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The Olive Branch, 2/4/15

February 5, 2015 By Mount Olive Church

Accent on Worship

     Why assemble for liturgy?

     In two short weeks we embark on our Lenten journey.  In addition to our regular assemblies for Holy Eucharist on Sundays,  we add Evening Prayer on Wednesdays,  and during Holy Week (March 29-April 5) there are daily assemblies for prayer,  and of course the Three Days (Triduum) with their intense focus.

     Why?

     Of course there are the almost obvious reasons we know and have rehearsed:  Because God is central to our lives.  As a community of faith, we gather regularly.  As we do, we expect to participate in praise, prayer, to be challenged by God’s Word,  strengthened by the meal,  and sent.  The season of Lent is a time where we renew our lives in Christ – recommitting to our Baptismal identity as God’s chosen.  The word “discipline” gets used for the season as if a negative.  I like to link the word “disciple” to that word – and ask, “What does it mean to be a disciple?”

     The Wednesday Evening Prayer services are an opportunity to be reminded mid-week whose we are, to rejuvenate our efforts and focus (discipline?) of the season.  Holy Week is a time when we reverse the norm:  Rather than being mostly in the world and here one day, we are mostly HERE every day around this central story of Christ’s death and resurrection.

     But consider the following aspect.  Your presence may be what SOMEONE ELSE needs.   By your being there, someone else may be drawn into participation where they may not otherwise.  What do people see in our participation when they decide to be among the assembly – perhaps for the first time?  Smaller gatherings especially need folks willing to carry a bit of extra weight to insure we don’t sound like an uninterested group of mumbling worshipers.

     The smaller the gathering, the more stepping out with more full responses is needed!  “Amen” or “Thanks be to God” – speak up!!!  Sing out!!  Most are a little uncomfortable singing in public, the smaller the gathering the more exposed it may feel – but if there are those here singing out (even if a few, or even one:  YOU!), it’s much easier for others to enter in.  Maybe they can’t sing for whatever reason – then we need to sing FOR them.

     I have had too many experiences being a part of assemblies where people are afraid to sing out or speak out.  It’s difficult for me to enter in, and frankly, that situation is a bit unfortunate.  Smaller shouldn’t mean softer responses and singing.  Just fewer in number.

     Be brave.  Be here.  Sing and speak out.  Don’t mumble.

     After all – many are watching – including God.  Let your inner glow be known!

-Cantor David Cherwien

Sunday Readings

February 8, 2015: 5th Sunday after Epiphany
Isaiah 40:21-31
Psalm 147:1-11
I Corinthians 9:16-23
Mark 1:29-39
 ______________________

February 15, 2015: Transfiguration of Our Lord
2 Kings 2:1-12
Psalm 50:1-6
2 Corinthians 4:3-6
Mark 9:2-9

Sunday’s Adult Forum: February 8, 2015

“A Taste of Guatemala: Celebrating our Partnership with Common Hope,” sponsored by the
Mount Olive Missions Committee

End of Life Planning: Join the Conversation

• This Saturday, February 7: 9-Noon at Mount Olive – Mount Olive members Kathy Thurston and Rob Ruff will present perspectives and direction on end- of -life planning including the POLST and Honoring Choices Advance Directive.

     This workshop is a follow-up to last Sunday’s Adult Forum (2/1) presentation by Pastor Crippen on this topic. The presentation was recorded by Paul Nixdorf and can be viewed at:   http://youtu.be/npRfQf8TTJg

     Registration for Saturday is not required, but if you know you are coming, a call or email to the church office or Marilyn Gebauer (612-306-8872, gebauevm@bitstream.net) helps us have enough handouts available.  Friends and family welcome.

     Feel free to stay for lunch.  The Community Meal will be served at noon in the lower level.

More Helping Hands Are Needed to Feed the Homeless

     Members of Mount Olive provide the evening meal at Our Saviour’s Shelter the second Sunday of every month.  This important ministry meets a real need right in our own neighborhood.  You can serve in these ways:

Food preparation – We’ll cook the meal in our kitchen Sunday afternoon.
Food transportation – We will bring the food eight blocks north to the shelter.
Serving – We’ll meet the residents as we serve the meal to them.

     You can find the sign-up sheet for 2015 in the East Assembly Room, near the Sunday coffee.  Come and be part of this chance to help.  Questions?  See Elaine Halbardier or Connie Olson.

Common Hope and Taste of Guatemala at Mount Olive to be Held This Sunday, February 8

     What is Mount Olive’s support of Common Hope in Guatemala all about?  We learned about this organization through Lisa and Mark Ruff and their family, and we were impressed with the focus on education and community development. We could see that we could learn much and could contribute much. Here’s an introduction for you.

     Common Hope promotes hope and opportunity in Guatemala, partnering with children, families, and communities who want to participate in a process of develop-ment to improve their lives through education, health care, and housing. Serving Guatemala since 1986.

• We EDUCATE children and help them graduate from primary and secondary school, and some continue on to college.
• We PARTNER with local schools to help them reach new standards of excellence.
• We TREAT illnesses and TEACH parents how to prevent them so that their families live healthier lives.
• We help parents BUILD houses so that their families have clean, dry, and safe places to live.

Keep Us in the Loop!

     Have you moved? Are you moving? Dump your land line or get a new phone number or email address?

     Please be sure to let us know so that we can update your information and keep YOU in the loop!

It’s an Open House!

     All are cordially invited to an open house at the new home of Art and Dorothy Gaard.

     The open house will be held this Sunday, February 8, from 2-4 pm at 502 Lynnhurst Ave. E., Apt 407, St. Paul, MN  55104.

     The Gaards will celebrate their “126th anniversary” ( 63 years for Art and 63 years for Dorothy). The afternoon will also include a house blessing.

     Call the Gaards (651-457-5736) with any questions you may have about parking or finding their new home.

Granlund Exhibit at Mount Olive

     Mount Olive will host an exhibit of sculptures by the famed artist, Paul Granlund, beginning in mid-February and going through mid-April.  The exhibit is sponsored by Mount Olive Music and Fine Arts program.

     Paul Granlund wanted his sculptures to be viewed and enjoyed from all angles and even touched.  The exhibit will be on display in the Chapel Lounge and assembly areas.    We encourage members to invite guests to visit.

Shrove Tuesday Pancake Supper – Bring Your Palms!

     The Shrove Tuesday pancake supper will be held on Tuesday, February 17, from 6 to 6:45 pm.  Everyone is invited for an evening of pancakes and fun! At 6:45 pm we will observe the burning of the palms for the Ash Wednesday ashes.

     Bring your dried palms from last Palm Sunday and leave them in the basket in the narthex. They will be burned to make the ashes for Ash Wednesday liturgies.

An Evening with Donald Jackson

      Concordia University St. Paul invites all to a rare U.S. speaking engagement by Donald Jackson, renowned British calligrapher, illuminator, and artistic director of The Saint John’s Bible. This event will be held on Thursday, February 12, 2015, from 7:00 p.m. – 8:45 p.m. at Buetow Music Auditorium, Concordia University St. Paul, 1282 Concordia Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55104.

     This event is free and seating will be on a first come first served basis.

Lent Begins
Ash Wednesday, February 18
Holy Eucharist with the Imposition of Ashes at Noon & 7:00 p.m.
All are welcome.

Book Discussion Group’s Upcoming Reads

     For their meeting February 14, the Book Discussion Group will read Wise Blood, by Flannery O’Connor. For their meeting on March 14, they will read The Alchemist, by Paulo Coelho.

A Reminder About Parking at Church

     All who come to Mount Olive (for Sunday worship particularly) are asked to reserve the handicapped parking places in the north lot for those who need them (and there are several who do need them!) Also, please remember that the spaces with diagonal stripes near the sidewalk are to be left open so that those who park in the adjacent spot can actually get out of their cars to come in to church.

     Thanks for doing what you can to make things as easy as possible for everyone who comes to Mount Olive.
 

Bach Vespers at Mount Olive

Sunday, February 15, 4:00 pm
Bach Vespers, with Cantata 23, Du wahrer Gott und Davids Sohn
Mount Olive Cantorei and Bach Ensemble; David Cherwien, Conductor
This event is sponsored by Mount Olive Music & Fine Arts.

Vision Expression

     Vestry members will host Listening Sessions on five consecutive Sundays, beginning on Feb. 15.  These events are designed to be an opportunity to give and receive feedback on the Vision Expression document which was presented after liturgy on Sunday, January 25.  Copies of this document are available in the church office.

     Watch for these sessions and attend as many as you wish.

     On March 22, we will have a larger congregational update for everyone.

News from the Neighborhood
Anna Kingman

     In effort to share in the relationships being built through our interaction in the neighborhood, we will hear from the people who find support, relief, and help through Mount Olive.

Profiles: Writings from Rodney
     I introduced you to Rodney a few weeks ago and many more have had the pleasure of meeting him at church. Rodney has a very interesting, difficult story, but throughout his trials he has developed a talent and interest in writing. He believes this is a gift from God as a method to share with others. Here is a short excerpt from #84, Fare for Fair, of a collection of 128 writings. Full copies of some writings may be found on the new cabinet on the south wall of the West Assembly area.

     “The heart has the ability to heal, endure, satisfy, gratify, love  overcome, ease pain, bear with, care, share, see, touch, smell, here, taste, delight, desire, retrieve, forgive, calm, war, sense, determine, change, pretend, understand, and smile just to name the minimal. The abilities of the heart know no bounds and are without measure. Yes, who can search the heart of man? God, and whomever he elects to gift that ability to. Everything imaginable and even that which is unimaginable lies within the heart…”

Opportunities to BE involved: Tuesday Night Tutoring – it’s a blast!

     We have a weekly Tuesday night tutoring program from 7:00pm-8:30pm. There are great kids involved and we try to keep it to a one-to-one ratio to really build relationships and be mentors to these young students. It’s an hour of tutoring and a group activity with a snack and will be the highlight of your week!

     If you are able or interested in helping for an evening or learning more please contact Anna at:  neighborhood@mountolivechurch.org.

Getting to Know Our Neighbors

     Part of sharing in community is understanding one another through language, culture, or experience. As we explore our community and get to know our neighbors, let’s continue with some helpful language lessons.

English: ‘Have a nice day’     Spanish: ‘Tenga un buen dia’ (Ten-gah oon bu-eyn dee-yah)

Review: ‘Welcome’ Spanish: ‘Bienvenidos’ (bee-en-ven-ee-dos)

     Go out and be fearlessly friendly folks!

Mittens and Scarves and Hats – Oh, My!

     As long as the weather stays cold, warm clothes are still needed!

     Please continue to donate mittens, scarves, coats, hats, and gloves to the box near the coat room. They will be given away at the Community Meals as the cold weather demands.

     Thank you!

Filed Under: Olive Branch

Wait For It

February 3, 2015 By moadmin

We wait for the Lord’s healing grace in this world because God’s good time is not our time, because things take time to be done the right way; but we wait where we know we’re going to see what we’re promised.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
   The Presentation of Our Lord
   texts:  Luke 2:22-40; Malachi 3:1-4

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

In Spanish, the same word means “wait” and “hope.”

The context gives the meaning.  I learned this in my clinic’s waiting area (with help from Anna afterward).  The sign said, “If you have been waiting more than 15 minutes, please inform the front desk.”  Below, in Spanish, for waiting it said, “ha estado esperando,” which literally could be “a state of hope.”  Here it clearly meant “waiting.”

Tonight’s readings make that sign amusing.  People are waiting for the day of the Lord’s coming in Malachi and Luke, waiting for a long time.  Far more than 15 minutes.  So how long do we wait for God before we need to inform someone?  Whom do we inform?

The Spanish are right: waiting and hoping are two sides of one thing.  In our hurry-up, fast food, get-it-to-me-now culture, we associate waiting with boredom, frustration, irritation, even lack of hope.  Can we imagine a Simeon today, waiting his whole life to see God’s promised Christ, ready to die when he does?  We don’t know what the prophet Anna is waiting for, but it’s been about 63 years.  15 minutes is nothing compared to Christian waiting for God’s healing and restoring of all things.

Maybe we also should glue waiting and hoping together.

It’s a modern convention to separate them.  Our ancestors fully lived this.

The Presentation is February 2, forty days after Christmas; the purification rites for the mother happened forty days after childbirth.  But in Ireland and Britain it held further significance as a cross-quarter day.  The year was divided into so-called quarter days, Christmas Day, the Annunciation (March 25), St. John the Baptist/Midsummer Day (June 24), and St. Michael’s Day (September 29).  These Christian festivals, importantly, are very close to the solar turning points, the winter and summer solstices and the spring and fall equinoxes.

Roughly half-way between these days were other important festivals marking time.  Presentation is the cross-quarter day between Christmas and Annunciation.  Each of these eight days held significance to our Christian ancestors who had things that needed to be done by those dates for life and livelihood, to survive.  It’s not accidental that in the Middle Ages in Europe the Presentation was a day for predicting the length of winter ahead (and without a rodent’s help).  They relied on weather and the land to live; half-way between the longest night and the longest day they dreamed when spring would come and food would be abundant.

There is evidence that this Christian celebration was also one of those festivals overlaid upon pagan celebrations of this mid-point that also were part of a culture dependent on the earth for life.  This has long been a day of waiting and hoping for the future to come.

Our Church Year is our way of joining our waiting with hoping.

Our culture has lost this sense of life in the year and dependence on God’s creation which paid close attention to the creation.  Our marking points in the year are based on our entertainment schedules, from awards season to sports championship times, or our political calendar.

But we Christians walk this Church Year.  We’ve gathered tonight for Eucharist to mark 40 days since our celebration of our Lord’s birth.  We may not have as desperate a need for good weather coming, but it’s good and right that we intentionally choose this calendar as our way of knowing where we are in our waiting.

That’s the whole point of a calendar, to mark the waiting.  From the classic film and cartoon stereotype of someone x-ing out days in anticipation, to our need to tell how many days until Christmas, marking time helps us wait.

So we mark our year, moving through the story of God’s grace coming into the world and into our lives, to help us in our waiting and remind us of our hope in God.

We notice from Malachi, Simeon and Anna that our place of waiting is also important.

All three center the place of waiting on the Temple of the Lord.  That’s where Malachi says the coming will be, that’s where Simeon goes when the Spirit lets him know the child has come, and that’s where Anna spent over six decades praying, fasting, waiting.

We join our waiting with our hoping when we come into this holy place and seek God in God’s house.  In this place we know we will hear words of grace and hope, words of promise that will be kept.  In this place we know we will be fed and strengthened.  In this place the Triune God has promised to be, so like those saints of old, we gather here to wait for the Lord.

But this coming of the Lord is clearly not meant to stay in this place.

Malachi speaks of the purifying of all the people of God; the coming might start in worship but will restore the whole nation.  Simeon takes it even further, declaring that this child he is holding will be a light to all the nations of the world, as well as the glory of his own people, Israel.

So it is with our waiting and hoping in this place: we take it into the world, fully expecting to see God’s healing coming to all things, fully believing in the possibility that the light of God will make a difference in the world’s darkness.  Bearing the light ourselves infuses our waiting with hope, because living in the rich blessing of God becomes abundant and joyful when we share it and see what happens in the world.

Yet our hoping is in turn wrapped up in our waiting: God’s fullness comes in God’s good time, not instantly.

Sometimes we’re tempted to despair at this, but this story of Jesus and Simeon shows God’s promises will be kept, even if they take time.  Simeon waits his whole life, and finally sees.  At the end of this story, though, Jesus is still just a little child; growing, filling up with wisdom, but still a little child.  He is not Christ for the world yet.  There is still the path to the cross and resurrection.  Some things take time.

We know this if we cook.  There are things that cannot be rushed, even in a microwave world with instant meals.  If you want a good oatmeal, you need to toast steel cut oats, and then boil them for about a half an hour.  Chili really only tastes best on the second day.

With the Triune God it’s the same.  To get what God is hoping for – literally the restoration of the hearts of humanity which will restore this planet – God needs to play the long game, bringing healing through the Son one community of faith at a time.  God’s grace will make all things new, but the way God needs it to work, it will take time.

So we return to our sense of marking time in the Church Year.  While we wait for God’s good time, we walk through the year’s story of God’s grace, to be filled with hope in our waiting.  And so we can recognize signs of healing and grace when we see them, like Simeon and Anna did.

It’s been longer than 15 minutes.  Things take time with God.

But on this night we once more meet Simeon and Anna we are reminded of the hope we have in this child they celebrated and for whom they praised God.  On this night we once more bless candles for our year’s worship we are reminded of the light which shines in our darkness and one day will fill all things.

We wait.  But we wait with hope.  Because God is faithful, and God’s promises are being kept.  It will take time.  But that we have, until all things truly are made new.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Wait For It

February 3, 2015 By moadmin

We wait for the Lord’s healing grace in this world because God’s good time is not our time, because things take time to be done the right way; but we wait where we know we’re going to see what we’re promised.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
   The Presentation of Our Lord
   texts:  Luke 2:22-40; Malachi 3:1-4

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

In Spanish, the same word means “wait” and “hope.”

The context gives the meaning.  I learned this in my clinic’s waiting area (with help from Anna afterward).  The sign said, “If you have been waiting more than 15 minutes, please inform the front desk.”  Below, in Spanish, for waiting it said, “ha estado esperando,” which literally could be “a state of hope.”  Here it clearly meant “waiting.”

Tonight’s readings make that sign amusing.  People are waiting for the day of the Lord’s coming in Malachi and Luke, waiting for a long time.  Far more than 15 minutes.  So how long do we wait for God before we need to inform someone?  Whom do we inform?

The Spanish are right: waiting and hoping are two sides of one thing.  In our hurry-up, fast food, get-it-to-me-now culture, we associate waiting with boredom, frustration, irritation, even lack of hope.  Can we imagine a Simeon today, waiting his whole life to see God’s promised Christ, ready to die when he does?  We don’t know what the prophet Anna is waiting for, but it’s been about 63 years.  15 minutes is nothing compared to Christian waiting for God’s healing and restoring of all things.

Maybe we also should glue waiting and hoping together.

It’s a modern convention to separate them.  Our ancestors fully lived this.

The Presentation is February 2, forty days after Christmas; the purification rites for the mother happened forty days after childbirth.  But in Ireland and Britain it held further significance as a cross-quarter day.  The year was divided into so-called quarter days, Christmas Day, the Annunciation (March 25), St. John the Baptist/Midsummer Day (June 24), and St. Michael’s Day (September 29).  These Christian festivals, importantly, are very close to the solar turning points, the winter and summer solstices and the spring and fall equinoxes.

Roughly half-way between these days were other important festivals marking time.  Presentation is the cross-quarter day between Christmas and Annunciation.  Each of these eight days held significance to our Christian ancestors who had things that needed to be done by those dates for life and livelihood, to survive.  It’s not accidental that in the Middle Ages in Europe the Presentation was a day for predicting the length of winter ahead (and without a rodent’s help).  They relied on weather and the land to live; half-way between the longest night and the longest day they dreamed when spring would come and food would be abundant.

There is evidence that this Christian celebration was also one of those festivals overlaid upon pagan celebrations of this mid-point that also were part of a culture dependent on the earth for life.  This has long been a day of waiting and hoping for the future to come.

Our Church Year is our way of joining our waiting with hoping.

Our culture has lost this sense of life in the year and dependence on God’s creation which paid close attention to the creation.  Our marking points in the year are based on our entertainment schedules, from awards season to sports championship times, or our political calendar.

But we Christians walk this Church Year.  We’ve gathered tonight for Eucharist to mark 40 days since our celebration of our Lord’s birth.  We may not have as desperate a need for good weather coming, but it’s good and right that we intentionally choose this calendar as our way of knowing where we are in our waiting.

That’s the whole point of a calendar, to mark the waiting.  From the classic film and cartoon stereotype of someone x-ing out days in anticipation, to our need to tell how many days until Christmas, marking time helps us wait.

So we mark our year, moving through the story of God’s grace coming into the world and into our lives, to help us in our waiting and remind us of our hope in God.

We notice from Malachi, Simeon and Anna that our place of waiting is also important.

All three center the place of waiting on the Temple of the Lord.  That’s where Malachi says the coming will be, that’s where Simeon goes when the Spirit lets him know the child has come, and that’s where Anna spent over six decades praying, fasting, waiting.

We join our waiting with our hoping when we come into this holy place and seek God in God’s house.  In this place we know we will hear words of grace and hope, words of promise that will be kept.  In this place we know we will be fed and strengthened.  In this place the Triune God has promised to be, so like those saints of old, we gather here to wait for the Lord.

But this coming of the Lord is clearly not meant to stay in this place.

Malachi speaks of the purifying of all the people of God; the coming might start in worship but will restore the whole nation.  Simeon takes it even further, declaring that this child he is holding will be a light to all the nations of the world, as well as the glory of his own people, Israel.

So it is with our waiting and hoping in this place: we take it into the world, fully expecting to see God’s healing coming to all things, fully believing in the possibility that the light of God will make a difference in the world’s darkness.  Bearing the light ourselves infuses our waiting with hope, because living in the rich blessing of God becomes abundant and joyful when we share it and see what happens in the world.

Yet our hoping is in turn wrapped up in our waiting: God’s fullness comes in God’s good time, not instantly.

Sometimes we’re tempted to despair at this, but this story of Jesus and Simeon shows God’s promises will be kept, even if they take time.  Simeon waits his whole life, and finally sees.  At the end of this story, though, Jesus is still just a little child; growing, filling up with wisdom, but still a little child.  He is not Christ for the world yet.  There is still the path to the cross and resurrection.  Some things take time.

We know this if we cook.  There are things that cannot be rushed, even in a microwave world with instant meals.  If you want a good oatmeal, you need to toast steel cut oats, and then boil them for about a half an hour.  Chili really only tastes best on the second day.

With the Triune God it’s the same.  To get what God is hoping for – literally the restoration of the hearts of humanity which will restore this planet – God needs to play the long game, bringing healing through the Son one community of faith at a time.  God’s grace will make all things new, but the way God needs it to work, it will take time.

So we return to our sense of marking time in the Church Year.  While we wait for God’s good time, we walk through the year’s story of God’s grace, to be filled with hope in our waiting.  And so we can recognize signs of healing and grace when we see them, like Simeon and Anna did.

It’s been longer than 15 minutes.  Things take time with God.

But on this night we once more meet Simeon and Anna we are reminded of the hope we have in this child they celebrated and for whom they praised God.  On this night we once more bless candles for our year’s worship we are reminded of the light which shines in our darkness and one day will fill all things.

We wait.  But we wait with hope.  Because God is faithful, and God’s promises are being kept.  It will take time.  But that we have, until all things truly are made new.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

What Is This?

February 1, 2015 By moadmin

In the community of the Church, Christ comes to us and brings healing and life, through the grace we are with each other, and even directly in healing hearts and minds; let’s let this news get out so more and more can know!

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
   The Fourth Sunday after Epiphany, year B
   text:  Mark 1:21-28

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

That must have been some day in the synagogue.

Into the place of prayer and learning came a man possessed of an unclean spirit.  Challenging the young rabbi who was teaching there, he shouted all sorts of things at him, including calling him the Holy One of God.  Then the rabbi, Jesus, commanded the spirit to be silent, and drove it out. It was quite a day in the synagogue.  The conversations over dinner afterward must have been animated.

Many of us know exactly what it was like.  A couple years ago this happened in our worship.  A woman came in from the streets, and during the offering walked to the front.  She splashed herself with water from the font, which was on the chancel steps.  Then she began bathing her head in the font.  A couple members stood with her, and let her do this for a while, until the offering was concluded.  When they then tried to help her move to a seat, she became agitated, shouting, kicking, falling to the floor.  She eventually was helped out, continuing to scream and kick.  We also had a Gospel reading concerned with possession that day; many were struck by the connection.  Conversations at our dinner tables that noon were also pretty animated.

We could have used Jesus’ authority, his power to heal, that day.  That poor sister left here and was taken to a psychiatric ward, but there was no immediate healing we’re aware of.  Does this story in Capernaum offer any hope for us today, or is it irrelevant to our modern concerns and reality?

To start with, we aren’t sure about this talk of spirits, if it’s even something we can believe.

When we look at the stories of Jesus’ healing, some of the things ascribed to “demons” or “unclean spirits” look an awful lot like things we describe medically today.  Epilepsy, depression, addiction, anxiety, even schizophrenia and others.  We can see how people of Jesus’ day would call these demons.  We even use that word at times.  These afflictions are real, and many struggle with them.

But there is this: even without a clinical diagnosis we can feel as if there are thoughts bothering us that come from outside.  It’s human reality that we all can have these negative voices in our heads telling us we’re not good enough, raising our anxieties, causing us to fear, lots of unhelpful messages.  When they become so strong we can’t cope, we seek diagnosis and help from doctors.  But in a very real sense these can feel like outsiders, even if we don’t call them “unclean spirits.”  They may very well be spirits.  They may not.  But we can’t easily rid ourselves of them.

Every single one of us is at one place or another in need of spiritual and mental healing.  There really isn’t any such thing as normal.  That’s our connection to this story.

Our problem is that Jesus was able to heal this man with a word, immediately.  That isn’t something we often see today.  But it’s what we wish we could experience.

The good news is, we already know part of Christ’s answer to this problem.  It’s why we’re here.

When that woman went to the font, she was not alone.  From the one, then two who initially stood with her, to the health professionals who came forward to help, to those who helped her in the lounge area after she left, this community surrounded her, even in the anxiety she raised in us.  Afterward, every single person I heard ask or speak of this was concerned about her, how she was, hoping and praying she would be OK.  Some tried to visit her in the hospital, but weren’t permitted.  She experienced a community in Christ who wanted to love her.

That’s what we all come here to find as well.  That community of faith is part of the authoritative teaching that so astonished the synagogue.  Mark doesn’t tell us here what Jesus taught.  Matthew, however, inserts three chapters of Jesus’ teaching between Mark’s verses 21 and 22 (the first and second verses we heard today); we call these chapters the “Sermon on the Mount.”

Powerfully, in those teachings Jesus describes a new community of faith based on trusting God to provide all things, and setting aside anxiety.  A community that prays for and loves enemies, instead of seeking revenge.  A community shaped by humility and peacemaking, that looks out for the meek and lowly.  A community that considers anger and hate as destructive as murder.  A community so shaped to love, people would refrain from worship if they had something outstanding against another, and go and repair what was broken first.

That’s what Jesus taught with authority.  That’s the gift of community he gives to his followers, and it’s central to the healing he offers us today.

When we see each other with the same concern and compassion we had for that woman who came among us, pray for each other in the same love, we find the power of Christ’s healing.

When we understand that each of us is broken, each has pain and suffering, be it spiritual, mental, or physical, and that our greatest gift is that we are with each other to love each other through it, we find the power, the authority, of Christ’s healing.

In Christ we are made into a community that doesn’t fear depression or anxiety, addiction or post-traumatic stress, any more than we fear headaches, so we can help each other face such pain.  In Christ we are made into a community that doesn’t fear cancer anymore than we fear a broken leg, so we can help each other in our fears.  In Christ we are made into a community that isn’t afraid of spiritual emptiness or heavy guilt, but sees them as other things, like all the rest, that we can support each other in and bring to our God for healing.

That’s the authority, the power Jesus has as Son of God: he declares what it is to be together as his Church, what it looks like, and empowers us to do it.  And so gives us healing.

But deeper healing is also possible through the authority and power of Christ Jesus.

What happened to the man in the synagogue is also happening today, even if we don’t see it as dramatically.  It might take decades, but God is constantly working in us to bring wholeness.  We might not see the completion of it in this life, but God is constantly working in us to heal.  Opening our eyes to see that all of us are broken and struggling opens our eyes to the ways in which God brings healing.  People do get better.  Sometimes we need the perspective of thirty, forty years, but we can see it if we look.  Healing of the spirit and heart does come.  We even have therapies and medicines that can help mental illness in powerful ways.

Even if the thing we think is the main problem doesn’t get healed as we hope, we still find healing from the grace of God, so we cope better, so we see the joy of abundance from God even in our pain.  That’s healing, too.  Because Jesus has risen from the dead, even the final illness, death itself, cannot harm us, which changes how we live in this life and see everything.

Best of all, in Word and Sacrament we worship the Triune God who loves and forgives and restores us, and are fed and blessed to find abundant rich life no matter our circumstances, a healing we receive each and every time we gather together.

“What is this?” they asked in Capernaum.  “A new teaching – with authority,” they answered.

This is why we gather each week, why we hope in this life: the Triune God has come into this world as one of us in Jesus the Christ, with the authority and power to heal all that ails us, everything.  In this community we are given each other to help in our journey of faith, to pray in times of need, to love us through whatever we’re facing, and in this community we are healed.

Like those first believers in Capernaum, this is astonishing to us.  But we’ve seen it.  We know it is so.  And so we are sent to proclaim this Good News to everyone we can, to embody Christ’s healing in this community, to welcome others always into it, so that more and more can know the same hope and healing we know.

It’s too astonishing, to good, to keep to ourselves.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

What Is This?

February 1, 2015 By moadmin

In the community of the Church, Christ comes to us and brings healing and life, through the grace we are with each other, and even directly in healing hearts and minds; let’s let this news get out so more and more can know!

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
   The Fourth Sunday after Epiphany, year B
   text:  Mark 1:21-28

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

That must have been some day in the synagogue.

Into the place of prayer and learning came a man possessed of an unclean spirit.  Challenging the young rabbi who was teaching there, he shouted all sorts of things at him, including calling him the Holy One of God.  Then the rabbi, Jesus, commanded the spirit to be silent, and drove it out. It was quite a day in the synagogue.  The conversations over dinner afterward must have been animated.

Many of us know exactly what it was like.  A couple years ago this happened in our worship.  A woman came in from the streets, and during the offering walked to the front.  She splashed herself with water from the font, which was on the chancel steps.  Then she began bathing her head in the font.  A couple members stood with her, and let her do this for a while, until the offering was concluded.  When they then tried to help her move to a seat, she became agitated, shouting, kicking, falling to the floor.  She eventually was helped out, continuing to scream and kick.  We also had a Gospel reading concerned with possession that day; many were struck by the connection.  Conversations at our dinner tables that noon were also pretty animated.

We could have used Jesus’ authority, his power to heal, that day.  That poor sister left here and was taken to a psychiatric ward, but there was no immediate healing we’re aware of.  Does this story in Capernaum offer any hope for us today, or is it irrelevant to our modern concerns and reality?

To start with, we aren’t sure about this talk of spirits, if it’s even something we can believe.

When we look at the stories of Jesus’ healing, some of the things ascribed to “demons” or “unclean spirits” look an awful lot like things we describe medically today.  Epilepsy, depression, addiction, anxiety, even schizophrenia and others.  We can see how people of Jesus’ day would call these demons.  We even use that word at times.  These afflictions are real, and many struggle with them.

But there is this: even without a clinical diagnosis we can feel as if there are thoughts bothering us that come from outside.  It’s human reality that we all can have these negative voices in our heads telling us we’re not good enough, raising our anxieties, causing us to fear, lots of unhelpful messages.  When they become so strong we can’t cope, we seek diagnosis and help from doctors.  But in a very real sense these can feel like outsiders, even if we don’t call them “unclean spirits.”  They may very well be spirits.  They may not.  But we can’t easily rid ourselves of them.

Every single one of us is at one place or another in need of spiritual and mental healing.  There really isn’t any such thing as normal.  That’s our connection to this story.

Our problem is that Jesus was able to heal this man with a word, immediately.  That isn’t something we often see today.  But it’s what we wish we could experience.

The good news is, we already know part of Christ’s answer to this problem.  It’s why we’re here.

When that woman went to the font, she was not alone.  From the one, then two who initially stood with her, to the health professionals who came forward to help, to those who helped her in the lounge area after she left, this community surrounded her, even in the anxiety she raised in us.  Afterward, every single person I heard ask or speak of this was concerned about her, how she was, hoping and praying she would be OK.  Some tried to visit her in the hospital, but weren’t permitted.  She experienced a community in Christ who wanted to love her.

That’s what we all come here to find as well.  That community of faith is part of the authoritative teaching that so astonished the synagogue.  Mark doesn’t tell us here what Jesus taught.  Matthew, however, inserts three chapters of Jesus’ teaching between Mark’s verses 21 and 22 (the first and second verses we heard today); we call these chapters the “Sermon on the Mount.”

Powerfully, in those teachings Jesus describes a new community of faith based on trusting God to provide all things, and setting aside anxiety.  A community that prays for and loves enemies, instead of seeking revenge.  A community shaped by humility and peacemaking, that looks out for the meek and lowly.  A community that considers anger and hate as destructive as murder.  A community so shaped to love, people would refrain from worship if they had something outstanding against another, and go and repair what was broken first.

That’s what Jesus taught with authority.  That’s the gift of community he gives to his followers, and it’s central to the healing he offers us today.

When we see each other with the same concern and compassion we had for that woman who came among us, pray for each other in the same love, we find the power of Christ’s healing.

When we understand that each of us is broken, each has pain and suffering, be it spiritual, mental, or physical, and that our greatest gift is that we are with each other to love each other through it, we find the power, the authority, of Christ’s healing.

In Christ we are made into a community that doesn’t fear depression or anxiety, addiction or post-traumatic stress, any more than we fear headaches, so we can help each other face such pain.  In Christ we are made into a community that doesn’t fear cancer anymore than we fear a broken leg, so we can help each other in our fears.  In Christ we are made into a community that isn’t afraid of spiritual emptiness or heavy guilt, but sees them as other things, like all the rest, that we can support each other in and bring to our God for healing.

That’s the authority, the power Jesus has as Son of God: he declares what it is to be together as his Church, what it looks like, and empowers us to do it.  And so gives us healing.

But deeper healing is also possible through the authority and power of Christ Jesus.

What happened to the man in the synagogue is also happening today, even if we don’t see it as dramatically.  It might take decades, but God is constantly working in us to bring wholeness.  We might not see the completion of it in this life, but God is constantly working in us to heal.  Opening our eyes to see that all of us are broken and struggling opens our eyes to the ways in which God brings healing.  People do get better.  Sometimes we need the perspective of thirty, forty years, but we can see it if we look.  Healing of the spirit and heart does come.  We even have therapies and medicines that can help mental illness in powerful ways.

Even if the thing we think is the main problem doesn’t get healed as we hope, we still find healing from the grace of God, so we cope better, so we see the joy of abundance from God even in our pain.  That’s healing, too.  Because Jesus has risen from the dead, even the final illness, death itself, cannot harm us, which changes how we live in this life and see everything.

Best of all, in Word and Sacrament we worship the Triune God who loves and forgives and restores us, and are fed and blessed to find abundant rich life no matter our circumstances, a healing we receive each and every time we gather together.

“What is this?” they asked in Capernaum.  “A new teaching – with authority,” they answered.

This is why we gather each week, why we hope in this life: the Triune God has come into this world as one of us in Jesus the Christ, with the authority and power to heal all that ails us, everything.  In this community we are given each other to help in our journey of faith, to pray in times of need, to love us through whatever we’re facing, and in this community we are healed.

Like those first believers in Capernaum, this is astonishing to us.  But we’ve seen it.  We know it is so.  And so we are sent to proclaim this Good News to everyone we can, to embody Christ’s healing in this community, to welcome others always into it, so that more and more can know the same hope and healing we know.

It’s too astonishing, to good, to keep to ourselves.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

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