Category: Lexington

  • Sainthood

    To the saints of God, greetings in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.

    I called you “saints.”  Does that surprise you?  If it does, perhaps it’s because we’ve done such a good job of substituting other words to identify those who have been joined to the Risen Christ.  Let’s see how many I can name:  members, communicants, parishioners, disciples, Christians, congregants, and, my least favorite, volunteers.  There is more to being a saint than any of these words can possibly convey because, you see, only God can make a saint.

    In our church, we're going to help make some saints on Sunday morning when we baptize some children.  By water and the Holy Spirit, they are going to be sanctified through Baptism.  They are going to become “holy ones of the Most High” who “shall receive the kingdom.”  And I promise you, neither of them has volunteered to have this water poured over them any more than they have volunteered to be born with their particular skin color, born into U.S. citizenship, born to their respective parents, or born into these families.  Neither will they volunteer to have their vaccinations, learn to wear clothes, take baths, or brush their teeth.  They won’t volunteer to stay with the babysitter, go to school, come home before curfew, or fall in love. Without their knowledge or consent, we are going to pour some water over them, rub some oil on their heads, and declare that they are saints – baptized in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and marked as Christ’s own for ever.  Those present are going to vow to do whatever it takes to help them grow to claim the new identity given to them through the Sacrament, to be formed as we have been as saints of God.

    Whatever else they may be called during the course of their lives, in God’s eyes they are saints – blessed, sanctified, made holy, not by their own will but by the will of God.  And, by virtue of the fact that someone baptized us, so are we.  We are saints of God by grace and adoption.  Above every other reason, when we return to the church week by week to worship with other saints, we return to be reminded who we are and to give thanks, to offer Eucharist, for the divine gift of and vocation to sainthood. For we were created by God to bear a divine image, to be shaped and formed by the will of our Creator, to be filled with the fullness that only God can give.

    Have you noticed how often God's people are referred to as saints in both the Old and New Testament?  The saints are those whom God has chosen and anointed to live in unity with God, one another, and those who have gone before us.  We are supposed to represent God and bear God's message wherever we may be.  We sometimes speak of the Church’s message, but if you read carefully, you will see that it is the other way around.  It’s not so much that the Church has a Message as that the Message has a Church.  The saints, who are the Church, are the delivery system for the Message.  That is our inheritance and our vocation.

    And consider the Beatitudes.  The Beatitudes describe the blessed, the saints, those who have been made holy not by volunteering, which is an assertion of human volition, human will, but by the Divine Will.  Our life in Christ takes us beyond being a volunteer. Luke’s version of the Beatitudes speaks directly to us, not to “them.”  Blessed are You – Blessed John, Blessed Barbara, Blessed Phil, Holy Dominic, Holy Michael, Holy Lauren, Saint Kathy, Saint Amanda, Saint Clay.  Here, the heart of the Gospel that enlivens and blesses all the saints of God is found. These “exclamations” are not a set of self-help sayings. Neither are they philosophical reflections on ways to govern life.  They are not therapeutic ways of correcting dysfunctional lives. They are not information about what would make life better. They are not even a prescription for godly living. They are above all the way the Gospel looks when it appears in the person of Jesus Christ from whose lips they come and who lives within us today, filling us with a divine presence. In this sense they are truly “in-forming,” a filling full of the emptiness of this life and re-forming the way we understand and live life. It is what his presence in us causes us to become when he claims our hearts.  Blessed.  Holy.  Saints.

    This fullness is not our own doing.  Hopefully, we have exercised our unique vocation as human beings and exercised faithful stewardship over that fullness.  But it is not our own doing.  The fullness is from God and belongs to God who in our creation gave us breath of life.

    A colleague of mine enjoys telling of a time when a little boy was visiting his grandmother, whose church had beautiful stained glass windows like ours.  The little boy asked his grandmother who the people in the windows were.  His grandmother told him, “Those are saints.”  And the boy exclaimed, “Oh, I get it!  Saints are people that the light shines through.”

    Saints of God, you and I, are people through whom God’s light shines.  Throughout our lives, as our wills are transformed and we grow more receptive to God’s grace at work in us, the light of Christ shines more brilliantly through us.  Theologians call that process "Sanctification."  It is how God perfects the  saints.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Passing On The Fruits of Our Contemplation

    This blog, e-piphanies.com, is devoted to glimpses of God at work in our lives.  That is another way of speaking about recognition of signs of the Kingdom of God – God’s Reign in our midst. It is my small effort to shine a light, so to speak, on places where I believe God is active and God's reign is intersecting with the world.

    The heart of the message of Jesus Christ was the Kingdom of God. It is supposed to be the heart of the message of those who follow him in every age. When we read the Gospels, we see that sometimes Jesus used the terms Kingdom of Heaven, Abundant Life, or Eternal Life to refer to the same reality – God's life and intersecting with the created world.  That intersection, for Jesus, had the purpose of transforming the reality of those who experienced it.

    Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori writes about the Kingdom of God in this way, "The physicists may call it a parallel universe; we call it the dream of God.  Pull it out, polish it up, and put it to work because that vision can change the world" (from A Wing and a Prayer: A Message of Faith and Hope).

    We who are called out and entrusted with the message of the Kingdom need to be sure we order our lives in ways that make it possible for us to experience the reality of the Kingdom so that our message is authentic and effective.  Now just what do I mean by that?

    On Wednesday of this week, I heard The Rev’d Chris Webb, an Anglican Benedictine, speak about how the Kingdom of God breaks into our life in the world and confronts us with another set of realities.  He said, “The world around us needs the confrontation of the Kingdom of God because it is a broken, wounded, hurting world.”

    He went on to point out the irony that we who are called to be bearers of the good news of God’s reign are a part of the world to which we bring that news.  It is inevitable that we “minister our brokenness into the brokenness of the world” even as we deliver the news. 

    An example of this inclination is seen in the life of Moses.  When Moses realized how the Hebrew people were being mistreated by their Egyptian masters, he reacted in anger and killed an Egyptian who was abusing a Hebrew.  He fled the scene and went to Midian where he met and married Miriam, the daughter of a priest named Jethro.  It was there when he was herding his father-in-law’s sheep, that he had the remarkable encounter with the burning bush through which God confronted him.  Later, he encountered God on the holy mountain and God delivered the Law to Moses.  Then he had the tabernacle built as a place of corporate encounter with God.  Still later, he would set up a tent apart from the camp where he would meet privately with God.  When that happened, the pillar of cloud would come down and stay at the entrance, while the LORD spoke with Moses. (Exodus 33)  Imagine that!

    The trajectory of Moses’ experience of God matures from an impulsive activism, to an accidental encounter, to an intentional encounter, to an habitual one.  At each step of the journey, Moses takes the fruit of his experience of God and shares it with others.  And, at each step of the journey, the fruit appears to be more fully ripened and, as a result, makes a greater impact upon those with whom he shares it.

    St. Thomas Aquinas, in trying to describe a healthy relationship between contemplativeness and activism, used the phrase contemplata alliis tradare, which Thomas Merton translated to mean “passing on the fruits of contemplation to others.”  Like Moses, our active work of delivering the good news of the in-breaking reign of God requires the contemplative work of experiencing God first-hand in order for their to be good fruit.

    Worship, both private and corporate, provides God with opportuities to give us glimpses of the Divine Life in the midst of our own lives and the life of the world.  Our witness has to be more than talking about God; it must be a witness to our first-hand experience of God.  We can’t give to the world something we don’t have in the first place.

    So, this weekend, when you are planning your activities, remember that an encounter with the Living God awaits you.  Come to worship expecting to be encountered in unexpected ways by the Creator of the Universe.  Prepare to be changed.  And don't be surprised if your experience of God extends into your daily life in equally unexpected ways.  Life may never be the same.  At least, that is the way it is supppoed to work.  Our participation in worship opens our eyes to see God's hand at work and transforms our hearts to share what we see with others in words and actions.

    Our witness requires worship.  Share the fruits of your contemplation with others.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • The Christian Lifestyle

    Jesus summed up the lifestyle God wants us to live a few words; "'You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.' This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: `You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets" (Matthew 22:37-40).

    The call to be faithful stewards of God’s bounty is the call to a lifestyle – a way of life – that acknowledges that everything we have belongs to God and that we are managers of a sacred trust.  We fulfill that vocation through the spiritual disciplines of worship, proclamation, teaching, presence, fellowship, service, and offerings.*  We commit ourselves to offer God the very best we have in the confidence that when God receives our offering, joined with the offering of Christ, it will be pleasing to God and accomplish the things God’s heart desires to accomplish through us.  There may be no vocation in the universe that is greater or more of a wonder than the vocation of stewardship.  It makes us unique among creatures.  It makes us human.  It is an expression of our creation in the image of God.

    To avoid faithful participation in the life of the Church because we are too busy should be evidence to us that we are simply too busy.  To avoid tithing because we think we don’t have enough is to insult God who has so bountifully blessed us and is evidence that we are living both materially and spiritually beyond our means.

    Loving God with all our heart, and soul, and mind, and loving our neighbor as ourselves involves giving the best we have, devotion to this shared way of life, and an understanding that the life God wants us to live demands faithful participation.  A parable that has been told from thousands of pulpits for who knows how many generations gets to the heart of the matter:

    A small village was excited to discover that it would soon receive a visit from their beloved King.  Community leaders immediately began planning for the great event.  Everyone agreed that they wanted to present a gift to the King that would represent their appreciation for his benevolent supervision and management of the realm.  But the village was poor and couldn’t afford a gift worthy of a King as great as theirs.

    Someone suggested, “We have wonderful vineyards and produce the best wine in the land.  Let each of us bring the best wine from our cellars and create a great vat of wine to present to our beloved King!”  The people embraced the idea with enthusiasm.  Over the next several days, they brought bottles of their best wine and poured it into a large vat that would be presented to the King upon his arrival.

    It occurred to some of the townspeople, however, that with so many people contributing wine to the large vat, their own contribution would not make much difference. “With so much wine,” they reasoned, “my failure to contribute will neither be noticed nor missed.”  So people brought bottles filled with water instead of wine.

    The day of celebration arrived.  The village leaders proudly made their presentation of the town’s best wine to the King.  They raised their glasses in honor of His Majesty and tasted the best wine their village had to offer.  To the abject horror and humiliation of the entire village, the “town’s best wine” was nothing more than water.  Everyone had thought the same thing; their personal contribution would not be needed nor missed.  Although they all wanted to honor the King, they had failed to understand the necessity of their own personal participation.

    Loving God and our neighbor is the essence of how God created life to be lived.  It is not meant to be simply an abstract theological concept to which we give intellectual assent.  It is meant to be carried out in tangible ways.  It is meant to be the driving force in the life of the community of God’s people.  It is meant to be central to our witness to others that God will always give us enough to be generous. 

    So don’t hold back!  Give God the opportunity to use your life and all the blessings that have been entrusted to you in ways that become evidence of your love for God and for your neighbor.  And, through the miracles that God will perform in your life, you will see that it is also the best way of loving yourself.

    The night before one of his musicals was to open, Oscar Hammerstein pushed past Mary Martin, his singing star, in the soft red glow of the semi-darkness of the curtained stage and pressed into her hand a slip of paper.  On it were these words, which later were to become the basis of one of the hit numbers in the uncut version of  “The Sound of Music.”

    A bell is not a bell until you ring it.
    A song is not a song until you sing it.
    Love was not put in your heart to stay.
    Love is not love until you give it away.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

     

     

     

     

    * Gk. – Leitourgia, Kerygma, Didicae, Proseuche, Koinonia, Diakonia, Laetrea

  • What belongs to God?

    The Pharisees and the Herodians sent their followers to Jesus with a question that was intended to entrap him.  “Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor or not?”  He asked them to show him the coin used for the tax.  Of course, it bore the image of the Emperor, revered by many of his subjects as a deity.  Jesus asked them, “Whose image is this, and whose title?” They answered, “The emperor’s.”  Then he said to them, “Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” (Matthew 22:15-22)

    They couldn’t fault Jesus for his assertion that the Roman money belonged to the emperor.  And as faithful Jews, they couldn’t fault him for reminding them that the whole earth and everything in it belong to God.

    Whatever we have is a sacred trust from God and whatever we do with it matters in terms of our spiritual existence.  I am not where I live, how much I possess, where I work, what I wear, which clubs I belong to, which soccer team my child or I am on.  Those things are transitory.  The only thing that can never be taken away from me is who I am in the eyes of my Creator as declared to me in my Baptism: “Ron, you are sealed by the Holy Spirit in Baptism and marked as Christ’s own for ever.”  Throughout life, whether I live in the lap of luxury or in a tent, it is my purpose in life and my joy to give myself to God.

    I can face the future because the Creator of the Universe is already out there in the future, calling me to life.  Give to mortals what belongs to them.  But give to God what belongs to God.   And what belongs to God?  Everything.

    Daniel B. Clendenin, has written, "As a friend of mine once observed, civilization is expensive, and taxes pay the tab.  But absolute allegiance to an ultimate God, rendering our entire selves to Him without preconditions or limits, without hedging our bets, demands a higher order of magnitude.  That takes a lifetime" (Show Me The Money: Unconditional Allegiance to the Unconditioned God, The Journey with Jesus: Notes to Myself, Daniel B. Clendenin, Journey with Jesus Foundation).

    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

  • Faithful Stewards

    A little over twenty years ago, a leading authority in the field of church administration advised clergy not to use the word “commitment” around baby boomers.  He warned that it would drive them away because commitment in any area of life frightens them.  Five years later, the same leading authority reported that baby boomers were attending high expectation, high commitment churches in disproportionately large numbers.  Those churches were growing. We discovered that low expectation, low commitment churches like The Episcopal Church were declining.  While we were soft-peddling commitment, our members were leaving us for churches where it is required.  I resolved at that time that I would never soft peddle commitment again.

    When George Rupp was President of Rice University, I heard him say, “There is no life without community and there is no community without commitment.”  Think about it.  Without commitment, families, organizations, athletic teams, work groups, companies, and nations fall apart.

    One task of an interim pastor is to challenge the church community in transition to clarify its present identity in preparation for a new pastor.  One way to foster that new sense of identity is to ask the members to measure their level of commitment in light of our Church’s teaching that, The duty of all Christians is to follow Christ; to come together week by week for corporate worship; and to work, pray, and give for the spread of the kingdom of God. (BCP, p.856)

    I realize that some people may be as allergic to the word “duty” as they are to the word “commitment.”  But most reasonable people will acknowledge that fulfilling our duties is a necessary aspect of keeping our commitments in daily life.  In fact, the phrase “relieved of duty” carries negative connotations.  And why would anyone think that duty to God is any less important than duty to family, team, country, etc.?  Throughout history, many people have expressed the conviction that duty to God made it possible for them to fulfill all the other duties of their lives.

    I invite you to examine your commitment to your Christian duty.  Make this an opportunity to take the next step in your faith journey.  Is there a way to follow Christ more closely?  Can you join your fellow Christians in worship more often?  Is there a place of service to which you are being called?  Is there room for improvement in your prayer life?  How about your giving? Is it time to move up another step toward the spiritual discipline of tithing?

    Do yourself and your church community a favor and reflect on those questions as you prepare for Commitment Sunday.  At The Church of the Good Shepherd, commitment cards will be distributed during the services.  We’ll complete them together and bring them to the Altar as an act of worship.  Make this time of transition a time of renewed and increased commitment.  Ask God to use you in new ways to help the Church be all God wants it to be.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Promises are not enough.

    Autumn is the time of year during which the theme of the gospel readings is that of the inbreaking Reign of God.  In these passages, Jesus provides us with insights into the nature of that state of being he called “eternal life” or “abundant life” or “the Kingdom of God.”  Through metaphor and parable, we are able to catch a glimpse of what life in that state of being is, to gain a perspective on what kinds of people are there, and to examine our own hearts and minds with regard to our own citizenship in that realm.

    The Parable of the Two Sons (Mt. 21:28-32) appears in Matthew in the context of a confrontation between Jesus and the religious leaders of Jerusalem. It concerns the Kingdom of God and the makeup of the Kingdom’s population.

    Why was the Kingdom so important?  To get at this question, it helps to have an overview of sacred history.  As the Bible tells the story, in the act of creation, God made our first ancestor in God’s own image.  And, like God and the angels, the human creature was androgynous.  We call the creature “Adam,” which really isn’t a name but a description of a unique kind of being – one that is capable of having complete communion with God and one that has resources beyond what any other creature possesses.

    Then, as the Bible tells it, God divided the creature into two, male and female.  While they were separate, they still lived in communion, in harmony with one another.  There was a spiritual union.  But then, the desire to become gods overcame our first parents.  Ever since, we have felt disconnected, dysfunctional, diseased, dissatisfied, and disempowered.  We struggle to fill the hole at the core of our being with something that will make us feel whole.  We try all kinds of things but all fall short of our unconscious goal of unity within and reconciliation with our human brothers and sisters.

    Finally, one like us was sent to become the New Adam.  He was the first person since the beginning of time to get it all back together.  And, the way the Bible tells the story; we know that it was painful for him, just as separation was painful for our first ancestors.  Yet there is salvation and a sublime joy in the case of Jesus.  He called that experience of having it back together “Eternal Life”, “Abundant Life”, “Kingdom of God.”

    What was Jesus saying to those religious leaders?  They, of all people, should be sensitive and receptive to the signs of God’s activity, but they were not.  So, he told them a story about two sons. One son refused to do what he was asked to do, but ended up doing it anyway.  The other son said he would do what he was asked to do, but didn’t follow through.  Jesus wanted the religious leaders to know that, in his opinion, they were the ones who were not following through and that the people they most despised were going to catch on and get it together before they did.

    God keeps coming to the aid of the broken, unscrubbed, ritually unclean, outcast, and marginalized.  Really, that is the only kind of people there are.  Jesus wanted the washed and scrubbed to know and acknowledge that fact.  Such self-awareness and humility are the prelude to big changes in the heart and the mind that are the very gateway to the experience of back-togetherness.  So, what he was saying to those leaders was, “You are bringing up the rear!  Promises are not enough."

    What does this have to do with us?  We resemble the people in this parable. The self-emptying of Christ for us in the Incarnation was not his victory of the human temptation to be like God – the sin of our first parents.  Rather, his victory was the free renunciation of divine prerogatives in order to fully share the human condition, which of its very nature is a service to God.  By his humiliation and exaltation, Jesus has conquered, as a human, all the cosmic powers that are hostile to God and humanity. Adam and the offspring of Adam were disobedient and fragmented the human family. Jesus and the followers of Jesus restore the human family to koinonia – to fellowship, communion, spiritual union – with God and one another.  All creation is watching just to see the sons and daughters of God come into their full inheritance.  And, to bring it home right where we live today, everybody is waiting to see what God can do with us. What an opportunity!

    Ron