Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts

Sunday, July 30, 2017

Sermon: God's One Thing



A Sermon preached in 
Christ Church, Grosse Pointe, Michigan
by The Reverend Vicki Hesse, Associate

The Eighth Sunday after Pentecost, 
RCL Proper 12, Year A
30 July 2017

Listen here.

May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts

be always acceptable to you O Lord, our strength and our redeemer.

In the 1991 movie City Slickers the cowboy Curly gives city slicker Mitch some life advice. They are riding horses along the prairie to move the herd from here to there.  In this scene, Curly says to Mitch, “Do you know what the secret of life is? [holds up one finger] This.” Mitch replies, “Your finger?” Curly scans the horizon, ignoring Mitch, and then explains, “One thing. Just one thing. You stick to that and the rest don't mean [nothin’].” (expletive deleted)

Mitch thinks for just a moment and replies, “But, what is the "one thing?" As they ramble along, the hot sun shines on Curly’s face and with a raised eyebrow, Curly replies, “That's what you have to find out.” For Mitch, whose was about to turn 40 his One Thing was buried deep in his heart.  His work was to sort out his One Thing in the midst of complicated life.

Of all the “things” for which Solomon could have asked (in today’s first reading), when God showed up… of all the riches, or long life, or victory over his enemies, the One Thing Solomon wanted was an understanding mind. Solomon’s motivation to understand, however, was not as simple as this appears. This little bit of text from our lectionary compilers does not tell the whole story.

See, Solomon was a complicated character and scripture more complicated than it appears. The text prior to today’s reading offers background.  The first verses describe Solomon as having married the daughter of Pharaoh. What does that imply? Well, one commentator explained, that, “political exigencies are one thing, but it is hard to justify kinship ties with Egypt the great oppressor of Israel.”[1] Further, this marriage violated the Israelite covenant to “not have relations with foreign people.” Subsequent verses describe Solomon as faithful and devoted, loving the Lord and walking in the statutes of his father David,[2] but worshipping by sacrificing and offering incense at high places.[3] Those “high places” were almost always strongly condemned when mentioned in the OT. 

Yes, Solomon was a complicated character. And, the original Hebrew of this conversation between Solomon and God unveils the complications, too. 

First, do you see (in that first line?) how The Lord appeared to Solomon, and God said?  Two names being used. Here, The Lord and God. See, the English use of The Lord is usually from the Hebrew Yahweh, from the four letters YHWH. Yahweh is the only proper name for God in Hebrew, arising from the pronunciation of YH-WH, the sound of breathing. (yah…breathing in, weh…breathing out. That’s a great spiritual practice on which to meditate - another sermon for another time). This name means something like, “immediacy, a presence,” or “God is with us.”[4]

The English use of God, in this case, is from the Hebrew Elohim, the subject of the Bible’s first sentence, the Creator God. Elohim means God in the highest and widest sense, with the fullness of divine power and expansiveness of the heavenly host. This name means God beyond our imagination BIG.

Now, see how Solomon addresses God, “O Lord my God”? That double name emphasizes the majesty of Elohim found in the immediacy of Yahweh. That double name is commonly known in the Shema, “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, The Lord is One” and emphasizes the paradoxical intimacy and immensity of the Divine.

So, when Solomon addresses God with his desire, he says something like: You, who are so close to me as my breath and so pervasive and expansive I can’t comprehend, You are the only one to whom I can ask, from my depth, for an understanding mind. 

But wait! There’s more!  For Solomon asks for understanding with the Hebrew word “shama,” meaning discerning: to hear, to listen to, to obey.  And Solomon asks for a mind with the Hebrew word “leb” meaning the heart: the feelings, the will and the intellect.

Our complicated Solomon is asking from this paradoxical God for a listening heart.

It’s complicated and it’s simple. Can you relate?  People are always a mix of complex motives and it is dangerous to romanticize anyone.  All lives have back stories, and all language used to describe them is insufficient because our feelings cloud the seemingly simple view of our lives.

Maybe our grief surrounding the death of our best friend is fraught with the time we were angry at her for something that we never got to resolve while she was alive. 
Maybe our trust in a friend is frayed because he did not reply to our call for help when we really needed him. 
Maybe our compassion for the woman begging for food is deepened because she looks like our sister who suffers with mental illness.

We, too, are complicated characters with mixed motives. What is our One Thing? Aren’t we, too, asking, from that same paradoxical God for a listening heart? It’s complicated and it’s simple. We wonder with listening hearts: Why am I struggling financially? Why did my friend get cancer?  Why did that transgender teenager take their own life? Why is that person so snarky at me because of the color of my skin or because of the gender of my lover? That One Thing for each of us, is different. 

So on that day, to Solomon, who had prayed and walked in the statutes of his father David throughout his complicated, young adult life … to Solomon God appeared. God appeared. Who was this God? This was the God who came to Solomon despite his complicated failures and frailties.  This was the God who wanted to listen with God’s heart to him.

Last week I heard about the nearly-completed development of Nasa’s most powerful telescope ever.  The James Webb Space Telescope, (to be launched in October of 2018)will study, with infrared and other new technologies, every phase in the history of our Universe, ranging from the first luminous glows after the Big Bang to the evolution of our own Solar System. This telescope is so powerful that it will be able to look at stars before they were born.  Before they were born!  That means exploring the whole of creation and the dynamic processes of stardust.

In November last year, NASA invited creative artists from around the country to visit the telescope, with its gold-coated mirror. Twenty-five selected artists brought art supplies to listen with the ear of their heart and create in front of the telescope, housed inside its massive cleanroom behind a viewing window. The artists used watercolor, 3D printed sculpture, silk screening, acrylics, comics, woodwork, metalwork, fiber art, ink, kite-making, tattooing and other media.

Their One Thing? To create in front of the observation of creation.  To listen with their heart. To consider with awe, up close, the expansiveness of our universe.

See, this desire to understand, this desire to be known, is not only what we, humanity, seek, it is also the desire of the God who seeks us, the God who appears to us every moment. This is the God who initiates contact with us, despite our complicated lives and frailties. This is the God who makes the first move and keeps yearning to know us, to discern our hearts.This is the God of Love who meets us with a powerful, mysterious yearning and an intimacy so near as the breath passing over our lips.

This is the God whose “one thing” is to Love and be loved.                                            Amen


[1] Brent Strawn commentary on 1 Kings found here.
[2] Verse 3a
[3] Verse 3b
[4] Names of God research found here on July 25, 2017

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Sermon: Rev. Alexander Crummell



 Image result for alexander crummell  image
Sermon for Sept. 10, 2015 ~ 11: 00 Rite I
Rev. Alexander Crummell
19th Cty Priest, Scholar, Author, Abolitionist
The Rev. Vicki K. Hesse
St. Philip’s In The Hills Parish, Tucson, AZ
For online access to the readings click here
I speak to you in the name of One God:
Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Amen

Today is the Feast Day of
Rev. Alexander Crummell,
who died this day in 1989.
What do you know about him?

Biographical information includes:

·        Born in NY City, 1819, struggled a/x racism all his life.
·        Driven out of school in NH, Dismissed as candidate for Holy Orders. Rejected by General Seminary, but ordained in Dio Mass.
·        Outspoken advocate for abolition of slavery
·        Moved to England 1848, 1st black student to graduate from Cambridge.
·        Went to Liberia, Africa, as Epis.missionary, and professor of Philosophy and English 1853
o   hoping to establish a strong urban presence of independent black congregations
o   Worship, education, social service
·        Lack of funding, returned in 1873
·        Appointed “missionary at large of the colored people” in Wa DC and established St. Luke’s in 1875, serving as rector for 20 years.
·        In 1882, when Southern bishops wanted
to establish separate missionary districts
in each diocese for black congregations,
he organized The Conference of Church Workers Among the Colored People
to fight the proposal,
eventually became UBE.
·        Unionof Black Episcopalians (see handout from Sunday’s service, tell about Vigil on October 31 for PB Michael Curry.)

What gifts do you recognize in Rev. Crummell?
·        Perseverance despite discouragement
·        Strong faith in God
·        Perception that the Church transcended racism and limitations of it’s leaders
·        Unfailing belief in the goodness and greatness of black people

So it is not surprising
that these texts were chosen
to commemorate Alexander Crummell:

Sirach, with it’s repetitive
You who fear the Lord, wait for his mercy
You who fear the Lord, trust in him
You who fear the Lord, hope for good things



Or Psalm 19
7 The law of the Lord is perfect
and revives the soul; *
the testimony of the Lord is sure
and gives wisdom to the innocent.
8 The statutes of the Lord are just
and rejoice the heart; *
the commandment of the Lord is clear
and gives light to the eyes.

And finally, the Gospel according to Mark:
The parable of the sower invites us to reflect on the complexities of faith, as illustrated by the parable of the sower.

In the parable, for example, Jesus says
the seeds passively “fell” –
·        on the path,
·        on the rocky ground,
·        among the thorns. 
·        But the seeds that “fell” on the good soil
brought forth great yields.
Yet when he explains it to his disciples,
he changes the verb to “sown” –
the active verb is “sown”
·        on the path (Satan takes it away)
·        on the rocky ground (receive with joy but fall away at any trouble)
·        among the thorns (cares of the world get in the way)
·        But the seeds that are “sown” on the good soil (hear the word and accept it) bear great yields.

This reflects the complex realities of our faith.
What makes our faith endure
during prosperity as well as hardship? 
The parable invites us to consider the soil
as a metaphor for discipleship.
True discipleship
does not offer easy, comfortable solutions,
as Alexander Crummell demonstrated.

And, I can bet that there have been times
in your lives
that your discipleship has not been easy,
but it has offered you rich soil out
of which you have yielded great yield. 
Can you think of any stories in your life?

How about facing the embarrassment
of giving to the poor when friends remark,
“they will just drink that money away.”
Or suffering a great loss,
only after which we are able to see
the grace, reconciliation and love
that was received in the midst of it.
Or having just the right prayer
that allowed us to persevere
through a difficult season.
Or believing that even when everything
seems to be crashing down around you,
there is this little glimmer of hope
that “this is not all there is,
there is more hope than despair here!”

In this call to discipleship,
Jesus says that the word of the gospel
is not too weak for the job:
Loss has been part of the discipleship process from the beginning of time. 

Despite the vigorous opposition to the word
– the path, the rocky ground, the thorns –
even for Jesus,
despite the dramatic evidence
of his relationship to the divine,
even he was not able to sustain
an enduring faith from all who heard him.

But to those who cultivate discipleship of
rich, fertile soil –
with spiritual practices like
perseverance, hope, and love
To those who cultivate rich soil of discipleship,
        God’s abundant love will yield
thirty, sixty, hundredfold.

Amen