Showing posts with label Proper 8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Proper 8. Show all posts

Sunday, July 2, 2023

Proper 8 A - July 2, 2023

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Aidan Owen, OHC

Proper 8 A - Sunday, July 2, 2023
 
Genesis 22:1-14
Romans 6:12-23
Matthew 10:40-42

In the name of the One God, who creates us, saves us, and makes us holy. Amen.

Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering and laid it on his son Isaac, and he himself carried the fire and the knife.

Andrew McGowan, the dean of Berkeley Divinity School at Yale, writes in a recent newsletter that the binding of Isaac “is about sacrifice in the sense that the Noah story is about navigation or the Parable of the Sower is about agriculture. […] The flood, the seed, the knife, are more than incidental, yet neither are they the point.”

I have to both agree and disagree with Dean McGowan. As with the Cross, the medium is, in some sense, the message. And, as with the Cross, the story of Abraham’s—attempt? Intention? Tearful but necessary submission?—to sacrifice Isaac is baffling and shadowy and impossible to reduce to a single, much less a satisfactory, meaning. Still, I won’t take the preacher’s easy out and say, “It’s all a mystery,” though as with everything of God, it is, in the end, a mystery.

It’s so easy to wonder what on earth Abraham was thinking. How could he be so misguided as to drag his son—who, by the way, is not his only son, though he does keep saying that—up the mountainside with the intention of killing and burning him. But, remember, this is the same man who disguised himself as his wife’s brother in Egypt, nearly bringing her to rape and who, as we heard last week, cast out his first son, Ishmael, and his mother into the wilderness with nothing but a water skin. These actions—or misdeeds, to call them by their proper name—make his exodus from Ur of the Chaldees seem positively reasonable.

Abraham is, if nothing else, a man who listens for the voice of God and who, when he thinks he hears that voice, does not hesitate to act. He is also a man who demonstrates the danger of the charismatic leader unchecked by a community grounded in faith and discernment. This is a threat ever present in our church today, which is in danger of becoming an echo chamber of progressive political action at the expense of the Gospel mandate to love and to welcome those whom we would call our enemies.

I recently heard another a priest say that fascists should not be welcome in our churches. That, in fact, banning fascists from our churches is a sign of moral clarity and purity, a needed beacon of what we stand for in a dark and frightening world. And yet, I wonder if our world would be a little less dark and frightening if we could listen to, learn from, and yes, even love, those whose political or social beliefs we find abhorrent. Surely, the Church should be the place where such hospitality of spirit is not only possible but expected.

If Abraham had had such a community with whom to test the spirits that spoke to him, would he so blithely have cast out his first-born son and his mother into the wilderness? Would he have loaded Isaac with the wood?

And what of that young boy and the load he bears? Did his arms ever set down the burden of those logs? Or, like the wood of the Cross, did they mark him and set him apart for the rest of his life? I once told a friend about the scars my father’s absence had left on my life. He said to me, “Be grateful your father wasn’t around. Mine was, and he was a horror.” Would Isaac have said the same? Did Ishmael get the easier road, cast out though he was?

And then, of course, we must ask, where is God in all this mess?

A spiritual director once told me that experiences of evil, neglect, or suffering are often, paradoxically, initiations into God. Sometimes the darkness is so threatening that only the light of God’s love, surrounding and suffusing us, can save us.

It is surely God’s voice who cries out “Do not lay your hand on the boy or do anything to him!” Many artists have portrayed this moment with an angel clad in light standing behind Abraham, grasping his wrist, his arm raised high above the boy, knife in hand. But I recently came across a different image of this scene. In this one the angel stands between Abraham and Isaac, the knife lodged in the middle of her chest, protecting the boy. I thought “Yes, this is the God we have in Jesus.”

The God who stands between the violence of the world and our innocence. The God who bears the weight of the Cross to save us and set us free. The God who loves us beyond loving, and who makes a shelter of his own body for the outcast and a lighthouse of his love to guide us home through the storm.

Whatever else this story tells us, it tells us that we need to be that lighthouse for one another. We need to show one another the way back, when we have lost our way, as we all do. We need to stay one another’s hands and stop one another’s mouths. And sometimes we need to step in front of the knife, to expose the futility of the fire and the knife.

However he carried this moment with him, Isaac certainly went on to live a faithful life, though much quieter than his father’s. He settled, married, and had children whom he loved deeply and freely. He showed God’s faithfulness, not in grand acts of exodus and vision, but in quiet steadfastness, in stability and solidity.

We don’t know if Isaac saw the vision of the angel of God, standing in front of the knife. But whether he knew it or not, God saved him. And whether we know it or not, God saves us in every moment of every day. Not by preventing harm from befalling us and those we love—though we understandably wish it were so—but instead by putting his body and his love between death and our souls.

For in each of us, no matter how hurt or hurtful, there remains a part untouched by evil. “A point,” in the words of Thomas Merton, “untouched by sin and by illusion, […] which belongs entirely to God, […] which is inaccessible to the fantasies of our own mind or the brutalities of our own will.” And, I would add, incapable of being harmed or shattered by another’s brutality. This is the place where Christ lives in us. This place, hidden with Christ in God, is the foundation of all authentic prayer and all authentic Christian community.

The story of Abraham and Isaac exposes our deep need of one another. We must challenge one another’s delusions. We must support one another’s healing. But most of all—we must welcome and love one another, most especially when it is hardest to do so, just as Christ has welcomed and loved us. There is no such thing as individual salvation. It’s all of us, or none at all.

Perhaps the Good News lies in the fact that our salvation, and that of Abraham, Isaac, Hagar, Ishmael, Sarah, and all those we think don’t belong in our churches or our communities doesn’t rely on us at all. For God is good, and that is everything.

.

Sunday, June 26, 2022

Proper 8 C - June 26, 2022

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Robert James Magliula, OHC

Pentecost, Proper 8 C - June 26, 2022




In today’s gospel, Jesus sets his face toward Jerusalem. That’s a great phrase for single-mindedness. Jesus knows where he is going. He’s kingdom-bound and kingdom-driven. This gospel shines a light on the conflicts we experience and the ways in which our loyalties are torn and pulled in different directions. It reveals our divided hearts and broken relationships. It names the reality that we, like James and John, are often quick to want to call down fire from heaven to consume those who oppose or reject us.
For Jesus, Jerusalem is about healing and wholeness, mercy and forgiveness, peace, the dignity and holiness of all humanity, reconciliation with God and each other, overcoming death, and life fully lived. Jerusalem is about God’s dream for our life revealed in the person of Jesus Christ. In that regard, Jerusalem is a place of hope, fulfillment, and new life. We all have a Jerusalem---- values that guide and describe our life, values by which we live and for which we die. We all set our faces to go in a particular direction. What is your Jerusalem? In what direction is your face set? What drives you? What keeps you going when life is hard or lonely or overwhelming? Setting our face to go to Jesus’ Jerusalem is about becoming our best and truest selves, about living as if we believe that we are loved unconditionally and that there is nothing that we can do to earn God’s love. I think what matters most is not so much how we love God, but how we receive God’s love for us. My experience of Jesus’ Jerusalem is that it often eludes me and always challenges my priorities, beliefs, decisions, actions, and relationships. It usually asks me more questions than it answers. I suspect that is true for us all to some degree. How does our Jerusalem compare with Jesus’ Jerusalem?
Those questions are highlighted in the second part of our Gospel which is composed of a series of encounters in which the sincerity and faith of potential followers are put to the test. All things in this world are gifts of God, given to us so that we can know God more easily and love God and others more readily. But if any one of these gifts becomes the center of our lives---work, possessions, family, health, security---then they displace God. That’s what happening with these three people. Their excuses sound perfectly reasonable to us. Jesus sounds extreme. He’s not saying these things are bad but is pointing to that human tendency to replace the giver with the gift. The three potential followers remind us of just how much we can bury our hunger for God beneath our busyness, our routines, our preoccupation with our relationships. Jesus calls on them and us to set our eyes on the kingdom and to commit to it. Adopting a life of discipleship requires a shift in priorities. More than a private endeavor, it is an identity.
Jesus’ clarity is an example to us. All of who he is and what he does is based on his identity as the beloved of God. God is central. His relationship with God deepens all the dimensions of his life enabling him to engage in the most intimate relationships with others. So much of our lives are caught up in the tension between fear and longing---even our fear of intimacy with the God. Deepening our relationship to God can take surprising turns. It is not perpetual ecstasy. It’s more like a dance with a rhythm of approaches and withdrawals, of hiding and showing, of protecting, and sharing.
If we are going to set our face toward Jesus’ Jerusalem then we must first face up to the condition of our lives, the state of our world, and the direction we are headed. Paul reminds us that bondage takes many forms, and we must be courageous in naming them for ourselves. The harsh debates and infighting among the Galatian Christians were outward and visible signs of their ongoing enslavement. He is saying unequivocally that Christian freedom is not unrestrained permission to do whatever one pleases. Love is the way that freedom in Christ expresses itself. Debates over circumcision were taking precedence over loving one’s neighbor. He tells them to not use their freedom for self-indulgence. The “Flesh” is his shorthand for self-centered rather than God-centered living. The counterpoint to life in the flesh is life in the service of others. Christ’s love for us should shape the way we love.

If Jerusalem is about mercy and forgiveness, how can we withhold forgiveness? If Jerusalem is about the dignity and holiness of all humanity, how can we remain on the sidelines, silent, or indifferent in the face of injustice, discrimination, or prejudice. If Jerusalem is about peace, what about the wars we wage, the violence in our thoughts, words, and actions? If Jerusalem is about reconciliation with each other, on what basis do we scapegoat a people or a religion, exclude the foreigner, deny the refugee sanctuary? Do we reconcile only with those who are like us? If Jerusalem is about the defeat of death, and life fully lived, how does Jerusalem inform our conversations and debates about gun violence in this country? If Jerusalem is about the truth of God revealed in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, how can we continue to promote or impose our personal and individual truths on another? These questions stand at the intersection of the Gospel, the world, and our lives.
Before Jesus had these conversations with the potential disciples, I’m sure he first had them within himself, working out for himself the meaning and cost for him to go to Jerusalem. Each one of those conversations is about letting go or giving up something of ourselves and our lives: a home, a sense of security, a place in society. If we set our face to go to Jerusalem, then we have put ourselves on a path of letting go of the past, the dead places, things, and parts of our lives, that can no longer give life or sustain growth. Today’s gospel does not allow for excuses, justifications, running away, or hiding. To struggle honestly with our questions is the beginning of setting our face toward Jesus’ Jerusalem. We don’t know what happened to those three potential disciples, but we do know that the invitation he gave to them he also gives to us---to be single-minded in wanting, in choosing what best leads to a deepening of God’s love and life in us poured out in love for others. +Amen.

Sunday, June 27, 2021

Proper 8 B - June 27, 2021

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC

Proper 8 B - Sunday, June 27, 2021




Jesus cares for both the privileged and the poor.  Jesus hears both of their prayers.  He responds to the faith of the one and the other.  Jesus wants us to live fully in God’s integrative love; the love that makes us One with the One.

In today’s passage, Mark the Evangelist displays to us the divinity of Jesus-the-man through his Kingship over both Law and Life.

Jesus does not let the letter of the Law, or even, the spirit of contemporary purity codes, stop him from serving the poor and the desolate.

Jesus does not even let the natural course of Life stop him from ministering to those who call upon him in faith.

*****

But before I explore Jesus’ healing of our lives with you, as illuminated by Mark’s gospel, I want to sound a word of caution.

I have faith in Jesus and I love God as best I can.  I do believe in prayer. And I do believe in God’s loving involvement with each and every parcel of creation (me and you included). 

Yet, I do not know God exhaustively as God is, nor do I pretend to comprehend or understand God’s work in all of creation.

When I pray, the best of me knows that I am coming to the relationship that evokes my true self and builds me up.  I don’t come to prayer to cash into the power of God.  I don’t count on my laundry list of requests being the most important thing in my relationship with God. 

And yet, I know God cares and so I sometimes bring my laundry list anyway.  In prayer, I help God transform me and teach me, while he loves me as I am and for whom I am.

*****

I say all this because today’s gospel passage could be over-simplified as: “believe strongly enough, and anything you ask for will come to pass as you intended.” 

And that is a dangerous way of looking at prayer and relationship with the God who wants us to be One.

Jairus and the hemorrhaging woman believed in Jesus.  And healing beyond their comprehension touched them through the touch of Jesus.  These two things are important:
- belief in Jesus is central,
- letting Jesus touch us is vital.

But, I don’t want to sound absurdly optimistic about what our faith and prayer can achieve.  It can achieve miracles but it is rarely the miracle we thought we were asking for.  Even for Jairus and the bleeding woman, the miracle went beyond what it seemed at first.

Being enfolded in God’s integrative love is miracle enough and it often takes shapes we don’t immediately recognize.  So keep praying, cleave to your faith; by all means.

But I don’t ignore that sometimes, our most earnest prayers seem unheard, or at least unanswered.  Or was it that we didn’t believe in our own prayer to start with?  I don’t know.

*****

In this gospel we read today, Mark the Evangelist weaves a brilliant narrative to reveal the nature of Jesus’ person and the depth of his ministry.  There are actually two stories, of course.  And one is inserted in the middle of the other. Our Br. Roy liked to refer to this as a Markan sandwich.

There is the story of Jairus.  There is the story of the hemorrhaging woman.  The two stories are intertwined for a reason.  And we are invited to contrast and compare them for insight.

*****

Jairus is an honored religious leader.  He has means (servants, a house, paid mourners).  Yet he, a leader of the synagogue, probably a Pharisee, recognizes Jesus’ authority and demonstrates it by kneeling in front of this traveling carpenter from Nazareth and begging for a favor.

In the second part of Jairus’ story, you can nearly hear the sneer in his servants telling him it’s no use bothering “the Teacher” any further.  They may think less of Jairus for resorting to a Galilean uneducated healer. And then there are the professional mourners who actually laugh at Jesus’ assertion that the child is not dead.  Clearly, Jairus is giving honor to Jesus against the flow of his entourage’s thinking.

Yet, upon hearing Jairus’ plea in all its genuineness, Jesus immediately follows him to his home, followed by a pressing crowd.

*****

The suffering woman, on the other hand, is a pariah in her own society.  Her constant bleeding has ailed her health and financial situation.  Her bleeding makes her ritually unclean.  People would move away from her if they saw her coming.  Her touch would make them religiously unclean themselves.

That no male intercedes in her stead indicates that she probably is a widow without male heir.  Such women were very vulnerable to start with whether pure or not.

She too recognizes Jesus’ authority.  But she knows that only stealth will get her close to him.  The crowd is so focused on Jesus that no one even notices her sidling up to him. If they did, they would probably shoo her away.

Yet she does not presume being allowed to address him and make a plea.  Instead, she ardently believes that touching his robe will cure her, and so it does.

But Jesus is aware of her and demands to know who touched him.  This is a moment of jeopardy for the woman; according to the codes of purity, she has just defiled a holy man.  She might be even more deeply shamed and shunned now, than she already has been.

But the woman does not escape, and she acknowledges Jesus’ status by also kneeling in front of him and she courageously confesses to him what has just happened.

Contrary to all expectations of their society, Jesus acknowledges the woman.  He honors her as kin of choice by calling her “Daughter.”  

In so doing, he uses his great authority to restore her to full participation in her community.  Honorable belonging to the community is the apex of what this society would have called healing; well beyond the curing of a physical condition. The woman is now fully healed. She belongs again. Does she become one of the many women who accompanies Jesus in his ministry? We can only imagine it.

*****

Is Jairus on pins and needles while all this happens?  Or is he further mesmerized by the charisma emanating from this man?  The text doesn’t say and he might experience both.

In delaying his visit to Jairus’ home to re-integrate the woman in the people of God, Jesus shows us another lesson we keep trying to forget.  It is what the Roman Catholic social teaching calls the preferential option for the poor.

In our own lives, how do we stand by the poor, be with them, advocate for them and love them?  Where does my preferential option for the poor express itself? Do I serve the underprivileged, as well and as promptly as the privileged?

*****

Yet those favored with ample resources are not forgotten nor ignored.  Jesus chooses his three closest disciples to accompany Jairus and his wife to the deathbed of their daughter. 

After a public demonstration of his standing beyond the scope of the Law, Jesus offers a private glimpse of his standing beyond the scope of Life and Death as we usually experience them.

Another “daughter”, Jairus’ own, is given back to her community.  She had lived 12 years up to then; just as the woman had hemorrhaged 12 years up to then.  Twelve years, as a repeated symbol of the wholeness of the People of God, to whom these females are rehabilitated.

*****

God loves us, engages with us and with our prayers.  Often, it looks nothing like we asked.  Will we move on disgruntled and ungrateful?  Or will grace open our eyes to the even better gifts we have received?  Those gifts that the Spirit, searching our hearts and the heart of God, knew we needed above all? Have faith. And love the Lord of Life and Creation.

*****

Beloved Lord, give us the courage to reach out and touch the hem of your robe, to kneel before you.  Give us the faith to receive and nurture what you know is best for us.  And if there are items on our laundry list that you really like too, so be it.  So be it, Lord.  Amen.

Sunday, June 28, 2020

Fourth Sunday after Pentecost - Proper 8A, June 28, 2020

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC
Fourth Sunday after Pentecost - Proper 8 A - June 28.2020

Jeremiah 28:5-9
Romans 6:12-23
Matthew 10:40-42

Add caption
Three weeks ago, we painfully decided to suspend our ministry of hospitality for another several months. Welcoming retreatants in our Guest House and Monastery is one of our main ministries. Who do we get to be when our ministries change upon us?


In the last few months, we have had to explore what it means to be hospitable when dozens of new guests do not stream through our open door every week. We have worshipped without in-person visitors. We have had the great privilege of continuing to worship with our community of brothers.

We have also had to be welcoming of our moods and emotions in these times of pandemic and social upheaval. Like all our friends, families and associates, we have had to deal with fear, worry, anxiety, loss, sadness, frustration and anger.

We have had to welcome reality, in part because it offered us no choice. But we  Brothers have gotten to do it in the company of one another.

We have had to exercise compassionate welcome on these brothers of ours. We do that as a matter of course, but even more in these trying weeks and months.
And we have done a pretty good job so far, I might add.

*****

But in today’s gospel passage, Jesus calls us to be hospitable to those who visit us on his behalf.

So how do we welcome the prophets, the righteous persons and the little ones in these times? How do we welcome Jesus in each other? How will we welcome people in person again eventually? How do we welcome people in remote and mediated ways?

As welcoming others into our home has temporarily become too problematic to entertain, we have sought to extend hospitality in other ways. Most of this has occurred on online platforms be it Facebook livestream, Zoom retreats or YouTube videos. 

We have shared some of our worship. We have shared some of our prayers and some of our study. But we have also spent more quality time reaching out individually to family, friends and associates. This has happened by phone, by email, by text messaging and video-conferencing. 

I have found myself spending more time on WhatsApp with Belgian friends lately. God knows when I will be able to see them in person. I have found myself checking in on monastery associates and friends whom I would normally have seen in the Guest House at some point or another.

In a way, we have found workarounds to our missing in-person hospitality ministry. We will all be glad to go back to shaking hands and giving a hug when the time comes. But in the meantime, we are coping as best we can.

So Jesus meets us in our brothers and sisters, here at home first and foremost. But Jesus also meets us through the friend or stranger who comes to us through the internet.

*****

I liked what The Rev. Dr. Emily Townes, an African-American Christian social ethicist and theologian had to say about today’s gospel passage.

“Compassionate welcome means approaching each other through God. This is how we recognize that genuine human relationships emerge from putting the grace-filled hospitality of God’s love at the center of our lives and at the center of our relationships.

God’s hospitality teaches us that close, loving, enduring relationships are to be valued along with distant, occasional, and abrasive ones -- as difficult as the latter ones may be.

This lively, and sometimes maddening, dynamic is the welcome Jesus speaks of in today’s passage. Further, if we live into this welcome with each other, we will find the rich rewards of discipleship found in God.”

Emily Townes

*****

I appreciate The Rev. Townes’ realistic talking about hospitality. She calls it “sometimes maddening.” And we go, “Yep! Been there!” And she insists that God’s hospitality is to be embodied in even the episodic, short or even brusque interactions.

We are to practice a compassionate welcome with the lovely and the not-immediately-so-lovely people. They are all our chances to welcome Christ as he is in his immense variety and diversity.

In the months to come, may we continue to identify Christ and welcome him as he comes, even as a little one, whether that be in the mirror, through the door, on the phone line or through the ethernet cable.

*****

May we continue to enjoy the rich rewards of compassionate hospitality throughout the covid-19 pandemic and beyond.

Amen

Sunday, July 1, 2018

Proper 8, Year B: Sunday, July 1, 2018

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC
Proper 8- Sunday, July  1, 2018 



To hear the sermon in its fullness click here.

Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC 
Jesus cares for both the privileged and the poor. Jesus hears both of their prayers.  He responds to the faith of the one and the other.  Jesus wants us to live fully in God’s integrative love; the love that makes us One with the One.

In today’s passage, Mark the Evangelist displays to us the divinity of Jesus-the-man through his Kingship over both Law and Life.

Jesus does not let the letter of the Law, or even, the spirit of contemporary purity codes, stop him from serving the poor and the desolate.Jesus does not even let the natural course of Life stop him from ministering to those who call upon him in faith.


But before I explore Jesus’ healing of our lives with you, as illuminated by Mark’s gospel, I want to sound a word of caution.

I have faith in Jesus and I love God as best I can.  I do believe in prayer. And I do believe in God’s loving involvement with each and every parcel of creation (me and you included). Yet, I do not know God exhaustively as God is, nor do I pretend to comprehend or understand God’s work in all of creation.

When I pray, the best of me knows that I am coming to the relationship that evokes my true self and builds me up.  I don’t come to prayer to cash into the power of God.  I don’t count on my laundry list of requests being the most important thing in my relationship with God.

And yet, I know God cares and so I sometimes bring my laundry list anyway. In prayer, I help God transform me and teach me, while he loves me as I am and for whom I am. I say all this because today’s gospel passage could be over-simplified as: “believe strongly enough, and anything you ask for will come to pass as you intended.” And that is a dangerous way of looking at prayer and relationship with the God who wants us to be One.


Jairus and the hemorrhaging woman believed in Jesus. And healing beyond their comprehension touched them through the touch of Jesus.  These two things are important:

- belief in Jesus is central,
- letting Jesus touch us is vital.

But, I don’t want to sound absurdly optimistic about what our faith and prayer can achieve.  It can achieve miracles but it is rarely the miracle we thought we were asking for.  Even for Jairus and the bleeding woman, the miracle went beyond what it seemed at first.

Being enfolded in God’s integrative love is miracle enough and it often takes shapes we don’t immediately recognize.  So keep praying, cleave to your faith; by all means. But I don’t ignore that sometimes, our most earnest prayers seem unheard, or at least unanswered.  Or was it that we didn’t believe in our own prayer to start with?  I don’t know.

In this gospel we read today, Mark the Evangelist weaves a brilliant narrative to reveal the nature of Jesus’ person and the depth of his ministry. There are actually two stories, of course.  And one is inserted in the middle of the other. Our Br. Roy likes to refer to this as a Markan sandwich.There is the story of Jairus. There is the story of the hemorrhaging woman. The two stories are intertwined for a reason. And we are invited to contrast and compare them for insight.

Jairus is an honored religious leader.  He has means (servants, a house, paid mourners). Yet he, a leader of the synagogue, probably a Pharisee, recognizes Jesus’ authority and demonstrates it by kneeling in front of this traveling carpenter from Nazareth and begging for a favor. In the second part of Jairus’ story, you can nearly hear the sneer in his servants telling him it’s no use bothering “the Teacher” any further. They may think less of him for resorting to a Galilean uneducated healer. And then there are the professional mourners who actually laugh at Jesus’ assertion that the child is not dead. Clearly, Jairus is giving honor to Jesus against the flow of his entourage’s thinking.

Yet, upon hearing Jairus’ plea in all its genuineness, Jesus immediately follows him to his home, followed by a pressing crowd.

The suffering woman, on the other hand, is a pariah in her own society. Her constant bleeding has ailed her health and financial situation. Her bleeding makes her ritually unclean. People would move away from her if they saw her coming. Her touch would make them religiously unclean themselves.That no male intercedes in her stead indicates that she probably is a widow without male heir.  Such women were very vulnerable to start with whether pure or not.

She too recognizes Jesus’ authority. But she knows that only stealth will get her close to him.  The crowd is so focused on Jesus that no one even notices her sidling up to him. If they did, they would probably shoo her away.

Yet she does not presume being allowed to address him and make a plea. Instead, she ardently believes that touching his robe will cure her, and so it does.

But Jesus is aware of her and demands to know who touched him. This is a moment of jeopardy for the woman; according to the codes of purity, she has just defiled a holy man.  She might be even more deeply shamed and shunned now, than she already has been.

But the woman does not escape, and she acknowledges Jesus’ status by kneeling in front of him and she courageously confesses to him what has just happened.

Contrary to all expectations of their society, Jesus acknowledges the woman. He honors her as kin of choice by calling her “Daughter.” In so doing, he uses his great authority to restore her to full participation in her community. Honorable belonging to the community is the apex of what this society would have called healing; well beyond the curing of a physical condition. The woman is now fully healed. She belongs again. Does she become one of the many women who accompanies Jesus in his ministry? We can only imagine it.

Is Jairus on pins and needles while all this happens?  Or is he further mesmerized by the charisma emanating from this man? The text doesn’t say and he might experience both. In delaying his visit to Jairus’ home to re-integrate the woman in the people of God, Jesus shows us another lesson we keep trying to forget. It is what the Roman Catholic social teaching calls the preferential option for the poor.

In our own lives, how do we stand by the poor, be with them, advocate for them and love them? Where does my preferential option for the poor express itself? Do I serve the underprivileged, as well and as promptly as the privileged?

Yet those favored with ample resources are not forgotten nor ignored. Jesus chooses his three closest disciples to accompany Jairus and his wife to the deathbed of their daughter.

After a public demonstration of his standing beyond the scope of the Law, Jesus offers a private glimpse of his standing beyond the scope of Life and Death as we usually experience them. Another “daughter”, Jairus’ own, is given back to her community.  She had lived 12 years up to then; just as the woman had hemorrhaged 12 years up to then.  Twelve years, as a repeated symbol of the wholeness of the People of God, to whom these females are rehabilitated.

God loves us, engages with us and with our prayers. Often, it looks nothing like we asked. Will we move on disgruntled and ungrateful? Or will grace open our eyes to the even better gifts we have received? Those gifts that the Spirit, searching our hearts and the heart of God, knew we needed above all? Have faith. And love the Lord of Life and Creation.

Beloved Lord, give me the courage to reach out and touch the hem of your robe, to kneel before you. Give me the faith to receive and nurture what you know is best for me.  And if there are items on my laundry list that you really like too, so be it.  So be it, Lord.  Amen.


Sunday, July 2, 2017

Proper 8 - Year A - Sunday, July 2, 2017


Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Bernard Delcourt,OHC
Proper 8 Year A- Sunday, July 2, 2017



Jeremiah 28:5-9
Romans 6:12-23
Matthew 10:40-42
Br. Bernard Delcourt
Listen to this sermon's recording

Let all guests who arrive be received like Christ,
for He is going to say,
"I came as a guest, and you received Me" (Matt. 25:35).
And to all let due honor be shown,
especially to the domestics of the faith and to pilgrims.
RB Chapter 53

*****

Our Gospel passage of today comes at the end of Matthew’s Missionary Discourse also referred to as the Little Commission. This discourse in Matthew 10 provides instructions to the twelve apostles who are about to spread out throughout Israel.

In the discourse Jesus advises them how to travel from city to city, to carry no belongings and to preach only to Israelite communities. He tells them to be wary of opposition, but have no fear for they will be told what to say to defend themselves when needed.

Later in the gospel according to Matthew (28:16-20), Jesus gives the Apostles the Great Commission, sending them out to all nations, not only to Israelites.

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Today’s three verses conclude the Missionary Discourse by telling the apostles that those who welcome them will be rewarded, they will receive a blessing. It will be as if they were receiving Jesus himself.

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Nowadays, we consider both the missionary endeavor and the duty of hospitality to be directed to all manner of people and not only a chosen people.

This week, at the monastery, eight Young Adults Service Corp missionaries and an adult missionary completed their two week orientation. Through the summer and fall they will be deployed to works of the Anglican Communion throughout the world. And those works address the needs of all, not only Anglicans or Christians.

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I’ll focus on the hospitality side of our reading. A greater number of us will be called on to be good Christian hosts than we are likely to become missionaries.

In Christian hospitality, we are called to be hosts to all people. We are to embrace both the humanity and the divinity of all and any human person we interact with. We are not only called to welcome those whose company we enjoy or those who resemble us most, we are called to welcome with compassion any one who calls on us.

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And that often requires us to stretch our compassion muscles. I have been reminded of my own stretching over the past thirteen years I have spent at the monastery. On average, the monastery welcomes over 3000 guests a.

They come in all shapes and sizes. They come with different stories each. That allows for regular stretching of our hospitality muscles.

Recently, a transgendered woman, I’ll name Myriam, asked to see me in pastoral counseling. I had known her as a man 6 to 8 years ago when she was struggling with how and whether to start the transition to womanhood.

At that time, I had listened to her with compassionate intent while at the same time noting my discomfort with her predicament.

Through that initial conversation and further interactions and conversations with other transgendered guests, I have come to know of my prejudice and to pay attention to it so as not to speak or act out of it.

I came to realize that I wanted men and women to fit neatly at either end of the gender binary. I felt uncomfortable with people who were in-between, or even more so, with people who claimed the freedom to slide back and forth on that continuum.

I thought I was fine with transgender people until I came to realize that I wanted each one of them to conform neatly to my male/female dualism.

My recent conversation with Myriam showed me that she trusted me to accept her fully as whom she wishes to be. Our conversation only brushed briefly on issues of gender identity and expression. That was not what her heart was most concerned about.

Instead, I listened to Myriam’s impassioned care for the spiritual health of our churches. I listened to her care for her children and her concern for her wife.

Somehow, my shelving of my prejudice a few years ago had allowed me to see more fully the beauty of Myriam’s humanity and with more depth than my earlier stereotypes would have allowed me to see. And, as a result, I could see Myriam also as an image of the God I love.

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Through my duty of hospitality, God has taught me to embrace more fully the beauty and multivalency of gender as a human phenomenon. In receiving Jesus in the person of Myriam, I received a blessing.

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I tell you this story to encourage us to pay attention to be hospitable especially to those whose personhood challenges us in some way. We are easily hospitable to family, friends and those who resemble us. Let us discover the prophets and righteous ones also among those who differ from us.
Christian hospitality calls us to offer compassionate hospitality to all. That is how we can encounter Christ in those who come to us and recognize the Christ who welcomes them from within ourselves.

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Come Lord Jesus, in whatever form you see fit to stretch our hearts. And let us be touched by the life and being of those who come to receive our hospitality. Amen.

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Proper 8 C- June 26, 2016

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Robert James Magliula, OHC 
Proper 8 Year C - Sunday -June 26, 2016

 Holy Cross monastery Bell tower
( Photo credit The Rev'd Phil Geliebter)

Our gospel this morning invites us to wrestle with the question of desire: our desire, God’s desire, the desire to be desired. What do we choose as the ultimate goal of our life? In Luke we hear a twice-repeated phrase that sets the tone for Jesus’ discipleship, and sets the standard for ours.  We heard that “Jesus set his face to go to Jerusalem”. That’s a great phrase for single-mindedness.

Feelings ran deep between Jews and Samaritans, as we can tell by the reaction that James and John had.  But Jesus won’t be sidetracked into an old feud.  His focus is on his mission. No matter how much the disciples fuss he stays the course. His disciples are literally being formed on the road. They learn by doing, by participating, as conscious, active observers and agents of love, compassion, and justice. This can’t happen on cruise control.

Three would-be disciples are introduced.  On the surface Jesus’ words may sound like harsh teaching---especially since the words are addressed to us.  If you want to follow me, you must be prepared, and you must count the cost.  The first person is swept away by his emotions.  His enthusiasm at the sight of the crowds and the privilege of Jesus’ company has obscured the cost that he will have to pay.  Jesus reminds him of the most basic deprivation that must be expected. Like his master, he will be without a place to lay his head.

The next person, when invited to follow Jesus, offers an excuse. “Lord, let me first go and bury my father.”  Jesus looked into the heart of this person and saw that he was making a selfish excuse out of a sacred duty.  Clearly the man’s father wasn’t dead. It was more likely that he wished to wait for his father to die so as not to encounter his father’s opposition to his choice of such a sketchy life with this itinerant rabbi. 

The third person was not rash or selfish.  He had counted the cost. He wasn’t making an excuse.  He was sincere and definite in his intention---but he wanted to delay.  He wanted to say good-bye to his family and friends.  But Jesus reminds him that the time is now. He uses the image of the Palestinian plow.  Because it is so light, it’s guided by only one hand, while the other hand drives the oxen.  This kind of plowing required careful attention.  Any distraction in focus, especially turning to look back, would result in crooked furrows. He invites others to follow him. When they are unable to make the commitment on the spot, Jesus moves on. He’s kingdom-bound and kingdom-driven.

The demands of the Reign of God are both urgent and absolute. That Reign is nothing less than the grace and love-driven transformation of the self and the world. There is no place for the reluctant or half-hearted in this radical calling.  Nothing---whether fear of discomfort and loss, perceived duties and demands, or family ties---should be allowed to detract from it. The three potential followers in the Gospel remind us of just how much we bury our hunger to know ourselves and God beneath our busyness, our routines, our preoccupation with our relationships. The degree to which we have all been seduced by a convenience store brand of Christianity is evident in our response to Jesus’ words.  We pick and choose what we want our discipleship to be---on our terms, on our schedules, with our agenda. Jesus calls on them and us to set our eyes on the kingdom and to commit to it.

Augustine wrote that “Before God can deliver us from ourselves, we must undeceive ourselves.”  Paul, in a wisdom born out of immense personal struggle, articulated the great paradox of faith and freedom.  As long as we live in the flesh, with hearts fixed on the world, relying on our own self-will, we are a slave to the world.  To do what we want, when we want, according to our want, is to be reduced to a self-absorbed slave. So much of our lives are caught up in that tension between fear and longing---even our fear of intimacy with God. In the end, I think what matters most is not how we love God, but how we allow God to love us. Jesus’ clarity is an example for us. All of who he is and what he does is based on his identity as the Beloved of God. This relationship deepens all the dimensions of his life.

Only when we surrender our lives to the power of God can we find the service that is perfect freedom, because in this act of surrender we begin to will what God wills. The compulsion to serve only self, in whatever form it takes and whatever justification we make---that compulsion lessens its grip on us.  Our anxiety, born of self-reliance and self-service, dissipates and is overshadowed by the desire to live freely and fully.  We live for Christ, and hence for one another.  We experience the paradox of rebirth: the giving up of the false self for the gaining of the true self. This shift implies that I want to show up in my life more fully. I want to let go of my old stories and habits. I am willing to be with the truth of whatever I learn about myself. No matter what I feel and what I find, I want to be free and fully alive. When we see, understand, and experience all the self-defeating blockages that have covered our true self’s qualities, they fall away like dead leaves from a live plant, and the fullness of our soul emerges naturally. Only our resistance and fear-based strategies prevent us from showing up and claiming our birthright as children of God.   

The deepening of our relationship to God can take some delightful and surprising turns. It’s like a dance, with a rhythm of hiding and showing, protecting and sharing, of approaches and withdrawals. It is definitely not perpetual ecstasy.

We don’t know what happened to the three potential followers, but we do know that the invitation he gave to them he also gives to us---to be single-minded in our deepest desire, in choosing what best leads to a deepening of God’s love and life in us. +Amen.

Monday, June 30, 2014

Proper 8 A - Jun 29, 2014



Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY 
Br. Randy Greve, OHC
Feast of Saints Peter and Paul - Proper 8 AJune 29, 2014


Jeremiah 28:5-9
Romans 6:12-23
Matthew 10:40-42


Little Golden Books
It will likely not come as a surprise to my brothers, but even as a child I loved to read. I remember a wonderful series of books called “Little Golden Books”; fairy tales, Disney movies, Sesame Street, or some other cast of charming characters doing fun and interesting things. What child would not want to read about “Scuffy the Tugboat and his Adventures down the River”, “The Poky Little Puppy” or “A Day at the Seashore”?

They are all too cute, ripe for someone who finally got the idea to do a parody of the Little Golden Book titles and call it the “Little Golden Books That Never Quite Made It.” Some of the “never quite made its” include “Curious George and the High-Voltage Fence", "Some Kittens Can Fly", and "The Boy Who Died From Eating All His Vegetables". But my personal favorite parody title has to be “You are Different and That’s Bad”. Which brings us naturally to today’s holy celebration…

I suspect Peter and Paul could have said “You are Different and That’s Bad” to each other in the early years after Paul’s conversion. The feast is rightly framed as two men with different gifts, called by God for particular ministries in the formation of the Church. And certainly they were both empowered and commissioned by the Lord, both gifted communicators and leaders, both bold in the proclamation of Good News and courageous when they knew that their preaching would likely cost them their lives. We rightly laud and magnify their service to God and the Church. But as true as all of that is, snippets in the Acts of the Apostles and the letter to the Galatians hint that their early relationship was not all hugs and kisses. Each had some valid reason to suspect and mistrust the other. What would their first meeting have been like: the fisherman and the Pharisee, the impulsive, passionate, and simple Peter – the intentional, thoughtful, and well-educated Paul - looking into each other’s eyes? Peter surely wondered how the zealous persecutor of Christians had become one so suddenly and unexpectedly. Paul wondered whether his calling to preach to the Gentiles would be accepted by the Jewish followers of a Jewish Messiah. Whatever respect they seem to have ultimately had for each other was not automatic or easy. To paraphrase the stereotypical Western movie line, “This Church ain’t big enough for the both of them.”

The fact that they were both called and sent, being so different from one another, seems overlooked today as cries of “you are different and that’s bad” come from pews, conventions, and holy meetings far and wide. Jesus chose Peter and Paul, these two very different men who maybe didn’t even like or understand each other very much, to go and fulfill the life that was given to each of them. Jesus never said “Here’s the methodology, here’s the right theological emphasis, here’s the most effective technique. Everybody do it the same way.” He just said “go, feed my sheep, go, run the race, - I am with you”. He dared to free the leaders of his Church to be themselves. Authentic personhood, not technique, would be the style of the Way. This is the same Peter who had denied Jesus, who had stumbled around struggling to grasp who Jesus was, yet who could emerge at Pentecost as the voice proclaiming resurrection and new life. And Paul; Pharisee of Pharisees, the unlikeliest of apostles, yet calling all he was before his conversion rubbish in comparison with knowing Christ Jesus. God knew and loved and wanted the individual men, with their flaws and memories, with their doubts and struggles, and, yes, with their courage and conviction. All of it was summoned into the process of transformation.

In Living With Contradiction, Esther de Waal writes, “It is only as I learn to accept, to love and to forgive myself as I really am – the person without the mask, the person who lets go of appearances – that I can accept, love and forgive others with the same reality.”

Whenever I think or say “you are different and that’s bad”, I am putting the focus in the wrong place. I am refusing to look at myself, to reflect on how I am living out my calling, to give more of myself to God and my neighbor. It is a tempting but ultimately unfulfilling impulse to escape, to blame, to criticize – anything to get the attention off of myself, off of the hard questions I need to ask myself that only God and I can answer.

How much time have I wasted wishing I had this person’s ability to socialize or another’s gift of service and compassion? Or criticizing those who did not conform to my obviously superior standards? How often am I unfaithful by imaging the glamour of some big and exciting mission far away while ignoring the opportunities to serve that are right in front of me? Call, vocation, ministry – or just life itself - is ultimately about the willingness to become my true self, the unique person, gifted and flawed, that God accepts and loves. What Peter and Paul realized that having different styles and audiences was not a problem that required one triumphing over the other, but part of being in the Body, part of the diversity within the unity of the Church.
As Paul is nearing the end of his life, the masks are gone, he is vulnerable and open and grateful: “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.” He has gone where he could go. He has preached where and to whom he could preach. He has worked for peace and harmony, he has welcomed, cared, taught. Some have responded with faith, others have not. Some of the churches he founded were healthy, others were not. Other faithful servants would come and build on his work and spread the Gospel even further. That work was theirs, not his - not his worry or concern. He bowed his head beneath a Roman blade in peace because he was not comparing, not pointing the finger, not wishing for something that was not his.

God loves and uses people I don’t like or understand very much. Thank God it is God who calls and sends, not me. What is given me to do is to accept and love them as God has accepted and loved me and offer my hand of friendship and partnership as we work together for the Gospel. Perhaps we could write a new Little Golden Book, a book that includes the truth about your life and my life and call it “God made me a unique and precious creation and that is very, very good.” That would be a golden book worth more than much gold. Amen.

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Peter and Paul give us a sign of the diversity of God’s call and the possibility of living in unity.
Peter and Paul remind us that we can say we have run the race, kept the faith, finished the course only when our identity is rooted in God’s call to us, not in the arbitrary and artificial standards and expectations imposed by someone else. Peter and Paul spent the first half of their lives striving to do what they thought was right and good, straining to conform to a system and a culture that promised acceptance and identity. Then Jesus came along and gave them a new identity. One not based on conforming to an image of ideal discipleship, but based on the freedom to be one’s true self.

Part of the evidence for the presence of the Holy Spirit is the way that Jews and Gentiles, slaves and free, men and women were all included in this new community centered on Jesus as Lord. Old cultural and religious barriers and centuries of mistrust were being broken down in the revolutionary act of becoming one body around the body and blood of Christ. We draw lines and say thiYet the fallen human impulse to force answers when there are none and codify a system where there need not be a system is strong and lived in Peter and Paul, the other Apostles, and sometimes even in us. Whenever we hear a different theological perspective or different language about the spiritual life and think to ourselves, “You are Different and That’s Bad”…

Both Peter and Paul grew after their callings. Peter was still worried about clean and unclean animals well into the Acts of the Apostles. Paul took about 15 years to process his conversion experience before he wrote his first epistle. Their sainthood and example to us is not in their super-human perfection and insight, but in what they did with the awareness of their own inadequacy and imperfection. Simon bar Jonah still lived in Peter the Rock, but he was transformed from the impulsive fisherman to a great preacher and leader. Saul of Tarsus, the former Pharisee and persecutor of Christians became the first great missionary and theologian of Christianity… It took a long time, but they did the work, to arrive at the place of being able to say “you are different and that’s good.”

Whenever I lead retreats or talk to guests I almost always point out that I know of no other way such a diverse community as lives in this monastery could have come together.
The image of Peter and Paul, side by side so different, yet living and dying for the same Lord, proclaiming the same good news, gives me hope that as individuals and communities we can accept our identities and vocations and celebrate the identity and vocation of our neighbor. The Church has had enough of “you are different and that’s bad”.

God has called us and we have grown and still need to grow.