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The Olive Branch, 5/22/24

May 21, 2024 By office

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

Filed Under: Olive Branch

What Can You Bear?

May 19, 2024 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Christ promises the Spirit will lead us into all truth when we can bear it: let us pray that we say we’re always ready to bear whatever is needed for the life of the world.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Day of Pentecost, year B
Texts: John 15:26-27, 16:4b-15; Acts 2:1-21, referencing vv. 41-47

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 still have many things to say to you, but you can’t bear them now.

“When the Spirit of truth comes, she will guide you into all the truth.”

What hope this promise gives us for the life of the Church, the life of the world! Jesus knows there are so many more things those who trust in him need to know if they’re going to follow the way of Christ. So many more challenges, so many more questions.

So he says, “there’s a lot you can’t bear right now, but the Spirit will lead you into all the truth.” And this promise has been fulfilled over and over again.

With the guidance of the Spirit’s wisdom, Christ’s Church has changed.

In our own recent history, the Church finally declared definitively that no human being could enslave another, that all God’s children were precious in God’s sight. Just fifty years ago many in Christ’s Church restored women to any and all leadership positions in the Church. And more recently, many Christian churches have been led by the Spirit to not only welcome LGBTQ+ siblings but embrace and cherish them as God’s beloved children.

The Spirit moves and shapes and teaches things now that at one time the Church wasn’t ready to bear.

But were we really not ready? Or just unwilling?

Did the Church, shaped by the sacrificial love of God at the cross for all humanity, really need over 18 centuries to recognize all humanity as equal and beloved in God’s eyes, and finally forbid human slavery? There were Spirit-led voices throughout those centuries who called for this. But the whole Church just wasn’t ready until the 19th century?

Jesus and Paul raised up women as leaders in the community. Paul had women colleagues who were heads of faith communities. By the end of the first century, the Church backed away from that, and became deeply patriarchal. Did we really need another 1,800 years to reverse that sellout? And even now, those Christian churches who have women as leaders are definitely the minority. Does the vast majority of the Church still get to say they’re not ready to bear women leaders?

And did the Church of Christ’s radical love need 2,000 years to recognize their LGBTQ+ siblings as beloved children of God? Such children have been a part of God’s rich diversity for as long as humans have existed. We weren’t ready to bear that until now? And again, Christian churches who do embrace these siblings are the small minority.

If Christ’s promise is that the Spirit will teach us new things when we’re ready to bear them, and the Spirit clearly taught people for 2,000 years things only recently accepted by larger groups, then are we hiding behind the wall of “we’re not ready to bear such things?” Maybe we just don’t want to do them.

Because if you look at that first Pentecost, the early Church seemed ready to bear some amazing things right away.

People were filled with awe at the signs and wonders the believers did. The community was transformed: they each sold everything they owned and shared all their wealth in common. Everyone had what they needed. And they worshipped together daily in the temple, and shared meals with each other. And every day more and more became a part of the community. Can you imagine us living that way as this faith community?

So they were ready to bear such a communal life, and now, 2,000 years later we’re not?

The truth is, we can actually see the seeds of this in the book of Acts itself. This new way started falling apart. Disputes started to happen, some people didn’t get enough food, some hid away their money.

So even the early Church struggled with bearing what the Spirit taught. They grasped it at first with joy. But it became more and more a burden to keep up this new way.

Clearly humans easily say “we’re not ready,” when the truth is more that we don’t want to.

So, on this day of Pentecost, what is the Spirit trying to lead us into, to teach us, that we’re dragging our heels on? There are lots of things to consider, but we could start with how we live in this world as a community of faith.

There’s a group here working on how Mount Olive can better know our indigenous neighbors and walk alongside them. If you’re interested in helping shape that conversation, there’s room at that table. But what are we willing to bear? Would we consider reparations as a regular part of our budget? If the Spirit raises challenging paths, would we be open to her guidance? Or are we not ready at this time?

Nearly every day during the week neighbors of all God’s diversity come through our doors for help: African Americans, African immigrants, Native Americans, new neighbors from all the countries south of our border, and we offer help. If you’re able to help during the week as we engage with these neighbors, we’re always in need of hands. But what are we willing to bear beyond that? What might the Spirit be calling Mount Olive to be and do as a community in this city to bear Christ’s love with all these neighbors? Are we willing to hear the Spirit’s call, wisdom, teaching, if it leads to new challenges, financial, physical, social? Or will we say once again, “maybe we’re not ready yet.”

Jesus’ promise is not an excuse to avoid growing, changing, becoming Christ.

Our task at Mount Olive is to keep listening to the Spirit together and then talking with each other, discerning what paths might be opening up in lots of areas. Because the Spirit will be inviting us to serve in our life in this world. To learn new things. Face new challenges. Be transformed into what God needs us to be.

So let’s commit on this Day of Pentecost to seek conversations amongst ourselves as much as we possibly can and listen to the Spirit together. And let’s also commit to helping each other listen to where the Spirit might be calling us each individually to take a different path, to be shaped by the Spirit’s wisdom, because that’s part of Jesus’ promise, too.

Most of all, on this day of Pentecost, let us pray.

Let us pray that we are always ready for the next thing the Spirit needs us to hear and learn. Let’s even boldly pray that the Spirit ignore whether she thinks we can bear something or not. That she let us stumble or fall rather than hold back guidance because we’re afraid or unwilling. Let’s ask the Spirit to remove the words “we’re not ready for that,” and teach us to say with joy, “ready or not, here we come.”

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

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, May 19, 2024

May 18, 2024 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Day of Pentecost, year B

Download worship folder for Sunday, May 19, 2024.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Teresa Rothausen, lector; Vicar Lauren Mildahl, assisting minister

Organist: Robert Buckley Farlee

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

The Olive Branch, 5/15/24

May 14, 2024 By office

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

Filed Under: Olive Branch

Unrecognizable

May 12, 2024 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

If you truly are made holy to love and live as Christ, you will be a threat to the world, like Jesus was; but you will also be a part of God’s healing of all things.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Seventh Sunday of Easter, year B
Text: John 17:6-19

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

God came to us as a human and was unrecognizable.

Jesus is God’s creating Word in our human body, and we didn’t recognize or want him. John says, “The Word was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him. The Word came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him.” (1:10-11)

And in this prayer on the night of his betrayal we heard today, Jesus names that. “I don’t belong to this world,” he says. And since God’s Word in our flesh was so unrecognizable to us, so problematic, so challenging, we had to get rid of him.

But the real problem is that in this prayer, Jesus trusts the same is true of us.

In this beautiful mystery of a conversation within the life of the Trinity, Jesus the Son says we also don’t belong to the world because we are Christ. We are shaped into God’s life and live as Christ’s love in the world. So the world won’t recognize or accept us either, Jesus assumes. That’s why Jesus asks that we be protected in this alien world.

I just wonder if Jesus is right about us.

Are we actually unrecognizable to the world?

Jesus absolutely was. His teaching, radical interpretation of Scripture, insistent boundary-breaking for the sake of God’s love, his welcome and inclusion of all, especially those on the margins, was so offensive to the authorities he had to be taken out.

But is there anything about our lives, about how we live in our neighborhood, or at work, or in relationships, that looks so much like Christ people just don’t know what to do with us? Does your love of God and love of neighbor so change you that people can’t relate, or are bothered or annoyed, or even angry at you? Does my life in Christ mean any risk for me at all?

We spend so much energy and attention on what others think of us, as if it would be horrifying if our life in Christ marked us as different, as if we fear that.

So the first question is, do we even want to be different like Christ?

It should be obvious, shouldn’t it? This community cares deeply about this world and the pain and suffering in it. We often wonder how we could help with any number of problems, from our racist systems to a societal structure that reinforces poverty and homelessness and inequality to our desperate helplessness in the face of war around the world.

Jesus says you and I can make a difference in our own places. That the more we look like Christ, love like Christ, the more we find the path Jesus first walked, we can heal what is wrong with our world.

And it sounds good until you have to make a stand. Or I have to talk to someone who disagrees with me. Or you have to reach out to your legislator. Or I need to actually love a neighbor I don’t even like. Or you have to recognize your own latent racism or sexism or classism, and actually try to change it, break it down. Or we have to make decisions that risk our wealth and security.

The cost of being Christ, the cost of loving, the cost of kindness, the cost of sacrificing some of our well-being, the cost of being seen by others as strange or naïve or just wrong, it’s a high cost.

But there’s good news. You have Christ’s grace in the Spirit to be changed, if you want it.

The Son speaks within God’s life and says, “I’m sending them out into the world, just as I was sent.” And Jesus adds, “so make them holy in the truth, in your Word.”

Remember, Jesus is the Word-made-flesh. And Jesus said, “I am the truth – it’s not abstract, truth is alive in my very being.” And, for Jesus, being holy is always love of God and love of neighbor. So here Christ says, “we’ll make that happen in you. You will become me. You won’t hold the truth as a weapon or fight over it, but you’ll embody it, live the truth of God’s love for all.”

If we want it, God will do it.

And when that starts to happen in you and me, the other part of this prayer helps deal with the cost.

Because when it starts to happen, you and I are going to start standing out in the world, looking different. We’re going to become more like Jesus and less recognizable as people who belong to this world. We’ll rub people the wrong way. We’ll risk our security and our ease of living. We’ll learn the feeling of going against the stream, we’ll increasingly realize we need to do something different, make new choices, live another way.

And when that happens, it will be hard. It will cost. But the joy is that Jesus asks here that you are always cared for in God’s arms. No matter what happens, even death, you don’t have to be afraid of becoming Christ, because God is with you.

And when it happens, when you and I become Christ as we were called to be in Baptism, we’ll become a real problem for this world. Like Jesus. And that’s the Triune God’s hope for the healing of all things.

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

Filed Under: sermon

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MOUNT OLIVE LUTHERAN CHURCH
3045 Chicago Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

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welcome@mountolivechurch.org


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  • Home
  • About
    • Welcome Video
    • Becoming a Member
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Staff & Vestry
    • History
    • Our Building
      • Windows
      • Icons
  • Worship
    • Worship Online
    • Liturgy Schedule
    • Holy Communion
    • Life Passages
    • Sermons
    • Servant Schedule
  • Music
    • Choirs
    • Music & Fine Arts Series
      • Bach Tage
    • Organ
    • Early Music Minnesota
  • Community
    • Neighborhood Ministry
      • Neighborhood Partners
    • Global Ministry
      • Global Partners
    • Congregational Life
    • Capital Appeal
    • Climate Justice
    • Stewardship
    • Foundation
  • Learning
    • Adult Learning
    • Children & Youth
    • Confirmation
    • Louise Schroedel Memorial Library
  • Resources
    • Respiratory Viruses
    • Stay Connected
    • Olive Branch Newsletter
    • Calendar
    • Servant Schedule
    • CDs & Books
    • Event Registration
  • Contact