Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Sermon: Prize

Image by Free-Photos from Pixabay

Pentecost 16, Year C
The Rev. Vicki K. Hesse,
Director of the Whitaker Institute,
Episcopal Diocese of Michigan
Sermon for September 8, 2019
Preached at St. Michael’s Episcopal Church
Grosse Pointe Woods, MI

Text here
May the words of my mouth
and the meditation of all our hearts
be acceptable to you,
O Lord, our strength and our redeemer. Amen

Good morning, St. Michaels!
What joy to be with you again.
My name is The Rev. Vicki Hesse
and I serve as the Director of the Whitaker Institute,
the educational arm of the Diocese. 
It is my honor to be with you today,
thank you for the invitation!
~~~~~~~~
This Gospel text today
does not seem like the kind of thing
that would pass for
an effective marketing message in today’s world. 

Come to the church!  Woohoo!
Hate your father and mother! 
Pick up your cross! 
This is the kind of thing
that could be trending on the TV show The List:
Ten Reasons Not To Be A Disciple of Jesus:
10. You have to hate your family.
9. You have to love your neighbor. 
[As the t-shirt says, “thy homeless neighbor, thy muslim neighbor, thy black neighbor, thy gay neighbor, thy immigrant neighbor, thy Jewish neighbor, thy Christian neighbor, thy atheist neighbor, thy addicted neighbor….”]
The smelly neighbor, the annoying neighbor,
…you get it.
8. You have to pray unceasingly, give thanks in all things, and with fear and trembling (Thanks, St. Paul).
7. You have to be last to be first
6. You have to be the servant of all the others.
5. You have to listen to understand rather than being understood.
4. You have to want to share your feelings, and that means talking to people you don’t know.
3. You have to give up all your possessions.
2. You have to carry a cross.
1. The number one reason not to be a disciple?
You have to sacrifice your life
and everything you love.
Who wants to sign up?  Because this is hard work!
Nope, this is not a marketing message
that would be the least bit attractive in our society.
Which is kind of the point, here. 
Jesus wanted to be clear
with the “large crowds” that were following him. 
He said:
Sit down, estimate the cost.
See if you have what it takes, he said,
to complete what you started. 
Sit down, consider this:
are able to oppose what stands between
you and abundant life? 
Are you ready to give up all your “possessions”?

My guess is that after Jesus described
what it would really take to be a disciple,
that large crowd traveling with him
might have dwindled, a bit. 
Jesus sharpened the paradox
between loving the world and loving God
almost to the point of contradiction.[1] 
Like usual, he provoked the crowd.
That they take stock. 
That they realize the depth of their feelings for this world.
That they let go of their
white-knuckle grip on the world as they knew it.
That they confront and expose to question
what they have always held dear:
family, friends, respect, winning. 

That they face the many little deaths as life dealt them.
And so he asked them, in not so many words,
do you know what you are getting into?”

I mean, do we know what we are getting into?

Think about your baptism. 
Did you know what you were getting into? 
Did you have some inkling
about what it meant to be a disciple of Jesus? 

So, a story:
I was baptized as an adult. 
My friend Lynn was getting baptized
for his 50th birthday.
Witnessing his baptism
at this little Episcopal church I had started attending,
the thought occurred to me,
why can’t I be baptized too? 

So at the next available baptism Sunday,  January 6th, 2000,
I was baptized. 
Did I know what I was getting into?
Nope.
No one showed me the caution tape
around the baptismal font.  
No one turned on the neon lights
about the cost of discipleship.  
No colleague parishioner cautioned me
about transformation.
All of that was glossed over by my own blindness… 
My eye was on the prize:
The love of God that surpasses all understanding.
The surprise of grace that drenched me with joy.
The liberation from shame driven by job loss.
The salve of healing from wounds of addiction.
The forgiveness for broken relationships.
The relief of pretense of living as a heterosexual person.
The life-giving realization that this new family,
this faith community,
would have my back forEVER.

But I didn’t really know what I was getting into.

Dietrich Bonheoffer[2],
in “The Cost of Discipleship,”
reminds us that,
“Through the call of Jesus,
[we] become individuals and
each [of us] must stand before Jesus
and fix our eyes on him. 
When Christ calls,
he delivers each person
from the immediacy of the world and
to the immediacy of Christ.   
This is no slow growth.
This is no progressive sanctification. 
From the call of Christ (our baptism)
There is no turning back.”

Do you know what you are getting into?

The crowds were following, and
Jesus turned.  Jesus “turned”
– in other words,
he changed his perspective
as a human
and took on God’s loving stance.
He taught them. 
Jesus turned and
showed the large crowds the caution tape.  
He flipped on the neon lights.
He cautioned about discipleship.   
You really want to follow me? 
Okay, here goes, he says. 
And he outlined the cost of discipleship
“that can demand leaving home and family
and all those whom the disciple naturally loves best.
Because Jesus himself had left the home which he loved.”[3]
And here, in this cautionary teaching,
he demanded then and he demands now
the “hating” of those people and possessions
(hate as “putting distance between”)
whom the disciple (we) loves most
– so as to love God in Jesus the most. 
For the prize.
He had his sights on the prize.  
“Jesus is inviting us to a full-bodied Christian faith
that stands over and against all those things
that are often presented to us as “life” by our society”[4]
as what makes for success: accumulation, reputation,
and security ”[5]

See, Jesus turned, and he showed them, loved them and
reminded them
over and over
about the caution tape
since the beginning of his ministry. 
And this is why Jesus mades his own sacrifice,
of course,
so that it need not be about our choices
or our willingness, even. 

Because Jesus assures us of God’s love and forgiveness. 
Because God’s promise of life is always in front of us.
And God’s unconditional love
frees us to be a disciple with grace. 
Because God’s love endures for ever. 
Because God’s love is stronger than death. 
Because nothing, “…neither death, nor life, nor angels,
nor rulers, …, nor powers, , nor anything else in all creation,
will be able to separate us
from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”[6]

…. And in turning, Jesus reminded them
and us
that in “becoming a disciple,”
you will know, and he promised,
God’s ever faithful love.
That love will set you free.
That love will lighten your load.
That love will cost you your “life.”

Remember, at our baptism
we renounce Satan, the spiritual forces of wickedness,
the evil powers of the world and sinful desires.

And we turn to Jesus Christ – as he turned to us –
and we accept him as our Savior,
putting our whole trust in his grace and love
and promising to follow and obey him.

So in our baptism, it is,
as Bonhoeffer wrote,
a “fait accompli with Christ and in Christ,”
that we live a Way of Love. 
And in this Way of Love,
we become a new family,
a new community,
a new people. 
So in this fellowship,
we live with the promise and guarantee
of the love of God for EVER. 

By the grace of God and the work of Jesus Christ,
we too live in a new fellowship.
With God’s help, we can give up all our possessions. 
With God’s help, we can make the sacrifice that is love.

For Love is one thing that only grows when it is given away. 

Turn today, my siblings in Jesus and accept that call.
You do know what you are getting into.

God knows what you are getting into.
And, it is a fait accompli that Jesus will use you.
Jesus will take your life, your love, your all. 

That’s the prize of discipleship.
Amen




[1] Alan Richardson, A Theological Word Book of the Bible, p.102
[2] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship, (New York, Simon and Schuster, 1937, First Touchstone Edition 1995) p. 94-101
[3] Ibid.
[4] David Lose, “Life-giving Sacrifice” cited here on September 6, 2019
[5] Ibid.
[6] Romans 8:38-39

Sermon: Pentecost Promises


Image by S. Hermann & F. Richter from Pixabay
Pentecost Sunday, Year C
The Rev. Vicki K. Hesse,
Director of the Whitaker Institute,
Episcopal Diocese of Michigan
St. James Episcopal Church, Dexter, MI
Sermon Preached on June 9, 2019

May the words of my mouth 
and the meditation of all our hearts
be acceptable to you, O Lord, 
our strength and our redeemer. Amen

Good morning, St. James! What joy to be with you again.
My name is The Rev. Vicki Hesse and I serve as
the Director of the Whitaker Institute,
the educational arm of the Diocese. 
As you may know, Mother Carol is on Sabbatical,
so it is my honor to be with you today on this special feast day,
Pentecost! 

At 8:15am – ask who knows what Pentecost means?
In the early church, “Pentecost” happened
when the Holy Spirit entered the community
after Jesus ascended to heaven.
Jesus promised to send “The Advocate” – the Holy Spirit –
to teach the gathered community and
to remind them of all that Jesus had done. 

Literally, Pentecost translates to “the fiftieth day.”
-         in both the Hebrew and Christian tradition. 
The day marks a Jewish feast seven weeks after Passover
and marks a Christian feast 50 days after Easter, when Jesus died, was resurrected and then ascended – that’s when
the Holy Spirit arrived (as we read infrom Acts).

At 8:15am – ask for us, what is the meaning of Pentecost? 
Pentecost, the arrival of the Holy Spirit,
annually points us to God’s power of Love.
We say we are “filled with the Holy Spirit” when we are:
inspired, creative, argumentative yet persuadable,
or when we are:
broken at the suffering in the world
or moved to pity at the sight of loss and grief.
The Holy Spirit works through the mystery of sitting in prayer and the power of inviting God’s unpredictable presence
to transform us as a community – like we did at the Bishop election last Saturday. (Who was there?)
…. That is Pentecost –the birth // day of the Church!

The reading in Acts today describes Peter’s Pentecost, that day
standing among the disciples,
in the midst of that rush of violent wind,
among all the devout people
hearing in their own languages
the testimony of God’s power. Can you imagine?
Bishop Gene Robinson[1] tells the story of a time when
"…A priest in a large church in Florida…
decided to dramatize the Holy Spirit coming like wind
in a spectacular way.
The priest got [an] engine out of
one of the boats used in the Everglades—
an airplane propeller attached to a big gasoline engine—
and mounted it in the choir loft high
in the back of the church.

{The idea was that} wind from the propeller
would blow out across the congregation
when the story of the coming of the Holy Spirit was read.
It seemed like a great idea.
The priest and an usher gave it a dry run
on Saturday afternoon, and although it was noisy,
it worked just fine, and promised
a spectacular effect for Sunday morning. 

So when the great moment arrived,
and the lector read,
"And suddenly from heaven there came a sound
like the rush of a violent wind and it filled the entire house,"
well, at that moment, the engine coughed once and
then howled into life. 

But the effect was a little different
than it had been at rehearsal. 
The sudden screaming gust of wind sent sheet music
and bulletins flying out over the congregation. 
Coiffures came undone and hair streamed out from faces. 
The preacher's sermon notes were gone with the wind…
Everything was messy, and noisy, and
absolutely unpredictable.”

P1 – they were bewildered and asked what does this mean
Peter’s first Pentecost must have been like that,
when the disciples heard a sound like the rush
of a violent wind, filling the entire house
 and all began to speak in the native language of each.

That Holy Spirit shook things up;
just like Jesus did in his testimony to the truth –
which, of course, got him in trouble. 
That Holy Spirit prompted the disciples
“…to make disturbing, disruptive,
and world-changing testimony
and call into question the values of the world.”[2]
That Holy Spirit bewildered those present,
arriving like a violent wind,
with tongues of flame and
voices speaking in many languages –
this was a totally new moment for everyone!
That Holy Spirit!
So of course, they were bewildered, perplexed,
And asked, “what does this mean?”

P2 – we are bewildered and ask what does this mean
“…And that's just the way it is with the Spirit. 

[The Spirit is] that part of God that
refuses to be contained in the little boxes we create
for God to live in,
safely confined to the careful boundaries
we set for God's Spirit. 

The problem is--and the possibility is—
God just won't stay put. 
And God won't let you and me stay put,
content to believe what we've always believed,
what we've always been taught,
what we've always assumed…”[3] 

See, in Greek, the word for Holy Spirit is “Paraclete,” which means one who “comes alongside another.”[4]
So it is, today, when *that Holy Spirit or Paraclete
comes alongside to strengthen us or
to rile us up for the work ahead or
to prompt or invigorate us into action.

*That Holy Spirit equips us
for the work of ministry
with a bewildering conviction.
*That Holy Spirit pushes us
beyond what we imagined and stirs things up.
*That Holy Spirit reminds us that
God’s way is different than the World’s way.

*That Holy Spirit comes alongside
our visceral anger at other’s incivility.
*That Holy Spirit activates our hearts
with compassionate grief
when someone innocent suffers for no reason.
So of course, we are bewildered, perplexed,
And ask, “what does this mean?”

P3. God surprised them with visions and dreams of what is possible
For those disciples, that day,
*the Holy Spirit promoted new visions and dreams
of what could be possible
when the Spirit moved in their hearts
and fueled them forward.
God surprised them with enormous possibility
through the Holy Spirit.

P4. God surprises us with visions and reams of what is possible
Nd, God surprises us, today, with possibilities too!
The Holy Spirit comes alongside us with newness:
new stories to tell,
new mercies to share,
new love to spread,
new anger to be fueled
new voice to get us out of our box. 

Are you bewildered by your life or this world? 
Great! Because this Pentecost,

God promises to surprise you and to mix things up! 

Perhaps the Holy Spirit might guide you to
·        Begin your meal by holding hands and
saying to the person on your right,
“You are the temple of God
and the Holy Spirit dwells within you.”
OR
·        Find someone who “speaks” another “language” –
(literally or metaphorically) and you take time
to listen with the ear of your heart,
even (or especially) when you disagree.
·        Invite family and friends to your special
to a Pentecost birth day party for the church!  
Standing in a circle you can share Holy Spirit bewilderments or blessings!
The younger people may want to share visions,
and the older people, dreams.
Then, raise your goblets and toast "To the Holy Spirit"!
This Pentecost, the good news is that
the Holy Spirit wants you to experience the power of Love
the possibility of Hope and the promise of Faith.
Happy Birth Day, Church!

Amen




[1] The Rt. Rev. V. Gene Robinson, In The Eye of the Storm: Swept To The Center By God (Seabury Books, 2008) 9-10
[2] David Lose, “Come Alongside” sermon notes sides here on June 7, 2019.
[3] Ibid. Robinson
[4] Ibid. Lose