Category: Sermons

  • The Journey of Faith: The Long and Short of It

    Since the Third Century C.E., the Feast of the Epiphany has been observed on January 6.  From the Greek epiphaneia, meaning “manifestation” or “appearance,” the feast commemorates the appearance of God to humanity in the form of God’s Son, Jesus Christ.  The account of the visit of the wise men or magi who followed the star seeking the promised Messiah has traditionally been associated with this day.  It also marks the disclosure of Christ to the gentile world – that world outside the Hebrew nation.

    Actually, two groups paid a visit to Bethlehem at the Savior’s birth.  One group was close by, the shepherds, just down the hill from the manger.  The other group, the wise men, came a long way.  They followed a star from faraway Persia in a journey to the newborn King.  Both the shepherds and the wise men were on a journey of faith.

    The shepherds made the short trip.  It was easier for them.  They were prepared for the news of the Savior’s birth because they were part of the people to whom the promise of a Messiah had been given.  They were expecting the promise to be kept.  It wasn’t hard to convince them and they had only a few short steps to take in their journey. The shepherds didn’t care about all the theological implications that were involved.  They were not concerned about the problem of relating ancient truth to modern knowledge or the historical accuracy of the scriptures.

    The wise men, on the other hand, will walk out on you if you skip over those intellectual problems of faith, because they expect all journeys to be long and it doesn’t seem right to them to take short cuts.  The wise men and women of faith have always been the ones who take the long way, those who come the farthest distance, and have had the more torturous trek.  For them, believing isn’t easy.  It takes awhile.  It is a long, hard journey.

    You’ll find both groups in church and synagogue, just as surely as you would have found them at the manger so long ago.  It’s a fact of human intellectual and psychological make up and neither group is preferred over the other.

    What is critical for each of us to remember, whether the journey of faith has been short or long, is that it isn’t how long it takes or how complicated the task of believing, but the fact that we’ve taken the journey.

    You remember the popular and legendary children’s story The Wizard of Oz.  Dorothy is swept up by a cyclone in Kansas and deposited in Oz.  There, she is joined by those three remarkable characters in the search for the Wizard of Oz, who will answer all of their questions.

    The Scarecrow wants a brain. The Tin Woodsman yearns for a heart. The Cowardly Lion wants courage.

    Their journey is perilous, through many obstacles, just like the wise men, but they finally come thru it all.  The way they come through is really the point of the story.  For, whenever they are confronted with some sort of physical danger, it is always the Cowardly Lion who manages to fight their way out.  When the danger is more cerebral, it is the brainless Scarecrow who manages to get them out of it.  And, as for the Tin Woodsman, who is journeying in search of a heart, he lends a hand whenever he can and he has so much pity and sympathy for other people that they have to gather around him all of the time with an oil can so that his tears don’t rust his joints. When they finally reach the Wizard, he points out that each of them already has what they traveled so far to find.

    This is where the story of The Wizard of Oz becomes more than a story and teaches us.  Things like courage and love and wisdom come to us when we take the first step on the journey toward finding them.  It is the same way with faith. Faith is not something simply handed down to us prepackaged for us to accept on the authority of some institution or even some book.  Faith begins when we begin the journey!  Like those characters in their journey to see the Wizard of Oz or like those in their journey to the Christ of Bethlehem.

    It is easy for people who come to faith easily and quickly to assume an attitude of righteous superiority over those who have a more difficult time of it.  If you are one of those, let me remind you that nowhere in the scriptures do we find the Shepherds saying to the Wise Men, “What took you guys so long?”

    At the same time, it is common to find those who have had a hard intellectual struggle in faith’s journey assuming an attitude of intellectual superiority over those who have not.  To you, I say, scripture does say that the Savior reveals some things to the humble and meek that he conceals from the wise.  True wisdom is achieved when the intellect and the heart become friends.

    All of us are sojourners, looking for a new way to believe that will guide us in a new way to live. And, as we will see in the weeks following the Feast of the Epiphany, the manger is not the end of the journey nor the end of the epiphanies.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Will the New Year really be new?

    As I reflect on the past year, with enormous help from the media, I'm faced with this question:  Will the new year really be new?  What's the difference between December 31 and January 1?  Really?  Will January 1 be any different from December 30 or June 30 or last January 1?  Why is it we make such a fuss over the changing of the year?

    The fact of the matter is that even those among us who are most committed to maintaining the status quo will be engaged in some degree of revelry on New Year’s Eve.  I suspect even many of the "stay the course" brigade will have a list of resolutions.  Our lists might include things like losing weight, getting more exercise, having a healthier diet, doing a better job of recycling, gaining discipline in attending worship and saying our prayers, spending more time with the family, reading more books, joining Facebook, and being a generally all around nicer person.

    I have friends who are against new year's resolutions.  They believe having them only sets one up for failure.  That may be so, but then any resolutions, goals, or objectives do the same thing, don't they?  Any attempt at change, growth, or progress involves some risk of failure.  I happen to like resolutions because I believe it is better to fail trying to do something worthy than to succeed doing nothing.

    With or without resolutions, I ask again, how will January 1 be any different than December 31 or any other day?

    If there is a difference, maybe it is one of perception.  The slate is not really going to be wiped clean, but we like to try to see it that way.  And, in so doing, perhaps there is at least some extra room for something new to emerge in our consciousness, in our pattern of behavior, or in our way of life.  Maybe, just maybe, looking at this particular tomorrow opens up room for something new and different. If that happens, we may understand God's words to the Prophet Isaiah, "I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? (Isa. 43:19)"

    So, I'm going make some resolutions.  And, I'm going to look at January 1 as a different kind of day and as the start of some-thing new – a transition – and pray with all my might that God will have something to do with it so that it will not just be up to me.  Maybe my first step, or yours, will create space for grace to see things through.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • What kind of heart is receptive and spacious enough for Emmanuel?

    Childrens' Advocate Marian Wright Edelman passed along a story told to her by The Rev. William Sloan Coffin when he was Pastor of the Riverside Church in New York City. 

    It was Christmas Eve and the pews at New York City's Riverside Church were packed. The Christmas pageant was underway and had come to the point at which the innkeeper was to turn away Mary and Joseph with the resounding line, "There's no room at the inn!"

    The innkeeper was played by Tim, an earnest youth of the congregation who had Down Syndrome. Only one line to remember: "There's no room at the inn!" He had practiced it again and again with his parents and the pageant director and seemed to have mastered it.

    So Tim stood at the altar, bathrobe costume firmly belted over his broad stomach, as Mary and Joseph made their way down the center aisle. They approached him, said their lines as rehearsed, and waited for his reply. Tim's parents, the pageant director, and the whole congregation almost leaned forward as if willing him to remember his line.

    "There's no room at the inn!" Tim boomed out, just as rehearsed. But then, as Mary and Joseph turned on cue to travel further, Tim suddenly yelled "Wait!" They turned back, startled, and looked at him in surprise.

    "You can stay at my house!" he called.

    Such childlike generosity and hospitality are qualities of the heart that is receptive enough and spacious enough for Emmanuel.  The One whom the heaven of heavens cannot contain is graciously pleased to come under our roof and dwell with us.  May our hearts prepare for him and may he dwell in us as we  celebrate his Holy Incarnation.

    O holy Child of Bethlehem,
    Descend to us, we pray;
    Cast out our sin and enter in,
    Be born to us today.
    We hear the Christmas angels
    The great glad tidings tell;
    O come to us, abide with us,
    Our Lord Emmanuel.

     

     

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Here am I…Let it be

    I'm listening to the Beatles' song "Let it be" as I read Luke's account of the Angel Gabriel's announcement to the Blessed Virgin (Luke 1:26-38).  The song tells us Mary's words are "words of wisdom."  Who would have expected wisdom from one so young?

    Frederick Buechner, in his book Peculiar Treasures, has this to say about the Annunciation:

    She struck the angel Gabriel as hardly old enough to have a child at all, let along this child, but he’d been entrusted with a message to give her and he gave it.  He told her what the child was to be named, and who he was to be, and something about the mystery that was to come upon her. “You mustn’t be afraid, Mary,” he said.  And has he said it, he only hoped she wouldn’t notice that beneath the great golden wings, he himself was trembling with fear to think that the whole future of creation hung now on the answer of a girl.”

    The future of creation hung now on the answer of a girl.  Imagine all the angels looking down and holding their breath, wondering what she would say.  We know her answer: “Here am I, the servant of the Lord.  Let it be with me according to your word.”

    Mary wasn’t the first to say these words.  She stands in a line of witnesses who said “Here am I” to God’s request.  Noah said, “Here am I,” and God told him to build a floating zoo. Abram said, “Here am I,” and God told him to get his wife, pack his things, and go to a land God would show him.  The boy Samuel said, “Here am I,” and began a career of speaking truth to the powers that be.  Isaiah said, “Here am I,” and God sent him to deliver a prophetic message promising deliverance by a Messiah who is to come.

    When we say the words, “Here am I,” and are open to hearing what it is God is asking of us, we take our places in that long line of faithful people.  We are liberated and given the necessary strength to do what God is calling us to do.

    Mary has already given birth to the Messiah, so God isn’t asking us to do that.  Still, the angels in heaven are holding their breath to hear our answer when God draws near and calls us.  We won’t need to find new words to say because the old ones still work just fine: “Here am I, the servant of the Lord.”

    Gay and I are blessed to spend another Christmas with the people of Good Shepherd.  May your Christmas and the coming year be filled with joy, peace, and blessings in abundance.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Word Made Flesh – The Toughest and Tenderest Love

    It is a happy coincidence that the commemoration of St. Ambrose, the fourth century Bishop of Milan, occurs during the Advent season on December 7.  I say that because one of the chief contributions of Bishop Ambrose was his defense of Athanasian (orthodox) Christianity against Arianism.  Athanasians affirm that the Logos or Word (John 1:1) is fully God in the same sense that the Father is, while Arians affirm that the Logos is a creature, the first being created by the Father.  So it is appropriate that his feast day occurs during the season in which we are preparing for the coming of the Messiah because Bishop Ambrose helps us better understand what kind of Messiah we are talking about.

    Ambrose may have written the Athanasian Creed (BCP p. 864), the first creed in which the equality of the three persons of the Trinity is explicitly stated.  Whether he wrote it or not, it is consistent with his theology:

    And the Catholic Faith is this: That we worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity in Unity, neither confounding the Persons, nor dividing the Substance.  For there is one Person of the Father, another of the Son, and another of the Holy Ghost.  But the Godhead of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, is all one, the Glory equal, the Majesty co-eternal.

    The Messiah who came as a little child and died on a cross as a man is not just a messenger.  He is Emmanuel, God With Us in the flesh.  That was as incomprehensible a Mystery in the first and fourth centuries as it is today – the Word that was in the beginning, the Word that was with God, the Word that was God, “became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son; full of grace and truth” (John 1:14).  The proof of it is a matter of faith.  This Word Made Flesh, Jesus, the Messiah, matters so much to us because he is the ultimate expression of God’s eternal love for us.

    His entire life demonstrates to us that God’s love does not shrink in the face of tragedy, injustice, exploitation, and alienation. Love Divine embraces everything that happens to human beings from birth to death. God With Us heals brokenness, overcomes oppression, and reconciles estrangement.  There is no love in the universe that is tougher or more tender!

    A meditation attributed to Bishop Ambrose beautifully expresses what God’s love means to us in these words: “Lord Jesus Christ, you are for me medicine when I am sick; you are my strength when I need help; you are life itself when I fear death; you are the way when I long for heaven; you are light when all is dark; you are my food when I need nourishment.”

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • An Advent Story

    Advent is a time of preparation.  The messages of the Hebrew prophets and of John the Bapitzer tell us that repentance is a necessary element when we are preparing for God’s entrance into our lives.  The call to repentance is a call to examine our lives and change directions in ways that open our lives for God to do something new.

    At this time of year, many people turn again to the wonderful Victorian era classic A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens.  As I read it, A Christmas Carol is really an Advent story.  The surly old curmudgeon, Ebenezer Scrooge, lives a miserly existence with his entire being.  Then he is visited in a dream by three Christmas ghosts.  He sees his past and then his present.  But what is most frightening to him, what shakes him to the core, is the vision of his future.  Scrooge awakens to find that nothing has changed.  Dickens says, “The bedpost was his own.  The bed was his own.  The room was his own.”  Then Dickens adds, in what might be an Advent text, “Best and happiest of all, the time before him was his own, to make amends in.”

    Scrooge undergoes a radical transformation and becomes an entirely new person.  He leaves behind the cold and indifferent miser and becomes generous and compassionate.  He seizes the time and becomes what the Bible might call “a new creation.”  The world has not changed, but he has!

    It is a heart-warming story.  But more than that, it is a hopeful story.  It provides us with the hope that we too can have a change of heart and mind when we know we should.  John the Baptizer tells us that someone is coming, someone so spectacular that it is not enough simply to hang around waiting for him to arrive.  It is time to get ready, to prepare the way, so that when he comes he can walk a straight path right to us.

    That’s what makes the news good!  The call to wake up and change directions is filled with the promise that something new is about to happen right before our eyes and in our lives.  The time before us is our own “to make amends in” as we prepare room for God to make us new creatures.  May this Advent be such a time for you!

    Ron Short Sig Blue