Sunday, August 29, 2021

Are you sure you want to do this?

 Sermon from 8/28/21 St Stephen’s Day Acts 6:8-7:2a, 51c-60

           For a few months now I have been preparing a campaign to run for school board.  I have met with teachers, principals, retired educators, trusted friends, students and community members to learn from their perspective and hear their concerns.  It has been a valuable learning experience.  Out of these diverse perspectives there has been one question that seems to come up again and again, one question that almost inevitably finds its way into either the beginning or end of a conversation, and that is: “Are you sure you want to do this?” 

          It is asked out of care, concern and a realistic understanding of the divisive world we live in today, where anything you say or do will make someone mad.  In addition to this, those who have known that I am running have sent me links to articles about school board meetings across the country breaking out into shouting matches or sometimes, even worse, fist fights.  I have seen videos of school board members being escorted to their cars amidst screaming parents making angry gestures.  And through it all I continue to be determined, fueled by my care and concern for my own children, the children I know through volunteering in the schools, the teens I minister to here at our church and fueled by my deep hope and passion for a future with hope, a bright future of opportunity, respect and possibility. 

         And yet, I couldn’t help but wonder if I was being invited into some serious contemplation by the Holy Spirit on Wednesday.  It was that same question, the “are you sure you want to do this?” Only this time it was in a text message I saw on my phone as I sat right in the middle of a contentious school board meeting, just a few blocks away from here.  People were angry.  The kind of angry that skips polite greetings, proper procedures and waiting your turn.  There was shouting, booing, clapping, tears and just a general feeling of unease.  Again, I wasn’t deterred, seeing all the more the importance of having people on the board who are open-minded and able to stay calm under fire.  And then I listened to a story on NPR about school board meetings in America.  They interviewed one woman, a school board president, whose son drives her to meetings so that her car can’t be identified and she keeps a baseball bat by the front door now and immediately assesses what in the board room might be used as a weapon by angry citizens. 

          After hearing that story, I came home to reflect on the scriptures for today in preparation for this sermon.  First it was the reading from Jeremiah where God tells Jeremiah to prophesy to the people and he does, he says what God tells him to say and they say, “you shall die!” and gather around him.  And in the Gospel reading from Matthew we hear Jesus say, “Therefore I send you prophets, sages, and scribes, some of whom you will kill and crucify, and some you will flog in your synagogues and pursue from town to town …”  And of course the story of the saint we celebrate today, St Stephen.  A man who, even though he was “full of grace and power, did great wonders and signs among the people” … and had “the face of an angel” was surrounded, dragged and stoned to death because of the words he spoke about Jesus. 

        It’s a lot.  A reminder that even when you are called to something, even when you speak for the benefit of the community, even when you believe you are speaking a prophetic word from God … there are no guarantees for your safety.  In fact, it might actually be more likely you will make people angry.  Truth-telling is not usually the way to make people happy.  Basically, what I heard again and again in the readings for today is: “are you sure you want to do this?”

         As I was contemplating all of this I also had the usual worries about my kids being in school during a pandemic, my husband running a church during a pandemic and other disrupting thoughts- paired with a jam packed schedule where I literally needed to be in multiple places at the same time.  If anyone noticed my shrinking, picked at fingernails they might have asked “are you sure you want to do this?” 

          In the midst of all of this I was reminded of something.  Something we all know in a deep place within ourselves, something we forget, we drown out with worries, disappointments, hurts and fears.  Something at the heart of Jesus’s words to every grieving and depleted person he met.  Something found in the faith of Jesus on the cross and echoed by Stephen as he cried out on his knees surrounded by bloodied rocks ... “I will be ok no matter what.”

         I have a framed quote by my bed from St. Julian of Norwich, it says “All shall be well, all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.”  She said this not as she sat at a park on a perfect weather day beneath the warm sun and smiling sweetly at the chirping birds.  She wrote these words in the midst of an illness that almost took her life, a persistent illness she suffered through.  In the midst of dramatic visions that made her sound crazy to outsiders.  During a difficult time period where the future was uncertain and disease was rampant.  As she knew the realities of pain and was surrounded by uncertainty she proclaimed “all shall be well.”  Similar to “I will be ok no matter what” these are not situational words based on our conditional comfort or good feelings, this is instead a deep truth, one that comes from persistent faith and a willingness to connect with the Holy Spirit within.  It comes from the moments when we let ourselves give in to God’s abiding presence and experience that peace which passes understanding.

        When I read the Acts reading and feel that tension build.  When the people are angry and accusing Stephen and he doubles down on his indictment of their hardened hearts, their refusal to listen to the Holy Spirit … I kind of want to say to him “are you sure you want to do this?” But he does not waver, he does not soften his message and no one around can deny that he is “full of grace and power.”  Even as they close in on him, even as his body is overcome, even when he knows he will die, he boldly speaks from faith and assurance, the kind of faith that knows that “all shall be well” even when pain and fear are screaming otherwise.  And his last words are asking God to forgive those who brutally murder him.  Stephen unleashed a well of peace, love and courage that continues to pour out all these many years later as we read his words and commemorate his life and death. 

          And so our church bears his name.  As I strain my neck to look up to the top of the tower from down at the bottom I think about when those stones were laid.  When the founders of the church invested their time, talents and money to build this beautiful building.  A testament in stone to a hope that lasts longer than our bodies, a faith that cannot crumble or be shaken.  Did others ever ask them “are you sure you want to do this?” as the tower stretched higher and higher.  And now here it stands in the midst of a busy downtown, through all weather, through pandemics, through uncertainty, through fears and division.  And it bears the name of St Stephen, the man who knew “all shall be well.” 

          

Image from https://www.nbcnews.com/feature/nbc-out/pronoun-policy-debate-leads-chaos-virginia-school-board-meeting-n1272134

Sunday, August 22, 2021

Sermon from Grace and St Stephen's August 22

 

John 6:56-69

          Many of you may know by now that I have thrown my hat into the ring for an upcoming local election.  It is true, I am now a bit of a politician, although trying to manifest only the positive aspects of that.  It has been a wild ride full of learning, meeting new people and studying everything from educational funding in Colorado to yard sign prices.  It also means that I have managed to find one more area of my life in which I am completely dependent on volunteers.  Being a pastor, running a youth group, various boards and committees, PTA, other school involvement- all of these things that I have devoted my life to have one thing in common- they depend on volunteers.  And now I have added a campaign to the mix.

          It is a tricky thing, enlisting others to give of their time.  You want to start soft, so as not to scare them away and also to make sure you can rely on this person.  The last thing anyone wants is a family playing Mary, Jesus and Joseph that doesn’t show up on Christmas Eve.  When you find really great, reliable, passionate people you want to say “will you please do this major responsibility that will be hard and take a lot of time but we really need you!” but you realize all that will get you is a hole in the wall shaped like their body as they flee as fast as possible.  And when someone comes up to you and says “I want to volunteer, what can I do.”  I find myself so overwhelmed with relief, disbelief and ideas that I may only manage to say something ridiculous like “great, can you carry this piece of paper to the other end of the room.”  And then regret the wasted opportunity. 

          Now before you start getting anxious about what sign-up sheets will be passed out at the end of this sermon, please be at ease, this is not a drawn out attempt at finding someone to manage the dunk tank at the church picnic next week … although … if you feel so moved … I could use that.  But rather, this is my reaction to the Gospel reading today.  The first thing that stood out to me are all the people who bailed on Jesus.  After Jesus’ words about eating his body and drinking his blood and his assertion that he is the Son of Man, John writes, “Because of this, many of his disciples turned back and no longer went about with him.”  Jesus was not into the soft sell.  It was eat my flesh or go home.  And many of them did go home.

        It’s a bit hard for us to imagine today.  Here we are thousands of years later worshipping Jesus who we never even got to see walking around doing miracles.  These early followers decided to leave after they saw the miracle of the loaves and fishes, Jesus walking on water and they got to hear all of his teachings first hand and be in his physical, earthly presence.  It’s hard to imagine walking away from the Son of God standing right in front of you.

           At the same time, I kind of get it.  In verse 60 the disciples say “This teaching is difficult.” Scholars say that the word difficult could also be interpreted here as “unacceptable, hard, offensive.”[1]  He was telling people to eat his flesh and drink his blood.  Definitely an offensive ask without the hindsight we have now and the Eucharistic understanding we carry.  And it was offending a lot of people, people with status, people with learning, people with power. 

          It was also going to get violent.  His flesh would be broken, his blood spilled … he would be killed and it would be gruesome.  So, yeah I get why some people might decide to cut and run at that point.  Jesus isn’t asking for someone to bring a dish to the Passover potluck.  He is asking them to stick with him through despair, violence, offensive teachings and death.  And to stand with him against a lot of people who wanted him to go away. 

         Sometimes I want to cut and run and the stakes aren’t even that high.  Sometimes life just seems completely overwhelming.  The other day I saw a sweatshirt advertised that said “what if it all works out?”  I have come up with a lot of “what ifs” in my lifetime and that one almost never makes it into my thoughts.  We don’t know how things are going to go.  We don’t know if covid will keep getting worse, if we or our loved ones will get a bad case, if we are making the best decisions right now, or when it will all work out.  We don’t know how tests, elections and hard conversations will go.  Meanwhile the news is full of scary stuff.  People in Haiti getting pounded by natural disasters, hazy air from raging wildfires, desperate people chasing planes in Afghanistan and full hospitals.  When we go about our work of doing good in the world, of bearing hope, of boldly speaking for peace and love … sometimes the uphill climb is overwhelming.  And perhaps you, like me, have moments where it feels like too much. 

          Then the question goes from, how could those early disciples walk away from Jesus to how did Jesus manage to keep anyone around?  It is a big ask.  “Follow me” even when everyone else is saying not to. “Follow me” even when it feels like too much.  “Follow me” even when the blood is shed and the flesh broken and it seems as though all hope is lost.  All it will take is your whole life, your heart, your mind, your spirit …

          This makes me think of a hike my family did a couple weeks ago.  It was at the end of a vacation where we hiked a lot and it was a hazy, hot day but we decided to stop at Hoosier Pass.  The views were amazing, but at such a high elevation the breathing was getting harder and the steep paths were making our legs burn.  Our kids started to express their doubts.  I started to wonder if they were right.  Maybe we should just enjoy the views from where we are, it is getting hot and harder to catch my breath.  How long would the path go, what if it gets harder, the kids have little legs, maybe it’s time to go back?  We decided to go just until a curve in the path and just see what’s on the other side.  As we neared the turn we all felt pretty good about turning around soon, but then we saw how near we were to the top and suddenly our legs had more stamina, our breathing felt more steady and it didn’t seem so bad after all.  So we went to the top, we took some pictures, breathed in the cool mountaintop breeze and headed back down feeling accomplished. 

        Our calling to follow Christ is more than a hike up a mountain, probably more like many hikes up many mountains with lots of tripping and falling along the way.  But like that rough patch in the hike, what matters is our spirit.  Jesus had a difficult ask.  He never did the soft sell, always after the full commitment.  Always after unconditional devotion.  There are no persuasive essays, fancy ads or eloquent stump speeches that can make that kind of conversion.  It has to come from the spirit.  It has to come from God’s spirit within and around us. 

          Preachers can talk until their voices give out, music can create an emotional response, technology can wow us but what it all comes down to is the same as it was when Jesus looked at those disciples and basically said “so, are you in?” The revelation of God through Jesus Christ is the same as it was and the same as it will be.  The commitment Jesus asks has not changed.  The promise of God’s presence in the bread and wine, the assurance of salvation, the unconditional love of God, it’s all still there. 

          And today, all this time later we will be confronted with the flesh of Christ and asked if we want to keep following.  It is more than a sign-up sheet, more than a time commitment, more than a raised hand.  It is a giving over of our hearts made possible only by the Holy Spirit.  God’s grace calls us, the Spirit nudges us, Jesus asks us … are you in? 



[1] Moloney, Francis J. Sacra Pagina: The Gospel of John. The Liturgical Press, 1998. Pp 225