know many women who choose not to come to church because it’s just easier not to try and be in church an deal with some or all of the emotions and feelings that come with just some of the situations I just named. And so wherever you are today, as we’ve been saying, whether you are experiencing joy and celebration on this day, or sadness and pain, or something in between, it’s okay, and it fits into our next issue of getting to the heart of the matter, and that is the heart of comfort.
Each Sunday, we’ve begun by holding our worry stones, or perhaps our pocket crosses, and rubbing them as a reminder of the steadfastness of God, and that God is with us always. We hear that is the Psalm that was read, in the Psalmist’s plea for deliverance from whatever it is that they are facing, that they are seeking refuge in God. Twice the Psalmist talks about God being their rock and fortress, first in asking for God to be that, and then in recognizing that God is their rock and their fortress. That God’s faithful and steadfast love will redeem them and protect them. In that imagery, in that call, and in that assurance and knowledge of God’s steadfast love, the Psalmist finds comfort. That God is rocksolid in God’s promises and in not going anywhere, and all the other things that the idea of God as rock means for us. And yet when we say that God is our rock, or even God is our fortress, we of course don’t literally mean that God is a rock. We understand that this is a metaphor that’s being used to give some attributed about what God is like. It’s to say that God is like this, but also to know that God is not like this. And there is certainly some comfort in understanding God to be our rock, solid, true, holding us and protecting us. But as we think of God’s comfort there are other metaphors that also need to come into play, especially as we celebrate our mothers and other significant women in our lives.
Mother’s Day is always a difficult service to plan and prepare for, because there are so many pieces that have to be remembered and taken into account. Of course we celebrate our mothers, but there are those whose mothers are gone, and they mourn, and there are those who never had a mother, or lost their mother early, or those whose mothers were unable to be a mother or to love as we expect mothers to. And then there are those who desperately wanted to be mothers, but who were unable to, and others who feel judged and thought of as less than a woman because they didn’t have children, and there are the mothers who have known the pain of a child dying, or that have lost a child in other ways. Although worship attendance tends to be higher on Mother’s Day, because mom’s say “I want you to come to church with me today”, and the family does, I also know many women who choose not to come to church because it’s just easier not to try and be in church an deal with some or all of the emotions and feelings that come with just some of the situations I just named. And so wherever you are today, as we’ve been saying, whether you are experiencing joy and celebration on this day, or sadness and pain, or something in between, it’s okay, and it fits into our next issue of getting to the heart of the matter, and that is the heart of comfort.
Each Sunday, we’ve begun by holding our worry stones, or perhaps our pocket crosses, and rubbing them as a reminder of the steadfastness of God, and that God is with us always. We hear that is the Psalm that was read, in the Psalmist’s plea for deliverance from whatever it is that they are facing, that they are seeking refuge in God. Twice the Psalmist talks about God being their rock and fortress, first in asking for God to be that, and then in recognizing that God is their rock and their fortress. That God’s faithful and steadfast love will redeem them and protect them. In that imagery, in that call, and in that assurance and knowledge of God’s steadfast love, the Psalmist finds comfort. That God is rocksolid in God’s promises and in not going anywhere, and all the other things that the idea of God as rock means for us. And yet when we say that God is our rock, or even God is our fortress, we of course don’t literally mean that God is a rock. We understand that this is a metaphor that’s being used to give some attributed about what God is like. It’s to say that God is like this, but also to know that God is not like this. And there is certainly some comfort in understanding God to be our rock, solid, true, holding us and protecting us. But as we think of God’s comfort there are other metaphors that also need to come into play, especially as we celebrate our mothers and other significant women in our lives.
Labels:
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comfort,
female imagery,
John,
Marcia McFee,
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Monday, May 4, 2020
Heart of Generosity
Here is my sermon from Sunday. The text was Acts 2:42-47 and John 10:1-10
Normally when people hear this passage from Acts, or some later ones dealing with the same thing of the disciples and new converts sharing everything in common, they are sort of shocked. Some question whether that really happened, and if it did how it really worked. Some wonder why they stopped and why the church doesn’t call for the same thing today. And on the opposite of that, some wonder why they were promoting communism when clearly we need to value and support private property. And perhaps all of those questions are the right and the wrong questions to be asking. The fact is that we don’t know for sure that the early church practiced this in the form that Luke reports, or if he was embellishing a little. But, we do know that there were communities that lived communally. All indications are that the Qumran community, from which we get the Dead Sea scrolls, live communally.
So it’s still there, and yet this practice does not seem to have lasted for very long in the church, and maybe not outside of Jerusalem, as there is no indication in Paul’s letters of converts being called to this behavior. In fact, he chastises the Corinthian community for not sharing their food and drink when they gather together, which may have led to communion becoming separate from a communal meal. But, the fact that Luke, who is the writer of Acts, tells us several times that they were doing this, indicates that it was a fairly important practice, because in chapter 5 we are told the story of Ananias and Sapphira, who sell some property they own, but lie about how much they sell it for, keeping some of the money for themselves. And when they both lie about it, they both drop dead, pretty harsh penalty, but Peter says that in doing what they have done, they did not lie to them, but they lied to God. And so there you go.<
Normally when people hear this passage from Acts, or some later ones dealing with the same thing of the disciples and new converts sharing everything in common, they are sort of shocked. Some question whether that really happened, and if it did how it really worked. Some wonder why they stopped and why the church doesn’t call for the same thing today. And on the opposite of that, some wonder why they were promoting communism when clearly we need to value and support private property. And perhaps all of those questions are the right and the wrong questions to be asking. The fact is that we don’t know for sure that the early church practiced this in the form that Luke reports, or if he was embellishing a little. But, we do know that there were communities that lived communally. All indications are that the Qumran community, from which we get the Dead Sea scrolls, live communally.
So it’s still there, and yet this practice does not seem to have lasted for very long in the church, and maybe not outside of Jerusalem, as there is no indication in Paul’s letters of converts being called to this behavior. In fact, he chastises the Corinthian community for not sharing their food and drink when they gather together, which may have led to communion becoming separate from a communal meal. But, the fact that Luke, who is the writer of Acts, tells us several times that they were doing this, indicates that it was a fairly important practice, because in chapter 5 we are told the story of Ananias and Sapphira, who sell some property they own, but lie about how much they sell it for, keeping some of the money for themselves. And when they both lie about it, they both drop dead, pretty harsh penalty, but Peter says that in doing what they have done, they did not lie to them, but they lied to God. And so there you go.<
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