Sunday, October 28, 2018

Sermon: Loving God


          Today's lessons are all about faith – having and keeping faith in the depths of despair, heartache, illness, and misfortune.  They are wonderful reminders of the results that faith can bring – happiness, health, joys, treasures untold.
          Let's look at our Old Testament lesson, the ending of Job's tragic story.  Job was beloved of God, blessed with wealth and riches of family, crops and livestock.  Despite this, he was humble and thankful for the blessings he received and credited God for every one of them.  And then one day, the Devil got bored.  He challenged God, and declared that Job was merely a faithful servant of God because he had been so blessed, but that without those blessings, he would curse God's name.
          Job is one of those stories in the Bible that often makes people very uncomfortable.  None of us can explain the concept of a God who allows the testing of His most faithful.  At his very lowest point, however, Job does curse the day he was born.  Despite having done nothing wrong, his three best "friends" counsel him incessantly that he must have done something to deserve this.  And despite being an Old Testament character, Job is the very epitome of the collection of sayings from the Psalms that Paul put together in his letter to the Romans:
There is no one who is righteous, not even one;
    there is no one who has understanding,
        there is no one who seeks God.
All have turned aside, together they have become worthless;
    there is no one who shows kindness,
        there is not even one.”

          And yet, Job's faith in God never waivers.  He submits himself – his life, his will, everything that he is – to God, to do with as He will.  And God finally ended the tests the Devil had subjected Job to, as Job had never denounced God or denounced his faith.  He had decried his very existence, as he didn't understand the reason for his suffering, but he didn't take his life.  He didn't commit a murder of the image of God that he was.  He submitted to the concept that he didn't understand, but that he belonged to God, to do with as God willed.  And God restored to Job all of the wealth and riches that he had before all the tests.  He rewarded Job for his faith.  He provided to him another family.  And if this were a fairy tale, it would be a happy ending and they would all live happily ever after.
          But this isn't a fairy tale.  And when Job's children died, they weren't returned to life.  Job had faith that they had gone to the Father, but what parent ever gets over the loss of a child – even when they have more children?  There is no substitute.  And perhaps the lesson that Job leaves with us is that there is none righteous, not one – but God's grace will bring His children to eternal life, and that is the faith we must strive to have.
          Yesterday's shooting at the synagogue in Pittsburgh is just such an event that will have so many people asking the question, "How can God let this happen?"  or making the statement, "I can't believe in a God who allows people to die for how they worship."  And the normal answers and arguments include that God gave man free will; that God is there with every one of those who died or were injured, taking them to their eternal life with Him. 
          The United States has so many laws governing free speech, freedom of religion, freedom of assembly – how can something like this happen in our country?  And we often forget that this time it was a Jewish synagogue in the United States, but in other places around the globe, it could be an Islamic mosque, or a Christian church, or a Buddhist temple.  Hatred is not a tool of God – it is a tool of the Devil, designed specifically to make us question our faith.  We can go all the way back to Cain and Abel – and even at that early point in time, God warned against anger and jealousy.  He cautioned us before we even had the commandment not to murder, for to do so was strike down that which had been created in the image of God – and thus was a crime against God Himself.
          Jesus was born to bring God's love to the forefront.  To teach that among the myriad of laws, the most important was to love God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.  Second only to that was to love your neighbor as yourself – to treat everyone you meet, your neighbors, the way that you would like them to treat you.  As Paul's letter to the Hebrews in today's New Testament lesson said, God "appoint[ed] a Son who has been made perfect forever."  And like the sacrifice that Job's friends were told to make in order to repent of their own faults, so that Job could pray for their souls – Christ became the perfect sacrifice for us.  Not just Jews, or Christians, but for the entire world. 
          Like Job, God too lost His Son – for three days, Jesus was dead.  Now Christ is restored to eternal life, but God knows what it is to lose a child.  And I think He mourns with us, even as He cares for those whose lives are cut short.
          We are heirs to the Kingdom of God, with Christ.  As such, and as baptized Christians, we are responsible for carrying on the work of Christ – of spreading the good news of eternal life, and teaching people to love one another as Christ loves them.  We're not alone in this job – not only are all the other baptized Christians out there, spreading the Word, but the Holy Spirit is here to help and guide us to do the right thing, in every situation.  We have to listen.  When we're dismissed today, listen to the commission you receive:  "Go in peace to love and serve the Lord."  With your response of "Thanks be to God", you've accepted that assignment.  What do you intend to do to fulfill it this week?
          Let us pray:  Almighty and merciful God, we ask that you receive into your tender and loving care all those who were killed in the mass shooting in Pittsburgh. Comfort those who mourn. Be with the first responders. Give strength and perseverance to those who work to eliminate bigotry, hatred and jealousy.  Transform the hearts of all who have embraced hateful and bigoted belief systems, so that they may learn love, before others are hurt. And help all people to come to know the truth that if you do not love others, you do not know God. Amen.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Invitation to an Instructed Eucharist



Why do Episcopalians
do the things they do?

What do all their
Liturgical practices mean?




COME FIND OUT!

All are invited to an Instructed Eucharist Mass

this Sunday, October 21st, at 9:00 a.m. 

with the Rev. Karen King.

Have questions?  Want to know more?

This is your perfect opportunity.

Saturday, October 13, 2018

Sermon: What Do I Lack?


In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.  Amen.  Please be seated.

A former dean at Duke University wrote: Today's gospel reminds us that there are good, understandable, reasonable reasons for not following Jesus.  Jesus is too often presented by us, from the best of motives, as the solution to all our problems, the way to fix everything that's wrong in our lives.  But this story reminds us that Jesus is sometimes the beginning of problems we would never have had if we had not been met by Jesus!

So I want you to think back to the time when you were a child.  What was your most valued possession?  (Pause)  What made it so valuable to you?  (Pause) Do you still have it in your possession?  Has its value changed? (Pause)

Think about today.  What is your most valued possession now?  (Pause)  What makes it valuable to you?  Are you capable of selling it?

Now keeping in mind those things, think about what exactly Christ said to the man.  "You lack one thing; go, sell what you own, and give the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me." 

What was it that the man lacked?

Think about what Christ said to his disciples in response to the question, "Then who can be saved?":  "For mortals it is impossible, but not for God; for God all things are possible.” 

We don't believe that we can get into heaven by "doing".  We believe that the only way we can get into heaven is by the grace of God.  Which, of course, doesn't mean that we shouldn't be doing all that a follower of Christ would do.  That phrase, "What would Jesus do?" should actually govern our actions, so that people know we are Christians by our actions, as well as our words.

One night, in a college dormitory Bible study, a priest presented this same story of Jesus and the rich man.  He then asked the gathered students, "What do you make of this story?"

"Had Jesus ever met this man before?" asked one of the students.

"Why do you ask?" the priest asked.

"Because Jesus seems to have lots of faith in him.  He demands something risky, something radical of him.  I wonder if Jesus knew this man had a gift for risky, radical response.  In my experience, a professor only demands the best from students that the professor thinks are the smartest, best students.  I wonder what there was about this man that made Jesus have so much faith he could really be a disciple."

Wow.  The priest hadn't thought about that.

Another student said thoughtfully, "I wish Jesus would ask something like this of me.  My parents totally control my life just because they are paying all my bills.  And I complain about them calling the shots, but I am so tied to all this stuff I don't think I could ever break free.  But maybe Jesus thinks otherwise."

Well, the priest was astounded. What he had been thinking about as severe, demanding BAD news, these students heard as gracious, GOOD news.

What was it that the man lacked?  He already followed the commandments.  He already believed in Christ, because he asked Jesus, what must I do to have eternal life.  What did he lack?

There's a story told that Clarence Jordan, that great Southern, social prophet, visited an integrated church in the Deep South.  Jordan was surprised to find a relatively large church so thoroughly integrated, not only black and white but also rich and poor; and this was in the early '60s.  Jordan asked the old country preacher, "How did you get the church this way?"

"What way?" the preacher asked.  Jordan went on to explain his surprise at finding a church so integrated, and in the South, too.

The preacher said, "Well, when our preacher left our small church, I went to the deacons and said, 'I'll be the preacher.'  The first Sunday as preacher, I opened the book and read, 'As many of you as has been baptized into Jesus has put on Jesus and there is no longer any Jews or Greeks, slaves or free, males or females, because you all is one in Jesus.'

Then I closed the book and I said, 'If you are one with Jesus, you are one with all kind of folks.  And if you ain't, well, you ain't.'"

Jordan asked what happened after that. "Well," the preacher said, "the deacons took me into the back room and they told me they didn't want to hear that kind of preaching no more."

Jordan asked what he did then. "I fired them deacons," the preacher roared.

"Then what happened?"

"Well," said the old hillbilly preacher, "I preached that church down to four.  Not long after that, it started growing.  And it grew.  And I found out that revival sometimes don't mean bringin' people in but gettin' people out that don't dare to love Jesus." (As told in Hauerwas and Willimon, Where Resident Aliens Live, Nashville: Abingdon, 1996, p. 103).

Jesus invites people to be his disciples:  to divest.  To break free! Let go of your stuff!  Follow me!  I believe you can do it!

What did the man lack? 

It wasn't poverty.  Christ doesn't ask us to live in poverty, and He certainly gives us more than enough to do with our money in order to benefit people. 

It wasn't a lack of ties – we are all brothers and sisters in Christ.  We're supposed to build ties with the family of God. 

Could it be that what the man lacked was belief in himself, in his own work, and his own hands, capable of doing the work of God?  Of profiting the poor, the marginalized, the least, the lost, the outsiders.  Could it be that Christ believed more in the man and what he was capable of in following Him as a disciple?  Our Psalm ends today with "Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us, and prosper for us the work of our hands— O prosper the work of our hands!" 

Do you dare to love Jesus enough?  Amen.

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Newsletter: October 2018



Holy Trinity Sanguinity

                    October 2018



Events in October at HT
            With convention occurring the first weekend in October, Kris Hanley will provide a Morning Prayer service on October 7, 2018 at 9:00 a.m.  Morning Prayer will also be celebrated the 14th and 28th. 
            The Rev. Karen King will be celebrating the Eucharist at the October 21, 2018, 9:00 service, which will include an instructed Eucharist.  Also attached here is a list of terms for you to look over, either to remind yourself of what everything is called, what its purpose is, or to learn about those things for the first time.  Interestingly enough, everything has a purpose or meaning behind what we do and why we do it.  Take the opportunity to glance over those terms and remember just how rich our liturgy is.
            Noonday Prayer is held Monday through Friday at Noon.  If you want a quick break in the day to remember our purpose here, stop in.  Takes about 10 minutes.
          Our Bible Study meets on Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m.  We are currently using a Great Studies course on "Lost Christianities:  Christian Scriptures and the Battles Over Authentication."  The next study will be on the Dead Sea Scrolls.  All are welcome!
            Last, but not least, our Vestry meeting will be on Sunday the 28th after the service.  If you have anything you want to bring up to the Vestry, please talk with one of the members.

Deacon's Office Hours
         Deacon Angel Bolling holds office hours at the church from 10:30 to Noon, or by appointment. 

2018 Outreach Events
            In addition to our normal outreach activities that include providing vouchers for food, gas and lodging for stranded travelers, scholarships for our graduating seniors and the Prayer Shawl Ministry, Holy Trinity held two outreach events.  The first, on Crockpot Cooking, was poorly attended, but gave people ideas of how to choose the right crockpot for them, and provided the opportunity to experiment with a variety of ingredients.  The second, on Estate Planning, led by Libby's Steve Dalby and Troy's Scott B. Johnson was fairly well attended by people from both Troy and Libby.  The seminar discussed wills, trusts, healthcare powers of attorney, and other documents your family will need should something happen to you. 
            At each annual meeting, we discuss the projects and goals for the year – both in outreach ministries and as methods of introducing Holy Trinity to the community.  Past events have included herbal medicine workshops and various kitchen skills.  Other ideas have included a rummage sale, afternoon tea and life skills classes.  It's October, so put your thinking caps on, and come to the annual meeting with ideas, a willingness to lead and/or support the ideas of others. 

Daily Liturgy Readings
            Many of us like to read the daily readings with the Liturgical Calendar, but finding them can be a chore.  At this link, you will find the daily readings for the week, each with a link that makes reading them easy.  Additionally, there's something to help you experience "Quiet Time" – a time to meditate, pray, or simply sit and listen for the voice of God.  Try to find an hour each week to do that for yourself.

Bishop Search – Request to Parishioners
            The Diocese has requested everyone's help in getting the word out about the Bishop Search.  There is now a video, Diocesan Profile and application form on the diocese website.  Send any or all of them to people who might be interested, or post it on your Facebook or other social media applications you may have.



Building and Grounds
            Our new roof, weather permitting, should be installed in the first part of October.  We're sticking with the shingle type roof, but hope to eliminate a couple of places where we've got drainage problems.

            We're currently looking for someone interested in doing concrete work and re-building our deck, so if you know someone, tell them to contact Jill Wilson to get the particulars and get a bid put together for consideration by the Vestry.

October Feast Days
This month's Feast/Holy Days include

  • The 18th for St. Luke the Evangelist.  He is known as a patron saint of artists, physicians, bachelors, surgeons, students and butchers. 
  • The 23rd for St. James of Jerusalem, also known as St. James the Greater.  He is known as the patron saint of Spain and, according to legend, his remains are held in Santiago de Compostela in Galicia. 
  • The 28th for St. Jude and St. Simon.  St. Jude is known as the patron saint of desperate cases and lost causes. Saint Jude's attribute is a club. He is also often shown in icons with a flame around his head. This represents his presence at Pentecost, when he received the Holy Spirit with the other apostles.  St. Simon is the patron saint of curriers; sawyers; and tanners. 
·         And the 31st is the Vigil for All Saints (as well as being All Hallow's Eve or Halloween). 

            The links here will lead you to readings for those specific saints should you choose to honor them, or just learn more about them.

Prayer Shawl Ministry Needs Help!
            As everyone knows, the Prayer Shawl Ministry is currently meeting the first and third Sundays from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.  While we are always happy to have new knitters, crocheters and all around organizers, part of what we really need are names of people who need the shawls!  Prayer shawls only do some good when they're wrapped around people.  We've got all sorts of sizes and colors, and include lap blankets for those not so fond of shawls.  Each stitch is made with prayer, and often they get passed from person to person as people need to be wrapped in prayer.

            So, contact Angel, Kris or Jill with names and ideas of how to best get a shawl or blanket to them, and we will do our best to make that happen! 

Quarterly Assignments
            The fourth quarter assignments are up and available on the website, found here.  These are, of course, subject to change within the last 10 minutes before a service.  We are a flexible congregation.