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Shabbat Shalom

June 2, 2024 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Sabbath is God’s gift to you and your neighbor: seek it, find it, live it.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Second Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 9 B
Texts: Mark 2:23 – 3:6; Deuteronomy 5:12-15

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

The Sabbath is God’s gift to you and to your neighbor.

It is precious and life-giving. Little wonder Jesus chose to follow Jewish wisdom and heal a man with a withered hand on the Sabbath. He offered him life, respite from the daily pain of his existence, just as God intended. Just as, Jesus points out elsewhere, the rabbis approved for a person whose child or ox fell into a well on the Sabbath, or whose donkey needed to drink on the Sabbath. Jesus’ opponents want a reason to criticize him, but in their tradition they’re on shaky ground.

But this argument is completely irrelevant to you and to me. We, and our culture and society, barely give the idea of Sabbath a second’s worth of time. Probably only for Christians when it comes up in a Gospel like this. But nitpicking over what’s permissible on the Sabbath? Nothing is further from our minds and hearts.

“Observe the Sabbath day and keep it holy,” as we heard this morning, is one of the Ten Commandments.

Yet we, who claim to follow Scripture and shape our lives by God’s Word, barely conceal our disinterest in following this commandment.

Lutherans could blame Luther himself. Luther swings and misses badly on Sabbath in the Small Catechism. He says it’s about going to church and hearing God’s Word. Now, our life-giving Sabbath practice is to gather here for worship, to be fed at Christ’s Table, to be shaped and led by God’s Word, to pray and share fellowship with each other.

But that’s a practice we do on Sabbath. It’s not Sabbath itself. And whether it’s Luther’s fault or ours, it’s where we are. When was the last time you consciously took time away from your life and called it Sabbath? Can you even imagine a day that was completely unproductive? Restoring?

And yet, Jesus says it’s God’s gift to you. To your neighbor.

The Sabbath was created for humanity, Jesus says, not humanity for the Sabbath. Yes, it’s a commandment, it’s in the top ten. But it’s the commandment solely intended for the grace and refreshment of all people.

And our Jewish siblings who keep Sabbath can testify to this gracious gift. No food is prepared, no cars driven, no phones or computers used, just to name a few among a number of restrictions. There is time for reading and conversation, for communal worship and prayer in the home. For those who live it, these restrictions open up a day of wholeness. Jews greet each other with “Shabbat shalom,” the “peace of Sabbath,” offering each other the hope that this will be a day of shalom.

Shalom means peace – peace from war, peace with God. But in Hebrew it means so much more: completeness, safety, health, welfare, friendship. Shalom is all these. Shabbat shalom wishes the fullness of human life in this time of Sabbath, complete wholeness as God’s children.

Sabbath is God’s gift of shalom to you and to your neighbor.

Look at Jesus’ healing of this man, and maybe you can see this. The Sabbath Jesus gave freed him to be fully what he hoped to be. Sabbath breaks whatever it is that binds you, restricts you, grinds you down, and leads you to wholeness. We are as fragile as clay jars, Paul says today, and we’re facing challenges that can crush us. All God’s children are, some have constant pain and affliction. We’re all people who need the shalom of Sabbath.

Whether you live under self-imposed rules or have the oppression of systems and structures laid upon you, you need a moment of respite. Sabbath. Whatever it is that traps you, binds you, weighs heavy on you, Sabbath is letting go of that for a time. To find shalom.

So what might Sabbath be for you?

Well, do you spend every waking hour always doing something, never feeling your work is done, even at home? What if one day a week you let go of all that and simply existed? Didn’t worry about being unproductive? Or took a nap and didn’t apologize to yourself or others?

Or, this: how much does technology bind you up and trap you? Could you go 24 hours without your phone? Without watching television or using your computer? What if you didn’t have to hear or see every bit of news or entertainment that’s pouring into the world, just for one day? What might that be like, to find that quiet?

And what if, one day a week, you consciously made shalom your priority over all things, looking for health, wholeness, peace, welfare, shalom mentally, physically, spiritually? And for your neighbor, too?

And what of your neighbors? If Sabbath is a gift to all God’s children, can we make this world pay fairly for work done, so our neighbors don’t need to work three jobs seven days a week to keep their home and put food on the table? Could we finally become passionate peacemakers so true shalom can exist in this world and war become obsolete? How might you be a part of giving Sabbath to your neighbor?

Maybe this sounds too complicated.

The world and all its problems are overwhelming. So is changing things in your life. We have limited time to get things done. But ask this: would a Sabbath respite be something you’d really love to have?

So start where Jesus starts: Sabbath is God’s gift to you and to your neighbor. God wants to open up a spaciousness in your life where you can simply be, exist, dream, live. Once a week. Where you step off the treadmill or pull your car off the interstate, or whatever metaphor works for you, and sit still. Where you let go of the things that bind and entrap your mind, your body, your heart.

Where you release yourself from whatever expectations you or others have imposed on you. And listen to God’s voice saying you are beloved, and so are all your neighbors. Where you seek shalom in all its fullness. And remember what it is to breathe. To smell. To see and taste and touch. To be refreshed and rested. To sleep.

Look, according to Scripture, even God needs a Sabbath. How about you? And how about your neighbor?

In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, Sunday afternoon, June 2, 2024

May 30, 2024 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Vespers for Bach Tage at Mount Olive

At the conclusion of our annual Bach Tage, celebrating the music and witness of J. S. Bach, we pray the office of Vespers, including this year’s cantata, BWV 101, “Nimm von uns, Herr, du treuer Gott,” (“Take away from us, Lord, you faithful God”).

Download worship folder for this liturgy, June 2, 2024, 4:00 p.m.

Leading Vespers: Pr. Joseph Crippen

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Sacristan: Tom Olsen

Conductor: Kathy Saltzman Romey

Choir: Participants in Bach Tage 2024

Soloists: Heather Cogswell, soprano; Alyssa Anderson, alto; William Pederson, tenor; Alan Dunbar, bass

Orchestra: Marc Levine, Ginna Watson, violin; Emily Hagen, viola; Charles Asch, cello; Mark Kausch, bass; Eva Sanske, flute; Andrew Blanke, Sarah Huebsch Schilling, oboe; Sian Ricketts, Taille de hautbois and Oboe da caccia; Joseph Jones, bassoon; Tami Morse, organ

Performed during Vespers: Cantata “Nimm von uns, Herr, du treuer Gott,” BWV 101, Johann Sebastian Bach; Vater Unser, SWV 411, Heinrich Schütz

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

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

Worship, June 2, 2024

May 30, 2024 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Second Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 9 B

Download worship folder for Sunday, June 2, 2024.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Brad Holt, lector; David Engen, assisting minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Download next Sunday’s readings 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

Sharing Life

May 26, 2024 By Vicar at Mount Olive

All of our words and images fall short of perfectly describing the ancient and difficult doctrine of the Trinity, which is at its heart a description of shared life, shared within the divine and shared with us. 

Vicar Lauren Mildahl
The Holy Trinity, year B
Texts: Isaiah 6:1-8; Romans 8:12-17; John 3:1-17 

God’s beloved, grace to you and peace in the name of the Father, and of the ☩ Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

We start every sermon that way.

In the name of the Triune God.  Not just on Holy Trinity Sunday – every Sunday! And we end every sermon that way too.   But since it is Trinity Sunday, since this is the day that we devote to this ancient and sometimes difficult doctrine, it’s worth pausing a moment on that familiar formula.  

Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  It’s not perfect. This language has contributed to the unfortunate and inaccurate depiction of the Trinity as “two white guys and a bird.” 

And we could say it in other ways.  

We could try some gender-neutral language: In the name of the Parent, and the Child, and the Bond Between.

Or we could emphasize the different roles within the Trinity: Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer. 

Or we could give it an Augustinian flare: In the name of the Lover, the Beloved, and Love.

Or we could lean into the languages of the Bible: In the name of Abba, Christ, and the Paraclete.

Or we could go pure Metaphysical: In the name of the Source, the Word, the Spirit.

And I’m happy to lean in and explore these alternatives, they are all thought- provoking and helpful in their own way, but none of them really solve the problem that since ancient times, we’ve been searching and failing to find the right words to pin down an ineffable mystery.

And it is a mystery.

A mystery we often ignore or argue about or try to explain away.  You know, a significant number of the major heresies of the Christian Church have about the doctrine of the Trinity, as the church has, over the centuries, attempted to demystify it or remystify it, and created leagues of heretics along the way.  It makes a preacher nervous.

So what can I say?   How can I approach this mystery?!  It makes the question that Jesus asked Nicodemus hit a little too close for comfort: “Are you the teacher of Israel and yet you do not understand these things?” Guilty!  It makes me want to throw up my hands like Isaiah in God’s throne room: “Woe is me! I am lost.”

But actually, I think Isaiah is a good place to start. 

Because there is something about his encounter which deeply resonates with me and which helps us get to something important about the Triune God. 

Isaiah sees God and despairs.  And it seems that that despair is fueled by an overwhelming feeling of apartness.  He witnessed God in God’s full glory in the community of celestial beings and all Isaiah can think is, “I don’t belong here. I’m just a man of unclean lips and I live among a people of unclean lips. There’s no way I could dream to be a part of this. I’m lost.”  He feels alone, separate, apart.

But all of those feelings – alone, separate, apart – those are impossible in a Trinity. 

As mysterious as the three-in-one and the one-in-three are, they point to a truth that divine life is inherently communal.  Connected.  Relational.  When we strip away the words upon words we have heaped upon the Trinity, when we abandon the paradoxes and the paracletes and everything that’s problematic about the formulations and the anathemas and the analogies: what we are left with is Relationship. That the life of God is a shared life.  And it is a shared life that wants to share even more. 

Isaiah despairs, until the burning coal touches his lips, until he is told that he doesn’t need to carry around his guilt and his sin and everything real or imagined thing that’s keeping him apart.  And I don’t think there is anything magical about that coal. I don’t think it really “did” anything at all.  Except that somehow, that experience, and the reassurance from the seraph, helped Isaiah realize that he already belonged. He always did.  He was always connected to God, he was always sharing life with the God that shares life. He was never lost.  

And that’s what gives Isiah the confidence to speak up, to throw his hand up when God asks for a volunteer.

“Here I am!” He says, “I belong here and I’m a part of this too. Send me!”

Isaiah joined the dance.  The dynamic dance of mutuality and shared life which we imperfectly call the Trinity based on the witness of countless ages, who experienced God in different ways and used different words to name those experiences, but which all pointed to the truth that the Divine is deeply connected to the Divine and deeply connected to us. 

Like Isaiah, we are already connected.  We already belong.  We are not lost.  

Like family, Father and Son–that imperfect language we borrow for the trinity–that’s the image that Paul uses: “The Holy Spirit is bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God!” Sharing life in the Holy Family. Adoption is the metaphor that Paul uses in Romans, but in the gospel reading Jesus chooses an even more intimate metaphor when he is speaking with Nicodemus: “You must be born from above,” Jesus says.

Birth. I mean, talk about shared life!

Nicodemus is often mocked for taking this image too seriously: “Can one enter a second time into the mother’s womb and be born?”  But I wonder if that’s why Jesus chose it, because he wanted us to take this metaphor seriously.  To understand the deep connection that exists within the life of God and between God and creation.  Like a mother sharing life in her womb.  Connected and distinct. Two persons, 1 being. 

Now, that analogy isn’t perfect.  No analogy of the Trinity is. Or can be.  I’ll concede that it is definitely missing an element of mutuality, not to mention the third person. But as an example of a life-giving relationship, a relationship of shared life – it’s hard to find one that is more on the nose. 

Nicodemus was afraid.  He was so afraid that he came by night, and yet he recognized the connection that Jesus had with God: “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God, for no one can do these signs that you do unless God is with that person.”  And I hear in that statement an unspoken question, an echo of Isaiah’s despair, “How can I ever be connected to God like that? I am lost!”

And Jesus tries to show him.

You are already born of the Spirit, Nicodemus. You must be. You are already more connected, more intimately related to God than you could ever imagine. 

Jesus wanted Nicodemus to fully experience the God who so loved the world that she shared life.  Wanted Nicodemus to hear the Holy Spirit bearing witness to his spirit, groaning and murmuring to him, touching his lips with the hot coal of truth that he is a child of God.  Just like you are. 

You are a child of God.

You are a child of God, the creator, the author and source of all life, who makes room within herself to share that life with the universe.  

You are a child of God-With-Us, the Word made flesh, the God who entered into our finite lives, lived at our side and shared our life the way we share it.  

You are a child of God, the presence that is the bond of sharing.  Who produces life-giving fruit within you and shows you why life is worth living.  Who whispers in your soul that you are not lost. That you belong.  And who asks “whom shall I send?” and sends you. 

You are born from above, beloveds.  Children of God. 

You share life with the God who shares life.  

And you are sent to share life in the name of the triune God, however you name the name: the Source, the Word, the Spirit; Abba, Christ, Paraclete; Lover, Beloved, Love; Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer; the Parent, the Child and the Bond Between…

In the name of the Father, and of the ☩ Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Filed Under: sermon Tagged With: sermon

Worship, May 26, 2024

May 23, 2024 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Holy Trinity, year B

Download worship folder for Sunday, May 26, 2024.

Presiding: The Rev. Rob Ruff

Preaching: Vicar Lauren Mildahl

Readings and prayers: Peggy Hoeft, lector; Tricia Van Ee, assisting minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Download next Sunday’s readings 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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