Showing posts with label Epiphany 6. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Epiphany 6. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2023

Epiphany 6 A - February 12, 2023

 Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Aidan Owen, OHC

Epiphany 6 A - Sunday, February 12, 2023
  

 


In the name of the One God, who is Lover, Beloved, and Love Overflowing. Amen.

Individual salvation is one of the great heresies of contemporary Christianity, and it lies at the root of so much of the trouble in which we find ourselves individually, communally, and as an American and a world people. It’s easy to see it in the yard signs of various political persuasions that say, essentially, God or Jesus or science or loving compassion are on my side and screw the rest of you if you don’t get it. It’s much harder to see this spiritual cancer in ourselves and in the small ways we dismiss or condemn or seek to control those people God has brought into our lives to share and expand and enrich our sense of God’s beloved community.  

I know I walk around correcting others’ behavior silently in my mind, or sighing heavily every time I open the dishwasher and see the mess one of my brothers has made. Your focus may be the speed or slowness at which people drive, or the views they hold on marriage, or their irresponsibility with finances or deadlines. Maybe it drives you nuts how uptight and controlling some of your fellow passengers in this great ride of life can be.

I don’t mean to trivialize these differences that provoke us. Sometimes—often, perhaps—they revolve around very real differences in the way value human and planetary life. Is climate change real? Does the preservation of other species matter? How about black lives? Trans lives? Women’s lives? What about the rural poor or the refugees swirling the globe fleeing war and famine? These differences and the ways they lead us to act or not act have real consequences for real people. They can mean the difference between life and death for someone or for some millions of someones. How we act and how we believe matters. What matters even more, though, is how we love—or refuse to love.

All three of this morning’s readings focus on the obstacles to reconciliation and harmony in the community of faith. So important is harmony that Jesus tells his disciples not even to think of approaching the altar if they suspect their brother or sister has a gripe with them. Forget about correcting or controlling others. Jesus doesn’t seem to care who is actually right in the situation. Reconciliation—not adherence to my sense of correct behavior or belief—is of primary importance.

Sin is nothing more or less than the turning away from the loving, indwelling presence of God to seek our own salvation by our own means. Yes, as Jesus reminds us, our eyes and our hands prompt us to turn away from God. We all know the power of advertising to woo us into believing that the “buy it now” button on Amazon will fulfill that nagging need in our hearts. (By the way, it’s no different in a monastery. I pick up the mail and see all the packages rolling in, many of them with my own name on them.) We all scratch that spiritual itch in unhealthy ways. These compulsions are what Moses is talking about when he says “your heart turns away and you do not hear but are led astray to bow down to other gods and serve them.”

In their essence, these compulsions are ways that we set ourselves up as God, that we seek our own salvation by our own means. As if we could somehow make our lives full and complete and total. Alone. That’s why they lie at the root of sin.

And yet, perhaps the greatest distraction or hurdle in our spiritual lives is the temptation to judge and condemn and control. Although we may notice this poison in the way we treat others or the ways others treat us, it arises first in relationship to ourselves. How many of us know the sting of self-condemnation, which, by the way, is not the same thing as genuine compunction? Compunction comes from a place of humility and self-acceptance. Self-condemnation, like self-righteousness, is built on grandiosity. We focus on all those aspects of ourselves and our lives that we think do not belong. And we work to excise or reform those parts, without relying on God.

As hard as we are on ourselves, we are just as hard on others, applying our own distorted sense of right and wrong, as if somehow God had specially enlightened us to remake the world and other people in our own image. You’ll notice, Jesus never tells his disciples to judge anyone for anything. Instead, he tells them to love, and more particularly to love those they would call their enemies. And as much as Jesus urges us to work for justice, much more does he counsel mercy and compassion and forgiveness. Because justice without mercy is tyranny, no matter whose definition of justice we’re working with.

As one example of this dynamic, civil rights activist and theologian Ruby Sales reflects on the quickness of progressive white Christians to condemn those who disagree with them. She asks “What is it that public theology can say to the white person in Massachusetts who’s heroin-addicted? I don’t hear anyone speaking to the 45-year-old person in Appalachia who feels like they’ve been eradicated, because whiteness is so much smaller today than it was yesterday. Because there’s nothing wrong with being European-American; that’s not the problem. It’s almost like white people don’t believe that other white people are worthy of being redeemed.”

Who is worthy? Is it you? Me? Those who act or think or pray like us? Those people with the right yard signs, or the right voting record, or the right beliefs on whatever issues drive us? Those people who want what we want? And what makes our own hearts worthy or not? What limits do we place on our love for others or for ourselves?

Julian of Norwich tells us that we should never even bother to notice another’s sins unless—and this is very rare—we look on those sins with love because we know that our brother or sister is suffering. To look on suffering with love is the definition of compassion, which literally means to suffer with. For, of course, when we sin, God looks on us and our sins with the eyes of love. God sees that we are suffering, and God loves us enough to suffer with and for us, and to wait for us to turn again to the arms of love.

There is no one and nothing outside the bounds of God’s love. Not the person or the group we would condemn or correct or control. And certainly not those parts of ourselves we would most like to be without. In some mysterious and glorious way, we are all a part of God’s work of salvation. And we will all be saved together or none of us will. Because God is good, and that is everything.

Sunday, February 13, 2022

Epiphany 6 C - February 13, 2022

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Randy Greve, OHC

Epiphany 6 C - Sunday, February 13, 2022



The season of Epiphany begins with watching. In the first few weeks of the season the Gospels narrate the history of the mighty acts of God in Christ for our sake - the visit of the Magi, the Baptism of the Lord, the first sign of Jesus changing water to wine, the call of the disciples.  As listeners, we are drawn back into these ancient mysteries, events that both illuminate Christ's identity and fill it with the air of mystery and wonder.  

The invitation to us in those weeks is to attend, imagine, and ponder.  Those are beautiful and important responses to those kinds of stories. The temptation is that we are lulled into becoming mere spectators, safe in an abstract distance from the events which seem not to have much to say to our lives directly.  Even as Jesus begins his ministry, we are still observers in the narrative as Jesus upbraids the hard-hearted hearers in the synagogue about their disdain for Gentiles and admire from a distance the boldness of the first disciples who saw miracles and were moved to leave everything and follow.

Today the narrative camera lens shifts. We have heard the various reactions to the coming of the Messiah - from angels, Mary, Joseph, Simeon, Anna, disciples, and even demons.  There is a term in acting called “breaking the fourth wall”.  The fourth wall is broken when the actor addresses or looks at the audience or the camera.  It can be an unnerving moment for the audience or viewer because our assumptions about a boundary between performer and spectator is crossed and we are suddenly participants.  I remember the effect of this technique on me while watching two movies about Jesus.  Franco Zeffirelli’s “Jesus of Nazareth” ends with the Great Commission and Jesus looking directly into the camera at the words “Don’t be afraid. I am with you every day, ‘till the end of time.”  And in Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ”, Mary Magdalene, cradling the dead Christ at the foot of the cross, her face streaked with dirt and tears, stares into the camera with eyes which have had their hope wrung out of them.  So today’s reading is the startling experience of suddenly being seen, of no longer gazing at events outside ourselves, but being addressed directly.
  
Having captured our attention, Jesus will surely announce some grand solution to the crushing injustice and oppression of his day or at least give us some easy and practical advice for living a happy life. If that is the kind of oracle we are waiting for, we will be waiting for a long time.  Instead, what Jesus does is describe the way things actually are.  Not how they appear to be, not how we have been taught to interpret things, but how they really are.  He states that the assumptions, the givens, by which the culture of his day operated - that the rich were blessed by God and the poor have been made poor by God - is not true. It is possible to be materially poor, but in fact be blessed and filled.  It is possible to be materially rich and filled, but in fact be poor and empty.  Appearances can be, and often are, deceptive and deceiving. Do not build a theology on how you want things to be, Jesus says, it leads to nothing but trouble. 

As the Lord begins to describe kingdom life and to invite us into its paradoxical life-is-death and death-is-life world, he must help the crowds, disciples - us - to be liberated from our attachment to labels of identity and value that choke the growth of the seed of the kingdom in our hearts.  These labels limit the possibility of something new and surprising, of a world that actually changes, of discovering our cherished beliefs about ourselves and our neighbors are inadequate.  Jesus announces that the unimaginable has indeed come - open your perception and welcome it in.

The reading is not asking us to align with the blessed for joy and fullness and avoid the “woes” that portend danger and suffering.  This is prophetic speech that is much deeper than mere moral reform or trying to be better people.  Jesus is speaking to the very nature of a social system that has organized itself and labeled each other along a metric of worthy and unworthy, welcomed and excluded, blessed and forsaken.  This system was created and perpetuated because the implications of covenant life were too good to be true. Rather than choose to live in trust and neighborliness, celebration and welcome, it was easier, safer, more understandable and controllable, to classify and rate each other on their cleanness and conformity to the rules.  Jesus is moving beyond speaking to the poor as poor and the rich as rich, but unraveling and exposing as empty, unjust, and evil the very nature of the categories themselves.  The poor who have the kingdom are no longer poor. The rich who no longer have riches are no longer rich. What are they if they cannot play their part, fit into their box any longer because it is not only meaningless, but gone.  

It is in exactly the moment when we do not know who we are anymore and do not know what is right that we are most ready to enter a trust in Jesus that is beyond appearances, better than the ways we have defined ourselves, certain whatever the circumstances that come our way.  Trusting God does not always spring from what we know what we do not know. It is rooted and grows in the unsettling discomfort of the realization that our thoughts about God are not God - our thoughts about ourselves are not ourselves.  How could Jesus possibly communicate the kingdom to the poor and hungry who did not believe they were worthy of God’s favor and to the rich and comfortable who believed they already had it?  Expose the ridiculousness of the system, upend the agreements, cross the boundaries, model and point to a way of being so much better and more beautiful and more amazing than can be imagined and then insist that it is true and possible and invites Jew, Gentile, men, women, slave, free, rich, poor, hungry, full - all of them - and all of us.

So, my fellow fourth-wall dwellers. We are in the story now. What is, how things are, what is true, has been unveiled and named for us. Now we blessed poor and hungry, who in the kingdom are rich and filled in the very act of knowing we are dependent on God and everything is a gift, get to be unsettled and uncomfortable together - thanks be to God! Thanks be to God that the barriers and divisions we thought defined and ordered our world and which we love so much are not real, appearances are not reality.  If we recoil from trusting the author of this mysterious truth, big trouble awaits us. Lies are weights on our ankles as we traverse the waters of life and we will sink into the dark abyss all the while claiming we know, we are right.  But that need not ever be so as long as our hope is fixed on the source of our identity - the very one who made us and loves us.  In that assurance we are ready to see ourselves and one another as we really are - brother, sister, beloved. 

Amen.

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Epiphany 5 C - February 6, 2022

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC

Epiphany 5 C - Sunday, February 6, 2022




Lord Jesus, your Hebrew name itself means "The Lord Saves."  Help us hold that truth always: "The Lord Saves."  Help us remember that you alone save us from our wandering desires and preoccupations.  May you strengthen us in hope and faith, that we may follow you and become netters of men and women fully alive for the building up of your kingdom of charity, your commonwealth of love.  Amen.

*****

Jesus is in Capernaum, a fishing village on the Sea of Galilee.  The evangelist Luke calls it the Lake of Gennesaret.  But it's a big lake; about 13 miles long and 8 miles wide.  In the first century of our era, the Sea of Galilee featured an extensive fishing industry.  Small settlements dotted its shores and most of them were active in fishing.

Being a fisherman on the Sea of Galilee was a tough and hard up occupation.  Fishermen had to pay for a license to catch fish.  That's one of the things toll collectors did in those villages.  In order to live from fishing, the catch had to be sold beyond the villages around the Sea.  The fishermen needed fish brokers and carters to take their fish to market.  All of these intermediaries in the fishing economy would be paid with a substantial part of whatever fish was caught.  No Galilean fisherman going out on the lake got rich doing it.

Catching fish on the Sea of Galilee was marginally easier at night.  At night, the ferrying of people and merchandise across the sea stopped and the sea was a bit quieter.  At night, insects fly lower to the surface of the water and fish come up to catch them.  That's why most fishermen would go out in the night to fish.

*****
 
So we may imagine how weary Simon and his fishing mates must feel; coming back from a night of working in vain on the sea.  They are tired and more worried about their livelihood than usual.
 
And having landed is not the end of their work.  They now need to mend and wash their nets in view of their next expedition.  They probably would rather go home to sleep off the bad night.  Even though going home would mean facing the family empty-handed.

*****

And as the morning of washing and mending nets wears on, a crowd piles up on the shore to listen to a rabbi, a teacher, whom Simon knows.  His name is Yeshua, a diminutive for Yehoshua, a name that means "The Lord Saves."  What a good name for a rabbi!

Simon knows Yeshua, the teacher.  Luke's gospel lets us surmise that Simon had invited Yeshua in his house on a sabbath day.  On that day, in the synagogue, Yeshua had rebuked a demon and made him come out from a man.  Then, once in Simon's house, Yeshua had healed Simon's mother-in-law.

Simon and Jesus know each other already.  No doubt, the sayings and doings of this unconventional rabbi have been on Simon's thoughts, at times.  And on this dreary morning for Simon, Jesus asks to step into Simon's boat to have enough distance from the crowd to teach them all without being crushed.  Simon likes this rabbi and is in his debt for the curing of his mother-in-law.  He invites Jesus in his boat and pushes off the shore as requested.

I imagine Simon, half-naked, sweaty and smelly, crouched in the prow of his boat, mending his nets while listening to what Jesus is teaching.  I imagine Simon fuming in his weariness and frustration, that "morning after".  I imagine Simon thinking "and what now?" at Jesus' request, but being drawn into accepting it anyway.  I imagine him being drawn into what Jesus is telling the crowd.  Little by little, Simon is going through an attitude adjustment. Progressively, his thoughts move to concerns about the Kingdom of God and what this man in his boat is saying about it.

Eventually, the teaching comes to an end.  Luke, the evangelist, sees no point in telling us what the teaching is about.  And as Jesus turns away from facing the shore-bound crowd, he seems to turn to the fishermen's more material concerns.

*****

Jesus tells Simon: "Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch."  There is nothing tentative here.  But what does a teacher of godly things know about fishing?  Simon offers his professional objection, but prodded in a way he does not fully understand, he complies.
 
He complies in a very teenage manner, if you ask me.  "If you say so" he says to Jesus.  I suspect a mental shrugging of the shoulders in that answer, mixed with puzzlement and curiosity.

And so, Simon and his partners let down the nets they have just mended and cleaned, back into the water.  If no fish is caught, they will need to clean the nets again, all the same.  They may be wondering "why are we doing this to ourselves?"

James and John, fishing partners of Simon, remain on the shore, lifting their eyes from their net washing from time to time to watch Simon make a fool of himself by trying another catch in full daylight.

But soon, James and John know something is up.  The nets start to show the tension of a catch.  Very soon, they see Simon and his folks bringing bulging nets back up.  And then, the abundance of the catch becomes obvious as Simon makes anxious signals to James and John that they need to bring their boat along and help.  When they get there, Simon's boat is starting to dip dangerously close to the surface.  They all struggle to balance the catch of fish between both boats.  And even so, both boats are precariously loaded with shimmering and flapping fish.

*****

Suddenly, Simon has an epiphany, a revelation.  This rabbi who rides his boat to a miraculous catch is more than a simple teacher, more than your run-of-the-mill traveling healer.  Simon believes what he heard the possessed man in the synagogue say to Jesus; He is the "Holy One of God!"  Simon is overwhelmed in more ways than one. 
 
Every night that Simon goes out fishing, he hopes for a good catch of fish to keep things going.  And now, all of a sudden, the abundance of fish is so large that the abundance itself becomes a danger; maybe the boat will sink.
 
Every day that Simon prays to the God of Israel, he asks for God's grace on the life of his family and community. And now that he perceives the hand of God so close to him, he is daunted.
 
Simon knows in how many ways he comes short of what Israel’s covenant with God demands of him.  Maybe he will be judged and found wanting in virtue.  He finds himself unworthy of the grace that is cascading over his head.  And he throws himself at the mercy of the man who is channeling this grace on him.

I feel great sympathy for Simon when I read "Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man!"  I know that feeling of unworthiness; that feeling of not being up to the task of walking with our God. Maybe you know that feeling too.

*****
 
But Jesus, Yehoshua, The Lord's Salvation is here to change the game.  Having shown the abundance of God's grace, Jesus doesn't walk away and let Simon's little fishing community have an easy-going party with the bounty at hand.  No, having revealed the nature of his humanity and the grace of God, Jesus reaps in harvesters of people fully alive for God. 
 
Simon knows the big ask; Jesus asks everything.  And having understood, if only dimly and intuitively, the awesomeness of God in man made manifest, Simon leaves everything and follows Jesus.
 
What Simon leaves behind is a livelihood, a family, a community that have meant everything of who he is, up to then.  This is a radical and risky departure; a scandalous one as far as Simon's community would be concerned.
 
And yet, the evangelist Luke seems to tell us that there was no further discernment needed; Simon, James and John became fisher of people for God's Kingdom.
 
*****
 
This is a demanding story for Christians.  How shall we, in our settled or unsettled lives, welcome God's abundant grace and respond to the radical invitation it contains?  There is no cheap grace.  And discipleship has a cost.  Are we ready?  Holy people of God, do not be afraid, and be daring in your following Christ.
 
Amen.

Sunday, February 17, 2019

Epiphany 6 C - Sunday, February 17, 2019

Holy Cross MonasteryWest Park, NY
Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC
Epiphany 6 C - Sunday, February 17, 2019

Jeremiah 17:5-10
1 Corinthians 15:12-20
Luke 6:17-26

Click here for an audio version of the sermon.


In the gospel according to Luke, the paragraph just preceding our reading of this morning tells us that Jesus spent the night in prayer on a mountain. At the end of that night, he chose twelve apostles among the troop of disciples who was with him. Then they all came down on the plain.

Luke notes that Jesus was full of power and healed many among the crowd that awaited them on the level field. Full of the Spirit, Jesus then gives what is called the Sermon on the Plain which extends beyond what we read today.

Our passage today is a parallel to the Beatitudes in the gospel according to Matthew. But besides four blessings, Luke recounts a mirroring four curses that vividly contrast the rich and the poor in regard to the Kingdom of God.

*****

Less than a month ago, I got to preach to you about the Magnificat which I characterized as Mary’s revolutionary song and a socioeconomic manifesto. Well, in today’s gospel, a grown-up Jesus is making his mom proud by preaching just the reversal of fortune Mary sang about in the magnificat.

Mary sang what God is really like. God is not the least impressed by any of our pride, power, or opulence. God has mercy on those who are in awe of God. God favors those who humble themselves. God cares for those who turn from the ego boosting accumulation of wealth to the lowliness of self-denial for the sake of others.

In today’s gospel, Jesus goes further than his mother did and tells us that the rich are shamed and cursed by their attachment to wealth. It is a case of comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable (from humorist Finley Peter Dunne).

*****

In Jesus’ day, ostentatious wealth was seen as proof that one had helped themselves to more than their share of the economic pie. Wealth was seen as limited and the accumulation of more wealth was necessarily at the expense of the less fortunate. To be very rich smacked of dishonesty and dishonor. This did not keep the powerful from accumulating wealth in Jesus time. Power led to wealth.

The small religious and political elites were much wealthier than the masses of peasants and craftspeople. Jesus’ listeners would overwhelmingly have been poor. There was no middle class in Jesus’ time. And the rich and powerful elites would have found his sermon distasteful if not abhorrent.

*****

In our contemporary US, wealth leads to power. For a long time, we lived (maybe we still do live) with the belief that wealth-formation is accessible to all and that extra wealth for some does not preclude wealth-formation for everybody else.

In other words we believe that the economic pie could always get bigger, and that everybody’s slice kept growing accordingly. This derives from something like a capitalist creed that enterprise, creativity and hard work are always the main engines of wealth-creation. And a belief that income and wealth are distributed according to merit alone.

This ignores that there are systemic aspects that facilitate income generation and wealth accumulation for some groups rather than those outside the privileged groups.

And if you have even a small amount of privilege because of the groups you belong to, you participate in those systems. Think of racism, sexism, homophobia, ableism, to name a few.

*****

In the last few decades, systemic obstacles to income generation and wealth accumulation have worsened for many. Beginning in the 1970s, economic growth in this country slowed and the income gap widened.


Income growth for households in the middle and lower parts of the national income distribution slowed sharply, while incomes at the top continued to grow strongly.

The concentration of income at the very top of the distribution rose to levels last seen 90 years ago (during the “Roaring Twenties”).

In many of today’s corporations, the average employee "needs to work more than a month to earn what the CEO earns in one hour."

And that’s about income generation. What about wealth accumulation?

Also starting in the seventies, and accelerating since the eighties, wealth which was always more concentrated than income has started concentrating even further.

Wealth can be considered as the value of a household’s property and financial assets, minus the value of its debts.

The share of the national wealth held by the top 1 percent rose from just under 30 percent in 1989 to nearly 39 percent in 2016, while the share held by the bottom 90 percent fell from just over 33 percent to less than 23 percent.

More wealth has been accruing to the already wealthy. A shrinking part of the national wealth is accruing to the others.

And in today’s world, wealth not only provides for both short- and long-term financial security. Besides, it also bestows social prestige, and contributes to political power. The combination of wealth, prestige and political power can all be used to accrue more wealth to the rich. And it is.

The standard of living of the working and middle classes is dependent upon income and wages, while the rich tend to rely on wealth. As a result of the increasing inequality of income distribution, working and middle class folk find it increasingly difficult to maintain or improve their standards of living.

So much for our little refresher in socio-economic realities of wealth production and accumulation in today’s United States. Hopefully, it makes you realize how relevant Jesus’ blessings and curses are to today’s national conversation (or lack thereof) on economic security for all.

And today, I am not even touching the disparity of resource use between the rich and poor countries in the world.

*****

In Jesus’ blessings and woes, the fortunes of the world are turned around. The Kingdom of God provides commonweal: welfare for all without exception.

While we trust for this Kingdom of God to be fully realized in heaven, we are also encouraged to unite heaven and earth in this Kingdom.

Where our current ministry lies is in building up the Kingdom of God here and now (close at hand) so that comfort, health and economic security are available to all in a way that sustains the planet which sustains us in turn.

*****

Of course, the blessings and curses of Jesus are not meant for us to usurp God’s place and judge people’s hearts and souls. We are to love poor and rich alike.

Jesus’ curses invite those of us with more resources (yes, also many of us in this church today) to share them more broadly.

Jesus’ blessings engage us to build a just society.  That is a society where wealth distribution is more equitable. It is a society where wealth disparities don’t shame the rich in their abundance and the poor in their unmet needs.

*****

Our true wealth lies in Love; love of God and love of neighbor. As God revealed to Saint Paul:
“My grace is sufficient for you, for power is made perfect in weakness.” (2 Corinthians 12: 9a)
As Christians we are to follow Jesus, not only worship Him. This involves loving our brothers and sisters. That love includes working towards a more just and equitable distribution of resources. How are we rich? Do we need to repent and come to share in the poor’s blessing? Pray about it. And see what actions you can undertake to bless the poor and yourself in the process.

Amen.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Epiphany 6 A - Feb 16, 2014

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Scott Wesley Borden, OHC
Year A - Epiphany 6 - Sunday, February 16, 2014


Deuteronomy 30:15-20
1 Corinthians 3:1-9
Matthew 5:21-37

“Whoever has looked at a woman with lust in his heart has already committed adultery...” I can never hear this phrase without thinking of Jimmy Carter – perhaps the most sincere president the United States has ever had. When some interviewer asked him how he had sinned, he responded, sincerely, that he had look at women with lust in his heart... It was an answer that the general public was not entirely ready to hear.

And in some ways that is the nature of this Gospel passage – its a bunch of stuff that we're not necessarily ready to hear – at least I'm not ready to hear... If I experience lust, I'm a rapist... If I experience anger, I'm a murderer... I should be tearing out my eyes and cutting off my hands... all this in something we call “Gospel” - that is “good news...”

But if we spend a little time with Matthew and with the context of this particular passage, it is perhaps better news than at first glance.

There was great concern at Matthew's time and in his community with how to relate to the law – meaning the Torah. Jesus uses the compound phrase of the law and the prophets. It our language we would use the word scripture.

The heart of this concern was that faithful people were abandoning the law, or perhaps even worse, changing it... In today's parlance, they were revisionists... they were unfaithful... unlawful... not to be trusted.

Keep in mind is that knowing and studying the law, meditating upon the law day and night as the psalms put it, was the way that faithful people could know God. The law was the only way to know God. So faithful people who truly loved God loved the law.

If we were alive in Matthew's time, given who we are and our earnest and real desire to know God, I think many of us would have been great lovers of the law. So Matthew is really talking to us.

The reading this morning starts in mid-thought. Matthew is in the process of preparing faithful people for the time between the Crucifixion (which by the time Mathew is writing has in fact has already happened, but in the narrative which Matthew is writing is yet to come) and the second coming.

Matthew begins with Jesus asserting that he has not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it. The law will still be the law, but the relationship will be changed. Those who love God by loving the law will be changed.

The nature of that change is gathered up in one seemingly harmless word: righteousness. Our righteousness must exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees, or we are doomed. When it comes to loving the law, the scribes and Pharisees really were the most accomplished. This is a very high bar. These are very righteous people. Greater righteousness is not an easy thing.

But the real question is what does greater righteousness even mean? And, conveniently for us, that is the question we are hearing answered in this morning's reading.

Rather than abolishing the law, Jesus is radicalizing the law. The question of greater righteousness is answered in a radicalized response to the law... radical righteousness.

“You have heard it said... it was also said... it was said to those of ancient times...” Jesus gives us this phrase in variation several times. “But I say...” Each time Jesus takes a well known piece of law and radicalizes it.

It is not enough to refrain from murder. Jesus radicalizes this into a way of life that does not even tolerate anger... doesn't tolerate abuse... name calling... insults... The boundary is moved from not murdering to not having any ill will.

The discourse on adultery and divorce is challenging. But we have to remember that, at the time, adultery was a property crime and marriage was a legal contract. This is not a discussion of sexual morality. But the radicalization that Jesus undertakes makes marriage something much more than just a legal contract which can be made and terminated. Adultery becomes more than violation of property rights. Its not a legal issue – its a spiritual issue. And its an issue of how I relate to other people.

Jesus manages, in a discussion which begins with his assertion that nothing changes, to change just about everything. For while the law may stay the same, our relationship with the law is entirely new. Jesus shifts the focus from keeping the letter of the law in outward and visible ways, to living in the spirit of the law.

Jesus gives us a great insight into what living in that spirit might mean. For notice that each of the illustrations has to do with an issues of justice – of how we live in relationship to other people. None of these illustrations have to do with issues of religious ritual, of purity – of how we live in relationship to God.

“You have heard that it was said that you shall not swear falsely... but I say don't swear at all. Let your yes be yes and your no be no.” This might be the greatest radicalization of all. For Jesus calls us to unconditional truthfulness. We can't stand behind some form of defense. We can't shield our selves. We can't shade our meaning. Yes or no. I have a vary hard time in a world where the word “maybe” is not in use...

I heard Br Don Bisson, our favorite Marist Brother, speak recently about the nature of change. He believes that change can have one of two primary characteristics. Change can be translational. Or change can be transformational. And of course change is essential for our lives as followers of Jesus – we must be made new, be changed.

Translational change is like when the bones of St John Chrysostom were moved to Constantinople. Those bones were translated. And transformational change is like when Ezekiel prophesied to the valley of dry bones and they took on sinew and flesh and became living beings. Those bones were transformed.

Jesus' teaching in this passage of the Gospel is transformational. Jesus is turning to the body of dry bones that is the law and saying take on sinew and flesh and become a living being. Its no longer about refraining from murder, its about living in love with other people. Its not about refraining from adultery, its about loving people. Its not about divorce, its about commitment to another person.

Before this transformation we could follow God's commandments, decrees, and ordinances as a way of loving God. Now we must love our neighbors as we love ourselves – it is the only way that we can love God. And however we love scripture, the law and the prophets, that love can only be as rich as our love our love of our brothers and sisters. Jesus has radicalized our way of loving God.

This is not something unique in the passage of scripture. It is the message Jesus keeps giving us time and again. And it is a message that starts in the prophets. A troubled and contrite heart – a heart that is ready to love – is the sacrifice God wants from us. Jesus' radicalization of the understanding of the law is simply another way of hearing the good news.

So what about that part in this morning's reading where Jesus talks the leaving your gifts at the altar while you go and reconcile with your brother. Or plucking out your wandering eye. Or the severed right hands... What might Jesus be up to?

It is interesting that sometimes we, as Christians, are interested in taking things literally and sometimes not. When Jesus says we are to feed the hungry and cure the sick – there I think he is being quite literal, though lots of Christians want to understand that as a call to bring the “food” of the Gospel to the “spiritually hungry.”

But here, with these very draconian suggestions, I think Jesus is making it clear that he is not being literal. We will look with lust, we will covet, we will fail to tell the truth and we may even swear a false oath. And the way-over-the-top notion of cutting off our hands and plucking out our eyes is not a call to do something outrageous.

Jesus is telling us that these sins are no greater and no less than any other. They merit the most extreme punishment – we're no better than the worst of sinners. Our salvation rests not on our merit but on God's grace. And that is true for everyone. I think this is just Jesus' way of saying “get over yourselves...”

Because when we get over ourselves, then we can abandon ourselves to this radical plan of greater righteousness.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Epiphany 4 C - Feb 3, 2013

HolyCross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Andrew Colquhoun, OHC
Epiphany 4 C – Sunday, February 3, 2013


Jeremiah 1:4-10
1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Luke 4:21-30



There was a young woman in South Africa who brought groups to the monastery for retreat.  She was not always easy to deal with but we got to like and respect her for her straightforward ways.  Her principal gripe was about people who had decided that their favorite flavor of Christianity was Christianity Lite.

from the cover of the book by the same title, by Glen Berteau
These are the people who want a faith that is pleasant, appealing, refreshing but which carries no weight with regard to their living out the Gospel.  These are folk that want to leave Church after their visit on Sunday feeling better – relieved to have had their dose of Christianity for the week.  Strengthened to read the Times and to tut with dismay at dismal or upsetting stories but strong enough now not to be unduly disturbed by events of most of the world.  If they invite others it’s with words to the effect that they should come with them to Church – it will make them feel better.  You know, “When I skip Church, I just feel something is missing.”

It’s kind of discomfiting to recognize one’s self in this, I hope!  Even the search to discover God can be so tainted – I want to draw near to God because God makes me feel better.  I pray and read the Bible for my own up-building; my spiritual welfare becomes paramount.

It’s a delicate balance, isn’t it?  Is it bad to feel good?  Am I wrong to want the comfort of feeling near to God?  Are my needs and longings to be ignored or put down?

Certainly not!  Scripture and history are full of testimony of the joy that saints have found in their discipleship even through whatever struggles life put before them.

But the gospel for today intrigues.  Jesus has just proclaimed his mission and the villagers liked it – at first.

They spoke well of him – we know this fellow – Joseph’s boy.  He’s one of ours.  I suspect as Jesus did that that their expectation was that this local boy would be a mine of gratuitous help for them.

The trouble was that Jesus knew them too well.  He’d grown up among them after all – and he challenged them.  “Are you the only people with widows or lepers?”

And the tide turned.  Jesus is not willing to be claimed and held by their limitations.  And you just heard the story – they got angry tried to kill him and he left them.

His call is always to the most broken, to the least of these.  His heart is for love and not for ease.  He is driven beyond comfort to the desperate, the crushed, the starving, the lepers of the world.  He’s driven too to the person who can’t get a job, the exhausted single mother, the depressed Veteran, the teenager who’s all confused… fill in the blanks.  And if the truth be told, sometimes your name is in the blank.

And where he leads we follow.

I love I Corinthians 13.  It never fades, this great hymn of love.  But it’s so easy to turn it into Christianity Lite.  To think of Love with a Hallmark veneer.  But Paul’s not talking about the sweetness of affection.  He’s talking about the love he experienced at the hands of the Risen Lord.  Blinded and sent to journey to God knows where to be stoned, imprisoned and finally put to death.  That’s the love he means.

We are on that same path.  We are preparing for the journey here.  Praying, longing for God, drawing into God’s broken heart.  And the nearer we are drawn, the farther out we are expected to reach.

The more we open ourselves to God’s love, the wider the circle becomes.  The more sweetness we know, the more we can taste the bitterness of the world’s sorrow.  The closer to the Cross the deeper the pain of God’s people penetrates our hearts.

There’s another option, of course…  We could just order a great big glass of Christianity Lite – and die of thirst.