Monday, November 27, 2023

Hope for a Time of Crisis

A sermon preached at Trinity Presbyterian Church of Scotia, New York, Nov. 26, 2023, edited

From the Hebrew Scriptures: Ecclesiastes 1:1-14 “One generation goes its way, the next one arrives, but nothing changes. All is smoke and steam, vanity, meaningless.”

From the Gospels: Luke 9:57-62  “No one who begins to plow and looks back is fit for God’s Empire.”

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This sermon is about the hope that we should have that can overcome the fears that we all experience.
I tell you this because I will be taking you on a long and winding road to hope.
You know our fears: We worry about crime.
(I was scammed out of several hundred dollars just a few weeks ago.)
We are grumpy about the economy, inflation, higher prices, 
high interest on houses and cars, shortage of affordable housing.
Depending on your field of work, you are scared about the future of 
        health care, elementary to higher education,  and probably every other endeavor and institution.

I gave you a chemistry illustration today.

The glass with the long neck sitting on the flame is called a “retort,” useful in converting liquid to gases, which can be condensed into new liquids. 

This is the process for the distillation of alcoholic spirits - an interesting use of the word spirit!

A chemistry teacher among us tells me that the retort is drawn incorrectly!

The end of the tube through the stopper into the flask must not be in the liquid being heated, but above it!

Well, this was a meme I copied from Facebook about ten years ago
and now I have learned how to build a still properly.

Here we see fear as a flame, that when applied to ignorance
which is not knowing something needful, distills to hate.
We can make more of this concept: If we put hate on the fire of fear we can get violence.

When I used to do conflict management I realized that the source of conflict is change, 
because each of us reacts and responds with different viewpoints to the new situation.
The Teacher of Ecclesiastes is wrong in saying that nothing changes!
So fear plus change produces conflict.
Every change from outside causes problems for some, but maybe opportunities and benefits for others.
Climate change is an example so that attempts to change our past behaviors are resisted.

Every new invention sets many changes into motion: wheels became wagons, chariots, and trains;
trains gave way to cars and airplanes,
         the telegraph became the computer and the cell phone replaced 
         wired phones, cameras, flashlights and a host of other things.
Each new invention delights some people and offends or frightens others.
Electronic developments have brought us robots and Artificial Intelligence,
which brings us back to fear.

Yet change is inevitable. Change cannot be changed.
Change can be either good or bad, but cannot be eliminated from life.
We can’t go back to the way things were.
Jesus said “No one who begins to plough and looks back, is fit for the empire of God.”
(Farmers have explained to me that if you look back your row will become crooked.)
To live in God’s kingdom is to live in the present, 
not tied to the past and looking to the future without fear.

Recently, I have wondered where change itself comes from.
I think it comes from time itself.

[Some people say that the present is God's time.
In other words, God may be the quality of each moment, which just is, without past or future, 
        but always carrying within it our past and the possibilities of all futures.
Jack Caputo in The Folly of God says that God is the "call" itself that draws us into the future.]

As time passes, everything changes, and the basic change for humans is ageing.
As we grow older, we change – in how we understand the world, 
in what we want, in what we have, in what we think.
-------------------
That leads me to some books I have been reading.
I often tell churches that I won’t preach when asked, because, I tell them “I don’t have anything to say.”
Today I am filled with ideas I want to speak about.

Four books from the library on my desk on racism.
I was struck by a comment on the radio 
that before the time roughly of the Reformation in the 1500's, 
there was no racism based on skin color.
How could this be? We cannot imagine this. So I ordered the books from the library.
Somehow before European exploration and colonization, skin color was just “difference.”
But White people were taught to fear people of Color.
This was explained in the musical South Pacific in the song, You Have to Be Carefully Taught.
So if we heat up difference with fear we get racism.

The ways people were divided was by tribe, ethnicity, or religion, 
but primarily whether you were civilized or barbarian.
Often this meant urban or rural, so there is an ancient source 
of the current grievance against cities, the educated, and the wealthy.
-------------------
Another book I read is The Fourth Turning Is Here, by Neil Howe.
He is the guy who with the late William Strauss defined 20 year Generations 
and 80-100 year cycles of social history.
I heard him speak when his first book came out in 1993.
In his scheme there are 4 generations:
I and my sister are Boomers; my older brother is of the “Silent Generation.”
Our parents were the so-called Greatest Generation.
Our grandparents, born after the Civil War are called Missionaries
for all the social developments they began and entering WWI.
My daughters are Generation X, born in the ‘70's.
There are no Millennials in my family, 
so my granddaughter born in 2008 is a “Homelander” or “Gen Z.”
There are many resources for thinking about these things on line.

The book was a shocker to me, even though
I have been preaching a lot the past few years about 
how we now or only recently understand our American history,
and events and issues in our lives in utterly new and different ways
from what we thought we knew or what we were taught when we were younger.
We didn’t know how racist and violent our history was.
We didn’t know that the US was a less than benevolent Empire.

When I was in seminary I was taught that the first chapter of Ecclesiastes was wrong:
First, life isn’t meaningless and history doesn’t go in a circle, they said;
things don’t repeat; history is linear.
They didn't believe in inevitable progress, they said, but the line from past to present to future
        may be bumpy, occasionally stepping backwards into older ways of thinking and behaving,
                but generally moving ahead with progress 
                        so that “the moral arc of the universe bends to justice.”
Now I wonder about that. 

Aren’t there cycles of history like the changes of seasons in the year? 
Isn’t there a circle of life from childhood to early adulthood, 
midlife, and elderhood. (And that last one is getting longer!)
In the church year we have the seriousness of Lent followed by the grief of Good Friday, 
followed by the joy of Easter and its season, and the life of Spirit in the season of Pentecost.
I think we need to reconsider the idea of time and history moving in circles of repetition.

Some things, like winter and old age, are predictable.
In The 4th Turning Is Here we find a repetition of generations 
through a predictable pattern of a spring-like High, 
like the post WWII years when I was growing up,
followed by a summer Awakening, such as occurred during the ‘60's,
followed by an autumnal Unraveling in the ‘80's, ‘90's, and early 2000's, highlighted by 911.
We are now in a Crisis, which Howe says began with the financial upheavel in 2008. 
Howe says that this crisis should peak and be resolved in the next ten years,   
        in a similar way to how WWII followed the Depression, and victory was the end of the crisis.

Today we are living in a crisis and we all know it.
I can’t remember in my lifetime when the daily news was so threatening.
Political division, culture war, people living in different realities, 
some built on conspiracy theories and outright lies.
We see a reversal of civil rights won in previous decades. 
We experience a decline of the churches and other institutions,
great change in technology, economics, and climate, 
with increasing income and wealth gap.
Dictators are being elected in Europe, Israel, and Argentina.
Terrible wars in Ukraine, Sudan, and Gaza follow years of terrorism, 
        which actually took many fewer lives.
-----------------
One more thing I have been reading about: Trauma.
My seminary, McCormick in Chicago, announced the formation of a “Trauma Healing Initiative.” 
I said to myself, “What is this?
I had to look up a definition of trauma:
“the lasting emotional response that often results from living through a distressing event.”
Individuals suffer trauma from assaults, accidents, fires, and explosions.
We know about trauma through the incidence of PTSD, “post-traumatic stress disorder”
coming out of the wars in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

More recently, studies and groups have been formed 
around the ideas of “public trauma” or “shared trauma.”
911 is an example of a public trauma shared by everyone.
(This is why generations are different: Different events mark their childhoods. 
        No one born since 2000 was much affected by or remembers 911.)
 
Imagine the trauma of Israelis Oct. 7, or of Gazans in the weeks since.
We see and hear and read news of terrible injustice, violence and natural disasters. 
At some level each of us shares in these traumas, 
psychologically, emotionally, and spiritually, if not physically. 
Because of wartime PTSD experience, there are now treatment procedures in trauma treatment centers.

People recovering from trauma are told not to isolate themselves, 
seek professional help, and join a Support Group.
Many groups are now forming for those of us without physical injury,
but suffering from public and shared trauma.
We all need to listen to our bodies and admit our traumas 
as alcoholics and drug users have to admit their addictions.
All of us need to think about the reality of the possibility of bad things happening to any of us.
We all need to know this and know our strengths for getting through pain and bad times.
We can lessen the effects of the stress, sadness, fear, shame, 
grief, and depression that follow traumatic events before they happen.

Thomas Hubl, author of Attuned: Practicing Interdependence to Heal our Trauma and our World says:
        The avoidance of trauma shows up as an inability to meet life, 
        which is the foremost symptom of separation from others
        and bypassing the spiritual dimension of life.” 
        Too often, we naively seek only 'light and positivity,' 
        and distance ourselves from the pain and grit 
        of our own and others' suffering. 
        By avoiding the raw nakedness of what is real, 
         we miss the deep spiritual intimacy that can only be experienced
        through a willingness to profoundly be in and with the painful dark. 
        Of course, this is much too difficult to do alone. 
        When we come together, willing to receive one another's pain  without judgment, 
                 without turning away, we discover trust, connection, and healing release. 

As Christians, we should know these things:
The cross of Jesus shows the reality of violence and trauma in human life.
We can look forward without fear if we recall from our past 
that our ancestors survived and responded to the crises of their lives
in the depression, in WWII and in WWI before it.
As individuals, they lived through, suffered, or died in the Civil War, 
        and the War for Independence before that.

Terrible things have happened before and will happen again.
It may be that the next terrible, national crisis will bring people together again, 
and churches will once again be centers for social and personal healing, 
and for the basic expressions of gratitude, service to others, and democracy.

Neil Howe tells us that each generation is favored by certain traits and characteristics.
Some are heros, nomads, artists, and prophets.
He would say that I am living out my life as a senior prophet, fitting for a boomer in this time. 
If you are of Generation X and the Millennial and Homeland generations 
each of you has your own views of life  because of the worlds you experienced growing up.
In many ways we gave you a bad deal, but you learned different skills from mine;
        and your abilities will serve all of us well as the coming crisis reaches its depths and heights.

Younger generations give me hope.
Children and grandchildren have always brought hope and new life, and new beginnings to the world.
We can only regret that we aren’t leaving them a better one.
And we musn’t retreat from or give up on this world. 
Stay engaged.
Everyday I read an obituary for someone in their 90's
who recently completed a book or a painting or who led a movement.
That means I might have a decade more, and you may have even more years
in which to accomplish something great.
May it be so.


Friday, May 26, 2023

The Road to a New Christianity

(Preached April 14 at First Reformed of Wynantskill NY, and May 14 at Trinity Presbyterian in Scotia NY. The texts were Micah 6:1-8 and the core of the Sermon on the Mount, by the Jesus Seminar.) 


On Easter Sunday I was a little sad because April 9 was also the anniversary 

of the execution by the Nazis of Dietrich Bonhoeffer in 1945, 

only a few days before the end of WWII.

He was imprisoned and hanged for participating in a plot to kill Hitler.

Nearly 5,000 people were executed for the plot.

You may have seen one or more of several TV specials and full length films about him 

        in recent years, such as the film, Valkyrie.


He may have died, but he is risen!

There has been a kind of resurrection of Bonhoeffer that he never could have imagined.

Now there is an international Bonhoeffer society

with national divisions in dozens of countries, of many scholars 

who do little more than study and write about him,

He is one of the most extensively studied and written-about figures in modern Christian history.

So, I and many other ministers are Bonhoeffer nerds.


Why so much interest in a single Lutheran clergyman in Germany, 

who was swept up and killed among more than 6 million others?

To start with, he wrote some remarkable books, mostly short, 

and not scholarly but aimed at church members like yourselves.

The first one to be published in the US came out four years after his death.


You may have read The Cost of Discipleship in a church study group.

It was written before the World War, and is about the Sermon on the Mount 

and how following Jesus' teachings faithfully, 

we witness to him and belong to him, 

and come into a deeper, more personal relationship with God.

This book is best known because here Bonhoeffer wrote of "Cheap grace,"

expecting God's presence and help, but without the teachings of Jesus,

without the cross, without discipleship.


Many people in the churches didn't know about this book until another,

more sensational and controversial book came out in 1963: 

Honest to God, by British bishop, James A.T. Robinson.


I am sure that many mainstream pastors preached from these writings, 

at that time, and from the writings of Bultmann and Tillich, 

who also were discussed in Honest to God.

If you are old enough you probably heard one or more of such sermons, but not so much anymore.


Honest to God introduced Britain and the U.S. to Bonhoeffer's writings

in Letters and Papers from Prison, his thoughts from 1942-1945.

Here is my $1.45 copy from 1967, and this monster from 2010 which sells for as much as $50

with additional material and commentary, Vol 8 of 10 books in the DB Works.

This is the book that concerns me today.

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Who was this person? And why is he important to us, today?

He was from an upper class family in Berlin.

His father was a psychiatrist, his mother a teacher.

His Grandparents and uncles were professors of theology and church history,

but Dietrich's family was not religious, or church going, 

and yet he became a serious, pious teacher and preacher 

who believed that we must follow the words of Jesus 

which were to him the Word of God.

Bonhoeffer almost always spoke of Jesus as "Christ," whereas

I always speak of the historical Jesus as "Jesus" 

and talk about him post resurrection as "the Christ."

He spent a year at Union Seminary and in Harlem in New York City, 

which affected him profoundly, but returned to Germany

to work against the rise of Hitler and the Nazis.


What he wrote in prison sounds current today, 

and has provided the sparks for all the radical theology of the 1960's and of today.

I will give only of a few of his ideas that impact all of us today.

Some of his thoughts and mine may be shocking to you.

(I am trying not to give a lecture, but what I think of as a teaching sermon!)


Bonhoeffer wrote in prison: [043044]

"What is bothering me incessantly is the question [of] what Christianity really is, 

or indeed who Christ really is, for us today. 

The time when people could be told everything by means of words,

whether theological or pious, is over.... 

We are moving toward a completely religionless time; 

people as they are now simply cannot be religious anymore. 

Even those who honestly describe themselves as 'religious' do not in the least act up to it, 

        and so they presumably mean something quite different by 'religious.'"


Bonhoeffer was first of all despairing of how the Christian churches of Germany could accept Hitler 

and control of the churches by the Nazis and the murder of millions of Jews and others.

This was so serious that he came to realize that the churches and their doctrines 

        were at fault and needed to change.

He began to think about how Christian beliefs about God were outdated and mistaken.


He said: 

"The foundation is taken away from the whole of what has up to now been our 'Christianity....' 

What do a church, a community, a sermon, a liturgy, a Christian life mean in a religionless world? 

How do we speak of God--without religion, i.e., without the culture and philosophy of the times. 

How do we speak... in a "secular" way about God?"


Bonhoeffer saw a great problem for us:

"It is not with the beyond that we are concerned, but with this world....

What is above this world is, in the gospel, intended to exist for this world...."

[All these] doctrines of revelation: virgin birth, Trinity, – [aren't] biblical.... 

[But] The mysteries of the Christian faith must be protected." 


So Bonhoeffer planned a book on "Taking stock of Christianity"

and "The Real Meaning of the Christian Faith."

First, was this problem of God. [060844]

"[People] have learned to deal with themselves in all questions of importance 

without recourse to the "working hypothesis" called 'God.' 

In questions of science, art, and ethics this has become 

an understood thing at which one now hardly dares to tilt. 

But for the last hundred years or so it has also become increasingly true of religious questions; 

it is becoming evident that everything gets along without 'God'  – and, in fact, just as well as before. 

As in the scientific field, so in human affairs generally, 

        'God' is being pushed more and more out of life, 

        losing more and more ground. We have 'come of age.'"

So, what people now believe is in a 'God of the gaps,' a God who is absent

except when we need him to step in and help us.

But this God doesn't step in; this God really does not exist.

I think that people saw this after 9-11, 

        that the Providential God who takes care of us isn't around anymore.


Bohoeffer said:  [071644]

"We cannot be honest unless we recognize that we have to live in the world as if there were no God. 

And this is just what we do recognize--before God! God himself compels us to recognize it. 

So our coming of age leads us to a true recognition of our situation before God. 

God would have us know that we must live as people who manage our lives without him. 

The God who is with us is the God who forsakes us (Mark 15:34).... 

The God who lets us live in the world without the working hypothesis of God, 

is the God before whom we stand continually. 

Before God and with God we live without God. 

God lets himself be pushed out of the world on to the cross. 

He is weak and powerless in the world, and that is precisely the way,

the only way, in which he is with us and helps us. 

Christ helps us, not by virtue of his omnipotence, but by virtue of his weakness and suffering."


Bonhoeffer saw that Much of our Christian faith has been a flight 

from the world to God, an escape for our individual salvation.

Bonhoeffer asked: 050544

"Does the question about saving one's soul appear in the Old Testament at all?"

The entire Hebrew scriptures are about  the need 

        for personal responsibility to others and for justice in society.

Sin in Hebrew scriptures is failure to be just; and Jesus was a good Jew.

--------------

For Bonhoeffer, the proof that God was in Jesus is that [081044]

"Jesus is there only for others." Jesus is "the man for others."

"His 'being there for others' is the experience of transcendence

[of going beyond the normal; of God's reality and presence]. 

It is only this 'being there for others,' maintained till death, 

        that is the ground of his omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence. 

Faith is participation in this being [for others] of Jesus.... 

Our relation to God is not a "religious" relationship to the highest, 

most powerful, and best Being imaginable – that is not authentic transcendence – 

        but our relation to God is a new life in "existence for others,"

        through participation in the being of Jesus [for others]. 

The transcendental is not infinite and unattainable, 

but the neighbor who is within reach in any given situation..."

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So where does that leave us today?

Bonhoeffer wrote about his time something that sounds like our own: [072144]

"Our church, which has been fighting in these years only for its self-preservation, 

                        as though that were an end in itself,

is incapable of taking the word of reconciliation and redemption to mankind and the world. 

Our... being Christian today will be limited to two things: prayer and work for justice."

Prayer for Bonhoeffer was mostly a private affair, 

in which we seek to align ourselves with God and Christ.

Prayer is not to make us feel better, but to lead us to action in the world.


Bonhoeffer had harsh prescriptions for our churches:

"The church must come out of its stagnation.  [080344] 

We must move out again into the open air of intellectual discussion with the world, 

and risk saying controversial things, if we are to get down to the serious problems of life.

The church is the church only when it exists for others. 

To make a start, it should give away all its property to those in need. 

Furthermore: [There is] the question of revising the creeds including the Apostles’ Creed; [and]

reform of the training for the ministry and the pattern of clerical life."

------------

So if we want to think today about the resurrection of Jesus as the Christ,

we need to think of resurrection as a symbol for the possibilities 

of our transformation into new life.

Bonhoeffer called the new life, the new creation in a resurrected life, faith!

So, to believe is to live the new life, and to allow Jesus to lead us into the world, not away from it.


This is how Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a pious upper class Lutheran and pacifist,

came to participate in a plot to kill a murderous tyrant.

He saw it as something that had to be done in order to be faithful to God in Christ.

Whether he was right or not is still debated:

We cannot know if killing Hitler would have brought the positive outcome

        the resisters hoped for or expected. 

Sometimes when we act to change things for the better, they become worse.

We call that "unintended consequences."

---------------

To summarize: 

* The point of being Christian is to be a disciple, and that is hard.

* We live in a religionless time because we have come of age in our knowledge of the world. 

* God is being pushed out of life; and we rely on a god of the gaps.

* We see faith as escape from the world, but Jesus was the man for others, for the world. 

* Faith is our participation in this being for others.

* Faith requires Prayer and righteous action - work for justice - in the world.

* Discipleship is responsible action in faith.

* The church must exist for others; we need to revise our creeds and our worship.


I see Bonhoeffer travelling in a great circle in his thought about Jesus.

Bonhoeffer began with deep faith in the Incarnation, belief that God was in Jesus, the Christ.

As he focused more and more on the crucifixion, he realized that 

        God exists only in the suffering of Christ and in the lives and deaths of all who suffer.

And if God is in human suffering, as he was in Jesus' suffering, then God is incarnate in all of us.


So, if we wish to know God, we must be alive to the suffering around us and in the world.

We must therefore treat everyone as Christ, as God,

even if Christ and God are not clearly visible in them.

But at the same time, we must do justice and promote justice 

and resist the evil that causes suffering.

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Bonhoeffer is back! He too is risen.

Bonhoeffer challenges us to reform our expression and practice of Christianity 

into something more true and honest for today.

What will we do about that, and when?