Sunday, May 19, 2013

The Day of Pentecost


The Ven. Richard I. Cluett

What would it have been like to be there; to be in Jerusalem that busy, urban center at the beginning of the Christian era, at the beginning of the Christian Church? Walking those narrow streets, crowded with people from all over the known, and the unknown, world? “Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabs…”

Eventually finding yourself in an open square filled with people, standing before a house where the followers of Jesus had gathered? “And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability.”

It would have been wild. It would have been crazy. It would have been chaotic, and maybe even a bit scary. You would have been amazed and astonished, and perhaps perplexed.

But for sure you would have known that something new and different and powerful and transformative for the world had taken place… and maybe even transformative for you, yourself. But at that moment you’re not sure, you don’t know what it means.

And then this powerful figure rises and stands above the crowds and tells you and all assembled what it means as he repeats the words of the prophet Joel,
“…I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh,
and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy,
and your young men shall see visions,
and your old men shall dream dreams.” It is the Lord’s great and glorious day.

And then you remember the scripture, “And all flesh shall see it together.” And you see it. You get it. You believe it. You know it.

You have a new and powerful sense of yourself as God’s child, so beloved by God that God’s Spirit would descend upon you. God’s blessing would be upon you.

And you resolve to build your life anew upon it. You want all people – you want the world – to see and know what God has done in Jesus of Nazareth and how God has empowered the people by the coming of the Holy Spirit. You want the world to be built anew upon it.

You want it for those you love, you want it for your family, you want it for your friends, you want it for those who are closest to you and you want it for those who do not have it or know it or who live across the world. You want them to know this joy, you want them to receive this power, you want them to claim this purpose for their lives.

It is as if you are filled with new wine… filled to overflowing with God’s Holy Spirit and Power and you want it to flow out and over all those around you.

And here we are today, two millennia later remembering how it was, way back there, back when God’s Spirit came so powerfully onto God’s people, came so powerfully into God’s world. And perhaps we wonder, What has happened? Where is that presence? Where is that power, today, in my life, in this world?

I want to say to you that “Today is Pentecost.” Today is the Day of the Lord. Today God’s Holy Spirit has come upon you. Today you are declared God’s beloved. Today you are to know that Jesus of Nazareth was born and lived and ministered and was crucified and died and was resurrected to life and has ascended to God’s right hand – all for you and for the life of the world.

You have been called by name. You have been saved. You have been baptized by water and the Holy Spirit. God’s Spirit has descended upon you and enriched your life already and empowered you – and sent you into God’s world that does not know God. Sent to God’s world that knows not God’s power. Sent to God’s world does not know God’s presence. Sent to God’s world does not know that Jesus has come to save the world. Sent to God’s world does not know that life lived in Christ and in the power of the Spirit is a life filled with joy and purpose and power and fulfillment. Sent to God’s world, which God has created and redeemed and loves and will not ever abandon.

Today is Pentecost, a day to know anew God’s power and presence and purpose in our own lives and in the lives of those around us, indeed in the life of the world.

It is the Lord’s great and glorious day and you are God’s great and glorious child upon whom his spirit has come to rest. It is a day when everyone who calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

The Seventh Sunday of Easter


The Ven. Richard I. Cluett

For the last few weeks we have had a series of readings from the Book of Acts in which we travel with St. Paul and Barnabas, and Silason their missionary journeys. We get a glimpse into life in the earliest Christian communities. There is no glossing over how difficult those early days of the Church were.

Today’s reading from Acts details just how hard it could be. And think about the pattern of St. Paul’s ministry. It goes something like this:
- Paul and Silas arrive in town
Their preaching, teaching and example convert a few Jewish people and maybe some others,
- They gather the new believers into a community
There is a strong reaction against them by the political and religious authorities
St. Paul leaves town

Now, that happens over and over again. Paul and Barnabas and Silas have what we might call an "Itinerant Ministry of Evangelism" - that is, they move, spreading the Gospel to successive individuals and groups in successive places - gathering together the converts in to the beginnings of a community or fellowship - then leaving, usually with" the posse on their heels." They were starters, not stayers. 

Thanks be to God, for the ministry of those who did that and do that. Paul, Barnabas and Silas, and a whole long list of Holy Women and Men who have brought the good news of Jesus to people and brought them together in Jesus’ name. If they had not come and then moved on, where would the church be? A couple of towns and villages on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, and that's all! They spoke of Jesus to anyone anywhere who would listen to them - whether or not they were of "their own kind".

One of the learnings we get from St. Paul and the story of the early church in the Book of Acts is that there is a cost to preaching andliving out the Gospel. A cost because there is a clash, a conflict, a confrontation when the Gospel meets the world. For Paul, that was a time to "cut bait and cut out". His ministry was to plant the seed, not tend the garden. That was left to those who stayed and became the community of the Gospel in that city, town or village. They were to stay and deal with the garden pests and weeds that tried to choke off the life that Paul had planted.

And thank God that he did, and others, too. Because here we are - Christians gathered in community in the name of Jesus Christ - planted, rooted, fed and nourished by the deep riches of God's grace. Here we are, the fruit of the labor of Paul and Barnabas, and other faithful, itinerant, missionary, evangelizing followers of Christ.

But, you know, in that there is both blessing and rub. Christians planted, rooted - together - stuck with each other - through thick and thin, good times and bad tough times - not, like Paul able to "get going when the going gets tough"  but in for the long haul. No new mission fields to escape to. And when the clashes come as they always do - between our faith and our culture, our belief and the world - when differing views and understandings come within the community itself - here we are with one another and here is where we are going to be - with one another. Brothers and sisters and neighbors.

And what is the Gospel message from Jesus, "Heavenly Father, I made your name known to them, and I will make it known, so that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in them." And all Jesus's words have to do with how we are to live together in love.

Do you know what keeps us from loving one another and our neighbors, whether they are within the church or outside? They do! Ourneighbors do. Don't we have to admit, in all truthfulness, that some of the people among we live and move and have our being are just notall that lovable, at least not all the time! Some folks make it a real challenge to love them.

And furthermore, there seem to be very few possibilities of life in this day and time without conflict - without the clashing of differences.And if we are speaking the truth is it not true that there will always be conflicts whether between generations in a family, or between laborand management; republican and democrat, even people with a common purpose, but with different views about how to move toward that purpose. Even in the Church!

Some questions for us who are in this Christian enterprise in this particular community for "the long haul" are: To what do we point with the testimony of our lives? What signs do our individual lives and our community life say about us? They do speak plainly, you know.What are the signs of discipleship? Do the words and actions of our lives convict us before the world as disciples of that Jesus?

Jesus said that the sign of discipleship is the love shown to the world by his community of disciples. It is by this that people will know the nature of the Jesus whom we call Lord. It will tell the world plainly - if we love powerfully. Love ourselves love one another, and even love those that are in the world but have not yet, heard, known, believed, accepted the truth of the Gospel. The fundamental command is not that we agree, but that we love.

It is true that that even though there is not the possibility of living without conflict, there is the possibility of life without hostility.Conflict is inherent when more than one is gathered together. Hostility is outside the life lived in the name of Jesus.
All of which is to suggest that the failure to love does not lie outside ourselves, but rather somewhere within us. And that, of course, is what makes this issue so hard to deal with.

Sometimes it is our insecurity that keeps us from living love.
Where do we find the deep down security that will give us the confidence we need to live fully and then to love fully? Here! It is precisely in Jesus Christ and in his community that we are grounded and rooted, bound and bonded together with God’s love in us that does away with the need for self protection.

But, someone could say, there are some people that you just don't like. The "vibes" are bad. You know the saying, "I love people, its just Harry that I can't stand." And that line from My Fair Lady, "The Lord above made man to love his neighbor, but with a little bit of luck, when he comes around I won't be home."

It is true that those feelings exist, but it is also true that there are other feelings, other influences, other urges that work just as automatically, but for love. And it is here in the community of Jesus, in the common life, prayer, and work of the people of God. It is here that we are exposed to the possibility of being able to love - it is here that we may find others who also are willing to make the attempt - not in spite of who we are - but rather because of who we are.

It is here that hostility is unacceptable and declared to be sin. It is here that there is healing and forgiveness for the unwanted hostility that is in each of us. It is here where we find support and encouragement as we move out into the neighborhood, and the market and the home, and the workplace and the playground to let others know the truth that we know.

St. Paul and Silas and many other itinerant missionaries planted the seed, but it is our loving care that will bear fruit. Because this is where we live, we know what needs to be done, we know the strategies to employ, we know the people who need the gospel of Jesus, we know we have each other, we know how important it is for the world to know the truth.