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Foolish Trust, Foolish Way

September 14, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The path of Christ is foolishness, a stumbling block, nonsense, and we know that from the beginning. It is also the only way to life for us and the creation?

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The feast of the Holy Cross
Texts: 1 Corinthians 1:18-24; John 3:13-17

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

You have to admire Paul’s honesty.

He starts his letter to the Corinthians calling his promise, his proclamation, his witness, foolish. Deluded. Making no sense to the Jewish people or any other people on earth.

“We proclaim Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles,” Paul says. From the start let’s be clear, he says. What we say about Christ isn’t going to connect with just about anyone.

He could actually have named two other groups. What he often calls the flesh, or the world, what we might call our culture, our way. And second, the very Church itself, born out of the cross of Christ and gathered by the Spirit’s fire. Both also struggle with the cross.

So Paul says: look honestly at the truth of our proclamation. And know that it’s in opposition to nearly everything everyone expects about the way the world works.

But it’s what Jesus proclaimed.

Jesus said, “The Son of Man must be lifted up, so whoever trusts in him might have eternal life.” The path to God’s life starts at the cross, where we see our Savior lifted up for the life of the world. Lifted up, as Jesus proclaims later, to draw all people to himself, all things into God’s embrace. (John 12:32)

And Paul says this way of the cross is clearly opposite to the way most desire. But it will save the world. All things will be healed, saved, brought into God’s life and love through this sacrificial love. And as those who see Christ lifted up allow themselves to be lifted up, cut down, walked on for the sake of others, then the world of power over others, of domination and might, will crumble and eventually fall.

And that’s where the rubber meets the road. When the historical event of the cross makes a demand on how people live their lives, how they they think things work.

It’s where all these groups struggle.

They just don’t know what to do with the cross.

The proclamation of Christ’s cross was a stumbling block to Jews because they couldn’t envision the one true God, the maker of all things, so debased, so lowly as to assume human form and die.

The proclamation of Christ’s cross was foolishness to Gentiles because they’d ridicule a pathetic group of believers who followed someone who ended in a humiliating public execution.

The proclamation of Christ’s cross is nonsense to our culture because the world can’t comprehend an all-powerful Creator of all things giving up that power in love. If you’ve got power, wield it, use it, the world says.

And the proclamation of Christ’s cross largely appears to be irrelevant to the very Church Christ called. The Church has learned to live as if the cross is unimportant to its life, sharing a bed with military and political power for centuries, calling it God’s will, a practical way to preserve the institution. And because we like power, being winners.

So, Paul says, let’s be honest. Name at the start what’s at stake.

The path to God’s life is the path of stumbling, foolish, irrelevant nonsense.

Can you see the stumbling block? he asks. You don’t get to tell God what to do, you only get to decide if you’re going where God has already gone, into disreputable places and places of loss. To love those who would hurt you.

Can you see the foolishness? Paul asks.  To stop defending the church, our congregation, yourself, even God. This path doesn’t lead to impressive, powerful things people have to respect.

Can you see the nonsense? he asks. To move out in vulnerability and weakness, offering only love and grace in your words, actions, and decisions, instead of fighting to make sure you win or the church wins.

Can you see how this might appear irrelevant to your life? Paul asks. If people always need to adjust to you, if your needs are always foremost, if your trust in God depends upon whether you have success and security, if being right is the most important thing, if sacrificial, vulnerable love is something you’re unwilling to do, what does that tell you? he asks.

That’s the honesty Paul calls for.

But such honesty is why you and I are here tonight.

Tonight, and at every Eucharist, when we gather at the Table of Christ and claim those visceral gifts as our own, Christ’s Body and Blood, we declare Paul’s words from later in this Corinthian letter: “When we eat of this bread and drink from this cup, we proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.” (1 Cor. 11:26)

This isn’t some morbid obsession, to stop and proclaim Christ’s death at every Eucharist. It is declaring the truth each time, so we remember this is our way. So we continually focus on the path we walk with Christ, a path of loss and death that gives life.

The cross marks our lives, our worship, our rituals, our gestures, our faith, precisely as a reminder of Christ’s path, and ours. And with this sign we commit to our path.

“The message of the cross is foolishness,” Paul says . . . “but to us who are being saved it is Christ the wisdom of God.”

We seek wisdom in foolishness, because that’s where God’s way is. We seek power in powerlessness, because that’s what God does. We seek strength in weakness, because that’s how God works. We seek victory in losing, because that’s how God wins. This foolish, nonsensical, stumbling block truth about the way the Triune God really works in the world is life. Millions before us have learned this and found life for themselves and for the world.

So with God’s help let’s walk this foolishness together, catch each other when we stumble, help make sense of the nonsense together, and find the relevance of this way for our life and the life of the whole universe.

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

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, September 17, 2023

September 14, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 24 A 

We worship a God of reconciliation who calls us to that ministry for the sake of each other and the world.

Download worship folder for Sunday, September 17, 2023.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: John Crippen, lector; Al Bipes, assisting minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

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

Worship, Thursday, September 14, 2023, 7:00 p.m.

September 14, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Holy Cross Day

We center our worship on the foolish love of God at the cross that is the wisdom that will heal all things.

Download worship folder for Wednesday, September 14, 2023.

Presiding and Preaching: Pr. Joseph G. Crippen

Readings and prayers: Allan Heggen, lector; Judy Hinck, assisting minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

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

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

The Olive Branch, 9/13/23

September 12, 2023 By office

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

Filed Under: Olive Branch

A Tale of Two Churches

September 10, 2023 By Vicar at Mount Olive

The church that Jesus describes in the gospels is beautiful and messy.   Life and love in Jesus sometimes means leaning into the messiness of being church, because we are bound to each other.

Vicar Lauren Mildahl
The Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 23 A
Texts: Ezekiel 33:7-11, Psalm 119:33-40, Romans 13:8-14, Matthew 18:(+10-14) 15-20

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

The word “church” (ecclesia, in Greek) only appears in two places in the Gospels. 

It appears lots of times in the book of Acts and in most of the epistles, but Jesus only mentions the church twice, and only Matthew’s gospel.   In fact, we heard him say the word “church” for the first time a few weeks ago.  When Jesus asked the disciples, “Who do you say that I am?” And Peter answered, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the Living God!”  Then Jesus came back with, “And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it!” 

The first time we hear of the church, it is ascendant. A church that death itself cannot prevail against. A church built strong on the rock of faith, of Peter’s faith in the Living God who came in love as Christ. This church is a glimpse of God’s beloved community, of life and love in Christ. It’s beautiful!

And now, here we are, just two chapters later, and when Jesus speaks of the church this time it is in conflict and disarray. Jesus describes a wounded church, where members are hurting each other and aren’t listening to each other, and the church represents the last-ditch effort to restore peace. It’s messy!

These two chapters tell a tale of two churches. The best of times and the worst of times. So divine. So human. Beautiful and messy. And isn’t that just like the church? 

Because church is often messy, isn’t it?

Even this church. I haven’t been here long, but I’ve been reading the wonderful history of Mount Olive that was put together for the 100th anniversary. It has been such a lovely way to get to know more of the rich history of this place. But it’s also a tale of two churches (at least 2!) There have been many beautiful moments and many messy moments in this place.

And in the wider church as well.  Some of you shared with me this week your own painful stories of the messy church and the ways you have been brought down and let down, sometimes by people who sanctioned their actions with these very texts. It’s all too easy for “2 or 3” people to claim God’s authority to push away or even excommunicate some sheep who makes things just a bit too messy.  Whose “sins” (real or imagined) threaten the idea of the beautiful church. And the conflicts weigh us down. And they hurt. 

It’s heartbreaking. In my cynical moments, I think about God’s promise to do anything we ask – IF “two of you can agree.” – I imagine God thinking, “Oh I’ll take that bet.  Two of you need to agree on something?  Yeah, sure. If two of you can agree on anything, I’ll do it.  Good luck.”

But of course, that’s not how God thinks or what God wants.  God wants us to agree, wants us to love one another, wants us to live! Telling the prophet Ezekiel, “I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from their ways and live!”  But how? How do we turn and live? How do we muddle through the messiness of living side by side? 

Well, God has given us a good place to start. It’s called “the law.”  

We Lutherans love gospel so much we like to give the law a bad name. But the law is a gift. It is supposed to help us.  It’s a good thing.  It was the desire and delight of the writer of Psalm 119. And it’s what Paul offered to the Romans who were trying to navigate their own very messy church. Paul helpfully summarized for them and for us that “the law” is really just love. Love for our neighbors.   So that we can turn and live!  So that maybe we can be that first beautiful version of the church a little bit more often. 

But as helpful as the law is, the love and life we find in Jesus goes even beyond that.

This passage in Matthew 18 is often called “The Rule of Christ” – but it isn’t just sensible conflict management advice.  This is the kind of love that doesn’t just follow the law, it fulfills it. This is the love that goes to find the lost sheep that has gone astray.  The love that doesn’t want a single one of these little ones to be lost.  The love that brings every single one back. 

That’s what we are commanded to do here.  If a sibling in Christ has sinned against you, has hurt you, has offended you, has annoyed you, whatever it is, you don’t shut the door on them. And you don’t just take it like a doormat.  You go out and you meet them face to face.  You might need to bring along others. You might have to bring along the whole dang messy church if you need to, for the sake of one. That is restoration and reconciliation that will go to every length. 

Which sometimes means that we need to be a little bit flexible for the sake of reconciliation.  

We need to learn to lean into the messiness. Sometimes that might even mean re-evaluating the rules the law has given us.

And God gives us that flexibility!  Jesus says, not once, but in both of these passages where he mentions the church, the same phrase:  whatever you bind on Earth will be bound in heaven. Whatever you loose on Earth will be loosed in heaven. This isn’t God setting us up as little tyrants with terrifying cosmic power.  This is God reminding the church to go to every length to reconcile, to restore, to turn to life.  You aren’t bound to the law.  If the law isn’t working to bring every sheep back, be released from it.  If you need a few new rules to help you love each other into life, go for it. 

You aren’t bound to the law.  You are bound to each other.  

Which means that when you need to hold others accountable (which sometimes you will), you can’t forget to hold them. 1

Too often, these passages are used to wash our hands of those who have hurt us or those we don’t think should be a part of the church. 

Sometimes we are so afraid of a messy church, we want so badly to skip right to that beautiful church, that we are really tempted to read that part about Gentiles and tax collectors as license to exclude. To leave those sheep to wander on their cliffs. 

But that isn’t the church.  We only need to look at the way that Jesus treated Gentiles and tax collectors to see that.  Jesus wasn’t afraid of messy. Jesus knew that the two churches, beautiful and messy, are really only one church.  Because the church that death cannot prevail against is the same church desperately trying to hold itself together.  Not two churches. One church in Jesus. Who has already gone to every length to reconcile us to God, to bring us back into the fold, who doesn’t want to see a single one be lost. 

And don’t forget, dear church: Jesus is here.  He promised. 

Where 2 or 3 are gathered in my name, I am among them. In my beautiful, messy church, I am among them. 

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

 

1. This idea was inspired by Kazu Haga, a trainer of Kingian Nonviolence, from a line in his book Healing Resistance: A Radically Different Response to Harm (Parallax Press: 2020).

 

Filed Under: sermon Tagged With: sermon

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3045 Chicago Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

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