cjbanning: (Trinity)
As preached at the midweek outdoor Eucharist at St. Thomas' Episcopal Church in Glassboro, NJ on the evening of Wednesday, February 3, 2021.

Malachi 3:1-4
Psalm 84
Hebrews 2:14-18
Luke 2:22-40

As many of you know, my parents live down the shore, and when I visit them, I usually worship at St. Simeon's-by-the-Sea, North Wildwood. So when my atheist mother asked me to explain who St. Simeon was, I told her the story we just heard in our Gospel reading: that Simeon had been promised by God that he would live to see the Messiah, and had lived to a venerable age waiting around the Temple in Jerusalem for the Messiah to appear. When he at last saw the infant Jesus, he was then able to die satisfied.

"He should have stayed far away from Jerusalem!" responded my mother. "Then he would have lived forever!"

That's the logic of the world. But Simeon knew better. Anna knew better. They knew that the secret to eternal life didn't lay in staying away from the temple, away from Jerusalem.

Simeon and Anna knew--either consciously or unconsciously--that the secret to eternal life lay in Jerusalem, in the temple, specifically in the little baby child who had been brought by its parents, Joseph and Mary, to be presented to God at the temple: the incarnate God before the transcendent God, God the Son before God the Father. They knew that the life and death of that little baby would be the vehicle for God's ultimate victory over sin and death.

Our Gospel reading ends with what is perhaps my favorite verse in St. Luke's Gospel--"the child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom; and the favor of God was upon him"--because it underscores the beauty and paradox and mystery and sacrifice of the Incarnation. The omnipotent God, born as a weak baby who needs to grow and become strong. The omniscient God, born as a foolish and ignorant baby who needs to learn and and grow in wisdom and knowledge. The omnipresent God, born as a tiny baby, so small you can hold it in your arms, who needs to grow tall. (Holds hand several inches above head.) Well, tall. (Holds hand at chin level.) Jesus was probably short by modern standards.

The unchanging God, needing to grow and change and adapt. The infinite God, made finite and limited.

The Definition of Chalcedon is an ancient credal formula we use in the western Church to help us understand the relationship between Jesus' full humanity and his full divinity. It tells us that just as Jesus is of one being with the Father according to his divinity, he is also of one being, consubstantial, with us according to his humanity. We share an essence with Jesus Christ.

So when Mary and Joseph bring Jesus to be presented at the temple, we are being presented to God as well. We are dedicated. We are consecrated. We are made holy.

Amen.

two images under the cut )
cjbanning: (Bowed Head)
As preached at the midweek outdoor Eucharist at St. Thomas' Episcopal Church in Glassboro, NJ on the evening of Wednesday, January 20, 2021.

Acts 4: 8-13
Psalm 23
1 Peter 5:1-4
Matthew 16:13-19

You are the Messiah, says St. Peter to Jesus: the Son of the Living God.

The late Catholic priest Richard P. McBrien described Jesus Christ as “the great sacrament of our encounter with God and of God’s with us. The Church, in turn, [he writes] is the sacrament of our encounter with Christ and of Christ's with us. And the seven sacraments, in their turn, are sacraments of our encounter with the Church and of the Church's with us. Indeed, the other members of the Church are sacraments of encounter for us and we for them because, in the Christian scheme of things, we experience and manifest the love of God through love of neighbor.”

And so it is fitting that from this encounter between St. Peter and Jesus, in which the apostle recognizes Jesus as not only the Messiah, but the unique divine Son of the Living God, the establishment of the Church flows naturally--perhaps even inevitably.

It is through our relationship with Jesus Christ, as meditated through our relationships with each other, that our identity as Church emerges. Through our baptisms we were made members of the Church which was established upon St. Peter’s rock.

When we come together to break bread together as Christ commanded us to do in memory of Him, we do so as His Church--one, holy, catholic, and apostolic. In the sacrament of Christ’s Body and Blood we recognize and confess alongside St. Peter that Jesus is the Christ, the Messiah, the Anointed King, the Only Begotten of the God Who Lives.

When we preach and listen to the Word of God, we do so as Christ’s mystical body. And when we then depart in peace to love and serve the Lord, we carry that identity with us, as the eyes and hands and feet of Jesus Christ on Earth. And when we do so, we do so secure in the promise that Jesus gives to St. Peter: that the gates of Hades will not prevail against us. Temptation and weakness and fear will not prevail against us. Avarice and greed and lust for power will not prevail against us. Racism and intolerance will not prevail against us. Sickness and death will not prevail against us.

In short, sin will not prevail against us. It cannot. For we are the Church of Jesus Christ, the Messiah, the Anointed King, the Firstborn of the Living God.

Amen.

image of me preaching under the cut )
cjbanning: "Saint Clare of Assisi Vanquishes the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" (Saint Clare)
As preached at the midweek outdoor Eucharist at St. Thomas' Episcopal Church in Glassboro, NJ on the evening of Wednesday, January 6, 2021.

Isaiah 60:1-6
Psalm 72:1-7,10-14
Ephesians 3:1-12
Matthew 2:1-12

In our Epistle reading, St. Paul speaks of a “mystery” which “was made known to [him] by revelation” and which “has been revealed by the Spirit to God’s holy apostles and prophets.”

In theology, the word “mystery” is sometimes used to describe a doctrine which transcends human reason, which defies our ability to comprehend it, like the Trinity or the full humanity and divinity of Christ. But in New Testament Greek, the word translated by the NRSV as “mystery” is simply a secret: knowledge which is hidden and thus needs to be revealed. The word “epiphany”, the name of the feast we celebrate tonight, is derived from a Greek word meaning “to reveal.” The Epiphany is the revelation of the “secret” of God’s universal and limitless love for humanity, both Jew and Gentile alike.

It was not enough for God to love the world so much as to send God’s only Begotten One into that world, into this world, to live and die as one of us, so that through Christ the world might be saved; no, God wants us to know that we are God’s beloved, that we might rejoice in this knowledge; that we might give thanks for this knowledge; that we might be transformed by this knowledge.

This secret knowledge was made known to different people in different ways, to each in the way they were best equipped to understand it. To the Magi, it was through astronomical phenomena; to St. Thomas, our patron, it was through the holes in the hand and side of the physical body of the Risen Christ; to St. Paul, it was through a blinding vision of Christ on the road to Damascus. And despite St. Paul’s claim that the secret wasn’t made known to human beings until New Testament times, there are passages in the Hebrew Scriptures, tonight’s passage from Isaiah and our psalm among them, that suggest that perhaps some people might have had at least an inkling.

And to us? How is this secret revealed by God to us, two thousand years removed from the little Baby Jesus asleep in his creche? What metaphorical star do we follow in our attempt to grapple with the mystery of God’s love for us? The answer to that is going to be slightly different for each one of us, but here are some suggestions.

The secret of God’s love for humanity is revealed in the natural, created order, in the beauty of this winter evening. It is revealed in the face of the least of these: the stranger, the prisoner, the immigrant, the destitute, the child. It is revealed in the bonds of love and community; it is revealed in silent contemplation and prayer. It is, of course, revealed in the writings of the Holy Scriptures, in the Church mothers and fathers, in the saints and the prophetic witnesses whom we commemorate on other Wednesday nights.

And, of course, it is revealed in the sacraments--the outward and visible signs of inward, invisible grace--including the sacrament of Christ’s Body and Blood which we come to share together tonight. I do not know all the ways this mystery, this secret has been revealed to each of you, but I give thanks that it has, and pray that it might be so more fully and more deeply each and every day, that it might live in us and transform us and compel us, and that we might be the means through which it might be revealed to others.

Amen.
cjbanning: (Palm Sunday)
As preached to the Church of the Ascension during our service of Morning Prayer, the second Sunday after the Epiphany, January 20, 2013.

Psalm 36:5-10
Isaiah 62:1-5
Canticle 11
1 Corinthians 12:1-11
John 2:1-11

This is the collect for the commemoration of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., celebrated either on April 4 or January 15:
“Almighty God, by the hand of Moses your servant you led your people out of slavery, and made them free at last; Grant that your Church, following the example of your prophet Martin Luther King, may resist oppression in the name of your love, and may secure for all your children the blessed liberty of the Gospel of Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.”
The collect uses the term prophet to describe the Rev. Dr. King because King filled in the twentieth century the function which in ancient Israel was held by the prophets: acting as an intermediary between God and the people.

Isaiah Ben-Amoz was a Jewish prophet who preached in Judah in the eighth-century B.C.E., but the book of the Bible which bears his name was probably written by many different authors over the course of two centuries. Scholars divide the book into three main parts: the first consisting of Isaiah’s prophecies and material added by his 7th-century disciples, the second addressing the Jews of the Babylonian Captivity in the mid-sixth century.

The third portion, known as Trito-Isaiah or simply Third Isaiah, is the portion from which our first lesson and canticle were taken. It is a collection of poetry, probably itself composed by multiple authors shortly following the return from the exile of the Babylon Captivity, prophesying “the restoration of the nation of Israel and a new creation in God's glorious future kingdom” (Wikipedia) to “a Jewish community in late sixth century Judah struggling to rebuild itself” (The Inclusive Bible).

The eschatological vision of the New Jerusalem was one of hope for the Jews who had witnessed the destruction of their beloved, sacred city and its temple. It would be a chance for the sovereign authority of the Jewish God to be established once and for all and for both the righteous and the wicked to receive their just desserts. This, of course, is one of the functions of a prophet: not only to relay God’s displeasure with the inequities of the people, but also to provide them with a motivating vision of the fulfillment of God’s Will. For the Rev. Dr. King, this motivating vision was of course his “dream” of a nation where children would not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character, a world marked by racial reconciliation, economic justice, and active peacemaking. For the Jewish prophets of the seventh and sixth centuries B.C.E., it was the New Jerusalem.

In a Hebrew Scripture reading this morning, the biblical author(s) use the image of a bride to describe the New Jerusalem and its special relationship with God the Creator and Ruler. For us Christians, we cannot but help but view this image through the lens of our traditional understanding of the Church--one, holy, catholic, and apostolic--as the Bride of Christ. For we remember that just as in the biblical conception of marriage the spouses leave their parents to cleave to each other and become one flesh, so too has Christ, in the mystery of the Incarnation, come to us from God the Parent to cleave to humanity and become one flesh with us.

We are the Bride of Christ. We are the New Jerusalem--right here, at the Church of the Ascension in Gloucester City. We are the builders of the Kin-dom of God.

It is of course true that without the amazing free gift of God’s grace, we are utterly powerless in the face of sin and death. This is simply good theology, the clear and constant teaching of the Church across the ages, from Saint Augustine of Hippo to the Protestant Reformers. But it is just as true that with the free gift of grace we are empowered to act as God’s agents in building the kindom. This, too, is the clear and constant teaching of Mother Church. Saint Augustine wrote an entire book called De Civitate Dei, or The City of God, in which he put forth both a theology of history and a challenge to human society to pursue what he called the City of Heaven.

As St. Teresa of Avila famously wrote, Ours are the eyes with which Jesus looks compassion on this world, Ours are the feet with which Jesus walks to do good, Ours are the hands, with which Jesus blesses all the world.

We are the hands and feet of Jesus because we have been mystically incorporated into the very Body of Christ through the sacrament of our baptism. Just as Jesus transformed that water into wine back at the wedding in Cana, so too has Jesus transformed us into new wine, to go out and get the world drunk on the good news that Jesus is Lord.

Because that is what the power of the Holy Spirit is like. Remember the disciples on the day of Pentecost: the crowd saw them, speaking in tongues, and said, “They are filled with new wine.”

This is a message of hope, but it is also a message of awesome responsibility. What does it mean for us who have been taught by Jesus to pray for the coming of God’s kindom, that the will of God may be done on Earth, to put our actions behind those prayers? To not only recite those words, but to live them? To heed the prophetic voices of our generations--and to be those voices for others? To work towards a world marked by peace and by justice--instead of war and division? To receive the love of Christ, our collective spouse, and to transmit it to each other?

During this time of transition, it is an especially good time for us to reflect on what, precisely, is the role the Spirit has in mind for us in the coming of the kindom of God. What is our congregational charism?

Whatever it is, I know one thing: so long as we are always seek to be motivated by love, we cannot go far wrong. As I was driving home from work this morning, I was listening to On Being on NPR and thinking to myself, “I really need to come up with a conclusion to the sermon I’m giving in two and a half hours.”

On the radio program, poet Elizabeth Alexander read from the poem she had read at President Obama’s first inauguration in 2009. “What if the mightiest word is love, love beyond marital, filial, national. Love that casts a widening pool of light. Love with no need to preempt grievance,” she read.

And that’s pretty much what it comes down to, isn’t it? One might find Alexander’s poetry trite--I remember not being particularly impressed with it when I heard it back in 2009--but it’s impossible to disagree with the sentiment. Jesus’ resistance notwithstanding, perhaps the Blessed Virgin Mother knew what she was doing when she caused the ministry of Jesus to be initiated at that wedding in Cana, amidst a ritual focused on love and covenant. Because the reasons the image of the Bride of God has remained so powerful across the ages doesn’t have anything to do with notions of gender or sexual orientation, with headship or submission. It’s about love and covenant.

Amen.
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My Prayer

"This is my prayer: that your love may overflow more and more with knowledge and full insight to help you to determine what is best."
-- St. Paul's Epistle to the Philippians 1:9-10

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