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A Good Tree

February 20, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The fruit of the life in Christ is produced by you when God makes you a good tree, a life that naturally bears God’s fruit of love for the healing of the creation.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Seventh Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 7 C
Text: Luke 6:27-38 (plus 39-49 from Lect. 8 C, hardly ever used)

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

Fruit is a little miraculous to me.

We had a raspberry patch in the back yard of the first house we ever bought. Invariably infested with ravenous mosquitoes, those prickly bushes were intimidating. Until little red bundles of joy showed up. It always seemed a miracle that such beauty and grace would simply appear in that formidable thicket.

And Jesus is absolutely right today. The kind of fruit is completely determined by the plant that makes it. A thorn bush can’t grow figs, or grapes, he says. An apple tree won’t produce lemons. So if you’re looking for a particular kind of fruit – and botanists have known this for centuries, to our great delight and benefit – you need to be working with the plant.

That means there are at least two challenges in Jesus’ words today. First, what kind of fruit do you want to produce in your life? And second, how might you be nurtured, developed, to bear such fruit?

The kind of fruit Jesus calls those who follow to bear has never been a mystery.

The will of the Triune God for those who live in Christ is not hard to discern. Jesus is always crystal clear, including in today’s overview. Those who are in Christ bear this fruit, Jesus says today:

They are loving and kind to those who hate them, hurt them, abuse them. They pray for such people, do good for such people.

They are generous without any expectation of return – whatever anyone asks of them, they give. They even offer to give more.

They do not judge or condemn others.

They forgive freely and fully.

None of this fruit is a surprise to you, if you’ve ever listened to the words of the Son of God, read the Gospels. Those who are in Christ have always known this is the fruit God wants to see in the world from us, from you, the fruit that will bless the whole creation.

The problem has never been knowledge. It’s always been desire.

We don’t necessarily want to bear the kind of fruit Jesus describes today.

We live in a world that despises such fruit. A world that promises revenge and payback. A world that screams that your highest priority is that your rights are cared for, not the rights of others. A world that teaches you to suspect anyone who asks for help, for money. A world that values criticism of others, especially in social media, encouraging personal attacks and hatred. Literally everything Jesus asks of you here is something this world mocks and disdains. If you live as Jesus says, you’ll be seen as weak, cowardly, foolish. You’ll be mocked.

Of course, not everyone in our world thinks this way. Many of us were blessed to be raised or mentored or loved by people who valued what God values. But don’t underestimate the pernicious strength of pressure in this country on making your own needs the highest value, the greatest good, to the exclusion of anyone else you decide to disregard or disdain. Sacrificial, vulnerable love as Christ models and commands is a fool’s game to many in our world.

That pressure makes us reluctant to embrace Jesus’ teachings, even if in our hearts we want to.

That’s why Jesus asks the only relevant question after all these teachings.

Are you in or are you out? “Why do you call me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and don’t do what I tell you?” Jesus asks.

There’s a path of living that is of Christ. Jesus talks about it all the time. Jesus’ only question is: do you want to walk it? Do you want to be in Christ? Do you want to follow God’s Son, whose life, death, and resurrection bring life to you and the world?

Here’s a test. How much do you try to parse any one of Jesus’ teachings, trying to figure out if he really meant it? For example: “Give to everyone who begs from you.” That’s really clear. If you’re trying to explain why Jesus doesn’t understand the socioeconomic realities of 2022, or if you’re spending any time thinking how you won’t have to do this, you’re not ready to follow. Every single one of Jesus’ commands is clear, simple, and unambiguous. If you can’t see that, on any one of them, you’re probably on the fence about this “being Christ” thing.

But if you want to live in Christ, bear God’s fruit, God will make it happen.

Since a good tree can’t produce bad fruit, you just need God to work on your tree, on you, your life. So even if you are on the fence on any of Jesus’ teachings, even if you fail at any of them, the question that matters is “do you want to follow?” Do you want to bear all the fruit Jesus proclaims throughout his teachings? If you do, good news: God will make it happen.

That’s the beauty of Jesus’ imagery. Apple trees bear apples simply because they’re grown to do it. If the Spirit begins to transform your heart and your mind and your body and your strength to bear the fruit of God’s love and grace in the world, you will bear that fruit. It’s as simple as that.

And if you ever doubt whether God is working in you, don’t look at your failures. Look for any time such fruit as Jesus calls for today came from you. If it did, God was there, and you can trust God will still be there to help you grow into a Christ tree bearing God’s healing for all things.

And, please don’t ignore Jesus’ clear warning today about your neighbors.

The only tree you and I need to worry about is our own. Don’t start looking at your neighbor’s fruit, or lack thereof. Jesus says you’ll be looking at a speck and thinking it’s a log, while ignoring the 2×4 sticking out of your eye. Don’t get distracted by how anyone else is doing, Jesus says. You’ve got enough on your plate as it is. Stay in your lane.

The life God pours into the world in the Spirit will produce the fruit God needs to heal and bless all things.

That’s what Jesus promised. That’s what the prophets of Israel promised. That’s what the first disciples filled with the Holy Spirit at Pentecost promised. God’s life will do what God needs it to do.

You can be a good tree. A blessed tree. A tree bearing God’s fruit of love and joy and peace and patience and kindness and generosity and faithfulness and gentleness and self-control. If you want this, God will grow it in you.

And do look at your life. You’ll see God has already been at work. Fruit has been borne from you as a blessing to many. Let that joy sink into your heart even as you ask God to keep gardening you.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, February 20, 2022

February 17, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Seventh Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 7 C

In our worship we are met and touched by the Triune God who makes us into good trees bearing fruit of God’s love in the world.

Download worship folder for Sunday, February 20, 2022.

Presiding and Preaching: Pr. Joseph G. Crippen

Readings and prayers: Peggy Hoeft, lector; Vicar Andrea Bonneville DeNaples, assisting minister

Organist: Interim Cantor 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

The Olive Branch, 2/16/22

February 15, 2022 By office

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

Filed Under: Olive Branch, Uncategorized

Need to Touch

February 13, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

All are broken, including you, and all need to be healed: when you see this is true about yourself you will be opened to be healing to others.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 6 C
Text: Luke 6:17-26

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

Everyone in the crowd today was trying to touch Jesus to be healed. Everyone.

The large crowd of maybe fifty disciples. The twelve of that group who were just named leaders. And the rest of the multitude there who came to see Jesus. Luke says everyone in the vast crowd needed to touch Jesus.

And Jesus said to those multitudes that they were fortunate people. Happy people. Blessed people, as our translation puts it.

You folks who don’t know where you’re going to find food – you are happy, he said. You’ll be filled. You who have nothing to your name – you’re fortunate. You’ll receive God’s whole reign. And you who are weeping, Jesus said, you are blessed. You’ll be able to laugh.

Now, Jesus never deliberately hurt or misled people.

When he says to hundreds, maybe thousands, that their suffering, their pain, their need, is a blessing, is fortunate, it wasn’t to mock them, or patronize them. He promised they would receive what they needed. These are real poor people, and starving people. People in grief. And they are promised relief. Filling. Abundance. Even laughter in their tears.

The reason many came to Jesus, Luke says, is they sought healing from diseases and unclean spirits. Because people saw that God was in this Jesus, and he had power to heal physical and spiritual illness.

But in these blessings Jesus says that God has also come in person to address more universal suffering and pain – poverty, hunger, grief – and offer the same promise. You will receive what you need. In the verses that follow today’s Gospel – which we’ll hear next week – Jesus tells those who wish to follow him that they are part of God’s plan to end people’s hunger, to lift up the poor and lowly, to comfort and help anyone in pain. God embodied in the followers of Christ will directly work on all the suffering Jesus promises to address, will be the blessing to those Jesus blesses with his words.

But go back to the beginning: everyone there that day needed to touch Jesus.

Even beyond the obvious ones with diseases and possessions. They or their family and friends would have made sure they got close to Jesus.

But as far as we know, most of the disciples, the women and men who’d been following Jesus for weeks now – not just the twelve set aside as leaders, but the whole group – didn’t need that kind of healing from Jesus. Mary Magdalene was possessed of demons, but we don’t know of others. Yet these followers also needed Jesus, needed his touch, his kindness, his words. His healing.

Can you see yourself in that same camp? Or do you have a hard time admitting to God or to others that you also need to touch God in Christ for healing and life?

It can be hard to admit.

Many of us want to give the impression that we’ve got it together, that we’re doing just fine. But the secret is, not everyone here is doing as well as you might imagine. We all can hide our own pain or doubt or struggles from others, especially if they’re not physical ones. (Most of us are OK to have physical needs put on the prayer list.) Maybe we’re ashamed of our weakness, afraid no one will understand our inner pain. Maybe someone told us we were supposed to have a strong faith and how can we say that we don’t?

And many of us who live with a privileged status in our society, whether due to the color of our skin or the gender we identify with, or our lack of economic insecurity, or whatever, struggle with naming our own pain. How can someone who doesn’t face what so many of our neighbors face every day, someone for whom this society works and makes sense, how can they complain? How can someone who doesn’t fear the police, someone who’s never been denied housing or help because of who they are, ever say they hurt? If there’s always another who’s worse off, we can feel we shouldn’t name our pain, or doubt, or fear, or struggles with our lives.

But everyone needed to touch Jesus that day, and he blessed them.

He said to those in pain of any kind, you are blessed, happy, fortunate, because God is with you and will help you, heal you. The point of the Incarnation, Jesus showed us, was for the Triune God to be with all God’s children, reach out to all God’s children, love all God’s children, bring healing to all God’s children. Everyone. Whatever their pain.

Everyone means you, too. Pain is pain, no matter who feels it. Anxiety is anxiety to everyone. There’s no need to hide yours because you want to put a good face on your life and not let anyone know you struggle. There’s no need to compare yours to another’s and diminish it or dismiss it because you know that your neighbor is struggling more than you.

If God has come to be with us in Christ, and to bring each of God’s children back into a healing relationship with God, you’re in, too. And that’s a huge promise you don’t want to ignore.

Maybe that’s what Jesus is doing with these woes.

The life in Christ Jesus calls those who follow him to walk is one where those who follow share a life together for the sake of each other and the world. All have enough. All weep when one weeps, all rejoice when one rejoices. No one is hungry or has unmet needs because God’s abundance is shared. That’s the blessing of God in Christ for the whole world. So if you’re laughing while others suffer, or delighting in your wealth while others starve, woe to you, Jesus says. You’re not living in the life of Christ.

But Christ’s healing begins when each of us honors both our own pain and suffering and the pain and suffering of our neighbor. When we don’t neglect our own suffering, because that can harden us to be uncaring and cruel people. And when we also don’t neglect the suffering of our neighbors. When we become Christ ourselves, ready to respond to whatever need God puts in front of us, whatever hand reaches out for help, as Jesus will say next week.

Everyone needs the healing touch of God’s in their lives. You, included.

Let yourself admit your need to God. And maybe to one or two others. Learn to say, “I can’t handle this. I don’t know where to turn. I don’t know what to do. Please help.” Those who reached out to touch Jesus didn’t hold back out of fear. They trusted in this One from God and put their lives in his hands.

When you do that, you will know what it is to be blessed, fortunate, happy. And in your healing you’ll never be able to look at the pain and suffering of another – your family, your neighbors, your world – and not care. You’ll be healed by God’s love and also given the heart of God to be a part of God’s healing touch in Christ that belongs to the whole creation. Blessed are you, indeed.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, February 13, 2022

February 10, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 6 C

As the crowds surrounded Jesus hoping for a blessing of grace, so we gather for worship seeking the Triune God’s healing and life for us and our world.

Download worship folder for Sunday, February 13, 2022.

Presiding and Preaching: Pr. Joseph G. Crippen

Readings and prayers: Lora Dundek, lector; Tricia Van Ee, assisting minister

Organist: Interim Cantor 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

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3045 Chicago Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

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