Sunday, October 28, 2018

Proper 25 B - Sunday, October 28, 2018

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Aidan Owen, OHC
Proper 25 - Sunday, October 28, 2018

Job 42:1-6, 10-17
Hebrews 7:23-28
Mark 10:46-52

To hear the sermon in its fullness click here.

In the name of the one God, who is lover, beloved, and love overflowing. Amen.

The days are getting darker. I mean this both literally and figuratively. And I find myself wondering, as the darkness gathers, what does hope look like?

This fall the maples have been late in catching fire. Their tardiness has coincided with the UN report on climate change, which tells us that by 2040 we will see unprecedented and violent climactic events. Faced with these new realities, we must ask when, not if, the last maple will drop its fiery leaf on this land by the Hudson.

And yet, I find that this fall, I only love the maples, this land, this world, this life harder. It is all more precious for its fragility and its impermanence.

And still, I ask, what does hope look like now?

Job and Bartimaeus both shine like stars in the night sky, by which to navigate in this gathering dark.

Today’s gospel reading presents us with two surprising words. They’re so small, you may have missed them. “Again” and “regained.” When Jesus asks Bartimaeus what he wants Jesus to do for him, he responds “Let me see again.” Similarly, when Jesus has done as Bartimaeus asks, we are told that Bartimaeus regained his sight.

The clear implication is that Bartimaeus was not always blind. Like Job, he lost something he once had, something he was probably so accustomed to he didn’t know to love it until it was gone. Until he quite literally entered the dark.

And yet, when Jesus approaches Jericho, Bartimaeus remains on the side, calling out—not for healing, but for mercy. He doesn’t rush Jesus. But neither does he sit apathetically by waiting for the healer to come along. Instead, he cries out, almost in joy, for Jesus to have mercy on him. Only when Jesus asks him specifically what he wants does Bartimaeus ask to see again.

I imagine that, however his blindness descended, however he may have raged against the loss of his sight, however he may have, for a time, despaired at this loss of light, Bartimaeus came to find peace, joy, and, assurance in the dark. I imagine that he discovered there a deeper kind of hope than he had known before.

On the eve of the Velvet Revolution in what was then Czechoslovakia, Vaclav Havel wrote about what it means to hope:

Hope is a state of mind, not a state of the world. Either we have hope within us, or we don’t. […] Hope is definitely not the same as optimism. It’s not the conviction that something will turn out well, but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out. It is hope, above all, that gives strength to live and to continually try new things, even in conditions that seem as hopeless as ours do, here and now. In the face of this absurdity, life is too precious a thing to permit its devaluation by living pointlessly, emptily, without meaning, without love, and, finally, without hope.

Real hope, as writer and activist Rebecca Solnit points out, is always dark, because the future is forever dim. And while the darkness may frighten us, in her words, it is always the dark, not just of the grave, but of the womb. For out of the darkness emerge possibilities we could never have imagined in the clear light of day.

If the emergence of hope from the dark is true in the secular world, how much truer it is for the Christian, who bears not only Christ’s life within her, but first bears Christ’s death on the Cross. We who profess the faith of Jesus, profess, not that he died and made everything okay in the world, but that having died and risen, he now lives in us, right here and now, still working to stitch back together this fractured world.

I think that what Bartimaeus discovered in the dark is that, although he could no longer see, he could be seen, seen in the depths of his being, known and loved in the very foundation of his soul, in that darkest point within that is reserved for God alone. And in that foundational place, too deep even really to call it love, for it is so much more than that, from that deepest place is where hope is born.

Having lived and having been loved in such darkness, perhaps it wasn’t so important to Bartimaeus to see the physical world. Perhaps he had learned to live with such joy and such hope that, dark or not, the world’s beauty drew him into the life of God right here and now. And I can’t imagine that, having had his sight restored, he could ever forget the fantastic condition of being seen and known in the dark. Surely such an experience changed everything for him.

So, I return to my original question. As the darkness gathers, what does hope look like now? I don’t really know. But I do know that I don’t want to wait for the maples to die to let their beauty pierce my soul. And that, whether in darkness or in light, I will go on planting tulips each fall and dreaming of their growth through the winter months.

Rebecca Solnit reminds us that “joy doesn’t betray, but sustains activism. And when you face a politics that aspires to make you fearful, alienated, and isolated, joy is a fine initial act of insurrection.”

Perhaps that’s just it. Hope looks much the same as it always has. It looks like love, like tenderness, like grief, like beauty and heartache and rage. It looks like wonder. It looks like joy. It looks like a room full of people, gathered at a table, remembering the life of God that flows through us, that re-members us, so that we can re-member the world. It looks like dying, and rising once more.

Monday, October 22, 2018

Proper 24 B - Sunday, October 21, 2018

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Roy Parker, OHC
Proper 24 - Sunday, October 21, 2018

Isaiah 53:4-12
Hebrews 5:1-10
Mark 10:35-45

CHRIST CRUCIFIED, THE POWER & WISDOM OF GOD

The gospel passage is about the disciples James and John trying for a power grab at a time when Jesus has given clear warning of his fate and the only appropriate attitude for a disciple must be related to that described by the prophet Isaiah, the scenario to which Jesus alludes by saying “Among you, anyone who wants to be great must be your servant, and if anyone among you wishes to be first, they must be the slave of all. For the Human did not come to be served, but to serve and to give himself as a ransom for the community.” These words of Jesus tie him to the description of the Servant of God in the first reading, a description long revered by the community of faith: Surely he has borne our infirmities and carried our diseases . . . He was wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the punishment that made us whole ... By his bruises, we are healed. . . The Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all ...

CHRIST CRUCIFIED, THE POWER & WISDOM OF GOD

He was cut off from the land of the living, stricken for the transgression of the people ... It was the will of the Lord to crush him with pain ... When God makes his life an offering for sin, he shall see his offspring and shall prolong his days; through him, the will of the Lord shall prosper ... Out of his anguish, he shall see light ... The righteous one, God’s servant shall make many righteous, and he shall bear their iniquities ...

CHRIST CRUCIFIED, THE POWER & WISDOM OF GOD

Adds the Letter to the Hebrews: Because he poured out himself to death, he bore the sin of many, and made intercession for the transgressors, offering up prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears to the one who was able to save him from death ... Having been made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him, having been designated by God a high priest according to the order of Melchizedek.

It would be appropriate here to cite the remarks of the Biblical scholar Joachim Jeremias who calls our attention to the placard over Jesus’ head stating that Jesus was King of the Jews, but in fact describes our transgressions — so many that they must be written in letters so tiny that one must draw very, very close to making it out, so close that one begins to realize:

CHRIST CRUCIFIED, THE POWER & WISDOM OF GOD

It would be important to dwell a bit on the opening sentence of Isaiah’s Servant Song on account of certain niceties in the Hebrew text, for whose understanding I’m indebted to Harvey Guthrie, professor of the Hebrew Bible at the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. To put it colloquially, the vocabulary and syntax of the verse “Surely he has borne our infirmities and carried our diseases” gives the verse something like five Good Housekeeping Seals of Approval for verity and reliability. Professor Guthrie comments that even without the introductive affirmative Surely, the verse would be extremely strong in its expression of the unexpected new thing which has taken place.

This Servant Song occurs in the portion of the Book of Isaiah which describes God’s new thing and the role played in it by the conquests of the Persian king Cyrus, but the most exquisite newness of the new thing trumps conquering Cyrus and lies in the Servant’s suffering and death, bringing God’s new thing to its final completion. God’s new thing is finally not “victory” or “conquest,” but the outlasting of all victory and conquest and power by a powerless suffering and dying Servant.

The perennial struggle throughout the Bible between the description of the Servant’s fate and the desire of God’s devotees to use the imagery of kingship and victory and conquest has apparently contributed to a confusion in the text of the concluding two verses of the Song, evident in the footnotes to the Hebrew and in those of the New Revised Standard Version which comprises the lectionary. One can wonder if these final verses haven’t suffered at the hands of the happy-ending tendencies of those who transmitted the text, and of all of us, including James and John who, despite Jesus’ repeated warnings about his fate, clearly belong to the happy-ending segment of the Twelve.

CHRIST CRUCIFIED, THE POWER & WISDOM OF GOD

Sunday, October 14, 2018

Proper 23, Year B: Sunday, October 14, 2018

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. John Forbis, OHC
Proper 23- Sunday, October 14, 2018


To hear the sermon in its fullness click here.


Br. John Forbis, OHC
So they give me the foundational Gospel passage for monastic life.  Many of the first monks, like Anthony, did exactly what Jesus told the rich man to do.  They gave away all they had, sold it, gave the money to the poor and went to live a solitary or community life in the desert following Jesus in word and action.  So it has been done.  Only, they give this passage to me of all people, a monk, whose perhaps worst struggle with this life is trying to face a passage like this.  

But who’s they?  Each of us brothers are put on a rota for preaching.  And this morning’s Gospel passage happens to be how the chips have fallen.  It’s only Jesus telling this rich young man, telling me and you to perform his injunction.  He is the one facing us at this moment.  And that is important to remember.  It’s him telling us how far we’ve come and how much further to go.

The man coming to Jesus could be looking for some teaching, some words of inspiration, but I would be surprised if there wasn’t the least bit desire for justification or the assurance that all is OK.  He begins with some flattery.  “Good teacher … “.  But Jesus deflects that and gives credit where credit is due.  Then, comes the question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”  Is there a hint behind this question of “Are you and I square, Jesus?  Am I in good with God?”  

Jesus responds with perhaps exactly what the guy is looking for.  Just follow the commandments.  Whew!  That’s the easy part!  But this guy blew it for us.  He could have walked away at that moment, and we all could have been off the hook.  But he sticks around and is insistent, it seems, to hear it out of Jesus’ mouth.  “All is good.  Keep it up.”

In the society of Jesus’ time, the prevailing thought was that people had wealth and prosperity simply because they were “good”.  They followed the laws and the commandments.  They did everything that was expected of them, and thus, God was on their side.

Not much has changed today really.  There actually is a them, a them, an us and a them.  Privilege comes at a cost.  It’s implied in the word itself.  If I’m privileged, others aren’t.  We have what others don’t.  

Privilege comes at a cost to us as well.  In my preparations for this sermon, I came across the existence of a PBS documentary entitled Affluenza.  The piece defines the neologism as “a painful contagious, socially transmitted condition of overload, debt, anxiety and waste, resulting from the dogged pursuit of more.  The term has also been used to refer to an inability to understand the consequences of one’s actions because of financial privilege.”  A pretty bleak future for us, I must say.    

But what if the prosperity and wealth isn’t enough for this man?  What if on some level he is desperately hoping that his “possessions” are not all there is?  

Jesus probably saw this man’s fear and anxiety about eternal life in the age to come.  Maybe Jesus heard what was behind the man’s question, “Is this all there is?”  Jesus, looking at him, loved him.  He LOVED him!  There is more.  There is an opportunity for non-attachment to and abandonment of possessions, for a freedom beyond separation, isolation, loneliness and fear.  There is the freedom to loosen his grip of control and open his hand to share his possessions, certainly, but also to find and share his true self, his soul, to follow Jesus.  There is the liberation to look beyond himself and respond to those at whose expense he flourishes.  There is the risk of being loved.

But the man walks away, the price is too high.  I’ve walked away again and again.   It’s too much of a shock to our systems, his and mine.  It’s so new, so strange, so foreign, and the repetitive voice in my head continuously hammers home that this life is inaccessible.  There’s no other way and don’t even think you can do it.  Now be a good boy, go out and buy a book that you will never read that alleges to tell you how to acquire eternal life.

Jesus knows what he is asking of us.  It costs as well.  Nothing less than what we hold on to for our own safety and security.  He loves us enough to allow us to walk away.  

But this begs the disciples’ question, who can be saved?  I wonder how many of them ask out of protest or defeat.  

We don’t know what happens to the man, but perhaps that is because his story is not over.  Filling the distance between Jesus’ love and this man’s fear is God.  Possibility is in control now, and yes, eternal life is accessible and given.  Not earned.  Our story is not over either.  For eternal life is given to all.  And we have our work cut out for us.  

For now we have community, “houses, brothers and sisters, mothers and children, and fields with persecutions—and in the age to come eternal life. But many who are first will be last, and the last will be first.”  We can no longer hide behind our possessions.    

Is the price too high?  I’m afraid I can’t answer that question for you.  I often can’t answer it for myself.


But I’ll say it again.  Jesus, looking at him, LOVED him.  Now what was the question again?