I have found much solace over the years in these words from Dietrich Bonnhoeffer. I like Bonnhoeffer's realistic view, and his honesty to not pretend that "God will make it all better" (in the sense of taking away all the pain), but that instead God will make the pain itself a source of gratitude.
I didn't want to post anything earlier for fear of family getting bad news from a facebook post so wanted to make sure that the news has gone out - the sadness I feel today is from the death of my Aunt Tootie, my mother's older sister, who had been a mainstay in my life and in my mom's. My mom lived with Tootie and her family when mom was a teenager (all six of them living in a basement for years, because no house was on it yet), and in the last six months or so of her life, mom moved back in with Tootie (this time in a house, not just a basement, but the same one!) so she could die in the comfort of home under good and loving care. Tootie's house and the home she made were always a kind of sanctuary, especially as I grew older. Many laughs, lots of extraordinary meals (she and I love duck, and we got to have a couple ducks these last few years), God only knows how much coffee, cake, pie, and cookies, and more love than one can quantify.
Here is Dietrich:
“There is nothing that can replace the absence of someone dear to us, and one should not even attempt to do so. One must simply hold out and endure it. At first that sounds very hard, but at the same time it is also a great comfort. For to the extent the emptiness truly remains unfilled one remains connected to the other person through it. It is wrong to say that God fills the emptiness. God in no way fills it but much more leaves it precisely unfilled and thus helps us preserve -- even in pain -- the authentic relationship. Further more, the more beautiful and full the remembrances, the more difficult the separation. But gratitude transforms the torment of memory into silent joy. One bears what was lovely in the past not as a thorn but as a precious gift deep within, a hidden treasure of which one can always be certain.”
Many questions and occasional answers as I muse, think, preach, and listen about science and culture through the lens of my understanding of Christian faith.
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Thursday, November 27, 2014
On Being Gratitudinal - sermon for Thanksgiving
On Thanksgiving Eve, the three UCC churches in town hold a joint worship service of thanksgiving. This year it was at First Congregational, and I was the preacher. Here is the sermon text I preached from. I talk about the importance of the act of giving thanks to be more than just saying it, instead of showing our thankfulness by the way we live, showing gratitude by serving the people around us.
How do you show your gratitude to God, or your gratitude to anyone/anything?
Have a blessed and happy Thanksgiving Day!
“On Being Gratitudinal”
Sermon, Year A, Thanksgiving, November 26, 2014
Given at First Congregational UCC, Eau Claire, WI
© Rev. David J. Huber
Focus Scripture: Amos 5:7-15, 21-24, Matthew 25:34-45
In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "A Matter of Honor", First Officer of the Enterprise-D William Riker does an officer exchange to go serve temporarily on a Klingon starship called the Pagh, a word that means “zero” in the Klingon language, by the way.
Klingons are a warrior race - combat, honor, staring down death, rising up through the ranks by assassinating your superiors when they get weak, they are honest, honorable, don't pretend to be something they aren't. They are loud, boisterous, laugh loudly and feel anger fully. That is what matters. That is what they value.
They are very much a race who are in the moment.
Riker is the first Federation officer to serve on a Klingon ship, because for a long time the Federation and Klingon Empire were enemies. They had been hesitant allies for 50 years after the Khitomer Accords in the year 2293, but the real alliance was with the Romulans. But after the incident at Norendra III in 2344, just a few years before this story, in which the Federation ship Enterprise-C helped Klingon ships defeat some Romulans who had betrayed the Klingons, which act then solidified the alliance between Klingons and the Federation and dissolved the one between the Romulans and the Klingons.
Oh, I'm sorry... Does this geekiness make my brain look fat?
Anyway, Riker, a human, comes to this Klingon ship, and lots of Klingonness ensues in which we learn that there are no old warriors. Riker has his leadership challenged by second-in-command and he has to fight him, finally putting the Klingon's head through a computer monitor; Riker learns that the Klingon food gagh, a kind of worm, is best when served live; and then the captain of the Klingon tries to attack the Enterprise-D because he thinks they did something to his ship. Riker tricks the captain, there are lots of Klingons threatening to kill each other because they don't like each others' commands, but Riker keeps them at bay, calls off the attack, gets the ship fixed and everyone is happy except the Klingon captain who gives Riker quite a belt to the head in anger and Riker goes back to the Enterprise.
As I watched, I thought, "What a way to live."
and then I paused for a moment, and thought, “No, what a way to die.” And said that with a feeling of awe.
Not just dying through combat or the glory of battle, but that the Klingons have about them a sense of death always around them - death is always on the horizon, and so there is a fullness in their lives knowing how precious it is this short time that one is alive. No pretending of there being a long life, so put things off to tomorrow... whether it be a party with friends, a chance to eat, a time to make love. Life is short, so there's no need to hoard, to acquire, to be stingy, to be worried about possessions.
Tomorrow we might die, so let us live right now. That's not even Klingon – that's the Bible.
“Today is a good day to die”, that's Klingon. Though originally it was Crazy Horse, but co-opted by the Klingons.
They have found something to live for, and so do not fear death.
And in that, I see a sense of gratitude. Gratitude, as I think of it, is thankfulness in action. Thankfulness lived.
This moment is all that there is, it is the gift given to me to be alive right now, so in gratitude I will make the most out of it.
“I'm so thankful for the gift of today, I will live it fully. I am so thankful for the gift of having enough, I will share it. I am so thankful for the people around me that I will spend time with them.”
And also this sense that, since life is temporary, what is the point of hoarding anything? Why hold on to things, or go without using them, or go without sharing them, when one knows that there is only a short time to experience and enjoy them? And once we're dead we can't take them with us. And once we're dead, we can't share. We can share through our estate planning or wills, sure, but I've heard good wisdom from some who have said to me that they are taking the things they planned to leave in their wills and giving them to the people now – then they can see the enjoyment. It's a way of saying “I have such thankfulness for what has brought me joy that I want to share them in gratitude.”
The prophet we read is railing against those who do not share. The rich have too much and are beating down and ignoring the poor. They're even cheating the poor. Taking advantage of the weak. We see over and over in the prophets that the sin God is upset about is not sharing. Being unjust toward those who have the least.
We like to balance budgets on the backs of the poor. It's easy. We like to think we won't die, and that we win by accumulating the most/
A Klingon might say that our attachment to things keeps us afraid, and being afraid keeps us from living. So would Yoda. And Confuscious. Lao Tzu, Buddha, and Mohammed as well.
Jesus said that we win by sharing. Keeping things to ourselves says, “God, you aren't generous enough to me.” Serving others says, “Thank you, God, for being generous.”
Our job is to love the world. As we dedicate ourselves to this vocation, to daily loving the world - we are more and more showing our gratitude, not just with words but with our very lives.
Compare this to Bilbo Baggins, the famous but also very hesitant Hobbit, described in this song that the dwarves sing:
Chip the glasses and crack the plates!
Blunt the knives and bent the forks!
That's what Bilbo Baggins hates-
Smash the bottles and burn the corks!
Cut the cloth and tread on the fat!
Pour the milk on the pantry floor!
Leave the bones on the bedroom mat!
Splash the wine on every door!
Dump the crocks in a boiling bawl;
Pound them up with a thumping pole;
And when you've finished, if any are whole,
Send them down the hall to roll!
That's what Bilbo Baggins hates!
So carefully, carefully with the plates! [Book version]
A turning point, in some ways, in Bilbo's life: he's been asked to go on an adventure, but does not want to go. He likes his comfort, his hobbit hole, his fine linens and delicate plates and ancestral silverware. The dwarves, who've lost their land, their home, their story, their history, they find Bilbo's hesitance to be almost offensive. Bilbo is afraid something might break, especially that the something might be him. He would rather see the dwarves go unfed and homeless than take the risk of serving them because he is afraid that he might break a plate, or soil a doily. He is afraid, and so he does not live. He only survives.
But, he learns! He likes his stuff, his comforts. And I'm not anti-comforts or anti-stuff. But he learns through his adventure to let go, and learns that by letting go he is finally alive.
But, we know that serious preachers don't quote Star Trek or recite Dwarven poetry.
So.... Wittgenstein.
Mmm, that felt good.
Schopenhauer. Schillebeeckx. Nietszche. Dag Hammerskjold. Wittgenstein.
As Wittgenstein wrote, “The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.” – but what limit has action?
Jesus never said, “Here's what I want you to believe. Repeat after me.”
He said, “Here's what I want you to do. Follow after me.”
Thankfulness – words. Important! Don't get me wrong. “Thank you, God, for what I have.”
But gratitude – thanksgiving in action.
Thank you, God, share my water.
Thank you, God, share my food.
Thank you, God, share my clothing.
Thank you, God, let me visit you in prison, let me visit you on the street, let me visit you in the hospital...
Words have incredible power to shape worlds. To define reality. To change reality. To take an imagination at warp speed and go places no one has gone before. But they are not omnipotent.
What if our language,
our language as Christians,
the language of our Christian vocation,
not be confined to liminal words of thanksgiving,
a lexicon of sounds and scribblings
inherently limited in comprehension
to only that population which shares it in common,
but what if, instead,
the language of our Christian vocation
be the universal language of gratitude, thankfulness in action,
through service to others,
a kinetic language of movement that does not limit the world
or attempt to circumscribe it,
but which by refusing to live for ourselves
creates ever new lands and capacity
for flourishing the imagination of what is possible. Amen.
How do you show your gratitude to God, or your gratitude to anyone/anything?
Have a blessed and happy Thanksgiving Day!
“On Being Gratitudinal”
Sermon, Year A, Thanksgiving, November 26, 2014
Given at First Congregational UCC, Eau Claire, WI
© Rev. David J. Huber
Focus Scripture: Amos 5:7-15, 21-24, Matthew 25:34-45
In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "A Matter of Honor", First Officer of the Enterprise-D William Riker does an officer exchange to go serve temporarily on a Klingon starship called the Pagh, a word that means “zero” in the Klingon language, by the way.
Klingons are a warrior race - combat, honor, staring down death, rising up through the ranks by assassinating your superiors when they get weak, they are honest, honorable, don't pretend to be something they aren't. They are loud, boisterous, laugh loudly and feel anger fully. That is what matters. That is what they value.
They are very much a race who are in the moment.
Riker is the first Federation officer to serve on a Klingon ship, because for a long time the Federation and Klingon Empire were enemies. They had been hesitant allies for 50 years after the Khitomer Accords in the year 2293, but the real alliance was with the Romulans. But after the incident at Norendra III in 2344, just a few years before this story, in which the Federation ship Enterprise-C helped Klingon ships defeat some Romulans who had betrayed the Klingons, which act then solidified the alliance between Klingons and the Federation and dissolved the one between the Romulans and the Klingons.
Oh, I'm sorry... Does this geekiness make my brain look fat?
Anyway, Riker, a human, comes to this Klingon ship, and lots of Klingonness ensues in which we learn that there are no old warriors. Riker has his leadership challenged by second-in-command and he has to fight him, finally putting the Klingon's head through a computer monitor; Riker learns that the Klingon food gagh, a kind of worm, is best when served live; and then the captain of the Klingon tries to attack the Enterprise-D because he thinks they did something to his ship. Riker tricks the captain, there are lots of Klingons threatening to kill each other because they don't like each others' commands, but Riker keeps them at bay, calls off the attack, gets the ship fixed and everyone is happy except the Klingon captain who gives Riker quite a belt to the head in anger and Riker goes back to the Enterprise.
As I watched, I thought, "What a way to live."
and then I paused for a moment, and thought, “No, what a way to die.” And said that with a feeling of awe.
Not just dying through combat or the glory of battle, but that the Klingons have about them a sense of death always around them - death is always on the horizon, and so there is a fullness in their lives knowing how precious it is this short time that one is alive. No pretending of there being a long life, so put things off to tomorrow... whether it be a party with friends, a chance to eat, a time to make love. Life is short, so there's no need to hoard, to acquire, to be stingy, to be worried about possessions.
Tomorrow we might die, so let us live right now. That's not even Klingon – that's the Bible.
“Today is a good day to die”, that's Klingon. Though originally it was Crazy Horse, but co-opted by the Klingons.
They have found something to live for, and so do not fear death.
And in that, I see a sense of gratitude. Gratitude, as I think of it, is thankfulness in action. Thankfulness lived.
This moment is all that there is, it is the gift given to me to be alive right now, so in gratitude I will make the most out of it.
“I'm so thankful for the gift of today, I will live it fully. I am so thankful for the gift of having enough, I will share it. I am so thankful for the people around me that I will spend time with them.”
And also this sense that, since life is temporary, what is the point of hoarding anything? Why hold on to things, or go without using them, or go without sharing them, when one knows that there is only a short time to experience and enjoy them? And once we're dead we can't take them with us. And once we're dead, we can't share. We can share through our estate planning or wills, sure, but I've heard good wisdom from some who have said to me that they are taking the things they planned to leave in their wills and giving them to the people now – then they can see the enjoyment. It's a way of saying “I have such thankfulness for what has brought me joy that I want to share them in gratitude.”
The prophet we read is railing against those who do not share. The rich have too much and are beating down and ignoring the poor. They're even cheating the poor. Taking advantage of the weak. We see over and over in the prophets that the sin God is upset about is not sharing. Being unjust toward those who have the least.
We like to balance budgets on the backs of the poor. It's easy. We like to think we won't die, and that we win by accumulating the most/
A Klingon might say that our attachment to things keeps us afraid, and being afraid keeps us from living. So would Yoda. And Confuscious. Lao Tzu, Buddha, and Mohammed as well.
Jesus said that we win by sharing. Keeping things to ourselves says, “God, you aren't generous enough to me.” Serving others says, “Thank you, God, for being generous.”
Our job is to love the world. As we dedicate ourselves to this vocation, to daily loving the world - we are more and more showing our gratitude, not just with words but with our very lives.
Compare this to Bilbo Baggins, the famous but also very hesitant Hobbit, described in this song that the dwarves sing:
Chip the glasses and crack the plates!
Blunt the knives and bent the forks!
That's what Bilbo Baggins hates-
Smash the bottles and burn the corks!
Cut the cloth and tread on the fat!
Pour the milk on the pantry floor!
Leave the bones on the bedroom mat!
Splash the wine on every door!
Dump the crocks in a boiling bawl;
Pound them up with a thumping pole;
And when you've finished, if any are whole,
Send them down the hall to roll!
That's what Bilbo Baggins hates!
So carefully, carefully with the plates! [Book version]
A turning point, in some ways, in Bilbo's life: he's been asked to go on an adventure, but does not want to go. He likes his comfort, his hobbit hole, his fine linens and delicate plates and ancestral silverware. The dwarves, who've lost their land, their home, their story, their history, they find Bilbo's hesitance to be almost offensive. Bilbo is afraid something might break, especially that the something might be him. He would rather see the dwarves go unfed and homeless than take the risk of serving them because he is afraid that he might break a plate, or soil a doily. He is afraid, and so he does not live. He only survives.
But, he learns! He likes his stuff, his comforts. And I'm not anti-comforts or anti-stuff. But he learns through his adventure to let go, and learns that by letting go he is finally alive.
But, we know that serious preachers don't quote Star Trek or recite Dwarven poetry.
So.... Wittgenstein.
Mmm, that felt good.
Schopenhauer. Schillebeeckx. Nietszche. Dag Hammerskjold. Wittgenstein.
As Wittgenstein wrote, “The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.” – but what limit has action?
Jesus never said, “Here's what I want you to believe. Repeat after me.”
He said, “Here's what I want you to do. Follow after me.”
Thankfulness – words. Important! Don't get me wrong. “Thank you, God, for what I have.”
But gratitude – thanksgiving in action.
Thank you, God, share my water.
Thank you, God, share my food.
Thank you, God, share my clothing.
Thank you, God, let me visit you in prison, let me visit you on the street, let me visit you in the hospital...
Words have incredible power to shape worlds. To define reality. To change reality. To take an imagination at warp speed and go places no one has gone before. But they are not omnipotent.
What if our language,
our language as Christians,
the language of our Christian vocation,
not be confined to liminal words of thanksgiving,
a lexicon of sounds and scribblings
inherently limited in comprehension
to only that population which shares it in common,
but what if, instead,
the language of our Christian vocation
be the universal language of gratitude, thankfulness in action,
through service to others,
a kinetic language of movement that does not limit the world
or attempt to circumscribe it,
but which by refusing to live for ourselves
creates ever new lands and capacity
for flourishing the imagination of what is possible. Amen.
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Spending God's Currency
Jesus' Parable of the Talents is often used to talk about stewardship of money - but what if Jesus is also (or alternatively) talking about stewardship of God's currency: the story that God has handed down to us, the story of the faith, which we have been asked (actually, which we have been charged) to share and to live.
How do you share God's story through your words and/or actions?
[you can also listen to this sermon]
“Spending God’s Currency”
Sermon, Year A, Proper 28, November 16,
2014
Plymouth United Church of Christ, Eau
Claire, WI
© Rev. David J. Huber
Focus Scripture: 1 Thess 5:1-11, Mt25:14-30
That parable does end on a bit of a nasty note. But, there is still good news in there.
That parable does end on a bit of a nasty note. But, there is still good news in there.
This
is a parable that you have probably heard used in stewardship
campaigns or sermons before. This often gets brought out to talk
about stewardship, especially about giving money to the church, and
also time and talents. How we steward what God has given us to
support the church. Are we generous, are we sort of generous, or do
we hide our treasure in the ground and hold it for ourselves. This
parable works very well for that. And we are going to be sending out
a stewardship letter soon with the pledge cards for next year.
Because the church does require money to run. It is needed, and that
money comes from us. Comes from those of us who are in the community,
and it requires our time and talents as well as we saw this last
week. You all put in a lot of time and talent putting together our
Holiday Bazaar. Many hours devoted to setting things up. Many talents
offered in baking, working the kitchen to clean dishes or prepare
beautiful plates of food, setting the tables and waiting on them,
bagging up treasures and working the till, talents at keeping the
place beautiful and decorated. Lot of time and talent went into this
last week, and I thank you all for that.
To
be part of the Church is to be part of something bigger. To be part
of the Body of Christ. As it is a part of us, so also part of us goes
into creating it.
But,
I'm not here to give a stewardship sermon or talk about money. Because
I think that parable of talents that we read here is also a parable
about what we do with something else that God gives us: the gift of
God's story. What do we do with God's story? What do we do with the
Good News of Jesus, the Prince of Peace, and the Good News of his
community of love? That's also one of the talents given to us by God
to be good stewards of. What do we do with the story entrusted to us?
And with our life in the church?
I
think many of us hide it in the ground. I know I did. That was the
tradition in the church I grew up in, not to talk about the church
much outside the walls. Not to share the story with other people. We
tended to keep our religion out of the public sphere. It's certainly
a much more comfortable and safe thing to do. But Jesus asked us to
share the message. He commanded us to share the message! "Go out
and make disciples of the nations!" Spread the Good News. Share
it.
As I have worked with my coach this
year and mentor and with others in the group that the Conference has
put together – the six of us ministers working together on church
growth and church vitality and how to be evangelistic – let’s not
be afraid of the word, might as well say it; to do evangelism –
I’ve gotten better at being invitational. I know that I have hit on
that word a lot, being invitational and showing hospitality. But I
do it because it is so important. That also is one of the talents
that God has given us: to share the story. Not talent in the sense
of, say, a musical talent or a talent for language, but talent in the
sense of currency as used in this parable.
I think it is showing fruit among us.
It is showing fruit. It’s a slow process, this relearning. It
certainly has been for me. I never had in any of my seminary training
anything about evangelism or church vitality or growth. None of that.
And most of our seminaries in the UCC, and other mainline traditions,
have very little on evangelism. Some are better at it. The
Evangelistic Churches are, of course, really good at it. This has
been a big learning curve for me, and a new thing. To be more willing
to share with others and invite them in. It can be kind of scary.
But this process is showing fruit.
We’ve had more visitors this year, and because of that invitation.
And the visitors that we’ve had this year, most of them have been
coming back and coming into the life of this congregation. Whether
they become members or not, they’ve become part of the life of this
congregation. We have invited them in and welcome them, and that has
been wonderful to see. Some even have joined and become members. So
this works! We are all in the learning curve of how to do it. I’m
learning, and you can do it as well.
It is amazing what happens when we
don’t put that talent underground but share it. Share the story.
Share the story of God’s love by inviting people in to hear it, but
even more to experience it. To be part of the community.
It is amazing what can happen when we
share our talents and invest them in others’ lives. That’s what
we are about in the church, yes? Changing lives for the better?
Letting people know that there is a God who loves them
unconditionally. That we can have hope in the face of a world that
seems hopeless and frightful, scary, dangerous. That we can live with
one another in a community of peace, love, and dignity, despite our
differences. That our differences don’t have to divide us. That’s
the message of the church, and one of the talents that God has given
us to possess, share, and invest.
And so we have this year opened our
doors to those who have come in. We have also opened our doors to
other groups. I talked about this a few weeks ago, but before
Halloween we opened our doors to the high schools’ Gender Sexuality
Awareness groups so that they could hold a Halloween party here. I
told this story the Sunday after that party, but you might not have
heard it. Many of the teens here were gay, lesbian, transgender,
though not all. At the end of the party, we sat around in a circle
and introduced ourselves and shared some story about who we are. One
boy shared a story that he came to the party with his mom who drove
him here, and as they pulled into the parking lot they weren’t sure
if they were at the right place. They had not been here before, and
were nervous that maybe that they were in the wrong place. And he had
been a bit hesitant about coming to a church anyway, but as they
pulled in they saw the rainbow flag that is in my office window and
as the boy told the story, “I saw the rainbow flag in the window
and I knew that even if I wasn’t at the right place, I knew that at
least I would be safe here.”
Hear that? “At least I would be safe
here.” That’s hospitality and Christian living. How awful that
some of our LGBT brothers and sisters, and others, would even have to
ask the question on the way to a church, “Will I be safe there?”
Heartbreaking, but sadly, some churches are not safe for certain
people. We opened our doors. That’s hospitality and invitation, to
open doors to people.
I am talking this week with some folks
who have asked if they can use our building for doing Reiki, a
Japanese massage, healing, spiritual thing. At the election bake
sale, one of the women working was asked by some people about the
church, so she told them about who we are and what we do, gave them a
tour of the building, and then offered an invitation to them to come
join us for worship. Two of the people she invited joined us last
Sunday! Simply because they had been invited. I’ve followed up with
them by email. I don’t know where that will go, but we’ll see. We
extended an invitation, and a “yes” was the response. That was a
good moment, being invitational.
Next week we have some high schoolers I
met at the Halloween party who will offer a song for us that is about
being thankful that one of them has written.
The first Sunday of December we have
another musician, Steve Carlson, who I met through networking. We had
coffee together, and during out talk I discovered he is a musician.
He gave a CD which is just wonderful. So I asked him to come share
his music with us, and he has agreed to do so, and will be here
December 7.
The Halloween party that we had I
challenged you all to invite someone. I challenged the kids to bring
a friend, and the rest of you to bring someone. We had over 40 people
here. That’s the biggest Halloween party I think since I’ve been
here. And it was because you invited someone to come with you. So
thank you!
I’ve been so happy to see you
inviting people in, and have been inviting our visitors to come be
part of the life of this congregation: to help with our street
ministry, to help with the bazaar, to help bake, to help make
greeting cards for the bazaar. Thank you for inviting visitors, even
though not members, into the fellowship of the church. That’s what
sharing our talents – the currency of love that God gives us –
looks like. The more we share the more we have. There is great power
in invitation and in sharing.
We have that story of God’s love,
grace, the power of God’s healing love, to share. To invite people
in to experience that love. We double the amount of our talents by
sharing them. By investing them in other people.
So I challenge you to double your talents by inviting someone to join you in a church event. Whether it’s a Sunday morning worship, or Thanksgiving Eve. Or to the Community Table on Saturday. Or if you know musicians, invite them and give me their names and contact info and I will invite them. Invite them into quilting. Our Christmas decorating on December 6. Invite someone. Or if you are hesitant to invite them, but know someone who would be a good fit, give me their name and their contact information and I will invite them.
Let us not keep our talents – and
remember, talent here is the story that we have been given and the
community of love that we have, and the hope that we share as Jesus’
people – let us not keep them hidden but put them to work. Let them
shine! Share them with the people around us into this hurting world
that needs to hear a good word. People that need to know that they
are loved, that they do matter, that they have dignity. Let us keep
up that good work and do even more at being invitational, welcoming,
and open.
The master came back and the one who
was given the five talents said, “Look, I have made five more
talents!” and the one who had been given two said, “Look, I have
made two more talents!” and the master said, “Well done, good and
trustworthy servants, you have done well. Enter into the joy of your
master.”
Amen.
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Who Will Jesus Look Like? A sermon from Nov. 9, 2014
How will we know Jesus when he returns unless we practice seeing him in the people around us? He will not come back as a first century Palestinian Jew in a robe and sandals like the pictures and paintings we see of him. And he is also already among us, and he looks like a homeless man, a grieving wife, a child caught in war, the sick and suffering. He looks, in fact, just like our neighbors. And also like us.
What are the habits you practice to help you notice Jesus, such as kindness, invitation, hospitality? Something else? Please share below how you practice, and how you have seen Jesus in your life.
“Who Will Jesus Look Like?”
Sermon, Year A, Proper 27, November 9,
2014
Plymouth United Church of Christ, Eau
Claire, WI
© Rev. David J. Huber
Focus Scripture: Joshua 24:1-3a, 14-25and Matthew 25:1-13
Wait.
Pay attention. Keep the lamps going.
Pay attention while you’re waiting. Be wise about your waiting. Be
prepared for when the Lord returns, which could be at any time! “You
know neither the day nor the hour.” It really seems in some ways
more of an Advent lesson. Advent being that time before Christmas
when we are waiting for Jesus to be born, waiting for God to break
into our world. But in a sense, all time is Advent time. All time is
waiting time. As we wait and we wait for Jesus may ask ourselves, “I
wonder when Jesus is going to show up?” Or, “I wonder when Jesus
is going to show up.”
Because you never know. You just never
know you will come to face to face with Jesus. We don’t know the
hour or the time. We just never know when we will come face to face
with Jesus. And when we do, will we be ready? Will we know that it is
Jesus? Perhaps if you have to ask that question, then maybe the
answer is self evident. Will you have brought enough oil, so to
speak? Will the lamps be trimmed and burning when it happens? Will we
be ready?
Which I kind of take to mean, “Have
you been preparing? Have we been preparing ourselves for the return
to come face to face with Jesus? Have we been practicing what that
might involve, or what we might do if it happened?”
Much as soldiers will drill, and drill,
and drill; and police and firefighters run scenarios and practice and
run drills; and astronauts train on simulators to try to practice
every possible emergency scenario. Practice and practice and practice
so that when something unusual happens, they are ready and prepared.
It’s not so new when it happens. It might be a surprise, but they
know how to handle it. “This is a surprise, but thankfully I have
the tools to deal with it!” They are ready for it> They have the
mental memory and the physical memory, and they can go on a kind of
autopilot because they have rehearsed it, practiced it, they’ve
been through it.
For the follower of Jesus, we can
practice as well. Practice to prepare to greet Jesus if he returns.
We could just sit back and say, “Well, if it’s Jesus, of course –
of course! – I will greet him and say hello and treat him well”
and do whatever we might think that we ought to do. “Of course, if
it’s Jesus, I’ll greet him. I don’t need to practice that.”
But how will you know if it’s Jesus?
But how will you know if it’s Jesus
unless we’ve practiced?
Unless we’ve practiced by greeting
others as though they were Jesus. By greeting others as though they
were Jesus. Because we may think that we will know Jesus. I mean,
we’ve seen the pictures, right? The paintings, the drawings of
Jesus. We know what he’s going to look like. He has long brown
hair, white robe, sandals, maybe or maybe not a beard. If it’s
November I’d like to think that Jesus would at least have a beard
in solidarity with no-shave November for men’s health.
We’ve seen the pictures of Jesus,
right?
But I don’t know. I don’t think
Jesus is going to look like that. I don’t think we’re waiting for
a guy with long hair, a white robe, and sandals. That would be too
obvious. It’s also the dress of a first century Palestinian Jew,
not someone of today. That’s a very idealized situation to think
that Jesus will look like the pictures. To think that Jesus will
conform to our idealized expectations, to assume that there is only
one way he might manifest, is to not be prepared.
It’s equivalent to telling a police
officer, “You don’t need to train. You will know who the bad guys
are. They’ll be obvious. And when you say ‘stop’ they will
stop.” Or to tell the firefighter they don’t need to practice
because it’s just throwing water on a fire. How hard is that?
Nothing unusual. It’ll be okay.
We need practice. To rehearse it. Jesus
is not going to show up as a first century Palestinian Jew in a white
robe, long hair, and sandals. Jesus is going to show up however he
wants to. Jesus will show up as the smelly homeless man asking for a
meal. Jesus will show up as the mother at Shopko or Randy’s who has
the three out of control kids, who isn’t a bad mom wanting our
judgment but is a single mom trying to keep things together after her
husband died or got shipped off to Iraq or Afghanistan. Or Jesus will
show up as the immigrant who wants a better place to live and a
better life for his children. Or the person who comes into our
sanctuary for the first time and doesn’t know the prayers, or the
proper way to be a Christian in worship, and perhaps does some things
not like we do, or makes noise, or does whatever it is that might
make us uncomfortable. But we’re the hosts – we don’t get to be
uncomfortable. Jesus can look like anyone. Jesus will look like the
people downtown who go to Sojourners. The people that you work with.
The people eating at Community Table. Jesus looks like our shut-ins,
and people in the hospital, and children who are in war, and soldiers
who are in war. And Jesus looks like you. Like us. Like all of us.
That’s what Jesus looks like, because
we are all the face of Jesus. Whatever we do to the least of these,
we do to Jesus. We are all the face of Jesus as are those around us.
Jesus looks like us. Especially Jesus looks like an opportunity to
serve or to show hospitality, to be invitational, to be gracious. To
follow Jesus is to follow this call to hospitality and to be
invitational. To be ready, therefore, for when Jesus appears by
greeting all and treating all as though they really are Jesus.
Because they are.
To fail at greeting the least, or even
to fail at greeting the greatest, is to be the bridesmaid that has no
oil and is not ready, as we serve God and we serve Jesus.
There is that choice that Joshua offers
the people. He offers a choice: serve whatever gods you want, or
serve the LORD, the God who rescued you, the God of Abraham, the God
of creation.
I will tell you a story. When I was a
teenager, I was 13 or 14, maybe 8th or 9th
grade. I was in junior high. I was at school one day, just a regular
normal day. Nothing unusual that day, except for what happened to me.
At some point during the day, and I don’t remember how this
happened – perhaps I saw it written down somewhere, but I think it
was the Holy Spirit whispering in my ear – but as I sat in a class
that day I heard something whisper in my ear, and it said, “Joshua
24:15”. Joshua 24:15. Joshua 24:15. Over and over, all day.
When I got home, I rushed to find a
Bible and I pulled it out to look this up. It took a while because I
wasn’t particularly biblically literate. I wasn’t sure where
Joshua was to be found. I wasn’t even sure if Joshua was a Bible
thing, but it seemed like something that ought to be in the Bible
with that name and a number and a colon and a number. So I went to
the Bible, and opened it up, and lo and behold, there it was!
And it was one of the verses we read
today. Right there in front of me.
It says, “Now if you are unwilling to
serve the LORD, choose this day whom you will serve. Whether the gods
your ancestors served in the region beyond the river, or the gods of
the Amorites in whose land you are living. But as for me and my
household, we will serve the LORD.”
BAM! There it was. All laid out for me.
It hit me: That was it! I had no idea what an Amorite was, or even
who Joshua was, or what the context was, but I understood that line:
As for me and my household, we will serve the LORD.
And so began a lifetime of trying to
live by that idea of serving the LORD, however imperfectly I do it.
That has been one of those verses that has been in my head fore a
long, long time. This idea of serving the LORD. We serve the LORD by
serving one another. We serve the LORD by greeting people. We serve
the LORD by being ready, by greeting people as though they might be
Jesus. Not to be stingy with our lamp oil, but to keep it flowing and
keep it burning because that’s a lamp oil we will never run out of.
God will always give us more/ We can stop the flow. We have control
of that. We can choose to be stingy, or not do what we’re called to
do. But that lamp oil will always be there.
So we practice, and to be ready to
greet Jesus himself and if we’re lucky, or keep our hearts open,
hopefully at some point we will realize and see that Jesus has always
been with us. He has always been around us. He has been here in the
people who surround us. Jesus has always been there, all along, just
hoping that we would notice and say hello, offer an invitation, be
gracious, show hospitality.
And so may we all notice and see Jesus
more as we serve the Lord through our hospitality, and through our
invitations, and through our greetings, and keep our lamps trimmed
and burning all the time.
Amen.
Death is Not the End - Sermon for All Souls/Saints Day 2014
On All Souls/Saints Day at Plymouth church, we take time to remember those in the congregation who died in the past year, and also offer time to remember any friends or family as well. It is a day to remember and give honor to the dead who touched our lives in one way or another and made us into the people we are.
Who has died that you give honor to, or shed a tear or form a smile when you remember them? Family members, favorite teachers, mentors in the church or in your profession, community members who made a difference, perhaps even a pet or someone you never knew but admired from a distance, such as a musician, political leader, etc.
Who are you remembering right now?
Please share below.
“Death Is Not the End”
Sermon, Year A, All Souls and All
Saints Day, November 2, 2014
Plymouth United Church of Christ, Eau
Claire, WI
© Rev. David J. Huber
Focus Scripture: Rev. 7:9-17 and Matthew 5:1-13
Today is All Saints/All Souls Day. We
have a lot of music and a lot of prayers today, so I will let those
do most of the speaking. I’m not going to talk much here.
If you’ve been here for a funeral or
a memorial service, you’ve heard the message that I tend to give.
You’ve heard my words about how we, as followers of Jesus, are an
Easter people. Not people of death, but people of life, because God
is a God of life. And even after our bodies die, we live on in
eternal life with God and with all who have gone before us. We don’t
know what that looks like or how it works, but we have that assurance
that we go on. Even after our bodies die.
Our God is a God of life. A God of
life, love, and hope. Not a God of death, wrath, and anger, but a God
of life, hope, and abundant love. So the focus is not on the
afterlife, but on this life. The life that we are living. And on this
day, we can look to the lives of the saints who have gone before us.
The saints who have passed on our traditions for almost two thousand
years in the Church. Look to how they lived while we are alive to see
how to live. To look at the lives of others of whatever faith they
are from, who have shown us how to live. Those who have shown us how
to be God’s people as we strive to create God’s realm here on
earth. God’s vision here on earth.
Those who have gone before us that we
remember today have shown us what a life of faith looks like. How to
live faithfully. Some of them have also shown us how to die
faithfully. How to die with dignity, with grace, with love and
courage, and with faith in the face of death. How to face our
mortality even as we live as fully as we dare to live in God’s
abundant life, embracing the life that God wants us to live. So today
is a day to remember those who have died. And to do so by celebrating
and remembering how they showed us to live. What they showed us, what
they taught us as they passed on their faith to us as they shared
fellowship with us here in the church, and also outside the church as
they served their families, their friends, and their community. We
can remember what we have learned from them by sharing meals and
passing on stories. We are a people who love stories and communicate
with them. We pass them on to the next generation, whether it be
sharing them here at church, or at the supper table at home, around a
campfire late at night or in the car on long trips, or family
gatherings on holidays.
Through us these people live on.
Through stories, through what they shared with us and taught us. They
also live on in our memories. Our remembrances of them. How we
remember and share stories about them, they will live on in us as
they live on with God. As we live our lives here and now we stand on
the shoulders of the people that we remember today. The church that
they built, the world they built, the community they built for us. We
stand on the shoulders of those who have lifted us up to show us
grander horizons, pointing us toward God, saying, “Live this way!
Go this way!”
And so thanks be to God this day for
all of the saints that we remember. The ones that we will read the
names of, and the ones that will be remembered by us silently or in
other ways. Thanks be to God for all the saints we remember today.
Amen.
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