Shared Sight
We share God’s vision of our neighbors and our world in this community and are strengthened for our work as Christ by each other.
Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 6 C
Texts: 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
I speak in defense of bubbles.
The conventional view of our polarized country is that people live in their own bubbles. They hear one point of view, gather with people sharing that view, and treat anyone who sees differently with disdain and often hatred. Left or right, people name and decry this reality of our modern world.
For good reason. If you put on blinders and ignore or hate anyone who differs from you, you’ll have a warped world view. Everyone needs to understand other points of view, find common ground, test their news sources and influences for bias and for factual truth, or we’re in trouble.
And yet it is a tremendous blessing to be in this community of faith, who hears Jesus’ words every week, and so sees the world and people as God does. Clearly some people, even some bearing Christ’s name, are willing to crush and destroy vulnerable people, whether LGBTQ or immigrant or poor or different in any way, for their own power and their own gain. So to be with a community who instead sees the face of God in every child, every person, who sees even strangers as neighbors worthy of love, is a huge relief when trying to navigate this frightening and broken and hateful world.
Clearly God’s Son today says the Triune God’s way of seeing is radically different from the common way of the world.
To God, those who are poor are blessed, because they’re in the heart of God’s reign, where we try to share all we have so none go without. Those who are rich are warned that wealth is not a sign of God’s approval and separates them from God’s family, leaving them without consolation. The world says that’s nonsense. Jesus says, well, that’s how God sees things.
To God, those who are hungry are blessed because in God’s reign food is shared and all are filled. And those who fill themselves up and trample others to get more are warned this is the path to a hunger no wealth or power can ever fill. The world says that’s nonsense. Jesus says, well, that’s how God sees things.
To God, those who weep are blessed because in God’s reign they find people who hold them, love them, share their tears. They find hope and home. And those who won’t feel the pain of another person, who laugh while people are caged or marginalized, are warned they’re isolating themselves into a life that leads only to grief. The world says that’s nonsense. Jesus says, well, that’s how God sees things.
The Triune God sees dramatically opposite to the way the world does. God values weakness, not strength, love, not power, and dies to create life. But we live in the world, so it’s sometimes hard to remember this. We’re tempted to side with those in power, or to secure our wealth, and ignore the pain of others as we scrabble for our own security.
And that’s where our community is a blessing.
Here we see God’s way together, and help each other live and act in it. Here, where love of God and love of neighbor are our highest ethical values, we can’t separate our trust in God’s love from our care for all people. So if I struggle to see as God sees, you all model and witness to me that way of seeing. And I remember. When you struggle to live as Christ, with the sacrifices that path asks, people here model and witness to you a life-giving way of being for all God’s children. And you’re encouraged.
We’re not in a bubble here to ignore other points of view and claim we’re right and others are wrong. We’re in this together to remember God’s way together. To remember and share God’s point of view.
And when we despair to see people treating others as garbage, risking others for their own needs, threatening vulnerable people and seeing them as nothing, we come together as a community and rejoice that we’re with people who do see the face of God in every person. Who trust that caring for the hungry, thirsty, and naked ones, the strangers, the sick, the imprisoned ones, is caring for Christ. When we think that the world’s gone mad, here we’re reassured there are still many who seek love and justice for all.
And this isn’t a question of picking political sides.
Christians of both parties and no parties have often found ways to agree on what’s important, if sometimes not on the policies to fix it. For example, we’ve agreed God cares for those who are hungry, therefore we must. Different political parties had different ways of addressing that, but sometimes even found compromise and common ground for the good of all.
But our current leaders, elected by a majority of those who chose to vote, are in it only for themselves, and disregard not only common decency but the very rule of law that holds our nation together. They argue for keeping politics out of church, and out of sermons in the National Cathedral, while putting their view of church into politics, reshaping the government. We can’t pretend this is business as usual.
But maybe this is a time that finally shows us the importance of living as a Christian.
Maybe now we find out what Jesus means. Many of us have lived privileged lives without facing adversity for practicing our faith. Choosing to act as Christ or not without many real consequences. Jesus’ warnings of rejection and being hated for following used to feel as if they didn’t apply to us. Not anymore.
Bishop Budde’s sermon was something you’d hear at Mount Olive and any number of our sibling congregations any time. She took Jesus’ call to love others seriously, as we do. She spoke of the joy of God’s diversity and finding unity in welcoming all. And the really offensive part apparently was simply asking the president to show mercy, to listen to all who were afraid and vulnerable. All values we share in this community.
Now, maybe, these values put us up against the wall. We have a chance to stand up for those being hurt, we’re called to risk so that the vulnerable are protected, and we might actually face adversity for being a Christian for the first time in our lives. That’s good. It feels good to face a Christian life Jesus actually envisioned, where we’re not in power and not controlling but a minority caring for those God sees as important and most in need. Those this community sees as important and most in need.
You are God’s beloved community.
And I thank God for you. For sharing God’s vision of the world together. For the witness you make in your daily lives to God’s love for all, the risks you’re taking to be Christ’s love. For the urgency so many here have to find the Christly path for Mount Olive in all this.
You are not alone because you have this community. We are not alone because there are thousands of communities of all faiths who share God’s love for all and want to risk being that love for all. And if someone hates us for this, reviles us, well, now we’re really having a good time. Because finally we’re acting enough like Christ to rile up the world.
In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
Worship, February 16, 2025
The Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 6 C
Download worship folder for Sunday, February 16, 2025.
Presiding and Presiding: Pastor Joseph Crippen
Readings and prayers: Brad Holt, lector; Judy Hinck, assisting minister
Organist: Robert Buckley Farlee
Download next Sunday’s readings for this Tuesday’s noon Bible study.
The Olive Branch, 2/12/25
The Next Right Thing
God calls us to be healing for this world. But often, we count ourselves out because we don’t believe we have what it takes. But if we trust God and do the next right thing, God transforms our hearts to prepare us for each moment that we’re in.
Vicar Natalie Wussler
The Fifth Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 5 C
Texts: Isaiah 6:1-8; Psalm 138; 1 Corinthians 15:1-11; Luke 5:1-11
Beloved in Christ, grace to you and peace in the name of the Father, and of the ☩ Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
The invitation has been sent. God has called you, and me, and this community to be essential pieces in the healing in this world. To walk in justice, and mercy. To be uplifters of marginalized voices and be Christ to a world that cries out for hope. To bear the Gospel that we have received, as Paul says. To enter into the pain and despair of the other and find some semblance of hope. God wants us and invites us to get out of our boats and follow beyond what we ever thought we could do. But that’s the problem, isn’t it? God’s call to us very rarely lets us stay within the realm of what we think we can do. And we’re usually called to do hard things during volatile times and sometimes we worry we don’t have what it takes.
We see this huge gap between who we are in this moment and who we think we need to be to embrace God’s call. We get scared that we won’t be able to bridge that gap, and ashamed that we’re not where we’re “supposed to be.” We disqualify ourselves before we even have a chance to prove these doubts wrong. The fear of doing the wrong thing, or saying the wrong thing, or not having the right resume, and the shame of all the ways we’ve screwed up or missed the mark paralyzes us. And instead of acting in love, mercy, and justice, fear causes us to retreat into ourselves, to stay in the familiar and build walls around what we think can and can’t do. Questions and doubts start running through us–how could I bring any good to such a time as this? But I’m probably too messed up and broken for this, right? Why would God ever want to use me? Beloved, hear this, if that’s ever been you, then you’re in the company of people like Isaiah and Peter and most other people who God calls in the Bible.
Because even after these two witness these manifestations of God’s divine power and God makes it very clear that Isaiah and Peter are wanted and needed for God’s mission in the world, this is how they respond: “Woe is me! I am lost, for I am a man of unclean lips” says Isaiah. “Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man”, Peter cries. Peter and Isaiah’s hearts race, as they remember all the ways they’ve missed the mark, all the moments they didn’t do the right thing or say the right thing.
And what a gift their reactions are to us! This is Isaiah, one of the most prolific and influential prophets in the Hebrew Scriptures, and Simon Peter, the one who Jesus later called the rock that the church will be built on. And THIS is where their God-given call starts. Afraid, doubtful, overwhelmed, ashamed. Remembering all their past failures, and not believing they have what it takes. But God still calls them. If that’s true for them in their doubt and worry, why not us? Not even our doubts in ourselves can keep us from the mission God’s given each one of us. We are still called. We are still needed.
And God continues to send out the invitation despite Peter and Isaiah’s knee-jerk self-deprecation. Isaiah needed forgiveness, so God gave him forgiveness. Peter was afraid, and Jesus took care of his fear. Almost as a way of saying, “yeah, what you’re worried about, that’s not really the main concern here. Now go, I’ve got work for you to do.” And the same can be said of you. Despite the problems, the inadequacies, and the sinfulness you might hyperfixate on, God sees you for what you are: a beloved child perfectly made for the moment you’re in. God sees you for all that you can do, all the people and places that need you to live as Christ, in a way only you can.
And so Isaiah and Peter take their next steps in their journeys, with an enthusiastic “Here am I, send me” from Isaiah, and Peter dropping all he’s ever known to follow a divine stranger. Their trust in God grows greater than their fear of inadequacies, and they follow. And with God as their strength and sustainer, they begin to do immeasurably more than either believed they were capable of. Isaiah preaches judgment and deliverance to the Israelites as the threat of exile comes closer, and Peter is a key leader in the earliest movements of the church. And their transformation is a promise to us. Because God molds our hearts and grows our capacity with each faithful next step. And step by step, the things you believed you were out of reach yesterday become the possibilities of today. You can trust that even if you stumble, God’s grace will pick you up and transform your insecurities into trust that God will give you what you need to be healing agents.
And it all starts with a call from God and a “yes” from us. And continues with us trusting God and doing the next right thing. To trust that God is with you and is a sure foundation. Trust that God is leading you to where you’re supposed to be. Trust that you are the work of God’s hands, that you are equipped for the moment you’re called to. Trust that you are not a mistake, and you are needed in this very moment.
And especially in those moments that make us feel small or powerless, or not good enough, like the world’s problems are too big and too hard for us to handle, we can call out to God, who strengthens our soul as the Psalmist says. We can trust that God will meet us where we are to give us the courage to take the next step forward, even if it is scary. We can trust that God will fill us with the love and compassion, the thirst for justice that we need to be agents of healing in the world and to be living manifestations of Christ. We can trust that God will give us a community to support and encourage us along the way, as food for the journey. And even though we don’t know where our journeys will lead, our faith and support for each other will give us the boldness to do the next right thing.
To take the next step. Do the next loving thing, the next compassionate thing. Love the next neighbor in front of you. Take the next step toward justice and mercy in whatever way you can. Do the next thing that creates joy that drives out fear. Breathe love into the next moment you’re in. The next thing the Holy Spirit leads you to.
And to trust that though we have been called to ventures that we’re not even sure if we’re good enough to walk, God will give us the faith and foundation to go out with good courage, to do the next right thing. And that along the way, it’s the God who created us and loves us dearly that is sustaining and supporting us, calling us beyond what we believe we can do and into deeper trust in our God and in ourselves.
In the name of the Father, and of the ☩ Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
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