Monday, November 15, 2021

Reformed, and Always Being Reformed

Luke 12:49-33

"I came to bring fire to the earth, and how I wish it were already kindled!
I have a baptism with which to be baptized, 
and what stress I am under until it is completed! 
Do you think that I have come to bring peace to the earth? 
No, I tell you, but rather division! 
From now on five in one household will be divided, 
three against two and two against three; 
they will be divided: father against son and son against father,
mother against daughter and daughter against mother,
mother-in-law against her daughter-in-law
and daughter-in-law against mother-in-law.”

My wife and I moved this summer to an out of the way place, Whitehall.
This was where we found a home at a low cost on water, 
on a creek that feeds into the champlain canal.
We live on Williams Street, Washington County road 12.
It’s pretty busy.
If you follow Route 12 south out of Whitehall, 
It ends in a wide spot on the road, named Truthville.
That’s right, I live on the road to Truthville.

In our time when Truth is so controversial, I thought about that.
Not much is known about Truthville, not even a village, 
but identified as a hamlet by the state of NY, 
absorbed long ago into the village of Granville.
How did it get that name? We don’t know.
So what is out there in Truthville and on the road there?

The Amish are out there.
I see and hear them go by my new home in their black horsedrawn buggies
with the tan canvas covers.
The Amish belong to different “orders,” and I haven’t yet learned 
    which order to which my new neighbors belong.
They are seemingly locked in an older time before major industrialization.

Amish are a small group that came out of the Reformation in the 16th century.
Today is Reformation Sunday, 
when we remember Martin Luther nailing to a church door, 
95 demands for changes in the Roman Catholic Church.
The Amish struggled then and struggle now with living the Christian faith, 
and maintaining their traditions, truthfully and honestly.
They oppose what is “modern,” by which they mean anything 
that promotes sloth or luxury, which is contrary to the Bible.
They quote Psalm 119: 
Turn my heart to your decrees, and not to selfish gain.
Turn my eyes from looking at vanities; give me life in your ways.
That’s enough about the Amish today, 
although I was going to pick as a hymn
'Tis the gift to be simple, 'tis the gift to be free,
'Tis the gift to come down where we ought to be,
And when we find ourselves in the place just right,
'Twill be in the valley of love and delight. [not in the current Presbyterian hymnal]
The Truth down County Road 12 may just be “simple living.”

I always thought and said about the Reformation that it failed.
The Church in Rome was not Reformed; it was split and divided.
The wisdom of the Roman Church was always to find a place
for those within it who objected to one thing or another.
That is why they created Catholic “orders,” such as the Jesuits, 
the Benedictines, and the Franciscans
(who have some similarities to the Amish).
Catholics named us Protestants, protesters
We have always split up when we disagreed, 
so that there is a plethora of denominations and sects, 
each with its own take on the Truth.

I have used an old Presbyterian Sunday School from 1950 
to teach the history of the church. 
Fire Upon the Earth by Norman Langford
It has a simple outline that is easy to learn.
The story of the Christian Church in 4 parts:
The church conquers an empire
[up to Constantine, who adopted Christianity as the religion 
of the Roman Empire, a period we often date to 325.]
The church becomes an empire
[When it became rich and powerful, up to the Reformation;]
The church shakes the world
[The Reformation, usually dated to 1517 
when Martin Luther shook the church and the world,]
and finally,
The world shakes the church
[The American Revolution in 1776 is a good time 
to date the beginning of the shaking.]
This was the time of the Enlightenment and its new ideas, 
followed by the science and new thinking of the 19th century, 
and finally all of the inventions and horrors of the 20th century.]

Another important book was written about the same time, in 1948: 
The Shaking of the Foundations, by the theologian Paul Tillich. 
It is a book of sermons, one entitled “The Shaking of the Foundations,”
based on Isaiah, who said: 
“The foundations of the earth shake. Earth breaks to pieces.”

What troubled Tillich was the development and use of the atomic bomb, 
    which from 1945 onward signaled a new and terrifying world 
because we have the power to destroy everything and all of us.
Think about this: 
No longer did we need God to destroy the world; 
it was now in our hands.

And yet most people in the church during my life
have looked back to the 1950's as a golden era for the church
when new members appeared without anyone making an effort,
when church buildings overflowed with children and youth,
when there was a social contract in which almost everyone
belonged, believed, and behaved in approved ways.
But the truth was otherwise.
In 1953 I was 9 years old and scared to death of atomic warfare.
And yet this was the decade of conformity,
the time when nothing was supposed to change,
but everything was changing.
We didn’t see the changes that were percolating
until the Civil Rights movement exploded in the ‘60's.

Tillich wanted the churches in 1948 
to know of all the changes that had been impacting 
the church and its faith for many decades and centuries.
Discoveries in astronomy, geology, biology and botony had changed 
the ways in which we view the world, our origins, and life itself.
This was forcing people to think in new ways about God as creator.

From 1776, developments in philosophy changed the ways in which 
people understood reason and faith.
Writers of history critically changed the ways in which we viewed the past, 
including the writing of the Bible, 
and the origins and development of Christian faith and doctrine.
New fields of study, such as anthropology, sociology, and psychology
challenged the ways in which we thought of human origins, 
religious community, our humanity, and our personal lives.
Medicine began to reduce suffering and early death. 
Technology brought us ease from backbreaking work 
and it brought the terrors of world wide war to civilians, 
and created the possibility of the destruction of life on earth. 

Langford wrote a wonderful last chapter on the modern world, 
but there is no mention here of the killing of 6 million Jews and others 
by the Nazis. 
It wasn’t until the 1960s that the holocaust entered media consciousness.

But Tillich acknowledged the Holocaust, writing:
“What answer shall we give, what answer can we give 
to such a crucial problem —
a problem in which Christianity as a whole is at stake, 
a problem which has nothing to do with a theoretical criticism 
of the idea of God, 
but rather which represents the anguish of the human heart 
which can no longer stand the power 
borne by the daemonic forces on earth?”

The atomic bomb and the holocaust intensified the questions about the love,
power, justice, providence, and even the existence of God.
For all of these reasons the very foundations of the churches 
have been shaken badly during the past 80 years.

----------
Now the churches are in a terrible crisis.
I don’t have to tell you about membership loss.
What has happened is that many thoughtful people have concluded 
that the church is teaching things
that belong to a world which no longer exists.
In the old world spirits filled the air – that’s where Halloween comes from –
the earth was the center of the universe
human beings were privileged creatures;
ministers and priests had authority over people’s lives,
church leaders and politicians were respected, or at least feared.
The US was an exceptional nation, 
the Pilgrims were kind and peaceful, 
and the founders were perfect men.
No one seriously believes these things now.
We live in an age of rapidly increasing 
knowledge and communications.
We know so much more about everything. 
And so we are re-evaluating everything about our world and our history. 

25 years ago we did not think of the Kingdom of God as The Empire of God,
as a political declaration by Jesus against the oppression of Rome.
We thought of the Kingdom as future, not here and now, 
and not as a vision for a better world, 
which it is in the Lord’s prayer when we ask 
that God’s will “be done on earth as in heaven.”
We didnot see it as an alternative lifestyle to the system of Roman slavery,
We didn’t see how Jesus and Paul were opposed to the classism 
and economic inequalities, the racism, and the sexism.
But it is all there.
 
Just in the past two years, partly because of political divisions, 
partly because of the pandemic, 
partly because of events such as the police killings of people 
like George Floyd,
we now know things about the Bible, the churches, our nation 
that we could not admit to before.

Our understanding of ourselves and our world is changing fast, 
and the impacts of technology and economic globalization 
have changed the lives of millions of people.
What is worse is that the changes are not over.
*When there are many changes around us, accelerating in speed,
affecting more and more of us, personally,
fear and anger rise, and hate follows, 
as people look for someone to blame.
In such conditions societies begin to fall apart.
--------
I think that 911 was so shocking 
that many Christian Americans ceased to believe in a providential God, 
and in an America that was so exceptional 
that he (God) would protect us from attack.
Think about that: God will no longer protect us, and maybe never did.

We began to see how racism was baked into the Constitution.
We now understand that Lincoln’s dream 
“that this nation shall have a new birth of freedom” 
failed just as the Reformation of the church failed.
We now see how President Grant’s efforts
to heal our divisions and fix the Constitution failed.

After 911 we began to ask 
“Why are there so many monuments of Confederate heros?”
And “Why didn’t the Civil Rights legislation of the 1960's change much 
for Blacks, and make much difference in our life together now?”
That question is the core of CRT, so badly misrepresented 
across the country this year.

I think January 6 has made us realize that the America of John Wayne movies
and television shows that were a big part of my childhood, were a lie.

Church news in recent weeks shows that conservative, evangelical churches
are now collapsing as they become more politicized. [The Atlantic]
Following Jesus has nearly disappeared from many of these congregations.
To be a member in some of these churches now 
requires not confession of faith in Jesus but in the former president,
who was viewed as chosen and called by God.

Following Jesus has nearly disappeared from mainline churches, too, 
but for different reasons:
Most of us are too comfortable and have too much invested 
in our material assets for us to concern ourselves much with the poor. 
Even politicians I like never speak of the poor; only of the middle class.
Jesus would have us consider the poor.
Most of us are too busy enjoying our affluent lives and our families 
to give thought to building a better world for everyone.

I tell you today that it is not your fault or mine 
that the churches are failing, 
that our nation is stumbling, 
or that we have difficulty helping the poor.
We inherited a history of systems – 
political, economic, educational, social, religious – 
that determine how we live.
To change or break out of those systems is very difficult, 
and can take centuries.
I took a doctoral level course in 1986 
on how to change and improve presbyteries.
We concluded that the structures and systems we are given
have more impact on us than we have on them.
So the presidency changes a new president 
more than the new president changes the presidency, 
and the Vatican changes a new Pope 
more than the new pope changes the Papacy.
----------
We have known for some time that the old religion is dying; 
a new one is emerging or being born.
Now we know that what is coming 
will be a great disconnect from what we have known.
Old style churches will continue to exist, 
but the model of paid, seminary-trained ministers 
and buildings like this will be drastically reduced. 
Some seminaries will close.
What is taught in one congregation 
will have little similarity to what is taught in another.

The number of people who believe in the God who takes care of us 
and rules the world will continue to shrink.
The Christmas story, the Easter story, the Exodus from Egypt 
will become more and more simply old myths known to some, 
studied by a few, and not believed by the larger populace.

Twenty years ago I warned the presbytery I served 
that when the greatest generation that had fought WWII died off, 
church membership would fall off a cliff.
That has happened.

But here is the hope: People will still gather together, 
perhaps in twos and threes, to read the words of and about Jesus, 
and they will study what he meant in his context
and they will discuss what they might mean for them in their time.
These will be younger people than any of us in this room today.

Christianity as we, the Boomer generation, have known it, will die with us,
and that’s OK, even a good thing, 
because many good features of the modern, secular (non-church) world 
grew out of the gospel and the church.
The modern secular world is the inheritor of the old world and its churches.

The younger Christians who come after us
will accept and welcome and include people
who are different and other from themselves.
They will not accept the racism, misogyny, and xenophobia 
that we have inherited from our parents and grandparents.

Christian faith has always been changing, and it is changing now.
We are quickly and sometimes slowly discarding 
some of the fear and hate and control that are present in scripture 
and which have been a major feature 
of church structures for 2000 years.
We are slowly adopting new language, new symbols, 
and new metaphors for that which gives us meaning in life.
Members of churches are experimenting 
with practices from other places and times.
We learn from Buddhism and borrow spirituality from Native Americans.
So much is happening that no one can fully understand it.
But perhaps we are growing up, as Jesus wanted us to when he said
“No one who puts a hand to the plow and looks back 
is fit for service in God’s Empire.” Luke 9:62
 Or as Paul wanted us to, when he said:
“Speaking the truth in love, 
we must grow up in every way into Christ.” Ephesians 4:14-15 

The Reformation is important because we all need to be reformed, 
and our 500 year old motto requiring us to continue to reform,
reminds us of our need not to rest on the past.
We need to be converted from the errors of our thinking and believing.
This is a time for wandering and it will take 40 years. [A long time]
The writer Diana Bass bluntly says “We thought we were in exile 
but now we have to actually go there. 
[The] Slavery and exile [of the Exodus story] suck; 
so [the lesson is that we must] make a home where you are.”
Meanwhile, she says “We need to detox from domination systems.”
We are all burdened by the domination systems of the church, 
of racism, of misogyny, and of capitalism.
One example is the real estate system of zoning, credit, and 
mortgage approvals, 
which excluded women and people of color from home ownership.
---------
Several times in recent weeks I have seen a man or a woman
begging at an intersection, often with a sign that says 
“Help - Homeless” or something like that.
I have wanted to give to them, but I was in the wrong lane 
and the light turned green so that I had to move on, 
or I couldn’t get my hand into my pocket because of my seatbelt.

So last week my wife and I pulled up next to such a man 
and I asked Carol to get some money out. 
She pulled out a $10 (more generous than I) 
and I gave it to the man with a few words of encouragement.
The light turned, I went on and the driver of an on-coming semi-truck 
honked, waved his fist at me, and shouted at me.
He was obviously upset that I had encouraged a beggar by giving to him.

I give to beggars to show myself that I am not selfish; 
that I do not think that what is mine is so important 
that I have to hang on to it, 
that I do not want possessions to control my life.
Mostly I have to give to beggars because Jesus said to do this.
“Give to everyone who begs from you, 
and do not refuse anyone who wants to borrow from you.” 
(Matthew 5:42) 
This was made real to me by Bob Funk, 
founder and leader of the Jesus Seminar.
He was a great Bible scholar, who had left the church as a young man
because he realized he could not follow Jesus’ teachings.
The rest of his life he studied Jesus’ teachings and gathered other scholars
around him to analyze what Jesus said and didn’t say.
Give to everyone who begs from you 
is in the top ten most likely true sayings of Jesus.

I heard Bob speak of this verse several times. 
Each time he lowered his voice as if the saying was special, even holy.
But he described it partly as a comic saying of Jesus, 
because those following this teaching would become penniless
themselves within a short time.
[Like the saying about giving your coat and your cloak,
which would leave a first century Palestinian naked, 
a laughable image.]

Giving to beggars is impractical, even stupid and impossible, but it is true.
They are the great victims of the systems we enjoy and support.
In the second century, Christians were excused from this command 
because we don’t know if the beggar was deserving of the gift.
I suppose that there were angry, individualistic, moralistic wagon drivers 
even in the second century. 



All Who Wander Are Not Lost!

 Matthew 6: 24 – 30

“No one can serve two masters; 
for a slave will either hate the one and love the other, 
or be devoted to the one and despise the other. 
You cannot serve God and wealth.

“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, 
what you will eat or what you will drink, 
or about your body, what you will wear. 
Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? 
Look at the birds of the air; 
they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, 
and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. 
Are you not of more value than they? 
And can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your span of life?
And why do you worry about clothing? 
Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; 
they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, 
even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these.
But if God so clothes the grass [or grain] of the field, 
which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, 
will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? 

Gospel of Thomas, Saying 42– “Be passersby/wanderers/itinerants”

There is a lot of scripure on my mind today.
We began our worship with words from the book of Ecclesiastes.
Ecclesiastes is one of my favorite books in the Bible.
It is often linked with Psalms and Proverbs as Wisdom Literature, 
and there is much wisdom to be found here.
It was the first book in the Bible to attract me as a teenager
and it is often the favorite of young people.
probably because of its search for wisdom 
and candid expression of doubt about most everything.
We learned in the past that Ecclesiastes meant "the preacher," 
but the newer Bibles translate the Hebrew to "the teacher," 
more appropriate for a book of wisdom, not sermons.
This teacher was searching for the meaning of life 
three centuries before Christ.

He said that “all is vanity” or “all is meaningless” and
"there is a season and a time for everything."
We conclude that he was a practical man 
who tried many life-styles and occupations:
He entered the business world and sought and gained wealth.
He studied the learning of his time 
and found all that he could about truth.
He found satisfaction or happiness in none of these 
or in any other way of living.

\We could say that Ecclesiastes was a passerby 
who observed and gathered information, as passersby often do. 
He kept moving on to new areas of study. 
He concluded (and he repeats it three times in the book) that we should "eat and drink and enjoy our toil, for they have been given to us by God."
He was one of the first perhaps to see that we should enjoy each day 
and live one day at a time, 
and enjoy what we have rather than striving for what we do not have.
This sounds a lot like what Jesus says about eating and drinking.

He was accused of profligate living:
“John the Baptist has come eating no bread and drinking no wine, 
and you say, ‘He has a demon’; 
the Son of Man has come eating and drinking, 
and you say, ‘Look, a glutton and a drunkard, 
a friend of tax collectors and sinners!’ 
Nevertheless, wisdom is vindicated by all her children.” [Luke 7:33-5]
Jesus seems to have thought that there was great value 
in eating and drinking together with sinners and outcasts.
It was the setting for his teaching of wisdom through sayings and parables.

When I look at the passage in Matthew, about serving two masters,
I ask “Why does Jesus go from serving God or wealth
to not worrying about food and clothing?”
And how is it that we quote these verses about our not needing to worry
and “the lilies of the field” without remembering that 
they are the antidote to seeking wealth?
As we approach Thanksgiving, this is important.

TG is a national holiday with religious overtones.
Rather TG is primarily a ritual gathering of extended families 
who eat together in homes.
It is a secular holiday about our national origin, 
tied to the stories of a 1619 TG in Virginia, 
and the more famous Pilgrim landing at Plymouth Rock.
We have been taught to remember their first good harvest
and the help they received from natives.
So it is about gratitude and fortitude, and it ignores 
the murder of those same natives soon after that first gathering.

When we have enough food, even when we have more than enough,
we are not much inclined to share with others.
The Amish, as I mentioned last week, saw in Jesus’ teachings 
the need to live modestly without luxury or too much ease.
Many scholars who study Jesus now see that he was 
more of a teacher of wisdom than a religious leader.

The Gospel of Thomas, discovered in 1947, opened this door
to understanding Jesus as a sage rather than a savior.
Many of the sayings of Jesus in Mark, Matthew and Luke
are found in the Gospel of Thomas, now often called “the fifth gospel.”
Some of the sayings there that are not found in our four gospels
are strange to our ears.
This shortest saying of two words, #42, is most puzzling.
As I said earlier, the meaning or translation of the word is unclear.
“Passersby” is a translation of a Greek verb which means 'to go past (something or someone)' 
        so it is “one who goes past.” 
I have the picture of someone walking past my house.
They may speak to me when they are in front,
but as they walk away they cannot speak to us or we to them, 
And they appear smaller as they walk finally out of sight.

This reminds me of the euphemism we often use for death,
that someone has “passed away,” or simply “passed.”
I used to not like that phrase, but as I get closer to passing,
I find that I like it a lot.
I will pass on from this life in the world and I will be gone.
This is my time for living, and my time will pass by.
Others will fill my space and have their time.
It is as if I walk or pass through history, as billions have before me.

A great philosopher, Heidegger, wrote about our sense of “thrownness,” 
Of our being arbitrarily “thrown into” ongoing existence 
without answers concerning our existence and fate. 
He noted that history was already running when we entered it
and it will continue on after we are gone.
In this sense the world will pass us by
but the verse suggests that we pass by the world.
All of the world will continue without me, 
so I should let go of the world and all its things
at least those things that I have accumulated.

When the people of Jerusalem 
were taken as slaves to Babylon 
in the sixth century before our common era,
the writer of the short prophetic book of Lamentations 
speaks for those who remain, saying
“Is it nothing to you, all you who pass by? 
Look and see if there is any sorrow like my sorrow,”
[Lamentations 1:12]
I know this verse because it appears on the front of an episcopal church 
on laSalle st in Chicago; 
The verse is below a great crucifix of Jesus on the cross, 20' high.
Many days we passed by it driving into the Loop.

I learned that Epitaphs on Greek tombstones often saluted the 'passerby' 
as if spoken by the one in the tomb. 
Some suggest that we should view ourselves as passing by the world, 
waiting to move on to the next. 
Move on, don't build your spiritual house in this world.
I think we should each contribute what we can 
to the on-going life of the world, or as Jews say, to repair the world.

It is a fact that Jesus was an itinerant; a homeless wanderer.
A scribe approached and said, “Teacher, I will follow you wherever you go.” And Jesus said to him, “Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests; 
but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.” 
Another of his disciples said to him, 
“Lord, first let me go and bury my father.” 
But Jesus said to him, “Follow me, and let the dead bury their own dead.” 
[matthew 8:20f] 
He asked his followers to do the same.
Luke 9:62 – “No one who puts a hand to the plow and looks back 
is fit for the kingdom of God.”

Matt 10 - Jesus sent out the 12
“Go nowhere among the Gentiles, and enter no town of the Samaritans, 
but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. 
As you go, proclaim the good news, 
‘The kingdom of heaven has come near.’
Cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out demons. 
You received without payment; give without payment. 
Take no gold, or silver, or copper in your belts, no bag for your journey, 
or two tunics, or sandals, or a staff; for laborers deserve their food. 
Whatever town or village you enter, find out who in it is worthy, 
and stay there until you leave. As you enter the house, greet it. 
If the house is worthy, let your peace come upon it; 
but if it is not worthy, let your peace return to you. 
If anyone will not welcome you or listen to your words, 
shake off the dust from your feet as you leave that house or town.

In Luke 10 Jesus sends out 70, two by two, with similar instructions.
In each case the disciples are asked to be radically dependent 
on the grace of others.
We are asked to do this.
All the disciples are asked to Trust, share resources, 
accept and give hospitality.
They are dramatically unequipped, 
followers of Jesus must be resourceful.
Jesus said, “I am sending you out like sheep into the midst of wolves; 
so be wise as serpents and innocent as doves.”

Last week I mentioned that Jesus was like a stand up comic,
and I talk about him giving us parables 
as puzzles which raise deep questions.
This may be comical.
Here he is asking the impossible: 
“Be wise as serpents and innocent as doves?”
How do you do that?

Paul tried.
He was an itinerant with his mission to the Gentiles, 
but as a follower of Jesus, 
he felt a need to be as free as possible from worldly cares.
The call of ministers in the Presbyterian Church used to say 
that the pay package for pastors should be sufficient for ministers 
to be “free from worldly care.”
Somewhere along the line the church concluded that in modern times 
that requirement was not needed.

I have been wandering through scripture this morning
I leave you with this song from Lord of the Rings by Tolkien:

All that is gold does not glitter,
Not all those who wander are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not reached by the frost.

The Road goes ever on and on
Down from the door where it began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
And I must follow, if I can,
Pursuing it with eager feet,
Until it joins some larger way
Where many paths and errands meet.
And whither then? I cannot say”

The last verse reverses the uncertainty of the journey.
Now there is hope of returning home, even when that is unlikely:

Home is behind, the world ahead,
And there are many paths to tread
Through shadows to the edge of night,
Until the stars are all alight.
Then [it is imagined] world behind and home ahead,
We’ll wander back and home to bed.