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The Olive Branch, 9/4/13

September 5, 2013 By moadmin

Accent on Worship

Bowing at Mount Olive

     We at Mount Olive describe ourselves as a “musical, liturgical, and welcoming” congregation.  We are a bowing church as well.  That is, there are many of us who bow during the liturgy as one of our worship practices and postures.  There are at least a couple of reasons for this practice.

     First, we bow to worship God, acknowledging the presence of the Holy One in our midst.  This is why many of us bow to the processional cross (the symbol of our salvation), to the altar (the symbol of God’s presence), and when the name of Jesus and the Triune God (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) are sung or spoken.  Bowing to God is a practice mentioned a number of times in the Bible. For example the Psalmist writes, “O come, let us worship and bow down, let us kneel before the Lord, our Maker!”  (Psalm 95:6).  Bowing before God has been a traditional worship posture for God’s people, both Jewish and Christian, since the earliest times.

     We also bow to one another as a way of showing love and respect to our brothers and sisters in Christ.  Since the gathered assembly of worshippers is part of the body of Christ and since Jesus has promised to be present whenever two or three believers gather in His name, the presence of the Holy One is located not only in the symbols of cross and altar but in the assembly as well.  This is why Pastor Joseph bows both to the altar and to the people before entering the pulpit to preach.  Bowing to one another, with a nod of our heads, acknowledges that each person is a beloved child of God, created in God’s image.  It reminds us that we are called to love one another – friend, neighbor, and enemy alike.

     Bowing in worship is neither something I grew up with nor something I learned in seminary (the Lutheran church of my upbringing and seminary I attended being rather non-liturgical places.) But it has become a practice I hold dear.  I like that bowing allows worship to be something I/we do physically, a way to worship with our bodies as well as with the words of our mouths and meditations of our hearts.  Bowing reminds me that God is present not only spiritually, in our minds and hearts, but physically in the very space we occupy as we gather for worship.  And I appreciate that bowing allows us a way to form ourselves – body, mind, and spirit – into a posture of respect and reverence for the living God.

– Rob Ruff

Regular Worship Schedule to Resume This Sunday, September 8

This Sunday, September 8, we return to our regular worship schedule of two Sunday liturgies at 8:00 and 10:45 a.m.

God’s Work. Our Hands

     To mark the 25th Anniversary of the founding of our national church body, all Evangelical Lutheran Church in America faith communities are being asked to promote activities that give life to ELCA’s byline:  God’s Work.  Our Hands. Please join us for brunch between liturgies this Sunday, September 8. We will learn more about and celebrate Mt. Olive’s service to the broader community, both in our neighborhood ministries and in our own ministries beyond these walls.

Sunday Readings

September 8, 2013 – Time after Pentecost: Sunday 23 
Deuteronomy 30:15-20 + Psalm 1
Philemon 1-21 + Luke 14:25-33

September 15, 2013 – Time after Pentecost: Sunday 24
Exodus 32:7-14+ Psalm 51:1-10
I Timothy 1:12-17 + Luke 15:1-10

Keeping Up with the Cantor

     Anyone who is interested in seeing what Cantor Cherwien is up to during his sabbatical should check his blog: www.cherwien.blogspot.com.

God’s Work, Our Hands – Be Prepared to Draw Your Hand!

     On September 8, the ELCA will celebrate its 25th anniversary! In observance of this special day, Mount Olive will celebrate with a luncheon at which you may tell of the stories of our own experiences of reaching out into the neighborhood and community. In anticipation of this day, several members have scheduled service opportunities.

     Come and enjoy the meal and conversation and be prepared to engage in our community. Members of Mount Olive know how to use their hands and hearts to do God’s work.

First MFA Event for 2013-14 Season
The Portland Cello Project
Friday, September 13, 7:30 pm

     Mount Olive Music and Fine Arts presents cellists doing innovative things with music!! The Portland Cello Project has wowed audiences all over the United States with extravagant performances. The group has built a reputation mixing genres and blurring musical lines and perceptions wherever they go. No two shows are alike, with everything from Beethoven to Arvo Pärt to instrumental covers for Adele, Kanye West and Pantera. Check them out at https://portlandcelloproject.com.

     A reception follows in the Chapel Lounge. This event is free and open to the public, and a free-will offering will be received to support the Music and Fine Arts program.

The Olive Branch Resumes Weekly Publication

With this issue of The Olive Branch, we resume regular weekly publication of the church newsletter. The deadline for information to be published is Wednesdays at Noon.

 
Way to Goals Tutoring to Begin Soon

     Tuesday, October 1st is the first day of our school year program, Way to Goals Tutoring, and we will be meeting most Tuesday evenings after that until the last Tuesday in May.  We begin at 7:00 p.m. with an hour of tutoring followed by a half hour activity and snack time, and ending at 8:30 p.m.

     If you would like to help as a volunteer tutor of one or two elementary school students call Donna Neste at Mount Olive for all the details.

Freedom of the Christian: Bible Study on Thursday Evenings Starting Sept. 19

     The first Thursday Bible study series of this year begins on Thursday, Sept. 19, and runs for six weeks.  Meeting in the Chapel Lounge from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Pr. Crippen lead a study of the book of Galatians, one of Paul’s most vital and important letters.  As usual, there will be a light supper when we begin.  All are welcome to this study opportunity!

Altar and Chancel Cleaning Day to be Held September 14, 12 noon – 3 pm

     Several times each year members of the Altar Guild gather to clean the altar and chancel.  This involves dusting (lots of dusting, including some pretty high places!), polishing all the brass, and scraping wax from the floor, to name just a few of the tasks.  This cleaning day is open to all members of the parish.  You do not need to be an “official” member of the Altar Guild to participate.  Please join us on Saturday, September 14 at 12 noon.  

Every Church A Peace Church

     The next regular bimonthly potluck supper meeting of Every Church a Peace Church will be held on Monday, September 9th at 6:30 p.m. at Robbinsdale United Church of Christ, 4200 Lake Road, Robbinsdale, MN  (763-537-6965,  and on the web:www.robbinsdaleucc.org).

     The speaker for this program will be Jay Carlson, pastor at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Minneapolis, a congregation that has long been a neighborhood leader for social justice. In recent years, Holy Trinity has supported a campaign for better wages and working conditions for retail cleaning workers and has been leading an effort to address problems associated with payday lending. His program will be “Faith, Community, and Building Power: A Reflection on Holy Trinity’s Work for Peace with Justice in the City.”

     Pastor Carlson will be joined by Holy Trinity’s parish organizer, Meghan Olsen Biebighauser, who has received training in community organizing methods from the Midwest Academy in Chicago.

Pictorial Directory Information

     Photography for the new Mount Olive online Pictorial Directory will begin in earnest the first week of September.
     We will be producing an online digital directory.  This online directory will be password-protected so that access is limited to Mount Olive folks who are issued a password through the church office. For those who do not have computer access a hard copy will be available.

     Photography sessions will take place at Mount Olive Lutheran Church. Arrangements will be made for photographs of shut-ins.

     An email will be sent to each household of the parish giving instructions as to how you can sign up for a photography session.

     There will be time slots for photography sessions during the month of September on weekday afternoons and evenings.  Time slots will be available on weekends.

     For those households that do not have e-mail, a letter will be sent via U.S. Post Office with instructions for scheduling a photography session.

     After the initial period of self-initiated photography session sign up, follow-up contacts and phone calls will be made to arrange for those households that have not scheduled their session.

     In the week following your photography session, you will be asked to select one of the photographs taken of you or your household for the directory.  Each person/household will be given a digital copy of the photo selected for the directory.  There will be an opportunity to purchase prints and/or digital copies of your photos should you want to do so.

     We need volunteers for the following jobs related to the project:

a) Hosts during the photo sessions at the church
b) Data entry and photo management that can be done from your home online
c) Follow up phone scheduling.

     If you are willing to assist with one of these jobs, please contact Andrew Andersen at andrewstpaul@gmail.com, or Sandra Pranschke at spranschke@gmail.com.

Introducing Vicar Emily Beckering

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ:

     Greetings to you and peace! I am overjoyed to be beginning my time with you all; it is a privilege to be able to worship and to serve with you as the 43rd vicar at Mount Olive. On behalf of those who have come before me, and those who are yet to come, I would like to sincerely thank you all for your commitment to training vicars; your ministry is truly a gift to me and to the Church.

     My husband, Taylor, and I come to you from Luther Seminary in St. Paul. We will continue to live on the Luther Seminary campus throughout the year. Recently in July, we celebrated our second anniversary! I grew up in East Bethel, Minnesota, which is also the town of my home congregation, Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church. Taylor is from Worthington, Minnesota, and we both graduated from Gustavus Adolphus College. Currently, Taylor works as a substitute mail carrier for the U.S. Post Office in Apple Valley. He will begin the Master’s program in Counseling Psychology at St. Thomas University this coming fall. We enjoy visiting our families in Worthington and Howard Lake, playing board games, fishing, crafting gifts, and reading novels. If you would like to introduce us to some of your own board games, favorite authors, or consider yourself a crafty soul, we invite you to pass along your secrets!

     I am grateful to gather around Word and Sacrament with you each week for the coming year, and I look forward to our time together. I anticipate that I will learn much from our conversations, from our shared service in the name of Christ, and from feasting on the Word with one another.

     Thank you for welcoming Taylor and me into your midst. I am eager to witness how God is at work among you for the sake of the world!

Christ’s peace be with you,
– Vicar Emily Beckering

Book Discussion Group

     Mount Olive’s Book Discussion group meets on the second Saturday of each month at 10:00 a.m. at church. For the September 14 meeting they will discuss Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe, for October 12, The Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde, and for November 9, Parade’s End, by Ford Madox Ford.

South Africa Learning Tour

     Christ the King Lutheran Church (Bloomington), a congregation that also supports the ELCA mission work of Pastor Phil Knutson, will sponsor a trip to South Africa, February 14- March 1, 2014.  They will be visiting Johannesburg, Phil Knutson’s base for his work, as well as other areas including Durban and Cape Town.  The goal is to broaden visions and perspectives.  The cost is approx $5099, including flights. Mount Olive members are invited to join this group.  For more information, contact Pastor Hans Lee of Christ the King at 952-881-8600 or hlee@ctkb.org

Invitation to Attend Lutheran Volunteer Corps Commissioning

     Mount Olive members are warmly invited to join the Twin Cities’ Lutheran Volunteer Corps Commissioning Service and Reception at 2:00 p.m., this Sunday, September 8, at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church.  Mount Olive is a supporting congregation for Lutheran Volunteer Corps.  This will be a great way to show our support, to meet the 2013-2014 volunteers, and get to know other congregations and community organizations.  This celebration is also a great way to mark the 25th anniversary of the ELCA by showing our support of service to the world.  If you are interested in attending, please send an e-mail to Sophie Gardner, (sophialggardner@gmail.com) and bring a dessert to share if you can.  They would love to see Mount Olive members there and build connections between the young adults in LVC and Mount Olive.

Vestry Meeting Highlights: August, 2013

     The August 12 meeting of the Vestry just happened to fall on new Vicar Emily Beckering’s first day.  What a great way for her to see Mount Olive members in action!  Pastor Crippen introduced Vicar Beckering and she shared that, prior to entering Luther Seminary, she had been a special education teacher.  It was a great opportunity for her to share some of her background and get to know a little more about Mount Olive and the Vestry.

     The meeting was a lively one and included updates on the Visioning Committee.  They are currently in the process of synthesizing the material that was gathered by the different observation and interviews and plan on submitting a report to the Vestry in October so that a formal update can be included in the Semi-Annual Congregational Meeting.  There is a lot of information to cover, but it is an incredible opportunity for Mount Olive to engage in the community.

     Several committees had new members to submit for approval.  The newest member of the Internship Committee will be Joe Kane.  A newly formed Library Committee will include Dan Burow, Dwight Penas, Bonnie McClellan, and Leanna Kloempken.  Tom Graves and Ginny Agresti are now members of the Congregational Life Committee, and new to the Staff Support Committee is Rob Ruff.

     This was Cantor Cherwien’s last Vestry meeting before his sabbatical.  He spoke to the joy and energy that has been present during summer worship and also expressed his excitement to be travelling to places that will give him the opportunity to experience some amazing music.  Interim Cantor William Beckstrand will begin his three month tenure on September 1.

     Members of the congregation will be asked to schedule time to have their photos taken for the pictorial directory.  Paul Nixdorf will take photos in September and members will be able to select the proof of their choice to be included in the directory. Andrew Andersen and the Evangelism Committee have also been working on ways to augment internal parish communications to ensure that everyone has the important information that they need to stay current.

     The next meeting of the Vestry will be September 9, 2013 at 7:00 p.m.

Service Event at CES

     There will be a day of service event for families of Mount Olive at the Community Emergency Services on September 8 from 1-3.  CES is located at 1900 11th Ave S. in Minneapolis.  We will be doing some sorting and cleaning–projects which are much needed.  They are grateful for our willingness to help.  If your family would like to participate please call or email Beth Sawyer at mikebethsawyer78@gmail.com or 651-434-0666.  There are 8 spots left.   CES is looking for additional volunteers on Monday, September 9 from 9 to 10 am to top off grocery bags.  If you can help please contact Pastor Lyn Peterson at lpeterson@cesmn.org.

Filed Under: Olive Branch

New Eyes

September 1, 2013 By moadmin

The gift of belonging to Christ is that we are given eyes to see as the Triune God sees, and to see in the face of all others the face of Christ, which is the loving and gracious face of the Triune God for us and for the world.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen, Time after Pentecost, Lectionary 22, year C; texts: Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16; Luke 14:1, 7-14; Proverbs 25:6-7

Sisters and brothers in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

I love the image of secret identity that flows throughout literature.  Superheroes who are ordinary people among us, but special and gifted to help the world.  Or secret kings, like Henry V who walks among his troops the night before Agincourt, disguised so he might share this night with them free of royal honors, and honestly hear their true, unfiltered thoughts.  Sometimes not recognizing that identity leads people to act badly, to their regret, as in the fairy tale “Beauty and the Beast”, where the arrogant young prince turns away a poor old woman on a stormy night and she is a sorcerer who enchants him as punishment.

But the theme is always the same: you never know whom it is you are meeting, so take care.  The person might be a queen in disguise, or a hero, or even God.  So it is that Leo Tolstoy tells the beautiful story of Martin the cobbler who is promised that Jesus will visit him on a certain day.  All day long he waits for the visit.  Throughout the course of the day several people cross his path who are in need and he helps them with love and grace.  And that night, as he prepares for his bed, disappointed that Jesus didn’t come, Jesus comes to him and says that he was there all day, in those people.  They were his visit, his coming.

All of this makes what Hebrews says today very compelling.  We are invited to show hospitality to the stranger, because, we’re told, “by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it.”  This is something to consider.  A stranger, just as in all the stories, might actually be an angel of God.  Suddenly the wisdom about not putting ourselves above others that we hear from Proverbs and from Jesus makes good sense.  We don’t want to elevate ourselves above another: she might be an angel of God.  We can’t know who the other person we are encountering truly is, and we need to respect that, honor that, just in case they are someone special.

But are we missing something more profound here?  Jesus told other parables than this one, and there are a couple in particular that suggest that we are on the verge of a wonder we perhaps haven’t fully appreciated.  A wonder that has the possibility of transforming our lives as children of God, and connecting us to the life of the Triune God in ways we’ve not known before.

In fact it is Tolstoy who understood a deeper truth in this mystery.

It’s not just that sometimes angels of God visit us and we don’t recognize them.  It is in fact Jesus’ promise that in the other person we meet we will always see his face.  That in the economy of God, there is no such thing as “other.”

In Matthew 25, Jesus tells the parable of the return of the King, the story we better identify as the one about the sheep and the goats.  And what is significant about the people in that story is that those who did not feed the hungry, welcome the stranger, care for the sick, visit the prisoners, clothe the naked, give water to the thirsty, did not intentionally neglect the Lord Jesus, the King.  Had they known he was in all those people in need, those strangers, those “others,” they would have helped willingly, joyfully.

And the whole point of the story for us is, now we know.  Now we know where Christ is: hidden in everyone, everyone we meet.

And so with another of Jesus’ parables: instead of considering the place of Christ to be in the person of the good Samaritan, we realize in light of Matthew 25 it’s different.  Christ Jesus is the half-dead man in the ditch.  Serving him is serving Christ.  Loving him is loving Christ.

Do you see how this brings us to the edge of a new world?

We are invited by our Lord Christ to see all others as if we were seeing him, his face, his needs.  Franciscan priest Fr. Richard Rohr has said this: “If God is Trinity and Jesus is the face of God, then it is a benevolent universe.  God is not someone to be afraid of, but is the Ground of Being and on our side.” [1]

This is a wonder to embrace: Christ Jesus is the face of God, and shows us that the Triune God is benevolent, loving, and “on our side.”  If this is so, and we proclaim it is, what then of seeing Christ’s face in every “other,” in all?

Do you see how this changes everything?

If our eyes are opened to see in all others the face of Christ, which in turn is the benevolent and loving face of the Triune God, then we cannot but fall on our knees in the presence of anyone.  If the Incarnate One, God-with-us, now claims that this divine incarnation extends into all people, all God’s children, then we have a new reality.

But that’s not often how we’re used to thinking of this.

You see, we too often take this parable Jesus tells as a call to be “humble,” and we think we know what that means.  Too often we consider humility to be something we need to learn, something we need to assume.  We read Jesus’ words as telling us not to think too highly of ourselves, and to consider others as more important.

The problems with this are many, but let’s consider a couple.

First, some of us have more difficulties with pride and needing to be reminded not to push to the front of the line than do others.  There are people all over the spectrum, even in this room.  Some who feel they’ve never measured up as important, certainly not in comparison to others.  And others who feel that it’s a burden Jesus places on them to have to put others first, that they truly are special and worthy of notice.  And all of us are somewhere in between those two poles.  So taking Jesus’ words as a “one size fits all” pithy statement cannot work.

Second, Jesus is inviting a change of vision here, not a change of mind or attitude or action.  He’s inviting us to consider what it would be to look at others as if they were important.  Not put ourselves down, not force ourselves to stand back, not remind ourselves to act humble.  But actually see others as important in God’s eyes.  That’s a huge difference.

Humility is not about feeling bad about ourselves, or even proud that we acted humble once.  It’s actually seeing the light of Christ in the other and honoring that.  It’s a completely different thing Jesus invites, especially if we consider Matthew 25 alongside this.  We don’t take the better seat because we quite literally see in the other person the face of Christ, which is the face of God.  So of course we move lower.

It may be helpful for us to consider what we know in this room and see how that might carry beyond these walls.

When we gather for liturgy, we come here expecting to see the face of the Triune God.  We see God’s face in Word and Sacrament, in each other.  We love the silences because in them we hear God’s movement in our hearts and minds.  We love the Word, the music and song, the people, because through these gifts we are brought literally, literally, into the presence of God.

Not everyone always experiences this in worship; there are times when we do not.  But if we experience it at all it is because our eyes have been opened to it.  Much of what brings me into the presence of the Triune God in this space comes from my experiencing worship with all of you.  You have taught me that you expect God to be here, and in that I, too, have come to see God’s face.  That’s how communal worship works.

And once our eyes are opened, we see God more and more.  Yes, there are dry spells, times when our vision is less clear.  The life of discipleship, even worship, wanders through deserts as well as lush landscapes.

But we help each other in those times: those who are seeing more clearly stand with those who are not.  And together, we experience the grace of the presence of the Triune God who made all worlds, right here as we worship.

So what if what Jesus is telling us is that if we continue to open our eyes in the world, not just when we think we are “worshipping,” we would see his face, Christ’s face, there, too?  Do you see how different that feels?

Just as we have learned to see God here, to expect to see God here, we might also learn that “out there.”  And then everything we do in this world is worship, because we are constantly finding God and seeing God’s gracious, benevolent face of love for us and for this world.

And once we see Christ where he is, we will be led to act in a couple different but important ways.

First, we will love all others not out of false humility, not out of a patronizing sense of obligation, and certainly not because we think there’s an off chance they might be special.  We will love others because they are special.  They are Christ to us.

So living in grace and love toward others is like living in grace and love toward the most important people we know in the world.  Consider the people you love most, honor most, admire most.  How would you want to be with them?  How would you want to care for them?  We quite naturally want to love them, care for them, offer them the best place.

That’s how you care for all others, Jesus says.

When we see Christ where Christ has promised to be, we become people who live in the world with a joyful awareness of everyone’s secret identity, and who treat all accordingly.  Unlike those in the parable, we care for all because we know who they are.  Not because they might be angels.  But because they are Christ.

But second, it seems that if Christ is in all others, then we also come to others as we come to Christ, expecting blessing, grace, life.  When we come here and expect to see the face of God, we come hoping for the blessing only God can give us.  We experience grace, forgiveness, love, full acceptance, no exclusion.  We see in each other in this room that grace and love of God.  In fact, for all of us one of the most important ways God actually touches us with grace and love is through our fellow believers in this place.

But now we go out these doors and we are told we can expect Christ to be looking at us from everyone out there, too.  So we look at others not only seeking to love them as Christ.

But we look at others expecting they will be the Triune God’s blessing for us, to us, in us.

Think of that woman who visited our worship earlier this summer and bathed at the font.  It was clear she had many issues that tormented her, and I was deeply grateful that literally every question I had from members afterward was directed at her well-being, at hopes for her health and her future.  People loved her in Christ’s name here, loved her as if if she were Christ.

But what if we also consider that she was not only Christ to be served but Christ who blessed?  I don’t know what that might mean fully, but I can see important ways she brought the blessing and grace of God to us that day.

That’s the new vision to which Jesus invites us.

We must pray about this.  Consider this together.  And most of all, seek the grace of the Holy Spirit to give us new eyes for seeing.

Because if Christ Jesus really is out there, really in literally every person we see not only in this room but everywhere we go today, tomorrow, and beyond, then everything is changed.

Then liturgy becomes the actions of our lives and worship becomes our living and breathing.  Then music in praise of God becomes our daily voice and prayer our every word.  Then welcoming becomes our way of life and hospitality our heart and soul.

Because when we see another person we see the face of Christ, the face of the loving Triune God.  And there is no one on earth or in heaven we’d rather see.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

[1] https://cac.org/dm-themes 

Filed Under: sermon

A Watered Garden

August 25, 2013 By moadmin

The worship the Triune God desires of us is one where our lives are centered on God, our rest, our care for others, our work for justice, and when all that happens, our lives will be a watered garden in the presence of God.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen, Time after Pentecost, Lectionary 21, year C; texts: Isaiah 58:(6-9a), 9b-14; Luke 13:10-17

Sisters and brothers in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

We live in a broken world, a world where people suffer, where the creation itself suffers.  Where we suffer.  A world where evil seemingly thrives in more places than we can deal with, where we often feel powerless.  A world that we ourselves have divided into things sacred and things secular.  A world where we wonder where God is, and why God doesn’t do a better job.

We live in a world of our own making.  It is not the Eden of old, and that is certainly our fault; much as we would like to blame our forebears, we are thrown out of the garden by our own doing, our own actions, our own inaction.  We know this.

Yet when we come here in this place, on the Lord’s day, for a brief time we feel as if we are truly in a different world.  A world of beauty and grace.  A world where God’s word is “yes,” where healing truly is possible.  A world where we know that we are loved by God and that all are loved by God.  And we wonder: “why can’t this occur outside of here?”

We have a word of God from Isaiah that suggests God actually intends to make this world as it was meant to be, that what we experience here belongs out there, everywhere.  That what we see “out there” is not what is meant to be, that what we experience is not God’s will.

Because the LORD God, through Isaiah’s words, is telling us that part of our problem is that we have divided our world inappropriately.  That we call what we do in here on a Sunday worship, and what we do out there in the world something else.  That we seek God in this place but rarely expect God out there.  For God, according to this word of Isaiah, worship is far greater than we imagined.  And the way back to the created beauty of such a place as Eden is through true worship of God for whom there is no sacred or secular but only one existence in which the true God is moving and calling to us, and to all God’s children, who in turn live their lives in healing, restoring worship.

The people of Israel are sorely misled, Isaiah boldly shouts, if they believe that true worship of God is unrelated to their whole lives.

I asked the lector to start the reading from Isaiah a few verses before what was assigned so we could get a fuller context to our reading, but we could easily have gone back to the beginning of this chapter.  The LORD tells Isaiah to shout out the rebellion of the people, that they pretend to be a people who seek the ways of God, people who delight in the LORD, but God says they are not so.  They fast, they practice the proper religious rituals, but they don’t understand why God has seemingly abandoned them.  This is prophetic word from after the exile of the Jewish people in Babylon.

What is clear from the prophet in this chapter is that there is a disconnect between the worship of the people and their sense of God’s blessing on their lives and their world.  They complain, in verse 3, “Why do we fast but you do not see?  Why humble ourselves, and you do not notice?”  In other words, we’re worshipping faithfully here, and you don’t seem to care, God.  Life still has problems, pain, suffering.

What follows is the rebuke of the LORD toward these people.  In the verses preceding our reading this morning, God says that the people look to their own needs and interests on the LORD’s day.  Worse, they oppress their workers; they fast, but then go off and quarrel with each other.  They even fight and “strike with a wicked fist.”

Why on earth would God consider this worship and faithfulness? Isaiah asks.  What we heard this morning is God’s answer as to what true worship really is, what God is seeking from the people.  And, we must say, from us as well.

And it’s a lot more than we thought worship was.

“Is not this the fast that I choose,” says the LORD?  (It’s hard to be clearer than that.)  There are two elements to this “fast,” this true worship.  Both are non-negotiable.

The first element of the fast the LORD chooses, the true worship, is centered on our relationship with others.  Jesus would say, quoting the Old Testament, “Love your neighbor as yourself.”  It’s a powerful vision that God’s sense of true worship begins with our care for others, in three specific areas.

First, true worship begins with the breaking of the yoke, the removing of the yoke.  Using an agricultural image, the prophet speaks of a tool placed on draft animals that draws on their energy to make work happen.  So we are told that when others’ lives and energy are used for our profit, our benefit, when others suffer so that we might enjoy what we have, we are using them as slaves, as pack animals, beasts of burden.

True worship of God begins with removing such injustice from our society, from our institutions, from our world.  We cannot pretend to be free, we cannot pretend to be delighting in God, when we participate in structures that bind, oppress, and harm others.  When we take advantage of other people.

Second, true worship begins with the ending of evil between us and other peoples, when we stop pointing the finger at each other, at friends, at enemies.  There is no way we can consider ourselves truly in line with God, truly worshipping, if in our lives we point blame at others instead of ourselves, speak evil of others, and act as if we are blameless.

It’s hard to find a more direct and appropriate prophetic word about our culture and our lives than these two, both the yoke of oppression and now this “pointing of the finger” Isaiah names.  So long as we refuse to consider our participation in the evil of this world, the evil of our lives, even the oppression of others, so long as we speak ill of others, we are not truly able to worship God.

Third, true worship begins when we “offer our food to the hungry and satisfy the needs of the afflicted”.  When we bring the homeless poor into our homes, share the abundance of bread we have with those who cannot find food, and clothe the naked.  Little wonder Jesus told the parable of the sheep and the goats: it is in meeting such needs, even Isaiah says, that we truly worship God, truly see God.  Or as Jesus would say, “when you do this to one of these, you do it to me.”

The second element of the fast the LORD chooses, the true worship, is centered on our relationship with God.  Jesus would say, quoting the Old Testament, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength.”

This Sabbath worship Isaiah speaks of is not the same as the rule-loving Pharisees speak of in our story of Jesus today.  For them, keeping Sabbath is following the form, the rule, more than the spirit of Sabbath.

Isaiah, rather, speaks the word of the LORD that when we spend seven days a week year round on our own interests, our own needs, our own priorities, we leave little to no room for God.  It is remarkable that in this passage keeping a Sabbath rest, taking one day in seven to focus on God, on living in the love and grace of God’s priorities, is as important as caring for the neighbor.

Isaiah’s people are “trampling” on the Sabbath.  They’re not just ignoring it.  They’re willfully doing their own things, caring for their own needs, even on Sabbath.  But Isaiah says that cannot be worship.  Until they, until we, take time for Sabbath rest every week, time to focus on God and not ourselves, we cannot truly worship.

This is part of what we are all doing here this morning, to be sure.  But it is so much more.  There is a sense in these verses of a life that is shaped and fed and described by weekly rest with God.  When you call the Sabbath a delight, when you find the holy day honorable, then, then, Isaiah says, you shall truly take delight in the LORD.  It’s hard to love the LORD your God if we never take time away from our own interests, and nigh on to impossible to care for God’s concerns if we focus only on our own.

Interesting, isn’t it, that Isaiah’s order is different than we are used to hearing: here neighbor is first, then God.  But both are necessary for the promises to be revealed, fulfilled, lived, experienced.  Because that’s the real joy of this word of God in Isaiah today: if we do these things, then wonderful things will happen.

Now, let us say this clearly: “If and then” is not a question of conditional love of God; it is a statement by the Triune God that if certain things happen, there will be wonderful consequences.

The unconditional love of God for us and for all people is not at risk here by our self-centeredness and lack of love for our neighbor or for God.  Rather, what the LORD God is saying to us in these verses is simple cause and effect: if we live in such love of neighbor and love of God, we will see amazing things.

There will be a unity to our lives where we do not see part of our lives as “ours” and “secular” and part of our lives as “God’s” and “sacred.”  All things become holy, all our lives become God’s, and everything, everything becomes worship.

When we break the yoke, stop pointing the finger, stop speaking evil, and start sharing food and caring for the needs of others, the world becomes a beautiful place, the LORD says.  Light shines into our lives and into the world.  Our bones, and the bones of our neighbors, will become strong, God says.  Ancient ruins will be rebuilt, roads repaired, safe streets created.

It couldn’t be simpler: caring for others and dealing with all that entrenched evil is the pathway God says leads to a world as God intended it to be.

Likewise, when we take our Sabbath rest and focus weekly on our love of God, we not only are filled with that love.  We actually begin living in such a way that we are children of God, sharing all the delight that means.  We take our inheritance alongside Jacob and all the other ancestors of faith, Isaiah says.

Our lives become one with God and with each other.

When God’s people see their entire lives as worship, their entire lives as shaped by love of neighbor and love of God, things in God’s world will dramatically improve.  That’s the promise.  The world will become one with God’s will and intent.  And God’s healing will begin to flow everywhere.

The image that seems to come to my heart the most in these words is this line: “You shall be a watered garden.”

Our whole lives of faith begin with the sense of the loss of Eden, the loss of intimacy with God and with each other.  Ever since, humanity has fought with each other, fought with God, separated our lives from each other and from God, and lived as if we were in charge.

And we wonder why things are so horrible.

Now we know: if we find true worship in God’s answer, we will find our lives and this whole world becoming like a watered garden, and we will find God restoring the creation through us, through all, into the world God has intended from the beginning.

And all things will be full of the knowledge of God, all our lives, everything will be worship, and we will see things we only have dreamed until now, for “the mouth of the LORD has spoken this.”

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

The Olive Branch, 8/21/13

August 21, 2013 By moadmin

Accent on Worship

A Great Gift

     Once a young J. S. Bach set out on foot for a 250 mile journey,  a four week  leave to observe Buxtehude in Lübeck.  It turned into a three-month absence for which he was punished.  Since he had hired a replacement (Johann Ernst Bach), he didn’t worry about the extension  because he had “hoped the organ playing had been so well taken care of by the one he had engaged for the purpose that no complaint could be entered on that account.”  Indeed.

     We have no way of knowing the significance of Bach’s trip,  but I’m guessing it was pretty influential for the 20-some year-old budding genius.   What’s three months in the grand scheme of things,  given the impact of this person’s lifetime of work?  Imagine if his superiors gripped on to him and his time,  thus depriving him of what most likely was significant input.

     I am lucky. I serve a congregation who understands the value of this kind of thing.  I’m hardly in my twenties anymore,  but input is still vital for me, and for all of us, actually.  The best way I learn is through experiences,  through observation,  having the chance to get out and hear and experience what’s going on elsewhere.  This will be my third sabbatical in my career,  and the second one during my time here at Mount Olive.  Each of the previous times were rich with experiences which fed our energy upon returning.  I’m expecting the same this go around.

     I’m energized by travel – by adventure.  And I will be doing a lot of it!  I will begin in Europe,  where my calling was begun – twice – first as a 13- year-old organ student in southern France,  then as a fresh college graduate studying Church Music in Berlin. I will be in Paris for two weekends,  attending 5 liturgies each Sunday (I’ve developed a Sunday itinerary that includes 3 Eucharists,  and 2 organ recitals).  I will then head to Berlin to see the people and places of my schooling 30 years ago,  and then to Leipzig,  to attend the weekend’s activities which include Motets and Cantatas.

     Following that trip, I was able to accept hymn festival invitations that I normally would not (because I GET to be here!),  and they will take me (and Susan who has also been invited to present at these) to Midland, Texas,  Lancaster, Pennsylvania,  Orange County, California,  Phoenix, Arizona,  and Indianapolis, Indiana!
     In mid October,  I will observe rehearsals and attend Evensong at King’s College, Cambridge England – an experience that I’m especially excited about.

     To top it off,  there is a wonderful series of concerts in New York City on the theme of spirituality – and I’m hoping we can go there to experience some of those in November.

     It will be a rich time – and I am extremely grateful for this opportunity, and the time.  Who knows what three months of input will do to my output in the six years that follow!

     Yet, sabbaticals work in both directions!  It is an opportunity for you to experience gifts of someone with different set of experiences, bringing new and fresh ideas to into your midst.

     In my place here at Mount Olive will be William Beckstrand.  He is an outstanding musician,  known for composition and church music!  He has served several parishes in the Twin Cities and Duluth,  and is currently a full time composer.  His gifts will be different,  and I know wonderful.  And I pray your gifts to him will also be a blessing!

     I will keep in touch.  Watch The Olive Branch for how I’ll decide to do that.

– Cantor Cherwien

Sunday Readings

Aug. 25, 2013 – Time after Pentecost: Sunday 21 
Isaiah 58:9b-14 + Psalm 103:1-8
Hebrews 12:18-29 + Luke 13:10-17

Sept. 1, 2013 – Time after Pentecost: Sunday 22
Proverbs 25:6-7 + Psalm 112
Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16 + Luke 14:1, 7-14

Regular Worship Schedule to Resume September 8
On Sunday, September 8, we return to our regular worship schedule of two Sunday 
liturgies at 8:00 and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Church School and Adult Education also resume on that day.

Book Discussion Group

     Mount Olive’s Book Discussion group meets on the second Saturday of each month at 10:00 a.m. at church. For the September 14 meeting they will discuss Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe, and for November 9, Parade’s End, by Ford Madox Ford.

Women’s Vocal Ensemble – for August 

     A women’s ensemble will be assembled to sing at the Eucharist this Sunday, August 25, 9:30 service.  We will have one rehearsal, that morning at 8:00 a.m.  (coffee provided!)  Contact Cantor Cherwien if you would like to sing, or simply come this Sunday, August 25, at 8:00 am.

Congregational Care Comes to the Forum

     The art of giving and accepting care will be a forum topic during the coffee hour on Sunday, October 13.  Many at Mount Olive find themselves in the role of caregiver while others find themselves in the often unfamiliar spot of having to accept care from others.  While we tend to think of this as an “old people’s problem”, this is a generational concern as people care for aging parents, sick friends, special needs children, and ourselves.

     Key to care is knowledge of services and programs available in our state and city and how to access them.  While most of us know a little bit about some things, laws change and it is hard to keep up.  The forum could address a variety of topics, such as:

–  End of life issues – how to plan for known and unknown entities and how to access help.  Learn about health care directives, Hospice, and plan your funeral.
–  Family support – shifting roles, new responsibilities, changes in and losses of a loved one.  What will you need to help get through the tough times?
–  Unexpected life transitions – i.e. divorce, suicide, chronic illness, parenting small and adult children, and all the unanticipated twists and turns of life.
– Spiritual resources – accepting God’s grace through the loving action of the Mount Olive community.  We all need to learn and be open to how this works.

     This is a tall order for one forum!  The final shape of the hour depends on what topical interest emerges as a “high demand” priority.  Please weigh in via phone, email, or conversation by contacting Marilyn Gebauer at 651-704-9539 or by email at gebauevm@bitstream.net.  Feel free to speak with any of the other members of the Congregational Care Committee: Cathy Bosworth, Peggy Hoeft, and Warren Peterson.  

Arts on Chicago

     On the counter outside of the church office reception window, there is a basket that contains a handy pocket-sized “Arts On Chicago” guide.  Please help yourself and take advantage of the many arts offerings in the neighborhood around Mount Olive.

A Note of Thanks

     Thank you to the many friends and members of Mount Olive who lifted my health in prayer during and following my recent surgery.  Pastor’s visit to the hospital along the many expressions of encouragement and good health, both in person and via cards, have indeed been a blessing and brought about the desired healing. Now to work on getting my voice back!

– Adam Krueger

Mission spotlight: LWF–Jerusalem

     Mount Olive’s Missions Committee each year selects new and continuing national and global projects for relatively modest direct grants that are in addition to our mission support through the ELCA. Our funding—on behalf of the congregation—of the Lutheran World Federation’s Jerusalem work, which falls under LWF’s Department for World Service, supports Palestinian refugees and others through the 100-year-old Augusta Victoria Hospital (which, happily for us, is located on the Mount of Olives!), a vocational training program for young men and women, scholarships, and work in peace, justice, and reconciliation. Last year LWF’s Jerusalem program (which now extends to serving Syrian refugees in the Zaatari camp in northern Jordan) served nearly 28,000 people at the hospital, more than 700 in the vocational program, and awarded scholarships and material help to almost 3,500 people. Mount Olive’s role in this troubled part of the world may be small, but we are there.

Neighborhood Ministries Newsletter
Available This Weekend

     Greetings from Mount Olive Neighborhood Ministries, the Neighborhood Ministries quarterly newsletter, will be distributed following the liturgy this Sunday, August 25.  If you will not be in church that day and wish to pick it up, it will be in the church office and also in the narthex.

Pictorial Directory Information

     Photography for the new Mount Olive On Line Pictorial Directory will begin the first week of September with EARLY dates in August.

****SPECIAL EARLY TIME SLOTS ARE AVAILABLE BEFORE THE END OF AUGUST***

     If you would like to have the picture for your household taken before kids depart for college or if you are not available during the month of September for a photography session, please call the church office at 612-827-5919, or contact Paul Nixdorf at   612-296-0055   or by email to   pn@paulnixdorf.com  to arrange for a photography session before the end of August.

     We will be producing an online digital directory.  This online directory will be password-protected so that access is limited to Mount Olive folks who are issued a password through the church office. For those who do not have computer access a hard copy will be available.

     Photography sessions will take place at Mount Olive Lutheran Church. Arrangements will be made for photographs of shut-ins.

     An email will be sent to each household of the parish giving instructions as to how you can sign up for a photography session.  There will be time slots for photography sessions during the month of September on weekday afternoons and evenings.  Time slots will be available on weekends.

     For those households that do not have e-mail, a letter will be sent via US Mail with instructions for scheduling their photography session.

     After the initial period of self-initiated photography session sign up, follow up contacts and phone calls will be made to arrange for those households that have not scheduled their session.

     In the week following your photography session, you will be asked to select one of the photographs taken of you or your household for the directory.  Each person/household will be given a digital copy of the photo selected for the directory.  There will be an opportunity to purchase prints and or digital copies of your photos should you want to do so.

     We need volunteers for the following jobs related to the project:
a) Hosts during the photo sessions at the church
b) Data entry and photo management that can be done from your home online
c) Follow up phone scheduling.

     If you would be willing to assist with one of these jobs, please contact Andrew Andersen at andrewstpaul@gmail.com, or Sandra Pranschke at spranschke@gmail.com.

First MFA Event for 2013-14 Season
The Portland Cello Project
Friday, September 13, 7:30 pm

     Mount Olive Music and Fine Arts presents cellists doing innovative things with music!! The Portland Cello Project has wowed audiences all over the United States with extravagant performances. The group has built a reputation mixing genres and blurring musical lines and perceptions wherever they go. No two shows are alike, with everything from Beethoven to Arvo Pärt to instrumental covers for Adele, Kanye West and Pantera. Check them out at https://portlandcelloproject.com/.

     A reception follows in the Chapel Lounge. This event is free and open to the public, and a free-will offering will be received to support the Music and Fine Arts program.

Summer Worship Schedule Draws to a Close

     Sunday, September 1 (Labor Day weekend) will be our last day on summer worship schedule. Beginning Sunday, September 8, we resume our regular worship schedule of two Sunday liturgies at 8:00 and 10:45 a.m.

Stop and Shop

     Summer art fairs are over and The Art Shoppe in the Midtown Global market is well stocked! Beautiful and unique works of art from over 60 artists are waiting to be purchased and worn or used by you and your friends and loved ones.

     Come and shop in the air-conditioned comfort of the Midtown Global Market!

Freedom of the Christian: Bible Study on Thursday Evenings Starting Sept. 19

     The first Thursday Bible study series of this year begins on Thursday, Sept. 19, and runs for six weeks.  Meeting in the Chapel Lounge from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Pr. Crippen lead a study of the book of Galatians, one of Paul’s most vital and important letters.  As usual, there will be a light supper when we begin.  If anyone wishes to provide the first meal, please let Pr. Crippen know.  All are welcome to this study opportunity!

TRUST: Coming Activities

     Cooperative Older Adult Ministries (CoAM) will sponsor a new Life Enrichment Series beginning October 7. This educational series will focus on the relations between the U.S. and other countries, such as China and Egypt. Mount Olive member, Dan Burow, will speak on the founding of our country and the Revolutionary War.

     Two tours will also be offered in the coming months. The first is an autumn train excursion on October 24, cost is $57 per person. The second is  a trip to see a Christmas play, “Sorry, Wrong Chimney,” presented by Day Trippers Dinner Theater on December 12. The cost for that trip is $51 per person.
     For more information about these and other TRUST happenings, see the bulletin board downstairs near Donna’s office.

Friendly Callers Meet for Check-In This Sunday August 25

     Mount Olive’s Friendly Callers will meet for a brief check-in August 25, following the 9:30 Eucharist.  We will meet near the Library for a short stand-up meeting to check the progress of our Friendly Calling Program and to offer each other support.  Any questions about the Friendly Callers can be directed to Sue Ellen Zagrabelny at 815-997-6020.

Filed Under: Olive Branch

Looking to Jesus

August 18, 2013 By moadmin

Following Jesus, according to Jesus himself, according to our forebears in faith, according to the reality of life in this world, is fraught with challenges, divisions, pain and suffering at times; yet we follow Jesus who walked it himself, and will bring all to completion and heal all the world.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen, Time after Pentecost, Lectionary 20, year C; texts: Hebrews 11:29 – 12:2; Luke 12:49-56

Note to the reader: 
This sermon begins with a retelling of a story first told by Jack Hitt, on This American Life, National Public Radio.  I read it from a transcript of the 500th episode, which was a compendium of previous shows, and which aired July 12, 2013.  It is truly an oral story, and will likely have more impact if heard first and not read.  At the transcript on the show’s website, http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/500/transcript, there is also a link to the audio of the whole show: http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/500/500.  This segment begins at 35:35, a little over halfway through the show.
Listen to him tell it.  You’ll be glad you did. – Pr. Crippen

Sisters and brothers in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

I heard a story on the National Public Radio program This American Life a month ago and I’d like to share it with you.  I’m going to read the actual transcript since it isn’t my story, and since I also couldn’t retell it any better than the speaker.  It’s a story by a man named Jack Hitt, and he tells it about his four year old daughter. [1]

“It all began at Christmas two years ago, when my daughter was four years old.  And it was the first time that she had ever asked about what did this holiday mean?  And so I explained to her that this was celebrating the birth of Jesus.  And she wanted to know more about that.  And we went out and bought a kid’s Bible and had these readings at night.  She loved them.  Wanted to know everything about Jesus.  So we read a lot about his birth and about his teaching.

“And she would ask constantly what that phrase was.  And I would explain to her that it was ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.’  Then we would talk about those old words and what that all meant.

“And then one day, we were driving past a big church, and out front was an enormous crucifix.  She said, ‘Who is that?’  And I guess I’d never really told that part of the story.  So I had to sort of – ‘Yeah, oh, well, that’s Jesus.  And I forgot to tell you the ending, yeah.  Well, you know, he ran afoul of the Roman government.  This message that he had was so radical and unnerving to the prevailing authorities of the time that they had to kill him.  They came to the conclusion that he would have to die.  That message was too troublesome.’

“It was about a month later after that Christmas we’d gone through the whole story of what Christmas meant.  And it was mid-January, and her preschool celebrates the same holidays as the local schools.  So Martin Luther King Day was off.  And so I knocked off work that day and I decided we’d play, and I’d take her out to lunch.

“And we were sitting in there, and right on the table where we happened to plop down, was the Arts section of the local newspaper.  And there, big as life, was a huge drawing by, like, a 10-year-old kid from the local schools, of Martin Luther King.  And she said, ‘Who’s that?’  And I said, ‘Well, as it happens, that’s Martin Luther King.  And he’s why you’re not in school today, because we’re celebrating his birthday.  This is the day we celebrate his life.’

“And she said, ‘So who was he?’  I said, ‘Well, he was a preacher.’  And she looks up at me and goes, (excitedly) ‘For Jesus?’  And I said, ‘Yeah, yeah, actually he was.  But there was another thing that he was really famous for, which is that he had a message.’  And you’re trying to say this to a four-year-old.  It’s very – this is the first time they ever hear anything, so you’re just very careful about how you phrase everything.

“So I said, ‘Well, yeah, he was a preacher, and he had a message.’  And she said, ‘What was his message?’  And I said, ‘Well, he said that you should treat everybody the same, no matter what they look like.’  And she thought about that for a minute.  And she said, ‘Well, that’s what Jesus said.’  And I said, ‘Yeah, I guess it is.  I never thought of it that way, but yeah.  And that is sort of like “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”’

And she thought for a minute and looked up at me and said, ‘Did they kill him too?’”

Jesus said, “Do you think that I have come to bring peace to the earth?  No, I tell you, but rather division!  From now on five in one household will be divided, three against two and two against three; they will be divided.”

We have so much difficulty hearing these words.  Too often we inwardly wish that we could skip them and read past them.  We’d like to dodge any suggestion that Jesus asks something of people that doesn’t unite but divides, that might even break up families.

Yet this little girl, who apparently from the story at any rate had little religious upbringing, this four year old child heard of Jesus and what he taught and what happened to him and knew two things intuitively and definitively about Martin Luther King, Jr.: One, what Dr. King said was the same as what Jesus said.  And two, it wouldn’t be surprising if he was killed for it just like Jesus was.

Why is it so hard for us to take Jesus seriously here?  Why do we pretend he was this innocuous, easy-going person?  He was killed for what he taught: does that tell us nothing?

Do we want to forget that the reason he’s so anxious and even angry in this story is that he knows he’s heading toward his death, something that will be brutal and horrifying, something that he wishes could be over and done with?

We are too often like Simon Peter, who prompted this whole little tirade by his oblivious and blind question a few verses earlier.  After the parable we heard last Sunday, about being good slaves who are always ready for the master to return, even as a thief in the night, Peter asks, “Are you telling this parable for us, or for everyone else?”

In other words, “you’re really worried about all those other people not being ready, right Lord, not your beloved inner circle of disciples?”  The verses between last week’s Gospel and today’s are Jesus’ blistering response to Peter.

He tells another parable about slaves being ready, but with a twist.  In this parable, there are some slaves who know their master is returning, but when he’s delayed they decide to party, eating and drinking until they’re drunk, beating their fellow slaves.  When the master returns, they are horribly punished.

But the punch line is that because they ought to have known better, they are worse off than those who ignorantly aren’t doing the work of the master.  “To whom much is given, much is required” comes at this point.  And what Jesus would have us and Peter know is this: for those who know what discipleship is, who know what the master would have us do, and choose not to do it, for those it will be far worse than for those who never heard.

It’s likely that if we do fail at our service, our discipleship, our faithfulness, it is because we’d rather avoid the consequences Jesus speaks of for those who follow, consequences even a four year old child can grasp.

The letter to the Hebrews is no less honest or difficult than Jesus today.  Same with Jeremiah.  In that amazing laundry list of heroes of the faith in Hebrews the terrible things that happened to those who were faithful is astonishing.  I’m no expert in advertising, but if you’re trying to attract believers, talking about tortures, being sawn in two, and living in holes in the ground is not likely to win converts any more than promises of division within families.

And the LORD says through Jeremiah that prophets who talk dreamily to people might win the favor of the people but not of God.  Yet speaking the word of God is always going to get the prophet in hot water with everyone else.

Gideon, on the Hebrews list, was a hero of mine as a child, but there’s a part of the story we often forget.  Right after he is called by God to lead the Israelites against the oppression of the Midianites, the first thing he is asked to do is tear down his father’s altar to Baal, and the sacred pole next to it, using his father’s second best ox.  Then he’s to chop up the altar and the pole, and burn that second best ox on the wood as a purifying sacrifice to the LORD.

It turns out his father defends his actions to the enraged townspeople, but how do you think Gideon initially felt about that request?  To follow the LORD is to potentially stand against even your closest family.

We cannot pretend either that these are ancient anomalies or that they are not so.  The history of the Church, the history of our own lives, is riddled with divisions and pain caused by people seeking faithfully to serve their Lord and Master Christ Jesus.

The whole church on earth is split into two parts, and a thousand years later we’re still divided.  The western part of that church is split into hundreds of pieces and five hundred years later we’re still divided.  Congregations kick people out for professing their understanding of the Gospel, congregations split, denominations sever ties with other denominations and self-implode over questions of true discipleship.

We don’t need Jeremiah, Hebrews, and Jesus to tell us this is so.  There is a harsh reality that following the way of Christ is not only hard, individually and collectively, but that it leads to divisions, pain, suffering and all sorts of difficulty.

So what are we supposed to do?  Three things seem to rise before us.

First, we might wish to learn that avoiding division is not a worthy goal as we seek to be faithful.  Jesus and the others aren’t being prescriptive here, saying that the hope of following Christ is that divisions occur.

At the same time, what is clear is that if we are making our decisions so that no one is offended, so that all are always unified, we’re probably not being faithful servants of Christ.  We may not want to disagree with each other, or other Christians, and we certainly don’t try to do things that cause division.

But if Jesus is describing reality here, which all evidence says he is, we also cannot let our fear of division or setback or suffering keep us from doing what we believe our Lord and Master is calling us to do.

Second, this means, obviously, that we are better off when we follow where our discernment tells us God is leading, regardless of consequences.  This means that we need to learn how to discern faithfully the calling of the Triune God.

We need to learn how to understand when we are at a crossroads, where to look for guidance and advice, how to listen to other believers and each other and to the Church, and how our Lord Christ speaks to us.

But when we have done that to the best of our ability, and when we feel we know where the Spirit is leading, we’d best do it, rather than play the part of Peter and say, “this is really for others to do, right?  We’ll play it safe, if you don’t mind.”

And this applies individually and collectively, to our own personal faith journeys and spiritual lives, to the life and journey of this and every congregation, and to the life and journey of all the ways we are joined to other believers in this world.

Third, when we look back at what Hebrews says, we find that division and pain are not the end, that there is something more.  “Surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses,” Hebrews writes, “let us look to Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of our faith”.

Both words are critical.  Jesus is the pioneer, we see that in today’s Gospel.  He goes before us into the world, facing what is often a hard road, with people seeking to destroy him because he embodies the love and grace of God for all.  He is our pioneer, today rather frustratedly and urgently calling to us, but always calling us to follow, even though the road is likely to be hard.

This is a great promise: whatever we might face in being faithful, our Lord has faced worse, and so walks with us.  Even to death, so there is nothing anyone can do to us that is worse than what the One who leads us experienced.

But Jesus is also the “perfecter,” which literally means the “completer,” of our faith.  Hebrews says that the faith journey of those heroes listed was not perfected, that is, completed, without the current generation.  Therefore, says Hebrews, salvation is never completed until all are brought together as one by the Christ who on the cross draws all people to himself.

Whatever divisions we have, whatever pain we suffer, whatever problems come from our faithful discipleship, they are never the end, never the final word.  The final word is always that through the cross and resurrection Jesus has in fact brought peace, not division, and has perfected, completed the salvation God has begun in him.

Make no mistake, the life of discipleship Jesus envisions requires courage of us.

We know that we will receive that courage as a gift of the Spirit when we pray, and so it is meet and right that we so pray.  Let us do that.

But let us also resolve that we face Jesus and his call honestly and openly, without dodging or ignoring, without seeking an easy way around.  It will not be easy for us.  It never is.  Even a child can tell us that.

But we have our Pioneer who goes before us and who in his death and resurrection completes the plan of God which will bring all into the life and grace of the Triune God.

“Yes, Peter; yes, all of you at Mount Olive; yes, all my children,” Christ says, “this parable is for you, not just everyone else.  But be not afraid, for I have overcome the world.  Come, follow me.”

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

[1] http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/500/transcript

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