Sunday, January 25, 2026

The Third Sunday after the Epiphany, January 25, 2026

Holy Cross MonasteryWest Park, NY
Br. Ephrem Arcement, OHC

The Third Sunday after the Epiphany, January 25, 2026

Click here for an audio of the sermon

Some of the most fascinating people we encounter in the Bible are the prophets of the Old Testament.  To be a prophet was not an envious thing, and few in ancient Israel would likely have told their parents that they wanted to be prophets when they grew up.  Because to be a prophet meant that you would place your life in the balance…that you would be despised by many and appreciated by few.  And your life may very well become the target of those who felt threatened by you…and those people were often the ones with the power to, at a whim, remove your head.  

Prophets were the conscience of Israel.  They held up the people of God to the standard of the law and the covenants.  They were the voice calling for fidelity and uncompromising commitment.  They pointed out sin and wickedness with clarity and precision and exposed the secrets of the heart before the discerning gaze of a righteous God.  

But there was another function of the prophet that those prone to apocalyptic visions of doom and gloom often overlook…the prophet was also a visionary who saw things that most others failed to see.  This vision into the future was marked by a vision of what could be in spite of what actually is.  This wasn’t a denial of reality but the conviction that reality is not a fixed, determined constant but open and malleable, able to be moved in directions that sometimes are surprisingly new.  In other words, prophets were those who stood up in the midst of an anxious, fearful people trapped by the threatening visions of the immediate reality before them and dared to see a way-out giving hope and courage to move a people forward into freedom.

The context of the first four verses of Isaiah chapter 9, our Old Testament reading today, is a bleak historical situation in which Israel (the small northern kingdom) is facing a brutal attack from the superpower Assyria.  Prophecies of judgment for sin are present.  But even though Israel has gotten herself into this mess in which she now finds herself, her God will not ultimately forsake her but, through Isaiah, promises a messiah, a coming Child, a Wonderful Counselor, a Prince of Peace, who will bring light and lasting peace to a land devastated by darkness and war.  The yoke of burden she now bears will be broken and she will know the salvation of God as on the day of Midian.  But what was the day of Midian?  The day of Midian refers to the decisive victory of Israel, led by Gideon in Judges 6 and 7, over the oppressive Midianite army, symbolizing God’s powerful deliverance from bondage.  Isaiah highlights God’s faithfulness to Israel in the past in order to offer faith and hope to her now in her current crisis: though all you see now is darkness and deep gloom, a liberating light is about to dawn once again!

What is at stake here not the power of Israel or even her faithfulness, or not, toward her God.  What is at stake is the power of God and God’s faithfulness to Israel.  A prevailing question tucked in the back of Israel’s mind has always been: have we sinned so greatly that our God will finally give up on us and leave us to become prey to our oppressors?  This was a nagging question with which she had to contend throughout her history.  This is, unfortunately, true also of many in the Christian church whose beliefs about God are determined more about what they do than upon who God is.  But have we really heard the gospel?  Have we really understood it?  

St. Paul says he has come not to baptize but to preach the gospel…and not with eloquent words so as to empty the cross of its power…for the message about the cross is the power of God to save.  What does this mean?  It means that when we look upon the crucified messiah, we see the revelation of God in its purest form.  The cross is the revelation of the unfathomable and unhinged love of God gratuitously given in total freedom without coercion or constraint.  It is love unconditional, unrestricted, and unlimited.  It is the peak of the glory of God, where the light of God’s love shines brightest.  It is a disarming folly, a most unexpected and unimagined declaration of the wisdom of God that communicates something absolute and all-determining.  It declares that you are infinitely loved no matter what you have done, no matter where you have been or where you come from, no matter what you look like or how you speak, no matter what you have or don’t have, no matter what you can do or can’t do.  You are the beloved of God and God sees you and knows you and God’s desire for you in not ever condemnation but only salvation.  And in this declaration of love comes the confirming, vivifying Spirit that was always within, but it now felt and known.  So that now, even though darkness may seem to prevail, a light has shown, and we know that this light will ultimately cast out this darkness.  All this flowing out from the wounded side of our crucified God.

And then another question arises: how do we live into this light?  How do we allow the light of God’s love shine out through our lives?  This happens for us just as it happened for Jesus…and just as it happened to those he first called to follow him.  

Notice that, in today’s Gospel, just after Jesus first hears of John’s arrest, he withdraws to Galilee.  Jesus had just gone down from Galilee to Judea to be baptized by John and is subsequently driven by the Spirit into the wilderness down there in southern Palestine to be tested by the devil.  It is immediately after this that Jesus hears about John being arrested.  The Gospel seeks to communicate that the age of John is coming to an end…that the path has been paved and that it is now time for Jesus to become the fulfillment of what John, with his baptism of repentance, began.  So, he withdraws to his hometown of Nazareth in Galilee to begin to tell his own story.  But notice, he leaves Nazareth and goes to the land of Zebulun and Naphtali, which would have been just north of Nazareth.  The point being, as we will also see in those he will soon call, the withdrawing from what is familiar, the detaching from what is custom, in order to hear and discover a deeper truth about oneself and to give oneself the time and space to reconstruct a life on this new foundation.  It plays itself out in Jesus’ call to Simon and Andrew and to James and John…leaving their parents and their livelihood in order to hear and discover something new…in this case, something profoundly new.

This call of Jesus to follow him…to be driven into the wilderness, away from family and the familiar customs which can so often hijack our minds and keep them bound in subservience to those customs, is quintessentially a monastic call.  We hear the Lord call us to come apart with him, leaving everything behind.  And in that place of the stripping of the old self we begin to hear and discover a new self, a deeper and more secure self that begins to reveal itself not by our ascetical efforts or our “perfect” monastic observance, but only by our unencumbered, contemplative listening…and hearing…the divine voice saying, “You are my beloved, with you I am well pleased.”  It is in that voice and that voice alone that the light of God’s glory erupts in and through our lives.  It is in that voice alone that the power to cut through the lies and illusions of our old self lies.  And it is only after every other voice has been silenced that we can hear it and know it and then begin to live it.  Everything else about the monastic life to this is secondary.  Without this…the personal knowledge of God’s love for us…a root of bitterness will likely soon spring up.  

It might be important, here, to point out how John and Jesus were both similar and different.  They both entered upon the public stage preaching…and they preached on a similar theme: repentance.  But where John stopped, Jesus continued.  While John focused on repentance, Jesus focused on what this repentance could lead to: the presence of the kingdom of heaven in the here and now.  This was unique from the message of John…and, for that matter, from what anyone else had ever dared to preach.  Jesus’ message was as clear as it was shocking: the hoped for time of God’s salvation has come…it is here…it is now.  And the question which confronted the first disciples who heard this shocking message also confronts us: will we leave the old behind…without looking back…and focus all our heart and mind on the one leading us into the great unknown?  Will we trust this voice, this experience, this deep longing of our hearts?  Brothers (and sisters), let us indeed trust it because that is the only place where the great transformation of our lives…and of all of life…can take place…where the epiphany of our true selves hidden in Christ can shine out and offer the world a way through the darkness. 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

The Second Sunday after the Epiphany, January 18, 2026

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC

The Second Sunday after the Epiphany, January 18, 2026

In the name of God, the Lover, the Liberator and the Life giver. Amen.

"Come and see."
With these three simple words, Jesus extends an invitation that echoes through the centuries and reverberates in this church today. It is an invitation not merely to observe, but to experience; not simply to learn about God, but to encounter the living presence of the Divine in our midst.

In today's gospel, John the Baptist stands at the Jordan, and as Jesus approaches, John proclaims, "Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!" This is no ordinary introduction. John recognizes something in Jesus that others might miss—the fullness of God dwelling in the fullness of a human person. This is the great mystery of the Incarnation that we contemplate during this Epiphany season: that God has chosen to make the divine presence known not in distant thunder or burning bushes alone, but in human flesh, in a person who walks dusty roads, who gets tired, who seeks out the company of friends.

Jesus is the ultimate manifestation of God. In him, the invisible becomes visible, the infinite becomes intimate, the eternal enters time. As John testifies, "I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and it remained on him." The Spirit that hovered over the waters at creation now rests upon this man from Nazareth. In Jesus, we encounter not a messenger from God, not merely a prophet speaking about God, but God's own self, present and active in the world.

This is the scandal and the glory of our faith: that God would choose to be so vulnerable, so accessible, so completely present in human form. The fullness of God—all that is holy, all that is love, all that is creative and redeeming power—dwelling in the fullness of a human person. Not partially human. Not pretending to be human. Fully God and fully human, without division or separation. In Jesus' joy and sorrow, in his compassion and righteous anger, in his prayer and his silence, in his teaching and his touch, God is made manifest.

But here is where our gospel passage takes a remarkable turn, one that speaks directly to those of us who have dedicated our lives to seeking God in intentional community. After John points to Jesus, two of his disciples begin to follow. Jesus turns to them and asks, "What are you looking for?" In typical Hebrew fashion they respond with their own question: "Rabbi, where are you staying?"
"Come and see," Jesus replies.

This invitation is at the heart of the monastic vocation, isn't it? We come to places like this not because we have all the answers, but because we are looking for something. We come with questions in our hearts; with longings we can barely articulate. And Jesus' response is not to hand us a doctrine or simply a rulebook, but to invite us into relationship, into presence, into the experience of staying with him.

The text tells us they remained with him that day. The Greek word used here is meno—to abide, to dwell, to stay. It's the same word Jesus will use later in John's gospel when he tells his disciples, "Abide in me as I abide in you." This is not a brief visit or a casual encounter. This is the beginning of a transformed life, rooted in staying close to the source of all life and love.

What happens when we accept Jesus' invitation to come and see, to stay and abide? Andrew discovers something so extraordinary that he cannot keep it to himself. He rushes to find his brother Simon and announces, "We have found the Messiah!" Notice that Andrew doesn't say, "I have found the Messiah." He says "We have found." Already, in these first hours of discipleship, there is a recognition that the experience of encountering Christ is communal. We discover God together.

This brings us to a profound truth that we embody here in our life together: we are often manifestations of God to one another. Andrew was a manifestation of God to Peter, bringing him to Jesus. John the Baptist was a manifestation of God to his disciples, pointing beyond himself to the Lamb of God. In our monastic community, in our worship, in our work, in our moments of recreation and rest, we are called to be Christ to one another, to reveal the divine presence through our words and actions, our listening and our love.

But this manifestation of the divine extends even beyond the human community. The more-than-human creation speaks of God's presence as well. John saw the Spirit descending like a dove — the natural world bearing witness to the holy. In this monastery, surrounded by wildlife and natural beauty, we know this truth intimately. The rhythm of the seasons, the persistence of growing things, the songs of birds at dawn, the silence of snow — all of creation is shot through with divine presence, reflecting back to us the glory of the Creator.

God is present everywhere. This is the radical claim of our faith. There is nowhere we can go to escape God's presence, as the psalmist reminds us. If we ascend to heaven, God is there. If we make our bed in the depths, God is there. If we dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there God's hand leads us.

But more than this—and here is the mystery that can sustain us through all of life's challenges—God is present deep in our heart and soul. We cannot be separate from God and Jesus, no matter how far we wander, no matter how lost we feel. The same Spirit that descended upon Jesus at his baptism dwells within us through our baptism. We are temples of the living God, sacred spaces where the divine presence abides.

This is why contemplative practice is so central to our life together. In silence and stillness, we descend into the heart where God already dwells. We don't create God's presence through our prayer; we simply become aware of the presence that has been there all along. As St. Augustine prayed, "You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched for you."

When Jesus looked at Simon and said, "You are to be called Cephas"—Peter, the rock—he was seeing not just who Simon was in that moment, but who he would become through the transforming power of God's presence. Jesus sees us with the same penetrating love. He knows our deepest identity, the self we are becoming, the image of God being revealed in us day by day.

"Come and see," Jesus says to us still. Come and see what God wants to teach you. Come and see what God wants to gift you. The invitation is open, always. It is an invitation to experience rather than simply to understand, to abide rather than simply to visit, to be transformed rather than simply to be informed.

In our life here, in this community dedicated to prayer and presence, we are responding to that ancient invitation. We have come. We are seeing. We are staying. And in our staying, in our faithfulness to the rhythm of prayer and work, in our openness to being Christ to one another, we become part of the great chain of witnesses that stretches back to Andrew and Peter, to John the Baptist, to all who have pointed beyond themselves and said, "Look, here is the Lamb of God."

May we continue to accept Jesus' invitation to come and see. May we recognize him in one another and in all of creation. May we abide in his presence, knowing that we can never be separated from his love. And may we, like Andrew, be so transformed by our encounter with Christ that we cannot help but share the good news: We have found the one for whom our hearts have been searching all along.
Amen.

Thursday, January 1, 2026

The Holy Name of our Lord Jesus Christ, January 1, 2026

Holy Cross MonasteryWest Park, NY

Br. Francis Beckham, OHC

The Holy Name of our Lord Jesus Christ, January 1, 2026

Click here for an audio of the sermon

“O God, our Governor, how exalted is your Name in all the World!” Amen.

The feast of the Holy Name of Jesus is one of several observances on the Church’s calendar known as “feasts of our Lord.” Others include the Presentation, the Transfiguration, the Nativity, and, the biggest one of them all, the Sunday of the Resurrection, or Easter Sunday. Like these other special days, the feast of the Holy Name helps us to meditate on and better understand a specific aspect of Jesus of Nazareth’s earthly life and teachings. Feasts of our Lord, as well as the feasts of the saints, invite us to pause and reflect on the unique role each of us plays in fulfilling God’s vision for the Church and the world. After all, Jesus’ first-century ministry was for our benefit, not his, and his special feast days help us see how we can become partners in that ministry right now in our own time and place.

But what’s really in a name? I mean, why the name ‘Jesus’ specifically? As with all names in the Bible, Jesus’ is rich in meaning and indicative of God’s particular job for him in the greater scheme of things. In Saint Luke’s Gospel, the assignment of Jesus’ name, which means “The Lord Saves” in Hebrew and Aramaic, is revealed to Mary by the Archangel Gabriel during the Annunciation. And so, right from the beginning, the naming of Mary’s child carries an important sacramental significance, and hints about what the future has in store for him.

Jesus’ name is no less meaningful today than it was back then. As probably all of us can attest, just hearing the name of Jesus is sure to evoke some kind of emotional response. Its mention can just as easily summon powerful memories based on how it’s been used with and around us (and possibly even against us) in the past. If Jesus’ name has been used rightly to teach us about love for God and neighbor, generosity of spirit, mercy, and service toward others, the memories are likely mostly positive ones. Sometimes, though, Jesus’ name is used wrongly, and then the memories around it aren’t usually so good, such as when it’s appropriated to incite fear or justify greed, domination, and violence. These are frankly blasphemous ways of using Jesus’ name, and today’s feast reminds us of our duty to restore it to its true, divinely appointed purpose of proclaiming God’s unconditional love for everyone.

In Sermon Fifteen on the Song of Songs, the twelfth-century monastic reformer, mystic, and early Cistercian, Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, reflects on this transformative message of love inherent in the name of Jesus, saying:

“In some mysterious way the name of [God’s] majesty and power is transfused into that of love and mercy, an amalgam that is abundantly poured out in the person of our Savior Jesus Christ. The name ‘God’ liquefies and dissolves into the title ‘God with Us,’ that is, into ‘Emmanuel’ … Servants are called friends in this new way, and the Resurrection is proclaimed not to mere disciples but to [beloved sisters and] brothers [of Christ].”

As we can see in this quote, Saint Bernard marvels at God’s willingness – eagerness, even – to forgo majesty and power by dwelling with us humans in the person of Jesus. The utterly ineffable – and, ultimately, unnamable – Eternal God becomes true flesh and blood, fully relatable, and definitively namable. In short, the entire mystery of the Incarnation becomes accessible to us in the name of Jesus.

So, too, as we have heard and sung this morning, does the psalmist marvel at God’s desire to draw all of us into the fullness of creation, the source and summit of which is God’s own name; and, amazingly, to entrust us as stewards and heirs of the Divine Wonders, the greatest being the Divine Name itself. Truly, in spite of all our flaws, each of us by our very existence is shown to be utterly, undoubtedly, and unconditionally loved by God. Don’t ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

But Jesus’ name isn’t meant simply to be a statement or even a summary of deeper truth, though it certainly is both of those. Rather, just as Jesus of Nazareth Incarnates and shows forth in his person our very God, Jesus’ name in its very self is an outpouring of his ongoing ministry among and through us. Using the example of oil, a basic and multifunctional staple of twelfth-century life, Saint Bernard goes on to expound on the efficacy of the Holy Name, saying:

“The likeness between oil and the name of [Jesus] is beyond doubt … I hold that the likeness is to be found in the threefold property of oil: it gives light, it nourishes, it anoints. It feeds the flame, it nourishes the body, it relieves pain: it is light, food, medicine. And is not this true too of [Jesus’] name? When preached it gives light, when meditated it nourishes, when invoked it relieves and soothes.”

When I stop and reflect on these words of Saint Bernard, I’m amazed at how true they really are. I can think of times when Jesus has been preached as the Way of Love, and I have seen God, those around me, and even myself in a new and gentler light; when I have managed to quiet myself in my cell or in the woods or by the river and meditated on Jesus as a devout Jewish mystic with a profoundly personal experience of God burning within him to be shared, I have indeed been renewed and nourished in my own spirit; and when I have uttered the name of Jesus the Great Physician in times of sickness, despair, brokenness, and trouble, I have never failed to feel the healing balm of Gilead at work deep within my sin-sick soul.

The name of Jesus, which is poured out by God as a source of healing, truth, and light in the world, is a reminder for each of us of our vocation to be sharers of that Good News; we are all siblings and partners of Jesus, not merely disciples and certainly not slaves, and so we are both commissioned and empowered to join in Jesus’ ministry of proclaiming the message of God’s love, and to do so boldly and joyously in the name of the one who first taught us. And, having received the Name of Jesus as our inheritance, we may, like the shepherds in Luke’s Gospel, glorify and praise God for what we have heard and seen.

But, it’s important that I add just one more thing. For as wonderful as all this may sound, we all know that sometimes it’s a lot easier said than done, especially when we’re weighed down by life, or struggling with challenging circumstances. And if that’s where any of us finds ourselves this morning (or this week, or this decade), that’s okay. When singing Glory to God in the Highest happens to feel just a bit too much, then simply doing as Mary does is enough for us, treasuring all these words as best we can and pondering them in our hearts.

As we begin the Two-Thousandth Twenty-Sixth Year of our life in Christ together, I pray that the peace and goodness of God, who indeed dwells among and within us as Emmanuel, be upon and remain with us. May each of us discover, feel, and share forth the light, nourishment, and healing beauty of the Most Holy Name of Jesus. Amen.