Sunday, November 25, 2012

God strengthens our hearts and raises our heads to live in freedom – Advent 1 (Yr C), Luke 21:25-28, 34-36.

Homily for preaching class on this year's Advent I readings.


What do you want for Christmas?  I want a puppy, but I know that’s not going to happen.  Realistically, I’ll be glad to get some good books, a trip to visit family, and a decent bottle of scotch from the duty free on the way back.  And I’m sure all of us have some simple things we want to get, but maybe we could each think of something we’d want to be rid of too.  For some of us… some just want to be sober for Christmas, to get through the holidays without smoking or to be free of another addiction.  Some of us want to be free of guilt when they take an extra Christmas cookie or of shame when they even contemplate seeing their body in a mirror.  Some of us want to be free of crippling social anxiety, or of a temper that erupts at the worst moments.  For others of us, what we want to be free from might be much subtler: a laziness that thwarts our best intentions, an envy that prevents us from being truly happy for someone else, a need to always be right, clumsiness.  Whatever it is, we want to be free. 

Saturday, November 10, 2012

God shakes our world – Matt 28:1-10

To complete my series on the Seven Sorrows of Mary, I closed with the resurrection.


After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to see the tomb.  And, behold, there was a great earthquake, for an angel of the Lord had come down from heaven.  The angel came and rolled away the stone, and then he sat upon it.  His countenance was like lightning and his clothing white as snow.  The guards quaked with fear and became like corpses.

The angel spoke to the women:  “Do not be afraid, for I know that you are seeking Jesus who was crucified.  He is not here, for he was raised just as he said.  Come, see the place where he laid.  And now, go, tell his disciples that he has been raised from the dead, and he is going before you to Galilee; there you will see him.  See, I have told you.”

Immediately, they went away from the tomb with fear and great joy.  They ran to tell his disciples.  Jesus appeared right to them, met them and said:  “Rejoice!”  They went up to him and grasped him by the feet and bowed down in homage to him.  Then, Jesus said to them: “Do not be afraid.  “Go, tell my brothers to go away to Galilee, and there they will see me.”

~~

Back when I still lived in California, there was a Bible study I’d go to in the rectory of nearby church.  One day, we were discussing some passage and as I was explaining how some aspect of it struck me, suddenly everything jolted.  My first, unthinking instinctive reaction was: “someone’s done an emergency stop.”  Then, I remembered we weren’t in a car… we were in the rectory, and rectories don’t do emergency stops.  It was an earthquake.  Not one that caused any real damage, but enough to jolt us, to spill people’s drinks, to make me joke that God maybe didn’t like that interpretation I’d just offered.  Enough to remind me that the earth we instinctively think of as solid and ultimately dependable is neither of those things.

Friday, November 9, 2012

God blesses us and bequeaths us as blessers – 1 Pet 3:8-9

1 Pet 3:8-9; Moreau Lucenarium.


Imagine you missed out on a great night out last night.  All your friends had an amazing banquet and raised their cups several times in toasts.  But, you knew there’d be toasts to the gods so you didn’t go.  Since becoming a Christian, your social life has really suffered.  And it’s not just that, or that your old friends think you’ve gone crazy for thinking that a crucified Jew could have come back for the dead, they think you’re selfish and mean-spirited because you won’t offer meat to be sacrificed to the local deity.  At times even you wonder if this year’s harvest will be that much worse because of you. Every time you go to the market (which you’re not really sure you should be at anyway, because of all the idols on display), people look at you funny, you’re sure whispering behind your back is about you and occasionally an insult does reach your ears.  And the Christians who welcomed you?  They don’t live like the teacher said they would: they bicker, they’re proud.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

God acts extravagantly, but in secret

That last of the seven sorrows of Mary: laying Jesus' body in the tomb.


Nicodemus, who had first come to Jesus by night, came carrying a mixture of myrrh and aloes weighing about 100 pounds.
Then, they took the body of Jesus and bound it with linen and with the spices.
This is the burial custom of the Jews.
There was in the place where he was buried a garden
and in the garden a new tomb, in which no-one had been placed.
There then, because it was the day of preparation of the Jews, and because the tomb was near,
they placed Jesus.



~~


He had come at night to see the Light of the World.  Nicodemus wanted to keep his interest in Jesus secret, so he went to see him at night to ask his questions about how to enter the kingdom of God.  Now the secret is out: a respected member of the Sanhedrin, Nicodemus can’t have been a young man and must have struggled to carry 100 pounds of ointment up a hill.  The sight must have seemed almost comic, almost pathetic as he tottered along struggling with this heavy load.  He certainly can’t have been moving quickly, covertly or even inconspicuously.  Everyone would now know that he was off to do something extravagant.