Presiding Bishop Curry’s Word to the Church: Who shall we be?

 Presiding Bishop Curry’s Word to the Church: Who shall we be?

January 8, 2021

Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Michael Curry has issued the following Word to the Church.

Video HERE

A transcript of the statement follows:

And now in the name of our loving, liberating, and life-giving God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.

In another time of national crisis, another time of danger for our nation, in 1865 on March the fourth, Abraham Lincoln concluded his second inaugural address with these words:

With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan—to do all which may achieve and cherish a just, and a lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.

Lincoln knew in that moment, in the moment of a national crisis, a moment of great danger, that such a moment was a moment of decision, when a nation, when a people must decide who shall we be? What kind of nation, what kind of people shall we be? A hundred years later, Martin Luther King faced the same reality. Who shall we be? The civil rights movement was waning. The great victories that had been won had been won. And yet now questions of poverty and economic despair and disparities raised an awesome specter on the nation. We were at war.

We were at war in another country, but there was war on our streets. The nation was deeply divided. Cities burned. There were riots. Riots at national conventions of political parties. The future of the nation was in question, and it was at that time that Dr. King realized that in moments of danger, a decision must be made. And he titled his last book, Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community. I believe as he believed, as Abraham Lincoln believed, as I believe you believe, that we must choose community. Chaos is not an option. Community is our only hope.

The truth is Dr. King spoke often of all that he did and labored for was for the purpose of realizing as much of the Beloved Community of God as it is possible on this earth. He spoke of Beloved Community, the Bible, the New Testament, Jesus spoke of the kingdom or the reign of God. Jesus taught us to pray, and to work, and to labor for that Beloved Community, that reign of God's love in our time and in our world, thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth just as it is in heaven. Those are our marching orders from Jesus himself.

I am a follower of Jesus of Nazareth because I believe that his way of love and his way of life is the way of life for us all. I believe that unselfish, sacrificial love, love that seeks the good and the welfare and the well-being of others, as well as the self, that this is the way that can lead us and guide us to do what is just, to do what is right, to do what is merciful. It is the way that can lead us beyond the chaos to community.

Now, I know full well that this may to some sound naive, to others, idealistic, and I understand that. And yet, I want to submit that the way of love that leads to beloved community is the only way of hope for humanity. Consider the alternative. The alternative is chaos, not community. The alternative is the abyss of anarchy, of chaos, of hatred, of bigotry, of violence, and that alternative is unthinkable. We have seen nightmarish visions of that alternative. We saw it in Charlottesville just a few years ago when neo-Nazis marched through the streets of an American city, chanting, "Jews will not replace us." That alternative is unthinkable. We saw it in Minneapolis-St. Paul, where a public safety officer knelt with his knee on the neck of another human being. A child of God, just like he was, and snuffed out the breath of life that God gave him. The alternative is unthinkable.

And we have seen it this past Wednesday, when a monument to democracy, the Capitol of the United States of America was desecrated and violated with violence by vandals. Lives were lost. A nation was wounded. Democracy itself was threatened. My brothers and sisters, this way of love that Jesus taught us when he said, "Love the Lord your God, and your neighbor as yourself." This way of love that Moses taught even before Jesus. This way of unselfish, sacrificial love, it is the way to redeem a nation, to save a world. It is the way of hope for us all. But do not make the mistake of thinking that I speak of a sentimental and emotional love.

Jesus spoke of love most consistently the closer he got to the cross. This way of love is the way of sacrifice, the way of unselfishness, the way of selflessness, that seeks the good of the other as well as the self. And that is the way of the cross, which is the way of life. And if you don't believe me, ask another apostle of love. Not Dr. King, not Abraham Lincoln, ask Archbishop Tutu. Ask one who has given his life for the cause of God's love in the way of Jesus. Ask him; ask Nelson Mandela in your mind. Ask them what love looks like. They knew that the way of love was the only way that could guide South Africa from what could have become a bloody nightmare and civil war to the way that could build a nation.

And it was not sentimental. Remember truth and reconciliation. They had to face painful truths. They had to do what was just and what was merciful. They had to do what the prophet Micah said, that the motivation and the guide was love. Archbishop Tutu said this:

Love, forgiving, and being reconciled to our enemies or our loved ones is not about pretending that things are other than they are. It is not about patting one another on the back or turning a blind eye to the wrong. True reconciliation exposes the awfulness of the abuse, the hurt, the truth. It could even sometimes make things worse for a while. It is a risky undertaking but in the end it is worthwhile, because in the end only an honest confrontation with reality can bring forth real healing. Superficial reconciliation only brings superficial healing.

This is the way of love that can heal our hurts, that can heal our land, that can help us to become one nation under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all. So, I would ask you to do two things. I'm asking you to make a commitment, a renewed commitment, to live the way of love as Jesus has taught us and to do it by making a commitment to go out and bless somebody. Bless somebody you disagree with. Bless somebody you agree with. But to go out and bless somebody by helping somebody along the way. Go out and bless somebody by listening to their story and their life. To go out and be an instrument of God's peace, an agent of God's love.

And then I would ask you to pray. Pray for this nation but pray with some specificity. Pray that we may have the wisdom and the courage to love.

God of grace and God of glory,
on thy people pour thy pow’r.

Crown thine ancient church’s story,
bring her bud to glorious flow’r.
Grant us wisdom, grant us courage,
for the facing of this hour
     - Harry Emerson Fosdick, God of Grace and God of Glory

With malice toward none, with charity toward all. With firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right. Let us strive to finish the work, the work that we are in. To bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan. To do all which may achieve and cherish, a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.

God love you. God bless you. And may God hold us all in those almighty hands of love.

The 10th day of Christmas - Joy to the World!

2nd Sunday after Christmas/Epiphany Sunday

Jan 3, 2021

Jeremiah 31:7-14; Psalm 84; Matthew 2:1-12

 

Joy to the World! The Lord is come!

I’ve been sharing this proclamation with you during the past couple of weeks of our Christmas season…

We began, on Christmas Eve, with the yearly scripture reading from the gospel of Luke, about the birth of our Savior, Jesus…. Joy to the World! The Lord is come!

We were reminded of the gifts given to us, in this season, on Christmas Day…the gifts of love, light, hope, peace and joy…

Joy to the World! The Lord is come!

And last Sunday, we also heard the good news about Jesus’ birth, according to the gospel of John, which took us back to the very beginning…reminding us of the love and the grace of God, which came down to earth, to dwell in us… Emmanuel…God is with us…

Joy to the World! The Lord is come!

Today is the 10th day of Christmas…The season and the unfolding story surrounding the birth of our savior, Jesus, continues…

So, I’ll say it again…. Joy to the World! The Lord is come!

This joy, born for us on Christmas day…. is only the beginning of a much larger story, that we will listen to, in the coming year….we will learn more about Jesus, and his life, and death and resurrection in the coming months…

But for today, I invite you to linger a while longer to celebrate this season….

Be present in these days of Christmas, to the first stories shared about the humble beginnings of Jesus…..as we heard through the experiences told to us, from the perspectives of the shepherds, the angels…and those who were also present to hear the good new news proclaimed on that first Christmas, that first Nowell… Joy to the World! The Lord is come!

Be present today, in reflecting on the gospel reading according to Matthew we just heard, in which we listened to the story of the wise men, sent out on journey to find this child, this King that had been born…be present with them…stay there for awhile with them…gaze upon this child, where we are told the star stopped over the place, where he was with his mother Mary….Stay there for awhile, where the star stopped, and the wise men were overwhelmed with joy…

Stay there for a moment…and let the joy wash over you, let the joy surround you, let the joy comfort you, let the joy turn your tears of mourning into tears of joy…let the joy remind you, that you are never alone…Emmanuel….God is with us…. God has been with us from the beginning, God is with us now…God will be with us for all our days to come…

Let this joy fill you, as one season is ending, while at the same time, a new season is set to begin…on January 6th, the season of Epiphany….A season which begins with this story of the wise men we just heard on this last Sunday of Christmas….But it also sends out on a new beginning…to bring along these gifts of this Christmas season: the gifts of love, light, hope, grace upon grace, peace and joy…with us, in the journey ahead….in the days ahead…

For this morning, though…in these final days of the Christmas season…let us stop…be here now….on the 10th day of Christmas…There will always be somewhere we need to go…there will always be the next thing to worry about….but for now….let’s celebrate our time together this morning……and be overwhelmed with joy…Joy to the World! The Lord is come!


Rev Julie Platson

St Peter’s by the Sea Episcopal Church, Sitka, AK

Hymn after sermon: The First Nowell – (H) 109 – vs 1-5

The first Nowell the angel did say

was to certain poor shepherds in fields as they lay;

in fields as they lay, keeping their sheep,

on a cold winter’s night that was so deep.

Nowell, Nowell, Nowell, Nowell, born is the King of Israel.

They looked up and saw a star

shining in the east beyond them far,

and to the earth it gave great light,

and so it continued both day and night.  Refrain

 

And by the light of that same star

three wise men came from country far;

to seek for a king was their intent,

and to follow the star wherever it went.  Refrain

 

This star drew nigh to the northwest,

o’er Bethlehem it took its rest,

and there it did both stop and stay

right over the place where Jesus lay.  Refrain

 

Then entered in those wise men three

full reverently upon their knee,

and offered there in his presence

their gold, and myrrh, and frankincense.    Refrain

A Word of thanks and gratitude as the year ends


"United with Christ in the Interest of Others”
“Let each of you look not to your own interests, but to the interests of others. Philippians: 2:4

On this eve of one year ending, and a new year set to begin...

I want to offer my heartfelt gratitude for each one of you....

This past year has been a difficult one, yet every one of you has contributed in a variety of ways to love and encourage and support one another and those entrusted to your care in the community...you've been mindful of one another's needs, for the well-being of all God's beloved....

You have been generous in the ways you have continued to invest in the way of love, by supporting the mission and ministries associated with St Peter's by the Sea this past year...

Thank you! Thank you for being a beacon of light and hope, in the midst of this difficult year...

Thank you for sharing your gifts to ensure that the love of God, as it has been revealed to us in the birth of our Savior, Jesus Christ... is the guiding light of all that we do, in our families, and in the wider community and world...

Thank you, for walking with me, this past year...

I look forward to walking with you again in 2021!

I look forward, with abiding hope, to be amazed once again, by the variety of ways, God will be at work in you, and in your life..using you, and your gifts this coming year, as a beacon of hope, and light, and love, and peace and joy to share with the world!

Peace, Love, and gratitude.....Rev Julie


What gift can we bring, what present, what token? What words can convey it, the joy of this day? When grateful we come, remembering, rejoicing, what song can we offer in honor and praise? (Voices found hymnal #118)

What gift can we bring?

https://youtu.be/Qmto2rsq5qA

Invest in the way of love

https://stpeters-sitka.org/invest-in-the-way-of-love-2021


1st Sunday after Christmas sermon- The gift of grace upon grace...

1st Sunday after Christmas

Dec 27, 2020

Isaiah 61:10-62:3; Psalm 147:13-21;  John 1:1-18

  

We gather together on this Sunday morning…just three short days into the season of Christmas…For many people, Christmas has come and gone already…..and everything has gone back to “normal”…the tree is down, the Christmas music put away for another year…the cookies have been eaten, and the presents unwrapped and in the toybox now, or on the shelf with the other new books, or hanging in the closet with other warm winter clothing, to wear in the cold days ahead….

So, it is with much gratitude in my heart this morning, that in the church, the celebration of Christmas is just beginning…the good news proclaimed to the world on Christmas Eve, and Christmas Day…Joy to the world…the Lord is come…is still with us….the light of Christmas, and the afterglow of the candles and the light and the life that came into the world,  is still lingering among us…

Emmanuel…God is with us…

Not just in our Christmas Eve and Christmas Day celebrations… but in the hope and abiding faith, that this love, this light, this joy, this peace of God is poured out for us, day after day, night after night….and for all our days to come…

In the three short days, into the Christmas season, we’ve all probably experienced a roller coaster of emotions…tears of sorrow and joy in the quiet of Christmas Eve…tears of sorrow and joy in the Christmas Day celebrations, and tears of sorrow and joy, in the tiredness of the day after Christmas…

For me, that brings us gently back to the beginning again, on this first Sunday after Christmas… reminding us to pause once again, at the start of this new day…to take a deep breath…to breath in the gift of the fullness of God’s grace upon grace, as we gather to remember the God of love who has come so very near to us, shining light into the darkness from the very beginning, as we are reminded in our gospel reading from John today…

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.

In a time when nothing seems to fit the description of “normal” anymore, and perhaps as our emotions continue to fluctuate between sorrow and joy, in reflecting on our Christmas celebrations this year…and as we begin to imagine what’s next in the unfolding days of our current pandemic…and what is to come in 2021….

Take heart…the good news of Christmas is that God is with us from the very beginning, and the life and the light,  that has come into the world for us, in the birth of Jesus, will be the light that can guide us and comfort us in the midst of our darkest moments, in the midst of our roller coaster of emotions that are very “normal” part of what it means to be a living and breathing human being…striving to navigate a world that can be scary and full of uncertainties at times, striving to love one another in times when we just don’t know how we can, striving to remain hopeful when we feel like we just can’t breathe anymore, we just can’t see the light ahead anymore….

Take heart….good care of your heart….Emmanuel…God is with us… God has been with us from the beginning, God is with us now…God will be with us for all our days to come…

The good news proclaimed to the world in this Christmas season…and especially on this day…. reminds us of one of God’s gift to us… the gift of grace upon grace…..God’s gift of grace that is given to us, again and again on every new day, in every new beginning, with every new breath we take…and breathe in the love and the light and the hope and the joy and the peace of God….

…. the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father's only son, full of grace and truth. …From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.

It is in the hope and abiding faith, that this grace, this grace upon grace, this love, this light, this joy, this peace of God is poured out for us, day after day, night after night….and for all our days to come…

Joy to the World! The Lord is come….

Let’s celebrate this good news this morning, on the third day of Christmas, with the song of the angels….Hark! the herald angels sing glory to the newborn King!

 

1          Hark! the herald angels sing

            glory to the newborn King!

            Peace on earth and mercy mild,

            God and sinners reconciled!

            Joyful, all ye nations, rise,

            join the triumph of the skies;

            with the angelic host proclaim

            Christ is born in Bethlehem!

           

            Hark! the herald angels sing

            glory to the newborn King!

           

2          Christ, by highest heaven adored;

            Christ, the everlasting Lord;

            late in time behold him come,

            offspring of the Virgin’s womb.

            Veiled in flesh the Godhead see;

            hail the incarnate Deity.

            Pleased as man with man to dwell;

            Jesus, our Emmanuel!

 

           Hark! the herald angels sing

            glory to the newborn King!

 

 

 

Rev Julie Platson

St Peter’s by the Sea Episcopal Church         

Christmas Day Sermon - Dec 25

Christmas Day 2020

Dec 25, 2020

Isaiah 62:6-12; Psalm 97; Luke 2: 8-20

 

Prayer:

God of unimaginable love, God of all humanity, God of the shepherds and the angels, God of the manger, God of deliverance, God of birth, God of Christmas: We give you thanks on this Christmas morning for the gifts of love, light, hope, peace and joy, you have given us in the yearly remembrance of Christ’s birth, and as we once again celebrate Your coming into Your creation.  Open our hearts and our hands to share these indescribable gifts, with all who have been entrusted to our care, with our neighbors and with all of creation. This with pray with thanksgiving and gratitude from our hearts to the One who is come among us…. Joy to the Word…the Lord is come… Amen. (Adapted from a prayer written by Brad Offutt)

  

Now what?

What do we do with all these gifts given for us today?

After a silent, holy night, the joy is much more palpable today…but maybe some of us are still a little hesitant to let the joy bubble up and out into our daily lives…it’s been a difficult year…

We caught our breath last night…we paused to collectively take a deep breath… apart, but together.

We listened to the familiar stories, the scriptures, the songs, the music; we embraced moments of silence, and listening, and candle-lighting…perhaps there were tears of sorrow that turned to tears of joy last night….all beautiful things to help us return to the true reason for our Christmas celebrations…Joy to the World…the Lord is come…. 

Now what?

Will you allow the good news proclaimed on Christmas Day, move you to believe in joy again? To live with joy again? To trust in the joy of the Lord, in all circumstances and in all matters under heaven and on earth?

Will you dare to be filled with wonder and awe again, like the shepherds were, at the sight of all they had seen and heard?

Will you go, and tell others about this wonderous God and the Joy that was restored in your heart this day?

Will you allow yourself to be amazed every time you hear the Good News proclaimed on Christmas Day….Joy to the World…the Lord is come….

Will you dare to say, Yes, like Mary… and allow your spirit to rejoice in God our Savior?

Will you treasure all these words and ponder them in your heart…as Mary did?

Will you return again and again to God, glorifying and praising God for the gifts given to all of humanity and all of creation….the gifts of love, light, hope, peace and joy…

Now what?

These gifts are meant to be shared…so go now…share your love, your light, your hopes, your peace, and especially your joy…share all of this…from your heart to the heart of God, and all of God’s beloved….

In this bleak midwinter, the whole world needs to hear the good news proclaimed on Christmas Day…. Joy to the World…the Lord is come…

 

Rev Julie Platson

St Peter’s by the Sea Episcopal Church, Sitka, AK

Hymn after the sermon: In the bleak midwinter

Sung by Ali Hosford

Christmas Eve Sermon - Dec 24 2020

Christmas Eve 2020

Dec 24, 2020

Isaiah 9:2-7; Psalm 96Luke 2:1-14(15-20)

 

I’d like to begin by asking you to join me in taking a moment of silence…a moment to breathe….and a moment to offer up a quiet word of thanksgiving….Joy to the world…the Lord is come…

Join me….breathing in, as you say these words to yourself…

Joy to the world….

And breathing out….the Lord is come….

 

Again…

Breathing in, as you ponder these words with your whole body…

Joy to the world….

And breathing out….the Lord is come….

 

Again…

Breathing in, as you pray these words from the depths of your heart and your soul…Joy to the world….

And breathing out….the Lord is come….

 

On this quiet, holy night…we pause to take a collective breath, we gather together to remember the God of love who has come so very  near to us,  who has been born for us, not just on this night we remember the birth, but in the hope and abiding faith, that this love is poured out for us, day after day, night after night….and for all our days to come…

We gather tonight to celebrate this good news proclaimed for all God’s beloved: Joy to the World, the Lord is come… Good news proclaimed, and fully welcomed, in the midst of some dark days and dark nights which we have all been journeying on for many months now… apart, but together…

Like many of you, I have been overwhelmed at times with all that has been happening in these past nine/ten months….there has been so much information we have had to take in, and sort through since the beginning of the pandemic…there has been so many changes to adapt to, so many new things to learn, so many frustrating challenges to figure out, so many twists and turns along the way…so many unknowns, losses, and heartaches, that have weighed so heavily upon all of us…yet for some people and their families, the losses and the effects of these pandemic times, has been much more personal and devasting to their lives, in ways that are known to us, and in many ways, unknown to us… 

As I’ve reflected back over these past four weeks, in our season of advent…a time of waiting and preparing our hearts for this yearly remembrance of Christ’s birth… and waiting and preparing our hearts for his coming again… And I thought back over all that has happened since we last worshipped in our church building together…I was reminded of the word Breathe….

I realized that I don’t think I have stopped since March 15th, to take a full, deep, whole body, mind, heart and spirit breath as we are doing tonight….this night on which we pause to remember, the breath of God, the love of God, being born anew for every one of us …with the promises of giving us true life, and pure light to comfort us and guide us, and to fill our hearts, once again, with hope and peace and joy….

And I have a feeling that I am not alone in this….it often feels as if the whole world has been holding our breath for some time now….yet, somehow, finding a way to keep on, keeping on…and I truly believe that God surely has something to do with this….and I give thanks for the good news proclaimed tonight: Joy to the World….The Lord is come…

Not just once…2,000 years ago… but in the hope and abiding faith, that this love is poured out for us, day after day, night after night….and for all our days to come…

So, what a gift it is tonight, to hear once again, the beloved Christmas story, according to the gospel of Luke…

It was as if the whole world had been holding their breath...watching and waiting for a Savior to come…for the Messiah to come… for God to give them a sign that God loved them, cared for them, and had not forgotten them….had not turned his back on them or stopped listening to their hopes and their dreams and their prayers and their longings to be delivered from suffering and heartache….

God was listening, and transformed their tears of sorrow, into tears of joy…on this silent, holy night…on which the Savior they had been longing for…was born….A child wrapped in bands of cloth, lying in a manger was a sign from God, of hope fulfilled, in the one they had been watching for and waiting for….

On this holy night, perhaps it was as if time stood still for a moment, and all took a deep, collective breath…as Light pierced the darkness of their despair….as love filled the air all around them…as hope was re-ignited in their hearts…peace had come….joy had come….The shepherds and the angels and all who gathered with Mary and Joseph that night rejoiced…in awe of the glory of God’s holy light, who came among them…. Joy to the World…. the Lord is come….

Emmanuel…God is with us…not just tonight, on the yearly remembrance of Christ’s birth… but in the hope and abiding faith, that this love is poured out for us, day after day, night after night….and for all our days to come…

On this holy night for us, the music, the scriptures, the candles, the stories, the faces of the people on the zoom screens, the sounds of the people’s voices on the phone, and in the silence and in the listening…

All of this…has been a sign for us, that the very breath of God –has come so very near to us to tonight… reminding us to pause for a moment to receive the gift… and to breathe…

Breathe in the hope of God, breathe in the light, and the love, and the peace that surpasses all of our understanding…

And breathe in some joy for your celebrations this Christmas….

Breathe in….Joy to the World…

Breathe out…the Lord is come…

 

Hymn: Joy to the World…Virginia and Martha Pearson

 

Rev Julie Platson

St Peter’s by the Sea Episcopal Church, Sitka, AK