Christmas Eve Sermon

Christmas Eve – Dec 24, 2022

Isaiah 9:2-7; Psalm 96; Luke 2:1-20

 

What a night this is to behold…

It’s our first Christmas Eve together, in person, since December 24, 2019….It seems like a lifetime ago…and we all know…that these past few years have been full of a lot of loss, suffering, times of uncertainty and rapid changes that none of us, could have ever imagined…

Yet, these past few years, in the midst of so much uncertainty, has also been a time of great spiritual growth and resilience, many of us didn’t know we had within us…

It’s been an incredible time of learning together what it truly means to live as people of hope; to discover and celebrate together, the little and the big joys that continued to mark our lives together; we’ve learned to reach out and love one another in ways that we never knew were possible…and if we take a close, introspective look, we can see how our once limited perspectives on what love looks like and acts like…was stretched and expanded beyond anything we had yet to dream of…

This is the kind of love, we are talking about tonight, as we celebrate and remember the birth of Jesus, the Love of God, who came down to dwell among us…to remind us of the light, the hope, the peace, the joy, and the love and presence of God who is always among us, always surrounding us, always reminding us…that whatever is going on in our lives…we are not alone…

Emmanuel…God is with us…God has always been us from the beginning…God will be with us…as we walk together in the coming year…

On Christmas Eve, our scriptures and our hymns and our prayers remind us of this good news…The shepherds, the angels, all those looking up at the night sky…saw the stars, saw the signs of God’s glorious light and love coming into the world, a gift given, not just for this one night…but for eternity…forever…

The night sky, the stars, are there for us even today…to look up and remember…this love that was born for us…this love that came down at Christmas…

The stars hanging here on the nativity table, were made by the youth here at St Peter’s…and were brought forward as part of the family pageant last week…So, it was with great joy that I discovered this beautiful book, unexpectedly this week, to share with you tonight…It’s called the Christmas Star…by Margaret Pfister…

That light, that glorious light, that beacon of hope…was born for us on Christmas Day…

Hymn after sermon: Love came down at Christmas (youtube recording/Andrew Remillard)

1       Love came down at Christmas,

                 love all lovely, love divine;

         love was born at Christmas:

                 star and angels gave the sign.

 

2       Worship we the Godhead,

                 love incarnate, love divine;

         worship we our Jesus,

                 but wherewith for sacred sign?

 

3       Love shall be our token;

                 love be yours and love be mine,

         love to God and neighbor,

                 love for plea and gift and sign.

Expectations....

3 Advent/Year A - December 11, 2022

(Sermon by Rev Julie Platson)                              

Isaiah 35:1-10; Canticle 15; Matthew 11:2-11

 

3rd advent candle: JOY

We light three candles on our advent wreath today… one for HOPE and one for PEACE…and today we lit the third candle, the rose/pink candle of JOY. On this 3rd Sunday of Advent, the church invites us to rejoice -, we can rejoice now because we know that God is faithful to God’s promises. Jesus is coming soon(Living well through Advent 2022)…The Hope, Peace, Joy, and love of Christ…is coming again soon…

 

Expectations…that’s the word that’s been on my mind this week…

The opening words from today’s gospel certainly got me thinking about expectations…

“When John heard in prison what the Messiah was doing, he sent word by his disciples and said to him, “Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?”

In today’s forward day by day devotion, for this 3rd Sunday of Advent, Sallie Schisler…reflected a bit on this verse…and it gave me some food for thought all week, as I thought about how I manage expectations of myself, others, what I’m looking for in life, what I’m expecting in my life and the world around me, as I anticipate, prayerfully wait and watch, and ponder the meaning, once again, of the 1st and 2nd coming of our Lord Jesus Christ…

Let’s listen to what she writes:

The Roman ruler Herod Antipas imprisoned John the Baptist because he publicly challenged Herod’s divorce and remarriage. As John languishes in prison, his faith in the powerful predictions he has made about the one who is to come may be wavering. So, John sends messengers to ask Jesus if he is the one.

Jesus says: Yes, John was right. The blind now see, the lame walk, and good news is proclaimed to the poor. These are all signs of how God’s kingdom would come into the world. But John was expecting a bigger splash. He assumed the Messiah would seize power and trounce the enemies of God. Blinded by his own expectations, he almost missed the significance of Jesus’s ministry.

I wonder when my expectations are viewed through the lens of my own desires. When might I have missed the point? (end of her reflection)

I love this time of year...this season of advent… and particularly this 3rd Sunday in Advent…because it invites us to slow down, ask questions, wonder aloud, and think about the lens through which we view our expectations…

Are we missing the signs of God kingdom breaking into our world already? Are we missing the signs of God’s hope, peace, joy, and love all around us now because we are looking through the lens of our own desires, our doubts, and in our weariness and unbelief, that nothing could ever change, nothing new is possible? Are we missing signs of the One we’ve been waiting for, who is indeed already here with us, in the many ways God’s people are proclaiming the good news to the poor, lifting up the lowly, feeding the hungry, in our communities?

Setting aside time to do this wondering and discernment, is a gift given to us, in this season of advent… it can help us identify those areas in our lives, where we might need to re-align our views and our expectations with God, and through the lens of God, rooted in the hope, peace, joy and love of the One, who is promised…will come again…Jesus Christ…

I wonder how our views and expectations would be changed and transformed in this time of slowing down a bit, this time of reflecting further on the scriptures, the music of advent, this intentional time spent in quiet and prayer, time set aside for worship and fellowship with others each week…I wonder, if we would begin to notice more around us…to notice God already at work in the world…to notice where the work of peace and justice is being advocated for and enacted in our communities… to notice where new relationships are being formed…to notice where healing is beginning… to notice where unexpected songs of joy and laughter are breaking through all the disappointment and discouragement we experience in our daily lives when our expectations are continually viewed through the lens of our own desires, our doubts, and in our weariness and unbelief…

Jesus poses another set of questions in today’s gospel when speaking to the crowds about John the BaptistAnother set of questions that invites us to think more about our expectations…  “What did you go out into the wilderness to look at? A reed shaken by the wind? What then did you go out to see?”

What about you? What are you looking for? What then did you go out to see?

As we journey through these final weeks of Advent - What are your expectations? What are you hoping for? What are you longing for?  

Take some time to think more about your own expectations…

Are your expectations viewed through the lens of your own desires, doubts, weariness and unbelief…or through the lens of God, rooted in the hope, peace, joy and love of the One, who is promised…will come again…Jesus Christ…

And take some time this week… to notice and pay attention to the unexpected songs of joy and laughter all around you…

Rejoice with Mary…today…and according to our advent calendar it’s a day to stir up something sweet for dessert…so let’s celebrate together...the long-expected Jesus is coming again soon!

Let us pray:  HYMN after sermon:  Come, thou long-expected Jesus (vs 1 & 2)

 

2 Advent/Year A

December 4, 2022

(Sermon by Rev Julie Platson)                              

Isaiah 11:1-10; Psalm 72:1-7, 18-19; Romans 15:4-13; Matthew 3:1-12

 

2nd advent candle: PEACE

We come to prepare the way;

The way for Christ –

the hope of Christ, the peace of Christ –

to enter our world,

to enter our hearts.

We cry out together in the wilderness:

The kingdom of heaven has come near.

We come to be part of the light– the light of peace…

the light that shines in the darkness.

~ written by Joanna Harader, and posted on Spacious Faith. http://spaciousfaith.com/

Today is the 2nd Sunday of Advent…and it stirs up a lot more questions…and shakes up the quiet start to our season, just a short week ago…

Last Sunday, we began the season of Advent with an invitation to ponder the old, but new questions that come up every year as we begin Advent…What time is it? How much longer? How will we know? What signs should we watch for? How many more days until we can celebrate once again the beloved stories of Jesus’ birth shared during our Christmas celebrations? How much longer must we watch and wait until Christ comes again?

We were encouraged to use the advent calendar, to help us slow down, be quiet, prayerfully watch and wait, as we ponder the meaning, once again, of both the 1st and 2nd comings of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to consider what it means for us, in this time of our lives…

The readings for the 2nd Sunday of Advent provide for some beautiful visual imagery and some harsh sounding words that proclaim a sense of urgency… as we watch and wait and ponder anew…the 1st and 2nd coming of our Lord Jesus Christ…

We listened to these words from Isaiah…giving us a vision of peace among all creatures…

The wolf shall live with the lamb, the leopard shall lie down

with the kid, the calf and the lion and the fatling together,

and a little child shall lead them. The cow and the bear shall graze,

their young shall lie down together; and the lion shall eat straw like the ox.

In our psalm today, the words painted a beautiful picture of the coming of this new kind of king and kingdom…a kingdom where justice and peace shall flourish…

He shall defend the needy among the people; *he shall rescue the poor and crush the oppressor.

He shall live as long as the sun and moon endure, *from one generation to another.

He shall come down like rain upon the mown field, *like showers that water the earth.

In his time shall the righteous flourish; *there shall be abundance of peace till the moon shall be no more.

In Paul’s letter to the Romans, we were reminded once again…

Whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, so that by steadfastness and by the encouragement of the scriptures we might have hope.  And the reading concludes with the familiar and beautiful words from the end of our morning prayer services:

 May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Our gospel reading is a pretty familiar story…we hear some version of the story about John the Baptist, every year during the Advent season… This year’s version begins with John the Baptist appearing in the wilderness of Judea, proclaiming, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.” We listened to the description of John the Baptist, who wore clothing of camel’s hair with a leather belt around his waist, and whose food was locusts and wild honey. We listened to his bold and harsh words for the Pharisees and the Sadducees who were coming to him to be baptized… questioning their motive perhaps?

And we heard his urgent and straightforward words, once again,  that point to the One who is more powerful coming after him…

Sometimes, the messages that come through the scriptures seem pretty subtle…they seem to come through to us, in a faint whisper…stay awake, watch and wait, pray, be quiet, be still…but there are other times in the reading of the scriptures, where the words jump off of the page in loud and bold letters…

This Sunday…is one of those Sundays.

I like to think that maybe they seem louder today, because I am one week into my advent discipline of a more prayerful, contemplative journey throughout Advent…slowing down, finding time to be quiet, and using the advent calendar to help me focus on “being ready”, spiritually ready, as I watch and wait for the coming of Christ again...and as I turn my heart and my attention towards Jesus, once again, remembering to keep him at the center of all my holiday preparations, and celebrations at Christmas, and beyond…

But then, I truthfully examine my journey thus far…and realize I have strayed off course already, I am failing miserably in my first week…

So perhaps the loudness today isn’t really loud at all because I am focusing more on quietness…but maybe it seems likes its getting progressively louder, and more persistent because I keep getting distracted and fail to pay attention to the words of wisdom, and the urgent messages being proclaimed by the messengers, the prophets, that I’ve heard more than once…I’ve heard them many times…and every time, I think I’ll pay attention, and try to make some small change in my life… and spiritual practice, because of the good news that I heard…

I often wonder if God ever becomes impatient with us, as we do with others in our lives, when we are trying to teach them something…something urgent, something wonderful, something we know will transform their lives in a hopeful way, in a peaceful way, in a joyful way, in a loving way…

Anyone who has raised children, teenagers, or those who work as any kind of caregiver or teacher in some capacity…knows how difficult it is to get our words of wisdom and urgent messages across to someone we love and care for…we often raise our voices, in desperation and exhaustion, as we strive to get our message across…

What we usually find out though, is that it’s not really how loudly we speak that makes them to listen…but instead, with the persistence of our loving intentions, words and visions of hope for them to hang on to, and with the intervention of the holy spirit, there is an opening of their own minds and hearts, and a willingness to hear something new for themselves, that prompts them to “turn around”, change direction, and begin again… It is in this turning around…where new life begins to flourish…

John the Baptist is the urgent and persistent voice of love and hope calling us, to turn around…and watch for the more powerful One that is surely coming…

In this season of Advent, as we are urged to slow down, be quiet, watch and wait, together…we will hear quiet voices, and urgent and persistent voices…calling our attention to turn around…to focus on the One, Jesus Christ, who the prophets proclaim boldly, will come again…the One whose life, death, resurrection and ascension to heaven, is where new life begins in us, and where the seeds of hope, peace, joy and love begin to grow and flourish among all of God’s people and all of creation…

 

Let us pray:  HYMN after sermon: (VF) 33 -The grain is ripe

 

1        The grain is ripe: the harvest comes!

          good seed of hope, your time is now

          justice will stream from hill and river,

          more than you dream and running over.

 

2        The righteous God gives this and more:

          grace is the mode, mercy the key,

          God comes in truth, the sharpest laser

          to scan the earth, to take our measure.

 

3        The work of peace is all for all,

          face turned to face in open trust,

          all famine gone and thirst and bleeding,

          the harvest comes from love’s good seeding.

Stay awake - be ready!

1 Advent/Year A

November 27, 2022

(Sermon by Rev Julie Platson)                              

Isaiah 2:1-5; Psalm 122; Romans 13:11-14; Matthew 24:36-44

 

1st advent candle: HOPE

God of hope, be with us in our Advent journey to the stable and beyond,

be with us in our meeting and in our travelling together,

be with us in our worship and our praying together,

be with us in our Advent journey to the stable and beyond,

our God of hope. Amen.

 

Today is the 1st Sunday of Advent – the beginning of a new year on the church calendar…

Our season of Advent begins with an invitation from our Isaiah reading: Come, let us walk in the light of the world…Psalm 122 gives us an image of peace…Peace be within your walls and quietness within your towers…In Paul’s letter to the Romans…we are told: You know what time it is, how now is the moment to wake from sleep…In the gospel of Matthew we are urged to stay awake and be ready….for the Son of Man is coming at an unexpected hour…

The season of Advent…stirs up a whole lot of new, but old questions…

What time is it? How much longer? How will we know? What signs should we watch for? How many more days until we can celebrate once again the beloved stories of Jesus’ birth shared during our Christmas celebrations? How much longer must we watch and wait until Christ comes again?

Well, today…is only the 1st Sunday of Advent…the beginning of a new year on the church calendar…So, we are just beginning again…to ask all of these questions anew…to ponder the meaning, once again, of both the 1st and 2nd comings of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to consider what it means for us, in this time of our lives…

I think one of the greatest tools we have for our use in this season of Advent, to assist us in this time of waiting and watching and asking the questions that help us stay awake and be ready for the ways God is showing up in the most unexpected times, and places…is our advent calendar…

The advent calendar can help us slow down, take a one day at a time approach, help open our minds and hearts to focus on “being ready”, spiritually ready, watching and waiting for the coming of Christ again...and help us to put Jesus back in the center of all our celebrations at Christmas, and beyond…

This time of year, society is always pressuring us to hurry up, do more, you better get ready, the holidays are coming soon… you need to get all the shopping done, get all the gifts wrapped, get all the baking and decorating done, plan all the Holiday parties…all the things that, yes…can be fun and bring us so much joy…but can also, leave us exhausted by the time Christmas Day actually arrives…and once Christmas Day is over…can leave us feeling let down sometimes…and leave us wondering – now what? And, for people missing loved ones this time of year, the constant pressure to “get ready” for the holidays can make this time of year even more overwhelming and difficult…

The advent calendar can help us “be ready, spiritually ready…by transforming our minds and hearts to be watchful, to be awake to the ways God has always been longing to get our attention…is longing to come again into our lives…longing for us to pay attention to the signs of hope all around us…signs of renewal and hope for ourselves, and for the people in our communities, who we journey through this life together with…

This particular advent calendar that Forward movement publishes every year, with new daily short messages, questions to consider, small actions to take…is just one that I commend to your use this Advent…

Hang it up somewhere in your home, where you will see it…and take time to pause and reflect on the daily message…

The large words at the top should catch your attention, every morning…Slow down. Quiet. It’s Advent…The sub-title’s words, Twenty-Eight Days to Seek new life within and around you…can give you a vision and a hope for how your heart, mind and life can be transformed anew, and indeed made ready, in this new year, to welcome the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ into your lives, once again…this Christmas…and beyond…

As we begin this season of Advent, we are given the opportunity to continue to explore, further, the Five Marks of Mission, as adapted by Bishop Mark in his call to the people of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska, to a time of renewal and growth in discipleship… And this Advent Calendar…is a great resource to help us do that…to help us think more about our relationship with Jesus, and share stories about our faith and our hopes with others; to help us learn more about the gospel readings we hear throughout the season of Advent, and how they relate to our lives now; to help us discern where we might be called this time of year, to reach out and offer support to a neighbor in need; to help encourage us to do something to promote racial reconciliation this Advent season; to help us take note of the love of God as revealed in creation, in this month of December and discern ways to protect this precious gift…and to help us be faithful in other ways, teaching us to be good stewards of all the gifts and treasures entrusted to us to use for the good of our community… our finances, our time, our talents…

The advent calendar can help us slow down, take a one day at a time approach, help open our minds and hearts to focus on “being ready”, spiritually ready, watching and waiting for the coming of Christ again...and help us put Jesus back in the center of all our celebrations at Christmas, and beyond…

Watching and waiting is something that is best done, together...together, you and I, and with Jesus, at the center of our lives…

So, let’s enter into this season of Advent together…with a commitment to help each other stay awake…and be ready…for the Lord is coming soon…the hope, peace, joy and love of God…is coming into our lives again soon!

 

Let us pray:  HYMN after sermon: Stay awake, be ready

My Heart Sings Out, #62 – vs 1 - recording

 

1        Stay awake, (clap, clap) be ready. (clap, clap)

          You do not know the hour when the Lord is coming.

          Stay awake, (clap, clap) be ready. (clap, clap)

          The Lord is coming soon!

          Alleluia, alleluia!

          The Lord is coming soon.

The Reign of God's love...here on earth...as in heaven

Last Pentecost/Year C

November 20, 2022

(Sermon by Rev Julie Platson)                              

Jeremiah 23:1-6; Psalm 46; Luke 23:33-43

 

Collect for today: Almighty and everlasting God, whose will it is to restore all things in your well-beloved Son, the King of kings and Lord of lords: Mercifully grant that the peoples of the earth, divided and enslaved by sin, may be freed and brought together under his most gracious rule; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

We come to the end of the church year today...the last Sunday after Pentecost or also known as Christ the King Sunday…. The Sunday, we begin with the words of our collect, praying to an almighty and everlasting God, whose will it is to restore all things in God’s well-beloved Son…Jesus…the King of kings and Lord of lords….and we pray that God’s people, divided and enslaved by sin, may be freed and brought under Jesus’ most gracious rule…in a kingdom that proclaims forgiveness, mercy, grace, joy, and hope….a kingdom that proclaims: this is what God’s love is…this is what God’s love looks like…this is what God’s love can do, through you and I…here on earth…as in heaven…

We just spent a whole year watching, listening and reflecting on the stories that were shared each week about Jesus…And if we were paying attention to Jesus’ teachings…we were given examples over and over again, of what God’s love is, what God’s love looks like, and what God’s love can do for us, and our siblings who walk this earth with us…a love that has the power to transform lives through forgiveness, through mercy and grace, through healing, through hope…a love that has the power to build, encourage and strengthen our relationships with one another, in the kingdom of God…a family of God…where Jesus, our Shepherd, guides us, and leads us, in walking the way of God’s love…

Our church year, began with the season of Advent, a season, that invites us to turn our focus once again, to anticipate the coming of a new kingdom, a new and renewed hope for God’s saving Love to come down among us…… and we celebrate the fulfillment of this hope and this Love, coming into the world on Christmas Day...when we hear the story of Jesus’ birth. 

We spent the season of Epiphany listening to the scriptures that illuminated and showed us who this Jesus was, we heard about Jesus’ Baptism and his being sent out into the wilderness, as we embarked on a journey with him in the season of Lent…we stood still with him on Good Friday, when he was crucified on the Cross, and we rejoiced once again as we celebrated his resurrection on Easter morning, three days later….The next 50 days we listened to scriptures about the resurrected Jesus, and the experiences of those who saw him, in his new glory…we celebrated his ascension into heaven, and on the Day of Pentecost, we celebrated the gift of the Holy Spirit given to us…and then we walked faithfully through the long, ordinary season after Pentecost, when we became the “students” of Jesus, and learned a lot about what it meant to be a follower of Jesus…

In this past year, we learned a lot about what the kingdom of God is like…a kingdom that proclaims what God’s love is… what God’s love looks like and what God’s love can do, through you and I…here on earth…as in heaven…

We learned a lot about the kingdom of God and God’s love…because of Jesus…

And as we mark this last Sunday after Pentecost, and the ending of a church year, we are still learning about the kingdom of God and God’s love...even, and especially, as we listen to today’s difficult gospel reading…which speaks of Jesus’ death on the cross…

In the reading today, Jesus is crucified with two criminals...one on his right, and one on his left…and Jesus’ prayed from the cross, asking for forgiveness for those who crucified him, “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing.”

The people stood by, watching Jesus on the cross, the leaders scoffed at him, the soldiers mocked him…

One of the criminals who were hanged there, beside Jesus, kept deriding him and saying, "Are you not the Messiah? Save yourself and us!" But the other rebuked him, saying, "Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation?

And we indeed have been condemned justly, for we are getting what we deserve for our deeds, but this man has done nothing wrong." Then he turned to Jesus and said, "Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom."

At this moment, I envision Jesus looking directly into the eyes and soul of the criminal when he responded with words of unconditional love and forgiveness, assuring him: "Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise."

With these few words, spoken by Jesus on the cross, Jesus gives us another glimpse of what God’s love is, what it looks like, and what God’s love can do…In this moment, we are witness to a sacrificial and unselfish love that proclaims words of forgiveness from the cross…a love that sets us free, from the entanglement and enslavement of sin in our worldly lives… a merciful love that sets us free to hope and trust in God’s goodness and love… and a powerful love that reconciles us to God, one another, and all of creation…

So, yes...this church year is coming to an end today, and in today’s scripture reading, Jesus’ life on earth, is coming to an end…but this isn’t just an ending, this is also a new beginning…

…a beginning that will bring forth the hope of something new, something better than we can ever ask for or imagine, something more fulfilling and life-affirming and joyful…than we have ever experienced….

This is an ending that brings forth the promise of a new kingdom to come, a new beloved community to come to fruition here on earth, as in heaven, when we commit ourselves to following the way of Jesus, together…working alongside of each other, serving and reaching out to one another, tending, nurturing, encouraging, and caring for one another, so that we can create and build loving, equitable, just, compassionate, merciful, grace-filled communities, where no one goes hungry, where violence is no more, where all our siblings are valued and respected, where no-one is without shelter, where everyone has a chance for recovery from substance misuse, where the lonely are uplifted by the love and attention of others, where those who are grieving are assured of the joy that will come again, where forgiveness and mercy and grace are offered freely and often…

This is the vision and the hope of God’s kingdom to come here on earth, as in heaven, that Jesus proclaims from the cross… a sacrificial and unselfish love that proclaims words of forgiveness from the cross…a love that sets us free, from the entanglement and enslavement of sin in our worldly lives… a merciful love that sets us free to hope and trust in God’s goodness and love… and a powerful love that reconciles us to God, one another, and all of creation…

Let our prayer and our hope ever be for the reign of God’s love, God’s kingdom…to come here on earth…as in heaven…

And now, as we come to the close of this church year, let us prepare our hearts and our minds and our lives for the new year ahead, by confessing our sins against God and our neighbor, through the words of this hymn…

Let us pray:

HYMN after sermon: (L) 176 – An Evening Prayer

 Recording by Mahalia Jackson

1        If I have wounded any soul today,

          If I have caused one foot to go astray,

          If I have walked in my own willful way,

                   Dear Lord, forgive!

 

2        If I have uttered idle words or vain,

          If I have turned aside from want or pain,

          Lest I offend some other through the strain,

                   Dear Lord, forgive!

 

3        If I have been perverse, or hard, or cold,

          If I have longed for shelter in the fold,

          When thou hast given me some fort to hold,

                   Dear Lord, forgive!

 

4        Forgive the sins I have confessed to thee;

          Forgive the secret sins I do not see;

          O guide me, love me, and my keeper be.

                   Dear Lord, forgive! Amen.

 

 

 

Teach/Learn

23 Pentecost/Year C

November 13, 2022

2 Thessalonians 3:6-13; Psalm 98; Luke 21:5-19

(Sermon by Rev Julie Platson)                              

 

Just a brief reminder:

For the month of November, and as part of our Fall pledge campaign season, we will be exploring the Five Marks of Mission as adapted in Bishop Mark’s call to the people of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska to a time of renewal and growth in discipleship through the Five Marks of Mission…

Here at St Peter’s, we will be using this framework of the Five Marks of Mission throughout the next year, to help us discern what we are being called to do, by being opened to them changing us, transforming us, and guiding us in all that we will do here at St Peter’s and in the community…

Last Sunday, we reviewed the 1st Mark of Mission…to TELL…

That one invites us to pray and reflect on our individual relationship with Jesus, and to prepare a simple, from the heart response to this question: “Why is my hope/faith/love with Jesus Christ?” And we are invited to share our answer with others, often, in times of casual, personal conversations with others…Last week, Kit and Deacon Kathryn, both shared some personal reflections, and responses to the question, while thinking about a beloved family member they considered a saint in their lives, who influenced their faith journey…

This week, we are exploring the 2nd Mark of Mission…to Teach/Learn…

Mandy Evans, a vestry member and active member of St Peter’s…introduced us to this 2nd Mark of Mission, in a mid-week email that I sent out…

These are her words…

Bishop Mark wrote (regarding this 2nd mark of mission), “I call on all Episcopalians in Alaska to commit at least 15 minutes each day to reading and praying on the Gospel lesson assigned for Morning or Evening Prayer. How does the passage relate to your life, your situation? How is the Gospel part of your story?”

I love routines, and one of my favorites is Morning Prayer. When I read this call from our bishop, I realized that my habit has been to focus on the Psalms more than other scriptures. In the past few days, I shifted my focus to the Gospel lesson, and I thought about this change.

 I love the Psalms - the cadence, and imagery, the familiar and comforting words. So, what treasures will I gain from this focus on the words of our Christ each morning? My first “a-ha” was (remembering) these words, these parables, and explanations that cause more questions, these expressions of love in so many different forms - they burn away all the rest. Jesus shows us our Creator’s Love. Nothing else really matters. All of our human debates on policies and practices are reflected back to us in a sometimes humorous, sometimes scathing, and always loving voice that shows us the Way.

IN the email, I included several online options to be engaged in Morning Prayer or evening prayer services, to use throughout the week…

What I want to add to this introduction that Mandy provided us with… are a few other hands-on, creative practices that can assist us in reflecting further, and going a little bit deeper on these daily gospel readings that come up on the daily lectionary…

This invitation to reflect on the gospels daily, are not meant to make us biblical scholars…they are meant to assist us in putting Christ in the center of our lives, in all we do, and to listen and look for the good news, and the Hope that is found in Jesus’ words and teachings…

The daily practice of allowing the words of Jesus to wash over us, are meant to bring light to our darkest moments, to show us the way…to guide us when we think there is no way…to help us see where God is present with us, always, and especially in those times, when everything around us can be terrifying, when it seems that there is no end to the news of  wars, and destruction, famines, weather disasters, when we can’t understand why bad things happen to good people, or when life seems to be full of so many questions….with very few answers that can soothe our anxious soul…

The daily practice of being engaged with the gospel readings, can help support us and encourage us, when the daily grind of life zaps the energy out of us, and leaves us weary in believing that anything new or hopeful is just around the corner…

Many of you have heard about the Disciples Prayer Book…or what is called Gospel-Based Discipleship…And quite a few of you may already use this as a way to reflect further on the gospel reading for the day…

It’s something individuals can use, but many small groups use it to reflect on the gospel readings together…and many clergy, including myself, use this simple practice of engaging in the reading of the gospels, and other scriptures, as a way to help prepare for the weekly sermons…

Gospel Based Discipleship is not a program. It is not Bible Study. It is an encounter with the Gospel, designed to engage people with the Gospel appointed for the day.

In the Disciple’s Prayer Book, it follows a simple format of the daily office services of morning prayer, noonday prayer, evening prayer, and at the close of the day.

Included in the order of the service, is a time to pause, read, listen, and reflect on the gospel reading, reading and listening to it 3 times, often using different translations…, and after each reading, responding to these questions…

 

After the first reading:

1.     What word(s), idea(s), or sentence(s) stand out for you in the Gospel of the Day?

 

After the 2nd reading:

2.     What is Jesus (the Gospel) saying to you?

 

After the 3rd reading:

  3. What is Jesus (the Gospel) calling you to do?

And what I would like to invite you to consider, as you engage in this reading of the gospels in this way…is that you think of other ways to help you listen more attentively and learn more about the way of Jesus, beyond just the conventional idea that might look like sitting by your yourself, reading the bible, or sitting around the table with a few others, and responding to the questions in conversation-style….

I was reminded this week, of the many ways that we all learn things…some are more hands on learners , some learn by watching, some learn best by reading, some may find listening to help them learn new things, some may need music on in the background, some may need long periods of silence….most of us, probably learn best with a combination of approaches…

As an example to try…after the 1st reading…take a colored pencil, highlighter, and circle, mark the words, ideas, or sentences that jump out at you…

After the 2nd reading…try responding to the question: what is Jesus (the gospel) saying to you…by looking at those words you initially marked, and highlighted…and write them out on another piece of paper…hang it up in front of you…and take some time to look at the words in front of you…giving you a new perspective on what you initially heard, and saw...and perhaps you draw some lines between the different words you put on that separate piece of paper…connecting things that seem similar…or maybe you draw a line between several words…that don’t seem to connect…

After the 3rd reading…and responding to the last question… What is Jesus (the Gospel) calling you to do?

Maybe you draw a picture of what you imagine Jesus is calling you to do…maybe you respond in a journal by writing a letter to Jesus…Maybe you have a list of 20 more questions that came out of your gospel reflection time after hearing it 3 different times, in 3 different translations…maybe your response is to sit in silence for a time…or maybe your answer at the moment…is to get up and bake a cake to bring to someone...or make a phone call to someone…write a letter to someone…pray for someone…

There is no right or wrong answer…it’s simply getting into the practice of engaging in the gospel readings, the scriptures, on a regular basis…placing Jesus in the center of our lives, helping us embrace and

ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which has been given to us in our Savior Jesus Christ.

Presiding Bishop Michael Curry wrote in a publication about being engaged in Gospel-Based Discipleship: Groups and individuals using GBD regularly should expect to begin to see their call to mission differently.

That’s my hope for us, here at St Peter’s…that as we strive to be engaged not only in this 2nd Mark of mission, but the other four marks of mission, as well,  that we will all be changed, and transformed in the process to see and hear anew, where God is calling us and leading us in the days, months, and years ahead…as the body of Christ, here at St Peter’s and in the community we are being called to love and serve…

 

Let us pray:

HYMN after sermon: (H) 628 – Help us, O Lord, to learn

Recording of Hymn 628

1        Help us, O Lord, to learn

                   the truths your word imparts:

          to study, that your laws may be

                   inscribed upon our hearts.

 

2        Help us, O Lord, to live

                   the faith which we proclaim,

          that all our thoughts and words and deeds

                   may glorify your Name.

 

3        Help us, O Lord, to teach

                   the beauty of your ways,

          that yearning souls may find the Christ

                   and live a life of praise.

 

All Saints’ Sunday/Fall Pledge season kick-off Sunday

November 6, 2022

Ephesians 1:11-23; Psalm 149; Luke 6:20-31

Sermon by The Rev Julie Platson

A CALL TO RENEWAL AND GROWTH IN DISCIPLESHIP THROUGH THE FIVE MARKS OF MISSION

All Saints’ Sunday – is one of my favorite days on the church calendar…

Why? Because here in the midst of all of us gathered in church today, we take time to recall not only the famous saints in church history, but to remember the cloud of witnesses all around us, the family and friends who have died and no longer physically sit in the pews beside us, or at the dinner table at home with us…but are very much alive to us now, in the ways they continue to inspire and encourage us today…

All Saints’ Sunday, for me – takes all the liturgical seasons of the church year, all the stories about God, all the stories about the life, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus, all the stories of our own baptisms, all the stories about our families and friends, all the stories of the losses, hurts, dreams and hopes that unite us as one humanity, and it invites us to pause and think about what it all means…for us, and for the lives of those around us now, and those who will come after us…

As we move closer to the end of this liturgical year, it invites us to pause and ask ourselves…What do I believe? Why do I continue to strive to follow in the footsteps of Jesus, and those who have impacted my life of faith…why do I continue to Hope in the One, Jesus Christ, who in the gospels, gives us alternative visions of what our world could be like, as we work and pray together, with all the saints, the living and the dead, for God’s kingdom to come, God’s reign of Love to come, here on earth, as in heaven…

It's a time to pause and think about this question: “Why is my hope/faith/love with Jesus Christ?”

That question refers to the 1st Mark of Mission, to Tell… as adapted in Bishop Mark’s call to the people of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska…to a time of renewal and growth in discipleship through the Five Marks of Mission…

Here at St Peter’s, we will be using this framework of the Five Marks of Mission throughout the next year, to help us discern, shape us, transform us, and guide us in all that we will do here at St Peter’s and in the community…

In this month of November, and in this Fall Pledge campaign season, we will do a brief overview and exploration of these Five Marks of Mission, and invite some personal stories and responses to each of the Five Marks of Mission…

It’s important to know, that these Five Marks of Mission, as adapted to capture Bishop Mark’s call to the people of this Diocese – aren’t just a list of five things to do once, and then check the box off that you, we’ve completed it. They are meant to keep us practicing and discerning throughout the entire year, and lifetime, as we seek to grow together as the people of God who live the faith and hope of Jesus in such a way that we become an invitation to a new life that is consistent with Jesus’ way of love.

So, today, we begin with the 1st Mark of Mission – to Tell…

This one invites us to pray and reflect on our individual relationship with Jesus, and to prepare a simple, from the heart response to this question: “Why is my hope/faith/love with Jesus Christ?” And we are invited to share our answer with others…This can be done in times of just having a casual, personal conversation with someone…

Your answer to this question may change and include a variety of reasons and responses to the question over time, as you become more attuned to recognizing Jesus’ presence in your life, and more comfortable in articulating why you believe what you do…

On this All Saints’ Sunday – I think we can all agree – that there have been (many) saints in our lives – everyday, ordinary saints that we call family and friends, who have influenced our faith, and can help us answer this question today - “Why is my hope/faith/love with Jesus Christ?” And it’s not because they were perfect or had never wavered in their faith that we call them saints, but because we can see where these everyday folk, like you and I, had dared to put all of their hope/faith love in Jesus Christ…and got up every day and went out into the world to strive to live out their beliefs in the best way they could…and with as much love that they could share with all of those they met along the way……

I’ve asked Kit (Kathryn) to share a personal story this morning, reflecting on that question, as she thought about one (of many) saints in her life who continues to influence her faith journey now…

*Kit share (at 8am) – see short version of Kit’s reflection below

  Kathryn & Julie share (at 10am) – check in Kathryn & Julie sometime about the “family saint” that they talked about today…

As you head out into your week…I invite you to simply reach out to someone this week – by phone call, out for a walk, visit over a meal…or begin by sitting with someone at the potluck after the 10am service today…and have a casual conversation, sharing stories with each other about the special saint in your lives who continues to inspire you and influence your faith journey and your life now…and share some heartfelt words that help you express why your Hope/faith/love is with Jesus Christ…

 

Let us pray:

HYMN after sermon: A Thousand Alleluias (A Cloud of Witnesses Around Us)

Music: Gary Rand. © 2015 Plural Guild Music Text: Brian Wren. © 1996 Hope Publishing Company

 Click here for Recording of the Hymn

A cloud of witnesses around us, a thousand echoes from the past,

proclaim the One who freed and found us, and leads us on, from first to last.

For such a gift, let all uplift a thousand alleluias.

A carnival of faiths and cultures parading through our settled praise,

with jangled rhythms, songs and dances, expresses Love’s expansive ways.

Christ is our song. To God belong a thousand alleluias.

 

A crowd, that clamors pain and anger, prevents us from nostalgic pride;

the cries of poverty and hunger recall us to our Savior’s side.

There we entrust, to God most just, a thousand alleluias.

 

A throng of future shapes and shadows, a world that may, or may not be,

names us the servants and the stewards of all the Spirit longs to see.

In awe we bend, and onward send a thousand alleluias.

 

A rainbow-host of wandering children, God’s varied image, from all lands,

awakes again our founding vision, that onward, urgently expands.

Give all, give more. Let love outpour a thousand alleluias.

 

*Kit’s story at the 8am service today - ‘Tell’ Mark of Mission

I first met Larry and Helen Steele at All Souls’ Episcopal Church in Okinawa in the fall of 1986. They looked as if they’d stepped out of a Norman Rockwell illustrator. They were both DODDS teachers at the Marine base high school; every summer, they returned to their small farm in Palmer to grow potatoes and other crops. As a teenager, Larry had health issues that left him with some mobility and balance issues, but that never stopped him from living an active life, from finding joy and beauty all around, and from always expressing gratitude in words, in worship and in action. He always had lollipops and small bills in his pockets in case someone in

need approached. Larry and Helen were the most generous people I’d ever met, giving freely of their time and their treasure, because they understood everything they had was a gift from God, given to them so they could share with others.

Larry and I were paired up on a stewardship team, and spent many hours exploring our beliefs on giving and living and being. I soaked up Larry’s experiences and teaching. In 1990, we were transferred to mainland Japan, and Larry and Helen retired from teaching, sold their Okinawan home and moved permanently back to Palmer. We lost touch until 2001, when I contacted them while on a trip to Anchorage; we caught up with each other over a long lunch. As we left the restaurant, Larry asked, ‘So what are you doing with stewardship these days? We’d like to help you re-charge those batteries.’ We met up a year later at the Episcopal Network for Stewardship conference in Washington DC, with Larry and Helen covering most of my expenses.

For the next 4 years, we stayed in touch – in person, by phone, by mail and email – and exchanged thoughts and prayers. In September 2006, I received a letter from Larry’s daughter, Daisy, telling me her father had passed away suddenly a few days before. It took a while, but I realized that Larry and Helen Steele were paying it forward when they gave me the gift of the ‘stewardship recharge,’ but their gift wasn’t just for me. They knew they were also giving a gift to the people of St. Peter’s, to the community of Sitka, to the Diocese of Alaska. That’s how they lived their lives.

Sermon for Oct 30 - Disrupting our lives with HOPE

21 Pentecost/Year C

Alternative lectionary: BE Campaign: Intersection of Religion & Politics – week 5 October 30, 2022

Isaiah 65:17-25; Psalm 126; Ephesians 2:13-22; Matthew 5:43-48

Today is the last Sunday of a 5-week series of alternative readings that we’ve been using as part of a national movement called the BE Campaign… It has been based on the teaching of the prophet Micah, who, in a time not unlike our own in 700 BCE, asked the question: “What does the Lord require of us, but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God?” For the month of October, we joined other Churches nationwide, in using this alternative lectionary to help us pause, focus, and reflect more intentionally on what it means to BE Just, to BE Kind, to BE Humble, in a time of so much division, uncertainty and anxiety in our world…

Last Sunday…we took a look at what it means to BE just, to BE kind, to BE humble, in the context of what it means to LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR…

All of them… The ones who don’t look like you, think like you, love like you, speak like you, pray like you, vote like you…the ones you agree with and the ones you don’t agree with...the ones you call friends, and the ones you call enemies…

We acknowledged that it’s surely a challenge to love some of our neighbors...to go beyond just understanding that we are called to love our neighbors to actually striving to take the next step forward to follow Jesus, to Love our neighbors, in a way of love that is built upon a foundation of justice, kindness and humbleness, a way of love that can transform the lives of every one of us…

The final theme for this sermon series is called The Intersection of Religion and Politics…and what comes to mind for me this week is the word “Disrupt”…

And I think of Jesus as being the greatest disrupter of all time…standing firmly in the intersection of all our conflicting ideas and thoughts and sorrows and hopes…always trying to help us see that there is another way to live with one another in this world beyond the hatred and fear of one another, beyond our misunderstandings of one another, beyond what floods our news feeds and mailings in this season of our mid-term elections. I think of Jesus as the great disrupter of helplessness, anger, grief, sorrow…a great disrupter of squashing our doubts that anything could ever change…that there will always be divisions, that there will always be neighbors we don’t like and don’t understand, that we will always live in a divided world that is always about us vs them.

Jesus stands firmly, compassionately and patiently among us very time we find ourselves at the crossroads and intersections of what we know and perceive now, and what we can only hope is possible… He stands among us to disrupt our old thoughts, our old ways, to encourage us to step out in faith and take the road that Jesus is showing us, to believe and dare to invite HOPE to disrupt our daily lives…showing us that indeed, a new way of life is possible, when we strive to walk in a way of love with God and one another…towards a new future and a new creation for all of God’s people…

IN today’s gospel reading, Jesus seeks to disrupt an old way of thinking:

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be children of your Father in heaven….

So that all of us, with Jesus as the cornerstone, as the foundation of what it means to BE just,  to BE Kind, to BE humble, can strive to walk in a way of love that contains the HOPE of all that disrupts what divides us and separates us from God and one another, the HOPE that transforms the lives of every one of us, and the HOPE that can inspire in us and equip us to work alongside of each other to build one new, common humanity, so that we will no longer be strangers and alien, and enemies to one another, but will all be members of the household of God…of a diverse, loving, family of God….

So, as we come to the end of this month and sermon series, I would like to commend a new spiritual practice for you to use in the month of November that will not only be a help to us now when we would rather be grumbling about the political climate…but it will help us get in the habit of disrupting our daily grumblings and doubts with Gratitude…It’s a 30 day United Thank Offering Gratitude Challenge with daily reflections and opportunities to disrupt our old patterns of thinking, to make way for the new…for all the new ways we will be called to a time of spiritual renewal and growth as the Body of Christ here at St Peter’s and in the wider community, in the days and months ahead…

To help us turn now with our hearts and minds towards this one day at a time challenge…let me close with this short children’s story by Cynthia Rylant (and illustrations by Nikki McClure) – All in a Day….

A day is a perfect piece of time to live a life, to plant a seed, to watch the sun go by.

A day starts early, work to do, beneath a brand-new sky.

A day bring hope and kindness, too…a day is all its own.

You can make a wish, and start again, you can find your way back home.

Every bird and every tree and every living thing loves the promise in a day, loves what it can bring.

There is faith in morning time, there is belief at noon. Evening will come whispering and shine a bright round moon.

A day can change just everything, given half a chance.

Rain could show up at your door and teach you how to dance.

The past is sailing off to sea, the future’s fast asleep.

A day is all you have to be, it’s all you get to keep.

Underneath that great big sky the earth is all a-spin.

This day will soon be over and it won’t come back again.

So, live it well, make it count, fill it up with you.

The day’s all yours, it’s waiting now…

See what you can do.

 

You’ve been given the gift of a new day.

I hope this day, and every day, and when you find yourselves at the crossroads and intersections of life, that you will welcome Jesus to disrupt your old thinking, and to inspire you to approach your day with a heart full of gratitude, and with a vision of hope, love, joy, and the peace of God, made known to us in Jesus, and by the power of the Holy Spirit.

The Lord has done great things for us, and we are glad indeed.

(psalm 126: 4)

 

Closing prayer/hymn: Give thanks with a Grateful Heart (Renew # 266)

GIVE THANKS HYMN

Give thanks with a grateful heart, give thanks to the Holy One, give thanks because he’s given us Jesus Christ, his Son.

And now, let the weak say I am strong, let the poor say I am rich, because of what the Lord has done for us…

Give thanks with a grateful heart, give thanks to the Holy One, give thanks because he’s given us Jesus Christ, his Son.

 

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

LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR - Oct 23

20 Pentecost/Year C

Alternative lectionary: BE Campaign: LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR – week 4

October 23, 2022

Ruth 1:1-8; Psalm 133; 1 Corinthians 13:1-8a; Luke 10:25-37

 

(As a reminder): For the month of October, we are joining other Episcopal and Methodist Churches nationwide, in using an alternative lectionary as part of the BE Campaign…TO BE JUST, TO BE KIND, and TO BE HUMBLE…It’s based on the teaching of the prophet Micah, who, in a time not unlike our own in 700 BCE, asked the question: “What does the Lord require of us, but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God?”

As we gather today on this fourth (out of five) week series, we are exploring how all of this comes together this week with what it might mean and look like to Love Your Neighborin a time of so much division, uncertainty and anxiety in our world…

I wonder if you noticed anything new about what it means to “LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR” in listening to today’s reading from Luke and reflecting back on the sermon themes from the past few weeks: To Be JUST, to BE KIND, to BE HUMBLE…

It is such a familiar parable… I think most of us believe we understand this story pretty well…and can see ourselves identifying with the different persons in the stories at different times in our lives…

The Episcopal Church teaches that we believe the scriptures are the living Word of God…so if we approach the reading and hearing of scriptures with open eyes, ears, hearts and minds, the spirit is always nudging us and asking us to consider what New Good news is being offered to us in the hearing of the scriptures today – in this time, and place in our lives…

What jumped out at you today in hearing this familiar parable of the Good Samaritan?

Something in pretty much every sentence jumped out at me today...but if I had to just offer up a few words…I would mention…love, God, heart, soul, strength, mind, neighbor, moved with pity, cared for, showed mercy…go and do likewise…

 

Let me read this scripture passage again from Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s Children of God storybook bible…This chapter of Luke is entitled The Good Neighbor:

Jesus said, “All you need to remember is to love God and your neighbor as much as you love yourself.”

But who is my neighbor? a teacher asked.

Jesus told a story to explain.

“One day, a Jewish man was robbed and wounded and left lying in the road. A little while later, a priest walked by, but pretended he didn’t see the injured man. Soon, another man came by. He worked at the temple, but he didn’t stop either. At last, a Samaritan came down the road. His people were enemies of the Jews. But the Samaritan stopped! He got off his donkey and walked beside him to the nearest inn. He put him to bed and took care of him.

Now, asked Jesus, “which of these people was a good neighbor?”

“The Samaritan,” replied the teacher.

“That’s right,” said Jesus. “You are all part of the same family – God’s family. God wants you to be like him, loving and kind to everyone – even your enemies.”

What questions are coming up this time for you after hearing it a second time? What do you think Jesus (the Gospel) is saying to you and asking you to consider?

What does it mean to Love God and your neighbor as much as you love yourself? Are you wondering, who is my neighbor? Are you wondering why someone who rob and wound a Jewish man, and leave him lying on the side of the road for dead? Are you wondering why the priest and other temple leader didn’t stop to help?  Are you wondering – how it is – that a Samaritan, whose people were known as enemies of the Jews, was the one who stopped to help and offer care for the injured man…are you wondering how you could be a good neighbor…especially to those who aren’t on your friends’ list, or in your usual circle of care and concern?

We’ve heard this parable of the “Good” Samaritan: the Good Neighbor, the Just Neighbor, the Kind Neighbor, the Humble Neighbor, numerous times over the years…and even those without any particular church affiliation, or in other faith traditions – are pretty familiar with this teaching story, too…

I think we understand what is written in the “law”… “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.”

I think we know who our neighbor is…there’s plenty of posters out there on facebook that remind us of that:

 And as Presiding Bishop Michael Curry has often included in his messages to the whole church:

I think we know and understand all of this…

That’s why we are here….to love God, and our neighbors...all of them…

Yet our challenge is always to figure out how to move beyond just knowing all the right words, saying all the right words, and claiming to understand the meaning of all Jesus’ parables and teachings…because as Paul reminds us in today’s reading from 1st Corinthians … If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. If I give away all my possessions, and if I hand over my body so that I may boast, but do not have love, I gain nothing.

LOVE, God’s love, made known to us in the life and teachings of Jesus…can make all the difference in the world…for us and our neighbors…

This way of love asks us to take the next step out in faith, with God and with one another, to Love our Neighbors, as Jesus has loved us and taught us, to Love our Neighbors, with our hearts and our hands and our feet…not by just sitting comfortably with all the right words and understanding of what the teachings are all about, and with those we already call friends - but to reach out with a loving heart and a helping hand across the divide, to invite others to help you and join you in reaching out and caring for others in your midst…and to cease with the judgment of who is worthy or not to be loved and cared for and treated with respect and dignity…

This is no easy task…to love our neighbors as Jesus has shown us…to love our neighbors, as we love ourselves…but when we strive to follow Jesus in this way of love…our acts of love built upon a foundation of justice, kindness and humbleness, can transform the lives of every one of us…

Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things…Love never ends…

God’s love never ends …for us and for all our neighbors

When you go home today…find another translation of today’s familiar gospel reading about the Good Samaritan……read it for the 3rd time, sit with it, pray with it…and ask yourself this question, to help you discern what’s next for you…

What is Jesus, (the Gospel) calling you to do in this time and in this place, as you are being sent out into the world to LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR?

 

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

 

Closing prayer/hymn: The Gift of Love (RENEW #155)

Words by Hal Hopso

"The Gift of Love" Recording by Saint Peter's Episcopal Church, Essex Fells, NJ

Though I may speak with bravest fire,

And have the gift to all inspire,

And have not love; my words are vain,

As sounding brass, and hopeless gain.

 

Though I may give all I possess,

And striving so my love profess,

But not be given by love within,

The profit soon turns strangely thin.

 

Come, Spirit come, our hearts control.

Our spirits long to be made whole.

Let inward love guide every deed.

By this we worship, and are freed.

 

 

 


BE HUMBLE....

19 Pentecost/Year C/October 16, 2022

Alternative lectionary: BE Campaign: BE HUMBLE – week 3

Genesis 33:1-12; Psalm 131 (GNT); Romans 12:3, 9-18; John 13: 3-17


(As a reminder): For the month of October, we are joining other Episcopal and Methodist Churches nationwide in using an alternative lectionary as part of the BE Campaign…To BE JUST, TO BE KIND, and TO BE HUMBLE…It’s based on the teaching of the prophet Micah, who, in a time not unlike our own in 700 BCE, asked the question: “What does the Lord require of us, but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God?”

Bishop Mark invited us to participate in this offering as a way to help us take a closer look at some scriptures that illuminate what it means to do justice, love kindness and walk humbly with God; and to open our eyes and ears and hearts and minds to more fully understand how these scriptures can shape, transform, and inspire our communities to look a bit more like the Kingdom of God…in a time of so much division, uncertainty and anxiety in our world…

This week’s focus calls upon us to BE HUMBLEto walk humbly with God…

And just as the last couple of week’s themes, to BE JUST, to BE KIND were BIG and BROAD terms to define and act upon as followers of Jesus in a time of so much division, uncertainty and anxiety in our world...this week’s theme also invites us to discern what it means, as a follower of Jesus, to BE HUMBLE, in a time such as this…

And when I use that phrase…in a time such as this…I’m especially calling to mind at the moment…this month of October, and these final weeks leading up to the mid-term elections in our nation…

I’m wondering, what it means to be humble, in an election season…

I’m really wondering aloud, what it could look like, to be humble, as the one offering themselves up as a candidate for election, or to be humble, as one of the campaign team members, or to be humble, as ones who will be engaged in conversations about our views and hopes for our favorite candidate to be elected in November…

I don’t think it would take much effort for any of us to imagine what an election season could look like…if the guiding principles were to be humble, to be just, to be kindand what it could like, if one made it a daily practice to strive to not think of oneself more highly than one ought to think, to let love be genuine, to bless those who persecute you, to rejoice with those who rejoice, to weep with those who weep, to hold fast to what is good, to outdo one another in showing honor, to not claim to be wiser than you are, to not repay anyone evil for evil, but to take thought for what is noble in the sight of all…

Yet, the challenge for us, is to not only imagine and believe that something different is possible, but to have the courage and the resilience to practice making small, simple intentions and changes in our daily lives that can move us from rationalizing and categorizing everything in our minds, to living out a way of love, that is centered around our humble trust in God…that is centered around the love of Jesus that inspires in us…a new way forward in this life…that calls us to walk humbly with God, and each other…every day…

A new life going forward, …that calls us to not only imagine a new way of life together that is not marked with daily acts of violence, hatred, and division, in our words and actions among God’s diverse family…but to do the very thing as Jesus has taught us and shown us in today’s gospel reading that can lead to deep healing and reconciliation between all God’s people...when we humble ourselves before God and one another…and as we seek and strive to love and serve one another…and respect the dignity of every human being…

In our gospel reading today, we listened to the familiar foot-washing story we hear every year during holy week…that captures the essence of what Jesus is teaching his disciples who say they want to follow him…to BE HUMBLE…

After Jesus had washed their feet, had put on his robe, and had returned to the table, he said to them, “Do you know what I have done to you? You call me Teacher and Lord—and you are right, for that is what I am. So, if I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet. For I have set you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you.  (John 13:12-15 NRSV)

Jesus said, I speak from my heart…The one who serves is not greater than the one who is served. A message bearer is not greater than the one who sent him. If you walk in this way of blessing, you will do well, and it will return to you - full circle. (John 13:16-18 First Nations Version)

(Micah 6:8) What does the Lord require of us, in this election season, and every season of our lives together - but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God?”

Let us pray this morning, for the healing river of the Spirit to move among us and guide us as we seek a new way forward together in this election season, in this season of our church life and community life, to walk humbly with God and one another…so that we can not only imagine and believe in a world without division, hatred and violence…but that each one of us, may be empowered by the love and power of God: The Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer, to go out into the world to make it so…

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


Closing prayer/hymn: Healing river of the Spirit


1        Healing river of the Spirit, bathe the wounds that living brings.

          Plunge our pain, our sin, our sadness deep beneath your sacred springs.

          Weary from the restless searching that has lured us from your side,

          we discover in your presence peace that world cannot provide.

 

2        Wellspring of the healing Spirit, stream that flows to bring release,

          as we gain our selves, our senses, may our lives reflect your peace.

          Grateful for the flood that heals us, may your church enact your grace.

          As we meet both friend and stranger, may we see our Savior’s face.

 

3        Living stream that heals the nations, make us channels of your pow’r.

          All the world is torn by conflict; wars are raging at this hour.

          Saving Spirit, move among us; guide our winding human course,

          till we find our way together,flowing homeward to our source.