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The Olive Branch, 7/20/22

July 19, 2022 By office

Click here to read the current issue of The Olive Branch.

Filed Under: Olive Branch

A Welcome Guest

July 17, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

God is here – in your life, in this world – and will help you let go of your anxiety and distractions so you can see God’s grace and find the blessing God brings.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Sixth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 16 C
Texts: Luke 10:38-42; Genesis 18:1-10a

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

Abraham and Martha honored a sacred obligation in their culture.

Abraham would have been shamed if he’d let these three strangers walk by without offering hospitality. Martha did the only thing acceptable when a guest appears, welcomed them into her home.

And in both households two critical roles of hospitality were done well. Food and refreshment is central to hospitality, and Sarah and the servant prepared that for their guests, while Martha did that for Jesus.

But someone also needs to attend to the guests. You can’t just leave them alone in your entryway, or standing outside. So Abraham was with his three guests, found them shade under the tree. Mary sat with Jesus, made him welcome as the meal was prepared, attended to his needs.

We’re not going to pit these two sisters against each other. Jesus never did. The important thing in both these stories is not who had to do what role. All offered faithful, welcoming hospitality, gave blessing and gift. So if the problem isn’t that Martha cooked while Mary lounged, a completely unfair assessment, what is it?

It’s simple: Martha was “worried and distracted by many things,” Jesus says.

Maybe by whether the meal was coming together. Maybe Jesus was a surprise guest, and she worried whether she had enough in the house. Maybe she’d just had a hard week. Maybe Lazarus was looking tired and Martha was starting to worry he might be sick with something. Who knows?

Regardless of source, her anxiety and worry distracted her from enjoying Jesus’ visit.

I get that. There’ve been times when I was the main one preparing the meal for guests and I was anxious and distracted. Not about being the one making the meal – I enjoy that. It could have been anything. And then I’d feel, after the guests had left, that my state of mind cost me the pleasure of having them there.

Maybe you remember a celebration where you just weren’t fully present because your mind or spirit were roiled up, and afterward it felt like you missed all the fun. Or something you long expected ended up a disappointment because of your state when it actually happened. Maybe even here, in this place, you’ve missed out on the grace of the beautiful music, or God’s Word, or the Meal, because of your distraction.

But what made it worse for Martha was that God was visiting her house.

Like Abraham and Sarah. This wasn’t an ordinary guest, this was God-with-us, in our human flesh. And that was a huge loss for Martha. Because her problem really wasn’t her sister Mary, or cooking the meal. You know what it’s like to blurt out something in your worry or anxiety that’s only masking your deeper concerns, or to say something you regret. If she really wanted Mary to help, she’d have found a way to ask. They loved each other.

But she spoke to Jesus. And her question is deeply revealing of her anxiety: “Lord, do you not care?” She’s worried about her place in Jesus’ love.

And sadly, because of her anxiety and distraction, even if Jesus acted in love toward her, she probably missed it. We know that feeling, being our own worst enemies and missing what we dearly want because we’re in a state where we can’t see it. And so Martha misses the very presence of God in her house.

And that’s how you know what the “better part” is that Jesus hopes Martha can find.

And you, too. It has nothing to do with what roles you and I are playing in our lives, whether we’re like Martha, or Mary, or Sarah and the servant, or Abraham. The better part is learning to recognize God’s presence in your life, in this world, for healing and hope. And if you’re worried and distracted by many things, it’s going to be hard.

Do you feel despair and fear over the condition of our world, like so many of us do? It’s legitimate. But if that takes you over, you’ll lose the ability to see where God is moving and acting in this world.

Are you anxious about threatening, uncontrollable things in your life, or that of those you love? Most of us have felt that. But if you and I lean into that anxiety, we might lose the eyes to see where God’s love is moving and touching and bringing life.

And if you feel guilt or suffer from fear that you’re not enough, that you’ve done things you’re ashamed of, again, we’ve all felt that. But if that distracts and dominates your heart, how will you see when God looks at you with the deepest love and says, “you are my precious one, always?”

This is why you and I come here every week: to learn to see God’s presence in our lives and the world.

Sure, sometimes our distractions win the day, even here. But here we can find quiet for our spirit to breathe and rest. God’s gift of music pulls us out of ourselves and draws us into the presence of God. God’s Word speaks into our hearts of God’s hope for justice in this world, and calls us beloved. God feeds us with goodness and love. Here we learn what it is to be on holy ground, to see and sense God’s presence.

Here you also learn that all ground is holy, there’s no such distinction as sacred and secular. Your eyes are opened so when you step out into your life, into your world, you can see God’s presence everywhere. When you’ve learned here how to drop your anxiety and distraction and find joy in God with you, you’ll be able to do that better out there, in the holy, sacred ground that is all of God’s creation.

This is the better part that will never be taken from you or this world: God is with you, and in this whole creation.

And when God is present, God blesses you with faith and trust to see God even more clearly.

Martha’s trust in Jesus became so deep that, even as her brother was lying in his tomb, she made the Gospels’ greatest declaration of Jesus as God’s Christ, as God’s Son who’s come into the world. Mary’s devotion to Jesus became so profound that, she, and only she, sensed the coming tragedy as Holy Week began, and she poured out her love with costly perfume and her hair over Jesus’ feet. And Abraham and Sarah, each nearly a century old, received the blessing of a child, but more, the blessing of courage and trust that this God they risked everything to follow would always be with them.

That’s the blessing, the better part God wants for you and the whole creation. With the Spirit’s help, even you will be able to see and trust ever more deeply that God is with you and in the world, and rejoice in that.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, July 17, 2022

July 15, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Sixth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 16 C

In worship we experience the presence and love of the God who is present in all the world, and learn to see and trust God everywhere we go.

Download worship folder for Sunday, July 17, 2022.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Grace Wiechman, lector; Vicar Mollie Hamre, assisting minister

Guest Organist: Dietrich Jessen

Download the readings for next Sunday for this Tuesday’s noon Bible study.

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

Verb, Not Noun

July 10, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Life in God, abundant life as Christ offers, is a lived reality, not a thing to have or hold; living in love of God and neighbor is living in God’s new life.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 15 C
Text: Luke 10:25-37

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

You can’t inherit eternal life. It’s not a thing to be possessed.

You can’t receive it or hold it. You can’t get it with a ticket, or own it. Eternal life, the abundant life Christ Jesus wants for you and me and the whole creation, isn’t a thing, a noun. It is only lived, experienced. It’s a verb.

So our friend today is mistaken at the start. He wants to know how to obtain something he thinks Jesus can give. But look at Jesus’ answer.

Love God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and love your neighbor as yourself. Do, this, Jesus says, and you will live. Do this, live this, and you will be living in this life from God you want.

Our friend, and so many like him, including you and me sometimes, believe you do what God wants so you’re rewarded with something.

No, Jesus says. This life isn’t a thing to be won or given. Do this – this love of God and love of neighbor – and you have it, right now, here. In that doing, you will know God’s abundant, eternal, new life.

We recognize our friend’s confusion from other things.

Take physical fitness. That’s not a reward, a present, something you can inherit or buy. No magic pills or tickets will give it to you. Exercise and eat healthily, and you’ll get there. Breaking free of addiction is the same. You can’t order it online or ask someone for it. You find support and guidance, and learn new ways of being, and you live into sobriety, and health.

But both of those things mean big changes in your life, one day at a time. And our friend is smart, like us. He knows that love of God and neighbor will mean changes in his life. Profound changes at times. And that’s not easy. So, rather than focus on the broad, complete love of God and neighbor and all that might mean for his actions, he tries one more time to make a noun the important thing, not the verb, not the doing. Even though doing it will give him exactly what he wants, he decides to limit the category of neighbor instead of focusing on his love.

Let’s talk about who you mean, Jesus. Who is my neighbor? Let’s describe that noun. Then maybe I can find a way to do this.

Well, you can’t trick Jesus.

Jesus sees clearly what he’s doing. Since our friend didn’t respond well to direct teaching, Jesus tries another way. “Let me tell you a story.” A story of someone beaten and left for dead in a ditch, a story of some who walked by and one who didn’t, who helped, who loved.

And Jesus refuses to classify neighbor. The categories mean nothing – priest, Levite, Samaritan, unknown guy in the ditch. What he asks at the end is, who acted as neighbor? Who loved someone here? The only question that matters this moment, this afternoon, tomorrow, next month, next year, is: am I acting in love or not?

Caring about the nouns, the categories we make, instead of the verbs, what we do, has nearly destroyed our world.

For almost half a millennium, racism has existed here because people who looked a certain way ordered their world by defining who was their neighbor, the person they cared about. They decided those of different skin color and culture were not neighbor, not even human, therefore could be enslaved, abused, killed. They were a noun, a thing. Property.

The legal system of this country and our social norms and customs and our cultural understanding have been shaped for hundreds of years on that ordering. We shouldn’t be surprised that we find embedded biases and prejudices in our own hearts and minds. We’ve been cooked in it for centuries.

And for millennia in the Western world, those who identify as male have been in charge. And they ordered their world by defining who was their neighbor, the person they cared about. They decided that everyone who wasn’t male was not neighbor, not fully human. They said that women weren’t capable, weren’t worthy of respect. Didn’t deserve equal pay or rights. Often they were property. A noun, a thing to be controlled. As the highest court in our land just reinforced.

Horrors are done for centuries because no one – especially, tragically, no one who’s been running everything all these years – ever stops and says, “the only thing that matters here is are we loving. Do we love all others as we love ourselves?

But when you focus on the verbs, on what you’re doing, everything changes.

Four decades ago, when Mount Olive began to be a safe, welcoming place for those who were LGBTQ, this community quit playing with nouns. All of the anguish and hatred and fighting over sexual orientation always focused on the nouns – who’s doing what with who, what physical parts belonged with what other ones, who gets to be with whom? Defining people and declaring what that means for the life they can live.

But this community – and thankfully many others – realized the only question was: is loving visible here? Can you see living in faithful, committed ways? Is there forgiving? All verbs. No definitions of the partners needed. The verb is everything, truth is seen in the doing.

What we learned here could change the world. When the only question in voting, in public policy, how you treat people at home, at work, out in the community, when the only question in thinking and acting on what’s wrong with our society and culture is: is this loving?, everything can change. Am I living in the love I know from God? Is our society acting in love? Is this policy a loving thing or not? Are we still objectifying people so that we don’t have to ask the love question?

The verbs are everything, Jesus says. Love God, love neighbor. Do this, and you’ll live. Right now. And so will this world.

Do you want God’s eternal life, God’s abundant life? It’s yours in your living in love of God and neighbor. And when you and I start living this abundant life, and others do, and others do, then this world actually becomes what God has always dreamed. This world will live, right now. Things will change, right now. Joy and hope and healing will begin, right now.

Start with loving your God with everything you are and have. Because when you dive fully into love of God you will find to your joy that you are beloved to God. You will know in your heart and soul and mind and strength how precious you are, how important you are, how much God will risk to live in love with you. That’s eternal life, right there.

And then, filled to the brim with that love in and from God, love of neighbor’s the only natural action. It pours out from you and me, and changes the world. That’s abundant life, right there.

Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength. And love your neighbor as yourself. Do this, and you will live.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, July 10, 2022

July 8, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 15 C

We worship a God who loves us with everything God is and has, and calls us to the same love of the Triune God with all we are and have, and to love our neighbors.

Download worship folder for Sunday, July 10, 2022.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Donn McLellan, lector; Judy Hinck, assisting minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Download the readings for next Sunday for this Tuesday’s noon Bible study.

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

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3045 Chicago Avenue
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