Category: Health

  • What Moves You?

    Christ_cleans_leper_man-e1457980075499Mark uses miracle stories in his gospel to illustrate a point the way Matthew and Luke use parables for that purpose in theirs. Jesus’ cleansing of a leper as recorded in Mark 1:40-45 is an example.

    A man who was afflicted with leprosy confronted Jesus. The leper broke the code of ceremonial cleanliness just by speaking to Jesus. It was a very bold thing to do. Here is one who is considered unclean and wretched by his people because he has contracted a hideous disease. Leprosy represented sin to the people of Jesus’ day and, like sin, it was considered contagious, more to be cleansed than healed. 

    A leper was banished from the community and had to dwell alone or with other lepers outside the community. This man had to go about with torn clothes, bared head, and a covering upon his upper lip. As he went, he was required to give warning of his polluted presence with the cry, “Unclean! Unclean!” The leper had not only to bear the physical pain of his disease, he had to bear the mental anguish and heartbreak of being completely banished from human society and totally shunned. So, it is incredible that he would approach Jesus at all, let alone dare to speak to him.

    Even more remarkable than that is the fact that Jesus responded to him as he did. He could have run away. He could have had the leper killed. He could have reacted with horror. But he didn’t. Instead, we are told in the story that his response was one of compassion and understanding. Jesus was “moved with pity.” He broke the code and defiled himself when he reached out and touched the leper. In so doing, his power over evil was demonstrated by a miraculous cure. He broke the law and, at the same time, he fulfilled it.

    Then he sent the man to the priest and in so doing placed before the religious establishment a difficult problem. Only the priest could certify the cure. To reject it would be to break the code. To accept it would be to acknowledge Jesus’ power and authority. To make matters even worse, this cleansed leper couldn’t keep all of this to himself, even though Jesus had asked him to. Is it any surprise?

    In this miracle story, we see that it was Jesus’ nature to be moved by the sight of human need. But sympathy isn’t worth a dime unless it leads to action. Jesus was first moved to pity, then to action. He continues to be moved to compassion and he still reaches out and touches those in need of help. People who have experienced this compassionate power find themselves moved. They become enthusiastic about life and they glorify God in whatever they do.

    I’ve always enjoyed the movie Bad News Bears. In it, there is a character named Lupus. Lupus is a little boy who had a runny nose all the time and was smaller than the others. He had learned to stay in the background because that’s where everyone else told him he belonged. One day, some boys on another team put ketchup in his hat and slapped it back on his head. One of his teammates took both of them on in defense of Lupus. He lost the fight, but afterwards, Lupus said to him, “You’re the first person who ever took up for me.” A short time later, the coach sent Lupus in to play during the championship game and he actually caught a fly ball. Nothing could ever stop Lupus again because someone finally believed in him. That gave him the courage to get out of the background and take his God-given place as a full-fledged member of the team.

    Like the story of the cleansing of the leper, the story of Lupus is a miracle story. It tells us what can happen on an infinitely greater plane when Jesus Christ touches a human life. His touch tells us that he believes in us and when we know that touch, we’ll never be the same. We’ll have a new perspective on life, a new confidence in ourselves, and a new ability to reach out to others, especially those who have been pushed into the background, marginalized, and condemned.

    Today is a good day to keep my eyes open to watch for a miracle. Today is a good day to experience a miracle for myself. Today is a good day to help a miracle happen for someone else. God, let me live today in miraculous expectation!

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • A Virtual Hug for Families With Children and Youth

    This message is addressed to families with children and youth and those who care about them.

    We have reached a point of frustration with this pandemic that is about to be compounded by the myriad of issues surrounding the opening of school. Our kids are anxious about what that is going to look like. Parents are concerned not only for their safety if they return in person, but also for the challenges raised if they participate in a virtual classroom. Either way, many parents will have to make a choice between family and employment, sooner or later.

    Then, there are the people who make school happen – the teachers, counselors, administrators, cafeteria workers, custodians, bus drivers, and others without whom schools in normal conditions would simply stop working. They, too, risk exposure to the Coronavirus if the students return to the campus. What happens to a classroom of students when the teacher tests positive or a busload of students when a driver tests positive? Do they all go into quarantine at home? Who looks after them? A dozen other questions come to mind, but I’ll stop there.

    Several weeks ago, St. Martin’s made the painful decision not to reopen our school. The change in student/teacher ratio, the added sanitation protocols, announcements of free public school early childhood programs in the area, no liability coverage for COVID-19-related incidents, a bleak financial outlook, along with the aforementioned questions, presented a perfect storm of obstacles. We could not see a way to open the school and safeguard the health and well-being of our kids and our teachers.

    All that said, I do understand the difficult decisions public and other independent schools are facing. The decisions their leaders must make and the decisions parents and families must make are daunting. Like you, I wish I knew the right answer. But I don’t.

    What I do know is this:

    • The people of St. Martin's will not shame parents for whatever difficult decisions they make.
    • The people of St. Martin's will stand by our parents, pray with you, and do whatever we can to help you uphold what you think is best for your children and youth.
    • The people of St. Martin's will remain steadfast in offering an abundance of faith, hope, and love to parents and families.
    • When this is over – and it will eventually end – the people of St. Martin's will be here for you and rejoice to see your faces reflecting the light of God’s countenance, the God who always sees us through both the bad times and the good times. Maybe that is actually the light at the end of this tunnel!

    I remind you of St. Paul’s words, which we read last Sunday, in the hope that you will let them resonate in your heart and mind during this time when all these things conspire against us and seem so overwhelming:

    We know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose…What then are we to say about these things? If God is for us, who is against us?…Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will hardship, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?…No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.  (Romans 8:28, 31, 35, 37-39)

    May this message be a great big virtual hug for our families with children and youth. We love you!

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • What then are we to say about these things?

    NBC News carried a report on Wednesday of this week concerning a so-called Bible teacher who is claiming that this coronavirus pandemic is the consequence of God’s wrath having been ignited by “gays, people with depraved minds, and environmentalists.” Before this is over, I’m sure we will be subjected to more of the same kind of wild declarations. I don’t know who is more dangerous; the people who say such things or the people who believe them.

    Alas, there have always been and perhaps always will be those who believe God uses events such as pandemics and natural disasters to punish humanity and those who try to pinpoint the end of history when God’s judgment will be rendered.

    These issues have been around so long we even have terms for theological discourse concerning them. For example, Theodicy attempts to deal with how and why a benevolent God allows evil and suffering. And, Eschatology is the study of questions about the final events of history or the ultimate destiny of humanity.

    Our response to human tragedy and our beliefs about God’s intentions probably say more about our own personality and outlook on life than about God. It is understandable when people are hurting and need to assign blame for the events that caused harm. And people whose experience of life involves heavy doses of righteous indignation and divine retribution naturally want God to take charge and straighten out everybody they disapprove of.

    For my own part, I’m impressed with the complexity of the physical universe. The more science discovers about things like quarks, chaos, leptons, and pheromones, the more my view of the Divine Being expands. Why would God go to so much trouble just to perplex humanity and then to destroy us?  Isn’t it just as likely that God created all things for good and gave human beings the resources to discover ways to cherish and protect creation and its creatures? For me, life is one big epiphany!

    When I peer into suffering, I see the God of compassion not causing harm but caring for those who are hurting. When I ponder the end of history, what comes to mind is not a so-called “rapture” or celestial supreme court, but instead a cosmic “Ah-ha” experience in which “every knee shall bow and every tongue shall confess” (Isaiah 45:23, Romans 14:11, and Philippians 2:10,11).

    The issues are far from settled and the discourse will continue. Those who need a wrathful God and an end of things characterized by judgment and retribution have plenty of preachers and churches to reinforce their viewpoints. But I am grateful to be a part of a church that believes “the universe is good, that it is the work of a single loving God who creates, sustains, and directs it” (BCP, 846). I am privileged to foster a view of the Christian hope, which is “to live with confidence in newness and fullness of life, and await the coming of Christ in glory, and the completion of God’s purpose for the world” (BCP, 861).

    St. Paul says it so beautifully in these words from the Letter to the Romans: “What then are we to say about these things? If God is for us, who is against us?… Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will hardship, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?… No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:31, 35, 37-39).

    Here is a prayer from the 1928 Book of Common Prayer that I invite you to pray during this difficult time.

    In Time of Great Sickness and Mortality.

    O most mighty and merciful God, in this time of grievous sickness, we flee unto thee for succour. Deliver us, we beseech thee, from our peril; give strength and skill to all those who minister to the sick; prosper the means made use of for their cure; and grant that, perceiving how frail and uncertain our life is, we may apply our hearts unto that heavenly wisdom which leadeth to eternal life; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. (Page 45, The Book of Common Prayer, 1928)

    God bless and protect you and those whom you love.

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • Righteousness and Rewards

    The Gospel for The Fourth Sunday in Lent this year is John 9:1-41. Jesus seems to give a non-answer to a very serious question about a blind man’s suffering.

    Rabbi Harold Kushner's book, When Bad Things Happen to Good People, was a best seller. In the book, the rabbi addresses the haunting question about the correlation between sin and suffering, about righteousness and rewards. Rabbi Kushner says it all has to do with luck. There is good luck and there is bad luck – neither of which is dependent upon a person's goodness or badness. There is a kind of randomness to life.

    Today, we want explanations, answers that make sense to us and reassure us that we are okay. Thousands perish of AIDS and famine in Africa, people are crushed in an earthquake in Haiti or Chile, hurricanes destroy lives and property in Puerto Rico and the British Virgin Islands, floodwaters destroy people's homes, terrorists gun down innocent people in the streets, and the Coronavirus Pandemic casts a pall of sickness, unemployment, economic calamity, and death across our planet. How can God be good and still allow bad things like these to inflict good people like us?

    Jesus' own disciples asked him questions like that. “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” Jesus didn't take Rabbi Kushner's approach. In today's climate, Jesus wouldn't win any awards in the pastoral care department either. He said, “Neither. This man was born blind so that the glory of God might be revealed.” Consistently, Jesus denies any direct correlation between the kind of person you are and what happens to you. In another instance he declares that, God “makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the righteous and on the unrighteous” (Matthew 5:45).

    Why did this happen to me? Probably, for no good reason. Bad things happen to the good and the bad all the time. The notion that only good things happen to good people was put to rest when they crucified Jesus. Now, this same Jesus takes our question and makes it cruciform: can you trust God – in joy or in pain – to be your God? Can you love God without linking your love to the cards life deals you?

    And then, we have televangelists who tell us that this pandemic is divine retribution for some views people have on various social issues. They want us to believe that if we don’t agree with their particular view of things, God will smite somebody at random and it will be our fault. That’s a pretty scary way to look at our God.

    God's love carries no promises about good or bad save the promise that God will not allow anything worse to happen to you than happened to God’s own Son and that beyond sickness and death, life is changed, not ended.

    Saint Augustine of Hippo mused over the great suffering that occurred when the barbarians sacked Rome. He noted in his City of God that when the barbarians raped and pillaged, Christians suffered just as much as non-Christians. Faith in Christ did not make them immune to pain and tragedy. Augustine wrote, “Christians differ from Pagans, not in the ills which befall them but in what they do with the ills that befall them.” The Christian faith does not give us a way around tragedy. It gives us a way through it!

    What do we do with our neat little distinctions in a church where we think being nice is the way to salvation? God's sunshine and rain keep blurring them! This is the way God responds to our questions – not with answers that flatter us, or make the world simpler than it really is, but with God’s life given for us, that we might more fully give our lives to God.

    So, during this time of anxiety, let's look for ways for God might be manifested in our lives and ways God can use us to bring peace and calm and hope to others. We don’t know how long this social distancing will last nor do we know the full impact of this health crisis. Gathering together is central to how we have always done Church but we can't do it right now. We are trying to learn and practice more and new ways to be Church when we can’t physically meet together. Worship will be streamed by video each weekend we are apart. Our clergy and pastoral care ministry are reaching out to people in the parish who are vulnerable. We are encouraging everyone to connect to our online directory (Breeze). We've set up a Helping Hands Network in order to learn who needs to receive help and who is willing to provide help. Groups are meeting via video, teleconferences, and email chains. When we need to get important information out, we will be more redundant than usual, employing a variety of avenues including social media, email, voicemail, and text messaging.

    If you have put off learning how to use new technology in order to communicate with others, please, please find someone to help you learn what you need to do today! We need to see each other’s faces and hear each other’s voices. This situation is not likely to be over for months. Our faith compels and equips us to find the way through this and do it together!

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

     

  • Inasmuch

    Senior Warden Tom Keyse and I spent a couple of hours today with The Rev'd Lynne Butler, CEO and Executive Director of  Metro Caring, Denver's leading frontline hunger prevention organization. I was heartened by everything I saw. This is the kind of place that offers real hope to our neighbors in need.

    Just a few of the programs I learned about are: Metro Caring_Logo_color

    • Healthful Foods Access
    • Nutrition and Gardening Education
    • Seeds for Success Job Training
    • Self Sufficiency Counseling
    • Financial Literacy Education
    • Identification Document Assistance
    • Metro Caring Market
    • Legislative Action
    • Benefits Enrollment Assistance

    Saint John’s Cathedral has members who serve on the board or volunteer in one or more programs. I saw some of those members who were exercising faithful stewardship of their time by sitting with guests of Metro Caring, engaging in conversation, listening, and demonstrating genuine care. It was as if I were witnessing a living tableau of the scene described in the twenty-fifth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew:

    When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on the throne of his glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats, and he will put the sheep at his right hand and the goats at the left. Then the king will say to those at his right hand, “Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.” Then the righteous will answer him, “Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry and gave you food, or thirsty and gave you something to drink? And when was it that we saw you a stranger and welcomed you, or naked and gave you clothing? And when was it that we saw you sick or in prison and visited you?” And the king will answer them, “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.” (Mt. 25:31-36)

    During lunch after our tour, Lynne told us that one out of four children in this state faces hunger. She also told me that a person enrolled in SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) in Colorado receives $126 per month in food stamps. That’s far less than I would have imagined. She then told me about a challenge that was given to Denver religious leaders in June. Each of us is asked to personally contribute $126 to Metro Caring and then to ask 126 more people to contribute the same amount. If even one of us did that, it would raise $16,000. The funds raised in this campaign will be used by Metro Caring to fight hunger in the following ways:

    • Reduce local food waste to ensure all have enough
    • End food deserts by going mobile
    • End hunger at its root through Seeds for Success, Metro Caring’s signature employment training program for food-industry jobs.

    In several ways, it is an awkward time to be doing this because of the start up of fall stewardship campaigns among my friends around the country. However, inasmuch as I am so impressed with the good work being done through Metro Caring, I’m going to make my contribution. If you are moved to do likewise with a gift over and above what you plan to give to your faith community, please do so. This is a personal suggestion and not a Cathedral campaign. Contributions can be made online or by mailing a check to:

    Metro Caring
    P.O. Box 300459
    Denver, CO 80203

    Everything I saw today convinces me that Metro Caring will exercise faithful stewardship over our gifts, hope will be restored, and lives will be transformed.

    I’ll see you in Church!

    Ron Short Sig Blue 

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ronald D. Pogue
    Interim Dean
    Saint John's Cathedral
    Denver, Colorado

     

  • The First Fruits Principle and Recovery of the Spirit of Generosity

    First Fruits Offering HebrewThe theme of our stewardship education emphasis at Calvary this fall is “First Fruits.”  The concept of first fruits in the Judeo-Christian tradition has its roots in practices that existed long before references appeared in the Hebrew Scriptures.  The faithful were expected to bring the first tenth (tithe) of their harvest to the temple and offer it to God. “Put the first of the fruit which you harvest into a basket, and set the basket down before the Lord your God, and rejoice in all the good which the Lord has given to you” (Deuteronomy 26:1-15).

    Then, as now, people raised questions about what was to be included in this first fruits offering.  For example, today it is not uncommon to hear someone ask, “Is the tithe to be calculated before or after taxes?”  The Temple authorities were not hesitant about providing specific answers to questions like that.  For example, agricultural product from non-Jews were not to be included in their offering.  It had to be from their own crops; not from fund-raising!  And, the portion of the crop at the corners of the fields and whatever was dropped in the fields was not to be included in the first fruits offering; that was charity for the poor and foreigners passing through.  So, this offering did not satisfy the requirements of charity and hospitality.

    In the Christian Testament, St. Paul uses this harvest language to describe the Risen Christ.  “But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who have died.  For since death came through a human being, the resurrection of the dead has also come through a human being; for as all die in Adam, so all will be made alive in Christ. But each in his own order: Christ the first fruits, then at his coming those who belong to Christ” (I Cor. 15:20-23).

    St. Paul also draws upon the first fruits principle when writing about the salvation of the Gentiles, “If the part of the dough offered as first fruits is holy, then the whole batch is holy; and if the root is holy, then the branches also are holy” (Romans 11:16).  Jesus Christ, according to Paul’s gospel, is God’s own first fruits offering on behalf of humanity and creation itself. The original first fruits were the first, the best, the ripest, and the most valuable of the fruits of the earth. For Christians, Christ is the first to rise from death.  As the first fruits sanctified the rest of the harvest, represented the whole, permitted and ensured the harvest, so Christ arose from the earth to new life and sanctified this new life for his followers.  Our lives in Christ are the rest of the harvest.  Jesus Christ, the first fruits, has sanctified us and the life we share with him.

    So, what does this have to do with us and our self-examination as we consider our vocation as faithful stewards of God’s bounty?  The principle of first fruits is at the I heart of how we think and act as followers of Christ.  When we learn to put Christ first and to offer the first of everything we have to him, that offering spills over into the rest of our lives.

    Our Church teaches that the tithe (10%) is the minimum biblical standard for Christian stewardship.  Far be it from me to object to the canons of the Church!  However, my reading of the Bible, especially the New Testament, tells me that the minimum standard is 100%.  The tithe, the first tenth offered to God for God’s purposes, represents a spiritual discipline that sanctifies everything else in our lives.  It helps us make conscious and faithful decisions about what we do with the remaining 90%.  Whatever we have – 100% – whether spent, saved, or given away, is a sacred trust from God.  The first fruits, the tithe, forms our perspective in ways that help us remember that everything belongs to God and we have the privilege of being stewards of it.  That is a vocation given to no other creature.  It is what makes us truly human and is a necessary aspect of civility.  We are called to be the givers.
    Eastman-portrait
    This week, as I have been reflecting upon this theme, I came across the words of a very wise person, Ohiyesa, (Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman) a Wahpeton Santee Sioux.  He said, “It was our belief that the love of possessions is a weakness to be overcome. Its appeal is to the material part, and if allowed its way, it will in time disturb one's spiritual balance. Therefore, children must early learn the beauty of generosity. They are taught to give what they prize most, that they may taste the happiness of giving.”  He also said, “As a child I understood how to give; I have forgotten this grace since I became civilized.”

    When we look at civilization as we know it today, we’d have to agree with Ohiyesa that many have forgotten how to give.  That is a fundamental reason for war, economic woes, crime, violence, the breakdown of families and communities, and a host of other ills that plague us.  We, as a civilization, have not done a very good job of teaching our children and one another the necessary discipline of generosity.  Like Ohiyesa, many of us have forgotten.

    Christians still have an opportunity to change that.  And, in order to do so, we must encourage one another in ways that will result in the change, starting with the first fruits.  If we will remind one another of this ancient principle and teach it to our children, God will use us to transform the world in ways we cannot begin to imagine.  If you are concerned that the remaining 90% won’t be enough, I invite you to remember these words of encouragement from St. Paul, “God will make you rich enough so that you can always be generous” (2 Corinthians 9:11).

    Let’s give it a try!

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Something More About Making Church a Safe Place

    Like many other denominations, The Episcopal Church has developed a series of courses that are intended to help make the Church a safe place.  We have courses called Safeguarding God’s Children, Preventing Sexual Harrassment in the Church, and Preventing Sexual Exploitation in the Church. Those who work with children and youth, clergy, employees, vestries, and others are required to take this training.

    I’ve been thinking it would be helpful to add a course to help our leaders recognize and address other behaviors that compromise the wellbeing of our communities of faith. To be truly safe places – physically, emotionally, and spiritually – our congregations and schools need to be havens of blessing and places of peace where people know they will not be subjected to emotional terrorism, disrespectful criticism, gossip, bullying, power and control tactics, and other such characteristically unchristian behaviors. 

    Well-meaning clergy and leaders often allow people to behave in these ways because of some notion that disruptive behavior has as much of a place in the Church as any.  We’ve been heard to say, “Bless her heart, that’s just Mattie.  We’ve just learned to tolerate her.”  Hmmmm…  Really?  Why would we tolerate behavior that undermines our efforts to serve Christ “in unity, constancy, and peace?”  Why would we ignore words and actions that are in stark contrast to the Baptismal Covenant in which we promise to “persevere in resisting evil…proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ…seek and serve Christ in all persons…strive for justice and peace…respect the dignity of every human being?”

    My interest in this topic is heightened by next Sunday’s Gospel (John 2:13-22). There is Jesus standing in the Jerusalem temple as Feast of Passover was drawing near. The scribes and Pharisees he has encountered so far in his ministry make it clear that Jerusalem, the center of their power and influence, is a dangerous place for him. Nevertheless, it is the center of religious life, and the temple is the most sacred of places. It is natural that he would want to be there in spite of the risks.  Jerusalem is the holy city of that time and the temple its most holy place. One would expect it to embody all that invokes the most holy feelings. In a people set apart, commanded to behave in “peculiar” ways, one would expect no less. Yet what Jesus finds is no different from the street outside the temple gates.

    Some scholars say that his outrage came from the dishonest commerce going on. Animals offered for ritual sacrifice had to meet rigid requirements. Those purchased from approved temple vendors were guaranteed to be acceptable. Those brought from home may not be. Purchases could only be made with temple currency. It has been suggested that both the sacrifice acceptance policies and the required currency exchanges were opportunities for corruption that created a scandal and an additional burden for the poor. These abuses would have given Jesus adequate cause for righteous indignation but he may have had reason enough without them.

    Quite simply, this holy place looked just like the marketplace. What should have been a model of another way of living, of relating to one another, an example of God's ways, had become no different from the ways of the world. “The model of God had become the mimic of man.”  Jesus expected his Father’s House to be a House of Prayer. 

    As Christians, we are called to be witnesses to our neighbors, not their clones. If our beliefs do not lead to conforming our lives to the life of Christ, what is the point of believing?  If the ways in which we conduct our affairs in the Church are indistinguishable from the ways of secular commerce, how can we sincerely pray “thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven?”

    Our Baptismal Covenant calls us to be peculiar in the eyes of the world. Our presence in divine worship expresses our desire to do so for the purpose of affirming Christ's presence wherever we may be. It is not an easy task. But it is a task of such importance that it gives our lives a richness of meaning and purpose that transcends anything offered by the world. 

    The history of the world, and especially our religious history, suggests that sin can always draw us from our best intentions. Will we continue to be tempted to think churches should be run more like business instead of suggesting that business would be better if they were run more like Church? Will we look for salvation in self-help publications instead of the holy habits of prayer, Sabbath keeping, offerings, and worship? Like Paul, we find ourselves saying "For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do."

    I submit that critical, disrespectful, grouchy, disruptive behavior should not be tolerated in our communities of faith any more than Jesus tolerated those unholy behaviors in the temple. Each one of us can be a better manager of our own behavior and attitude.  We can also watch over one another in love and confront our sisters and brothers in Christ when their words and deeds have a negative impact on the safety and sanctity of our faith communities.

    There are times when to be “nice” is to avoid being “Christian.”  After all, Jesus was anything but “nice” to the people he confronted in the temple.  Take comfort from the spectacle of Jesus overturning the tables of the moneychangers. Know that this same strength, courage, and righteousness upholds us every day of our lives and especially when we need to say to the Matties of our congregations, “No! That tone is not acceptable here among us. It disturbs our peace and Jesus has higher expectations.”

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Stewardship is in our DNA.

    Like many other congregations in America, ours is emphasizing stewardship of financial resources at this time of year.  Next Sunday, we’ll invite worshipers to fill out new commitment cards and bring them to the Altar.  Then, over the next couple of months, we’ll do everything possible to persuade everyone in the congregation to make a new, and hopefully increased, pledge of financial support of God’s work for the coming year.

    I'm not sure why we have to work at this so hard to get Christians to do something so central to the Christian way of life.  It came to my attention years ago that a substantial number of Christians consider the topic of stewardship to be less popular than some other ones.  In fact, on several occasions, I’ve had church members suggest that I soft-pedal stewardship because some people might get upset.  I’ve never taken that advice and here’s why.

    Over half of the recorded sayings of Jesus Christ have to do with possessions.  Jesus clearly knew how often possessions interfere with our relationship with God, our neighbors, and even our own spiritual identity.  Think about it.  Don’t most wars, lawsuits, family feuds, and legislative battles finally boil down to who possesses what and how much?

    There is an event in the life of Jesus that illustrates this aspect of Jesus message.  The story was so important to early Christians that it is recorded almost word for word in all three synoptic gospels.  A rich man approached Jesus and asked, “Master, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus responded by telling him the only thing left for him to do was to sell all his possessions, give the money to the poor, and follow Jesus.  The man couldn’t do it.  Why?  He was possessed by his possessions.  He relied on his possessions too much.  He derived too much of his identity, security, and status from his possessions.  Jesus wanted to liberate people from whatever enslaved them and in this instance, the man was a slave to his possessions.  Jesus was not condemning wealth.  He was trying to help a man find the freedom and joy that comes from living in a right relationship with God, his neighbor, and his stuff!

    Following the example of Jesus, I believe one of the most important aspects of my priestly vocation is to help people have a healthy relationship with their possessions so that all the other relationships of their lives will be healthier and they will know the kind of freedom Jesus called “eternal life.”

    Another reason I believe it is important to help people be faithful stewards is because the story of stewardship is grounded in the story of creation.  In the beginning, when God created human beings, our role as stewards of all that God has made was imbedded into our DNA.  As the only creature made in the likeness of God, humans have the distinct privilege and responsibility of managing all the resources God has provided in ways that further God’s creative and redemptive purposes. 

    When human creatures abdicate their role as stewards, they lower themselves in the pecking order of creation.  They view themselves as the subjects of their possessions or the elements.  Before long, they make idols and their idols stand between them and God.  As Martin Luther once observed, "Whatever your heart clings to and confides in, that is really your god."  The vocation to be stewards of creation is one of the fundamental things that makes us human!  It is in exercising stewardship that we become more fully human and fulfill our God-given destiny in the ongoing progress of creation.

    Fianlly, it is important to help the community of Christian people see how necessary the work and witness of the community is to the ongoing redemptive mission of Christ.  The first thing Jesus did in his public ministry was to form a community. Throughout his ministry, he worked to strengthen that community and form them into an apostolic, missionary force.  The last thing he did before his Ascension was to send that community into the world to bear his message and transform lives.  We give a portion of the money and time and other resources that have been entrusted to us for the work Jesus Christ wants to be done through the community he called into being.  When the community of Christ's followers is healthy and vibrant, the apostolic witness impacts the mission field at our doorstep in powerful, divine ways.  We can't be faithful stewards if we neglect the community into which we are baptized and to which Christ has entrusted so much of his redemptive work.

    When our lives are focused on stewardship instead of ownership, we experience greater freedom.  When we embrace the pattern of Jesus’ life that is characterized not by having but by giving, our relationships are transformed.  When we fulfill our vocation as stewards of creation, we become more fully human and realize more completely what it means to be created in the image of the Creator. When our giving strengthens the Church, the divine mission given uniquely to the Church can be accomplished.

    As a priest, why would I want to soft-pedal something like that?

    Almighty God, whose loving hand hath given us all that we possess: Grant us grace that we may honor thee with our substance, and, remembering the account which we must one day give, may be faithful stewards of thy bounty, through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.   (The Book of Common Prayer, p.827)

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Being sorry is not the same as repenting

    I was especially moved by these words in the Litany of Penitence in yesterday’s Ash Wednesday service: 

    For our waste and pollution of your creation, and our lack of
    concern for those who come after us,
    Accept our repentance, Lord.

    We've been praying that prayer for a long time!  This prayer book was published in 1979, 32 years ago.  That we’re sorry about our poor stewardship of creation is clear.  That we’ve repented is not so clear,  because to repent means to change behavior.  Our sorrow must be strong enough to motivate us to make a change.  However, as I lamented the sloth in my own green habits, I also noticed  some signs of hope, some of which are fostered by the city in which I presently reside, Lexington, Kentucky.

    Curbside Recycling ~ We have two cans, provided by the city.  One can is green and is for household trash.  The other can is blue and is for recyclables.  We put paper, glass, plastic, aluminum, and a number of other items in the blue can and set it out by the curb every Thursday morning.  A city crew comes by and picks it up.  They take it to a place where the items in the can are sorted and recycled.

    Bicycle Lanes ~ Lexington has bicycle lanes on roadways all over the city.  They connect to some very nice bicycle trails. Cyclists ride them to work, to school, to church, and for recreation seven days a week.  Motorists watch out for them and slow down.  Unless otherwise posted, the speed limit in Lexington is 25 mph.  In most other cities, it’s 30 mph.  That 5 mph can make a big difference in an encounter between a passenger car and a bicycle.  I don’t want to suggest that instituting bicycle lanes here was a simple thing, but mainly it took creative thinking, leadership, and application of some white paint on pavement.

    Energy Saving Light Bulbs ~ Gay and I almost never buy an incandescent bulb anymore.  The improvements in compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFL) and the number of options now available, the energy savings, and the availability make this kind of energy conservation a no-brainer!  To make it even better, our local electric utility provider sent us some coupons that provided significant savings on the purchase of CFL's.  We’ve come a long, long way from those fixtures with the “starters” my parents used in the 1950’s.  But I am grateful for the example they provided.  My dad was a homebuilder and he used fluorescent fixtures wherever possible.  Lexington, like many cities, now has reasonable building codes that foster more extensive use of energy efficient lighting.

    I am grateful to be living in a city where it easier to practice "green" habits.  I feel that I've moved a little beyond sorry and am actually demonstrating some repentance in my care of creation. Thanks, Lexington, for fostering such a climate.  Other cities can learn a lot from your good example.

    A friend of mine was complaining about “tree huggers.”  I confessed to him that I am a tree hugger and always have been. He pointed out that peoples’ livelihood depended upon the ability to harvest lumber from old forests in places like the Pacific Northwest and that the needs of people outweighed the needs of the Spotted Owls.  I had to point out that human beings are endowed by the Creator with more options than the other creatures with which we share this planet.  When God entrusted the stewardship of creation to humanity, it was because God had specially equipped us with cognitive resources not given to any other creature.  We are supposed to be smart enough to figure out how to steward the resources of creation in a way that respects and sustains all life, not just humanity.

    One of my Lenten disciplines is going to be to find more ways to be a good steward of creation, with or without the help of municipal resources.  I want to be a contributing citizen of “this fragile earth, our island home.”

    Ron

  • A Fruitful Life

    Modern personnel practices in secular business settings emphasize the importance of performance appraisals.  Some of that spills over into our perspective on our life as followers of Jesus Christ.  There is a problem with that.

    Business and the economy are concerned with performance and productivity.  People are useful as long as they are able to contribute to the bottom line.  People are cogs in the wheels of commerce.

    Jesus was concerned about fruitfulness.  He said, "Abide in me as I abide in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me. I am the vine, you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing" (John 15:4-5).

    I helped a family say farewell to a loved one today.  He was a renowned surgeon, husband, father, and Christian gentleman.  During those last minutes of his life, they were not concerned in the least with his performance.  They spoke of the wonderful life he lived and the stewardship of his gifts as a physician that allowed him to heal, save lives, give people another chance.  "That was why he was put here," they said.  He understood that God had made him a physician and guided his hands in God's healing work.  He lived a fruitful life.

    Every life he touched made a difference to others.  We'll never know how many.  Something The Rev. Robert H. Schuller said came to mind.  "Anyone can count the seeds in an apple, but only God can count the number of apples in a seed."  Fruitful people go around planting seeds.  Those seeds germinate, take root, sprout, grow, and produce fruit.  And so the process continues from generation to generation.

    Here's a question:  When you die, do you want someone to say about you, "He always had good performance appraisals," or do you want it said, "He lived a fruitful life"?

    Do what you have to do to earn a living, keep your job, and provide for your family.  Be a top performer. But don't confuse being a cog in the wheel with living a fruitful, abundant, Christian life.

    Ron