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Worship, July 30, 2023

July 27, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Ninth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 17 A 

The treasure we find in our worship is the all-inclusive love of God that transforms us so we can be a part of transforming the world.

Download worship folder for Sunday, July 30, 2023.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Steve Manuel, lector; Vicar Mollie Hamre, 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

Trust the Plan

July 23, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Great Farmer’s plan for the harvest of good in the creation is that in the end, all will be transformed into life-giving plants, healed and whole and good.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Eighth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 16 A
Texts: Matthew 13:24-30 (also Matthew 5:44); Romans 8:12-25

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

Goodness is stronger than evil. Love is stronger than hate. Light is stronger than darkness. Life is stronger than death.[1]

Nine years ago on the Sunday today’s readings also appeared, I began and ended my sermon here with those powerful, hope-filled words of Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Each section within the sermon also began with those words. They were the bones that held together God’s promise to always be with us in the face of evil, hate, darkness, and death.

Nine years later, and three years after the last time we heard this parable while reeling from the death of George Floyd and separated from each other by COVID, now in the face of continuing evil, hate, and the shadows of death that pervade our world, now I hear something else in this parable.

I hear Jesus say to his beloved servant Desmond, “your words are grace and truth. But listen, and I will show you a deeper mystery beyond your imagining.”

And that mystery is this farmer’s idiotic plan.

If you’ve studied this parable, or heard sermons on it, you know the two plants Jesus refers to are virtually identical looking. It’s extremely hard to tell them apart, and anyone who tried to do the weeding might easily make mistakes. Of course you don’t want people who don’t know what they’re doing digging around when plants are first coming up.

But no gardener, no farmer in their right mind would let weeds grow up with the desired plants all the way to harvest. Weeds choke out the desired plants, and severely reduce the yield. Jesus knows this – he literally said it in the parable we heard last week.

Now, this isn’t the first or last parable Jesus told that sounds ridiculous. Jesus was a rural person, and spoke to lots of rural people. So, every farmer in his crowd would’ve said this parable’s solution was dumb. But every shepherd in his crowd would’ve said that risking the safety of 99 secure sheep in the wilderness to find one lost one was the dumbest thing you could do, too. And most parents in his crowd would’ve said that a father who lets his two sons walk all over him, giving them everything, loving them even when they reject him, was just foolish, and a bad parent.

But when Jesus tells you a parable that absolutely crosses the line into foolishness, that sounds ridiculous and naïve and wrong and you know it, that’s when you really need to pay attention. Because when you say to Jesus, “that’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard,” that’s when Jesus says, “now you’re getting it. Now you’re really listening.”

And now you’re ready to hear God’s deeper mystery.

If your grasp of God’s love doesn’t ever make you think God is naïve, unaware of reality, you aren’t ready for the truth of God’s love. If your awareness of God’s love doesn’t ever make you say, “I don’t see how this can work,” or, “that would just be foolish,” you aren’t ready for the truth of God’s love.

The farmer is completely non-anxious about the servants’ rightful fears at his foolishness. Because the farmer is banking on a deeper mystery: evil isn’t to be destroyed. It’s to be changed. This is the farmer’s plan: by the time of the harvest, there will be no weeds to burn. All will be ready to share goodness for the life of all.

So today Jesus says to our brother Desmond, how about this? “Goodness will heal evil. Love will transform hate. Light will open up darkness. Life will raise the dead.”

In the wisdom of the Triune God, who came as one of us into a world sown deeply with evil, it’s not a question of who’s stronger. It’s a question of restoring the whole creation. All of it.

Jesus is always absolutely clear about this. But we don’t want to hear it.

Because it’s so foolish. So we say things like: It doesn’t take into account the real world. Evil needs to be destroyed. Some people are just bad. You need to do whatever it takes to end the power of evil.

Unless you follow the Son of God. Who, as God-with-us, engaged evil and hate and darkness and death at their core, by loving them. Offered forgiveness as he was nailed to the cross. Refused violence and the tools of this world, refused to take power.

Who commanded this: love your enemies. Pray for those who persecute you. That prayer, that love, will heal evil. Transform hate. Open up darkness. Raise the dead.

Of course we stand against what evil does in this world.

It’s our job. We stand in solidarity with all who are crushed and oppressed by the evil and hate and darkness and death that has been planted in this world. We do whatever we can, with whomever we can, to dismantle the systems and structures that perpetuate evil and hate and darkness and death. We join hands in love and grace and witness to the healing power of God’s death-breaking love.

But we do not hate. We do not demonize any of God’s children. We do not ever use violence or authorize others to do violence for us. We do not relegate anyone to the scrap heap of the bad who need to be burned. We don’t overpower or try to win. We love our enemies and pray for them, and that will heal the world.

You don’t have to like the plan. But it’s the only one Jesus has. It’s God’s way.

And there’s more to this plan.

Years ago in a previous parish, I had a confirmation student who had serious attention problems. It’s not uncommon, lots of folks do. But over three years I would’ve said this one heard nothing that was taught. It was so hard for him to sit still, and his comments were often random.

But then in one class in eighth grade, this amazing kid asked a simple question: “Do you think Jesus is delaying his return hoping that even the devil might finally come back?”

This kid got the plan. He didn’t care if it sounded dumb or foolish. He had ears to listen.

Because if this Farmer’s plan comes to fruition, that’s exactly what will happen. Even the great Enemy who first planted the weeds will be healed. Even the great Enemy who first planted the weeds is welcome to the harvest. Even the great Enemy who first planted the weeds is beloved.

It’s not going to be easy.

Listen to Paul, who says it’ll involve a lot of sharing suffering with other people, that the whole creation is groaning in labor pains, waiting for the birth of this new thing. Listen to Jesus, who knew something about suffering and dying for love, knew what it was to set aside power and violence, knew what it was to love enemies and pray for them.

But it is a birth God is making, Paul’s right. And only goodness can give birth to goodness. Only love can give birth to love. Only light can give birth to light. Only life can give birth to life.

This is the plan that will heal all things. It’s absolutely foolish. So trust it with your life.

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

[1] Copyright 1995 Desmond Tutu, admin. Random House, Inc. and Lynn C. Franklin Associates, Ltd. Used in Evangelical Lutheran Worship, hymn no. 721.

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, July 23, 2023

July 22, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Eighth Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 16 A 

We worship a God whose dream is the healing of all things, where all become blessings to all, for the sake of the whole creation.

Download worship folder for Sunday, July 23, 2023.

Presiding and Preaching: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Steve Berg, lector; Mark Pipkorn, assisting minister

Guest Organist: Robert Buckley Farlee

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

The Olive Branch, 7/19/23

July 18, 2023 By office

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

Filed Under: Olive Branch

Brave Seeds to Sow

July 16, 2023 By Vicar at Mount Olive

God does not determine worth by the amount of seeds we sow successfully–God already holds us knowing we have unimaginable worth and hopes that we will be brave to sow seeds to bring God’s reign.

Vicar Mollie Hamre
Seventh Sunday after Pentecost, Year A
Texts: Isaiah 55:10-13, Psalm 65:1,8-13, Romans 8:1-11, Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23

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

“A sower went out to sow.”

As Jesus often does in parables, he does not give much context, motivations of the character or even who this person is. Instead, he tells a story that sounds simple, but is also a lot to digest. Parables ask that we learn from each other and listen to the different ways that a story can be heard. In recognizing that Jesus does give an explanation today, that does not mean it is the only thing we learn from this parable.

The story starts with an individual going out to sow seeds–to plant what might be grain in the future. For those that have planted, there are two parts to caring for seeds. There is the experience side that tells us temperature, kinds of soil, water, drainage, among many other things, all play a factor in having a successful harvest. The other part is the hope and bravery that comes with planting. At some point, how the seeds grow is out of your control. As much as you can plan and prepare, there is a chance that nothing might grow which is a risk you take.

Sowing seeds is not for the faint of heart.

It takes patience, time, and commitment. Learning with one another, asking questions, trial and error. And eventually, we hope that we learn from experiences and grow from them.    

Planting anything is quite literally an act of trust because we place hope into the Earth’s soil that it might flourish and grow. That in itself takes bravery. But what comes of those seeds? The ones that hold hopes and failures? What if we plant in the wrong places? What if, even with experience, we find failure?

A simple story about planting seeds, quickly becomes much more.

We are talking about the ways we live and plant all over in our lives. The ways that we treat one another, invest in each other, show compassion, even to ourselves. The seeds that you sow when you stand up against racism. Stand up against aggression towards our trans siblings. And call for peace and justice in our world.

The seeds you sow when you call to check in on a friend or remind those around you that they are loved. When you have difficult conversations about caring for your neighbors with a family member and it feels like rocky ground. Those are brave seeds to plant. The ones that we are not sure what kind of soil we are encountering, but have hope and trust that God brings growth and the Spirit’s presence amidst it. The times that we put our hearts out there, on the line, with hope that change will happen. And even have to ask: about the times we do not feel successful?

Looking back to the parable, the sower is all across the board for results.

God is not looking for perfection. God is not a stranger to failure or working within imperfect people. So much focus can go to the seeds that land on good soil and bring forth grain, but the output is not the focus and results have never been a part of this for God.

The grain that does grow is enough to fill a whole community. For the hearers of the story thirty, sixty, or a hundredfold was a sign of abundance to be shared. But this grain would not be there if it was not for the time, patience, learning, and growth that is done together first. We are called to bring God’s reign to our world, that means reaching out to one another with grace to learn, grow and share together. This kind of abundance takes community effort, not the perfection of one person

All the seeds in your life will not be planted in perfect soil. You will get confused and lost. You will have success and you will have failure. And as a community, we hope that when we fail, we hold each other up and grow together.

While we can plan and prepare, we also hold as followers of Jesus, God with us, that some things are simply out of our control. And God tells us that is okay. The Triune God does not determine worth by the number of seeds we sow successfully. God already holds us knowing we have unimaginable worth and hopes that we will be brave to sow seeds to bring God’s reign.

“Listen!” Jesus says “A sower went out to sow.”

One of the bravest things you can do. For our world that lays so much stress on success and accomplishment, the Triune God does not. A sower goes out into the world and decides to have hope that seeds might sprout into a harvest, some a hundredfold. And sometimes those seeds do not.

Sometimes we fail and everything does not go according to plan, but that does not change the importance of the work you do. Because God continues to bring rain and snow and sunshine–all signs of God’s growing abundance and presence. These gifts that helps our community learn about soils, planting depth, watering and that is why we rejoice and embrace learning together. And when that seed brings forth grain, we rejoice too. Because in your own ways, just as all the seeds do, you each bring essential grain that feeds the community and gives it nourishment in order that we may hope together for God’s peace and justice in our future.

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

Filed Under: sermon Tagged With: sermon

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3045 Chicago Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

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