The Prophetic Power of Love

Dear Friends,

Our Presiding Bishop, the Most Rev. Michael Curry, has been making the rounds of morning talk shows this week, after his sermon at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle evoked so many responses of interest and excitement. Presiding Bishop Curry is a powerful preacher and in his sermon he preached on the redemptive power of love.

Love takes many forms, and certainly many people were focused on the romantic love which is so often expressed by a newly married couple. The presiding bishop reminded us though, that the love of God as revealed in Jesus Christ is also about the challenging commitment of addressing the needs of others, in a world where so many are lacking so much.

As if to emphasize that point, tonight the bishop joins other religious leaders in a  service at National City Christian Church followed by a candlelight procession to the White House.

The events in Washington, D.C., are part of “Reclaiming Jesus: A Confession of Faith in a Time of Crisis,”  an ecumenical Christian elders’ initiative launched in March to “reclaim Jesus” from those believed to be using Christian theology for political gain.

I hope you will read or listen to his sermon – there is a link to it in the article below. And I hope you will read more about the statement on “Reclaiming Jesus,” which you can find here.

Love is made manifest in the generous outpouring of our hearts when we are “in love” and in the ongoing and sometimes challenging commitment “to love” – to love  God and our neighbors, as ourselves.

Faithfully,

Tom

Come, Holy Spirit!

Rushing wind, dancing flame,
Holy breath who calls by name
Gift of truth, winged dove,
Streams of grace and font of love
Come, Holy Spirit!

Dear Friends,

This Sunday, we celebrate the Feast of Pentecost, a day in which we remember the coming of the Holy Spirit to the followers of Jesus. We will be celebrating at both the 8 am and 10 am services, with baptisms and festive music at the 10 am service. Don’t forget to wear red, or any  color that reminds us of the Spirit descending like “tongues of fire” upon the disciples. I am eager see the fire of God illuminating your life this Sunday as we gather to offer our praise and prayer.

Faithfully,

Tom

In Which Direction Are You Looking?

Dear Friends,

Today, May 10, is the Feast of the Ascension. Coming 40 days after Easter, it is the day on which the church recalls the scriptural accounts of Jesus’ ascension to heaven after numerous post-resurrection encounters with his followers. Traditionally, depictions of this event show the disciples looking upward, in both awe and astonishment. They were transfixed.

As Luke tells the story in the first chapter of Acts, two men robed in white – angels perhaps – had to then  reorient them.  “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven?” The disciples to leave Mt. Olivet and return to where they were staying in Jerusalem, where they would then discover the power of the Holy Spirit. That same Spirit then led them out into the world, bearing witness to God’s love for all of humanity. The focus of our Ascension gaze is not so much meant to be upward as it is outward.

We are living in times where all too many voices are encouraging us not to look up or out, but rather to look inward toward ourselves. If you consistently place your own interests first, it becomes easier to ignore the needs of others.

It seems like an especially appropriate time for the church to both hear and emulate the orientation of those disciples – to turn our gaze outward toward the world and all of its inhabitants, that we might be bearers of God’s embracing love.

Faithfully,

Tom

 

Getting the Word Out

Dear Friends,

Over the last two months, I have made an effort to record the sermons I have preached so that they are available on our parish website. Those of you who have looked for sermons there in the past know that at best, they have been posted sporadically.  I can’t promise you that they will be there every week, but I am making a commitment to you to post either an audio or text version of my sermons on a more regular basis.  Occasionally, our other clergy may choose to post a sermon as well.  If you have not visited the website, you will see when you go there a menu of Posts on the left hand side. Click on the link to Sermons, and it will take you to those sermons that we have posted.

You can go directly to the website by clicking here, or to the Sermon page by clicking here.

Of course, making sermons available in this way is not just a means of keeping us connected with one another, but also a means by which we can spread the word of how we are hearing the Spirit, seeing God’s beauty, and acting in love. If you hear a word on a Sunday morning that inspires you, I hope you will encourage others to listen as well. Let’s get the Word out!

Faithfully,

Tom

Dear Friends,

This past week, I joined colleagues from across the diocese to attend the annual Clergy Conference sponsored by the diocese. Dick and Lyn were also there, and if you have attended such conferences in your own field, you know that time away and together can be rich indeed. You reconnect with friends, find out what is going on in other parishes, and, as is always the case, come to fairly quick judgments about the effectiveness of the key note speaker or content being presented.

To note that this year’s speaker, Dr. Amy-Jill Levine, received a standing ovation at the end of her last lecture is to only hint at how compelling and informative she was. Dr. Levine is a professor of New Testament and Jewish Studies at Vanderbilt University Divinity School and College of Arts and Sciences. She is one of the editors of The Jewish Annotated New Testament, and has written numerous books related to the Jewish world in which Jesus lived and from which the New Testament arose.

A main emphasis of her work has been to help Christians understand the ways in which traditional, but by no means accurate readings of the New Testament, have often perpetuated an anti-Jewish bias.  In her opening remarks, she summed up much of her work by reminding us that we do not need to make Judaism look bad in order to make Jesus and Christianity look good.

Her presentations were at once scholarly, insightful, serious, and humorous. I know I will be reading some of her works in the future, and we have a copy of The Jewish Annotated New Testament here at the church office, if you are interested in borrowing it.

I’m grateful for the ways in which I was fed, challenged, and blessed during this conference. And I am grateful for your support in providing the time and funds for me to attend.

Faithfully,

Tom