<meta content="OpenOffice.org 3.1 (Win32)" name="GENERATOR" /><style type="text/css"> <!-- @page { margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } --> </style></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Room for the Spirit</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">by Pastor Gary</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Some of you will already know that I am a disabled Army veteran. Others will know that I was a top manager with a Manhattan multimedia firm. I am a man of action, I like to get things organized and done. In fact, I can be so task oriented, so set on checking off every single box on my task list, that I can bulldoze others. I like to call it being directive, though others have called it being bossy.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Of course, this isn’t how the Kingdom of God works. With congregational polity we have the outward appearance of a democracy, debating and voting with the majority getting its way. But that is just the outward appearance. In reality, we engage in the spiritual practice of discernment. Much like democracy, this involves discussion and sometimes even a vote. But we believe the Holy Spirit, that Christ himself, is present when we prayerfully meet, when we prayerfully decide.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">This is why ministers are advised to do nothing when they first arrive at a new congregation. We need to get to know our new congregants, to carve out space for the Spirit, to discern the way forward. Of course, this doesn’t mean we should do literally nothing… there are worship services to lead, visitations to make… but we are encouraged to make no major changes, to implement no major programs.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">By and large, I have not followed this very good advice since I arrived at Colonial Park. There were many programs that demanded immediate support, there was enthusiasm and energy from the E-vent. And there was a youth program in transition.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">So I started working, organizing, listening to volunteers, colleagues, congregants. And I started doing, making, organizing. And then came the Youth Stakeholders’ Meeting.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Like all of my best work, I can take no credit for the magic that happened. Somehow I was lead by the Spirit to establish ground rules, and one of these ground rules was that we would listen and discern, but fix nothing, do no problem solving. Imagine a room full of active congregants discussing a problem and not trying to fix it! Yet, because we didn’t rush in, didn’t turn it into empty slots and funding requests, didn’t bureaucratize the problem, we were able to have a meaningful conversation, to hear one another, to lay the foundation for future planning, for the discernment that will follow.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Of course, some problems need immediate attention. And we are a passionate people. But we must also welcome the Spirit into our discernment. This is my challenge to you: During the coming months, force yourself to carve out time for the Spirit. Fix what must be fixed, but only what must be fixed. Where you can, practice discernment. At the committee level, discuss a concern one month, make decisions the following month. Breathe. The church has lasted almost two thousand years… if we slow down, pray, discern, we certainly won’t kill it. If I can turn off the bulldozer, so can you.</p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/20/february-newsletter-article/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/20/february-newsletter-article/" dc:title="February Newsletter Article" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/20/february-newsletter-article/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/20/february-newsletter-article/#respond" title="Comment on February Newsletter Article">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>19 Jan 2010 01:54 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/ordination-on-the-horizon/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: Ordination on the Horizon">Ordination on the Horizon</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p>For the last several months I have been serving as a licensed minister, a status that in this case means I am already serving a congregation but I have not yet been ordained. The actual service of ordination is scheduled for February 7th, 2:00PM at First Church in Cambridge, Congregational. The sermon will be by the Rev. Dr. Stephanie Paulsell with an ice cream social reception to follow. Clergy are invited to robe and process. Red is the color of the day.</p> <p>Blessings<br /> Gary </p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/ordination-on-the-horizon/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/ordination-on-the-horizon/" dc:title="Ordination on the Horizon" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/ordination-on-the-horizon/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/ordination-on-the-horizon/#respond" title="Comment on Ordination on the Horizon">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>19 Jan 2010 01:45 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/semi-hemi-demi-pelagianism/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: Semi-hemi-demi-Pelagianism">Semi-hemi-demi-Pelagianism</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p><meta content="text/html; charset=utf-8" http-equiv="CONTENT-TYPE" /><title /><meta content="OpenOffice.org 3.1 (Win32)" name="GENERATOR" /><style type="text/css"> <!-- @page { margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } --></style>January 3, 2010<br /> Colonial Park United Church of Christ<br /> Harrisburg, PA</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Okay, I have tattoos and earrings. And one of my two undergraduate majors was art, I’m a painter. So I guess this makes me a pretty funky guy. But even by my standards English comedian Eddie Izzard is strange. Yet I find him to be very funny. I especially enjoy his description of the Italians. Izzard, in one of his stand-up routines, takes on that brief ugly moment in Italian history, the rise of Mussolini and the Fascists. He wonders about this anomaly, claiming that his experience of Italians is not really like that. As Izzard describes the Italians, they are all on scooters, no helmet, hair flowing, all cool, suave… ciao, bella!! He says it’s true, it’s just like the film “Roman Holiday.” Sadly, most of you will not have seen that film… Gregory Peck at his most dashing… Audrey Hepburn embodying elegance and charm…</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Izzard’s description matches my own experience of Northern Italy. I’ve been from the Aeolian Islands off the coast of Sicily to Milan and Venice, I love Italy! But it is Tuscany that captures me. The region is a singular example of God’s amazing creativity, it is the region that gave birth to the Renaissance, and with good reason. From the towers of San Gimignano to the ancient fresco spotted down an alley way, the region is beautiful. And the land, the lush land, the canvas of sky. But there’s more! The people of Tuscany, the people of Florence, are beautiful too. From the lowest street-sweeper to the most elegant grand dame, when they walk out the doors of their homes, they look marvelous. The woman comes out to wash the windows on her shop… “Look at me. I’m beautiful!” Even the smallest child, running out the door with the ball… “Look at me. I kick the football. I’m beautiful!” It’s true… from Audrey Hepburn on a “Roman Holiday” to the runways of Milan to the average Florentine, there is a certain grace about Italy, despite the moments of collective insanity like Fascism, like Savanarola and the Bonfire of the Vanities.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">This is one sort of grace, it is a beauty, a coming together of things in a way that seems effortless. It is not completely unlike the grace we refer to in the church, though the seemingly effortless coming together in the case of Christian grace is the result of divine action, is the result of effort, just not ours…</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Today’s scripture readings are filled with grace. Grace upon grace, God’s glorious grace, grace and truth… what does this mean? What is this term we sprinkle liberally about? Can our youth, after years in the church, provide a definition of the term? And is it important? Is there room for God’s grace when you are at the parent-teacher conference? On the phone, on hold, arguing with a customer service representative, not feeling particularly served as a customer, your temper about to break through? What of this grace we claim?</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">In its simplest form, we can define grace, at least the grace we refer to in Christianity, as God’s move towards us, as the Creator’s embrace of the created. And we can expand that definition to include the gifts that come with God’s attention. God attends to us, loves us, and provides the gifts necessary for us to live life in full, for this is what Jesus offers, life in full now, and life that never ends. To be graceful is to exhibit the signs of being loved by the divine, being the recipient of divine love.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">But the subject of grace has been the cause of countless theological battles since the beginning of the church. You see, the living dynamic God of the Hebrew scriptures, the God of Abraham and of Moses, the God of Jesus, was a relational God, was a God that allowed for human free-will. Even though the new covenant shifts the emphasis from works of the Law to faith, it was still your choice to believe. God invites, we respond. Jesus tells the rich young man to give it all up and follow… it is the rich young man who declines, who turns away.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">But then Christianity met Hellenism, met neoplatonism. The neoplatonists reduced their philosophical definition of God to near abstraction. This is where you get what I like to call the “omnis.” God is omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent… God is timeless… these are logical ideas, and they may well be true on some level beyond the realm of human knowing, but they reduced God to this giant neoplatonic monolith… an unresponsive ideal with which we could have no real relation. And then early Christian theologians tried to blend this neoplatonic concept of God with the God of Judaism and Christianity and draw conclusions from this train wreck, from this monstrosity. The disputed theology of grace is one result.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">The first big fight, and the one that gives this sermon its title, was the battle between Pelagius and Augustine. Pelagius argued in favor of free-will, arguing that God calls us to redemption, but it is our choice whether to answer that call. For Pelagius the redemptive act started with the human acting freely. Augustine argued that evil was so powerful that God had to force us into salvation, the first articulation of what would come to be called irresistible grace. Pelagius accused Augustine, who had converted to Christianity from Manicheanism, of bringing that religion’s personified evil with him. In turn, Augustine accused Pelagius of heresy, and won. Augustine always won, though I am not certain that has been such a good thing. The term Pelagian came to mean a theology in which salvation was achieved by human will, by human action, even though this was arguably never Pelagius’ position. Semi-Pelagianism was an attempt at a middle ground… the human moved towards God, and God, in love and mercy, responded, providing salvation. This was also denounced, rejected as heresy…</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">The battle would be fought again and again, most notably during the reformation. At one extreme, we had certain reformation Christians who believed that God, the God of all those “omnis,” must already know who will be saved and who will be damned, because God exists outside of time. I’d love to see a theology where Calvinism meets Quantum Physics! But according to this reformation theology, God must have predestined some humans for salvation and some for damnation. This was a God that would create a human predestined to suffer, to fail, to be damned. And this God created some humans who were predestined for salvation, they were the elect. Our own UCC heritage contains a goodly amount of this thinking, the Puritans and Pilgrims for example had a strong theology of the elect. It lead to a sense of superiority among Christians, they became the new self-righteous, the new Pharisees. If neoplatonic ideas held, then predestination, of the single or double variety, held true, and if predestination held true, then grace was irresistible. When it comes to predestination, you can have your double, with sprinkles on top… I’ll stick to the pie.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Of course, there were dissenters from this theology of irresistible grace. The Universalists, still a Christian movement at the time, rejected any notion of an elect, choosing instead to believe that salvation was open to all, was universally available, that God called all humans. The Methodists, under John Wesley, adopted a notion of free grace. It was not human effort that effected salvation, no, no no!, it was God who moved towards us, but it was up to us to respond, we could reject God’s call. This was not the semi-Pelagianism of John Cassian, is was not Augustinian orthodoxy, it was a new thing altogether… God moved, but we still had a choice, still had free will.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">And though I was raised as a good reformation Christian, not like those heretics over at the Methodist church, I must admit that I prefer the Wesleyan theology. I could not worship a God that would create beings, would grant them sentience and feelings, only to condemn them to suffering and damnation. And like the Universalists of old, I have to believe that God, if God is loving, invites all to fullness of life, that the salvation Jesus promises, that Paul preaches to Jew and Gentile, really is available to all, not just to some smug-elect sitting in their fortresses of holiness.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">What does this make me? Maybe I’m not a semi-Pelagianist. Maybe I’m a semi-hemi-demi-Pelagianist. In any case, it makes me a heretic, for some of the definitions of our relationship to God and to Christ that made sense to others centuries ago make no sense to me now. I prefer a living God, a relational God… and as much as I love the church, as much as I love the saints who have gone before, I am willing to see the church change. It is time to throw off the shackles and to be a dynamic living church!</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">What does this mean for you and me today? Think about those churches of old, self-righteous, aloof. Do we ever fall into those patterns? Do we ever take that neoplatonic easy way out, do we ever claim that “it is just God’s will, some folks are always going to be poor…” or “some people are just bad…”</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">God is calling. God is moving towards us, offering salvation, offering life in full to every single human. How could a God who loved, a God who created such amazing beauty, who created this miracle day and every miracle tomorrow, how could this God will anything other than fullness and salvation? It is up to the human to respond, it is up to us to respond. But when we do, the Holy Spirit is with us.</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">We are instruments in the hand of God. We are the body of Christ in the world. There are tens of thousands of people in this city alone who do not know Christ. People who are being sucked into corruptions of Christianity, feel good churches with easy answers. We are called to be witnesses to the hard and joyous and miraculous and frightening path of Christ. We are called to make disciples of all nations. That’s a lot easier than making disciples out of our neighbors, isn’t it?</p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in"> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">God is calling, is moving towards you. That is grace, that is miracle, that is love. And that grace is with you when you do, truly do, the work of Christ. It will seem effortless, beautiful. You will be Audrey Hepburn, you will be Northern Italian… Ciao, bella! It is beautiful. You are beautiful! We are beautiful! Grace upon grace! Amen.</p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/semi-hemi-demi-pelagianism/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/semi-hemi-demi-pelagianism/" dc:title="Semi-hemi-demi-Pelagianism" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/semi-hemi-demi-pelagianism/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/19/semi-hemi-demi-pelagianism/#respond" title="Comment on Semi-hemi-demi-Pelagianism">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>17 Nov 2009 07:57 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/11/17/the-widows-mite/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: The Widow’s Mite">The Widow’s Mite</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p>Castles of Stuff, Mountains of Things<br /> Sermon by Pastor Gary Brinn<br /> Colonial Park United Church of Christ<br /> November 15th, 2009</p> <p>Sermon Text: Luke 20:45 - 21:6</p> <p>In the hearing of many people Jesus said to the disciples, “Beware of the scribes, who like to walk around in long robes, and love to be greeted with respect in the marketplaces, and to have the best seats in the synagogues and places of honor at banquets. They devour widows’ houses and for the sake of appearance say long prayers. They will receive the greater condemnation.”<br /> He looked up and saw rich people putting their gifts into the treasury; he also saw a poor widow put in two small copper coins. He said, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all of these rich; for they have contributed out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty has put in all she had to live on.”<br /> When some people were speaking about the temple, how it was adorned with beautiful stones and gifts dedicated to God, he said, “As for these things that you see, the days will come when not one stone will be left upon another; all will be thrown down.”</p> <p>Sermon</p> <p>We know the numbers. Less Americans are going to church than ever, less identify as Christians, and the children we do manage to raise in our congregations stop going to church the moment they leave the nest.<br /> If we ask the “un-churched” what Christianity means, we might get a glimpse into the cause of our decline. Non-Christians will tell you that our faith is made up of obsessed busy-bodies with lots of rules, that the greatest purpose of this religion is to stamp out homosexuality. Other non-Christians might mention the televangelists, with their prosperity theology. This is the God who will make you rich just as soon as you give it all away, checks payable to Pastor Osteen please…<br /> This is not to say that all Christians behave in this way. In fact, we can point to many Christians who do real good in the world, who have chosen the prophetic tradition… who feed and heal and visit and clothe and who proclaim the right and real Kingdom of God, women and men who have rejected the priestly trajectory and have chosen to follow Christ. But even in our best churches, even at our best, this is difficult and rare.<br /> Christianity as commonly perceived and as commonly lived has mostly ignored the teachings of Jesus. For example, how much energy is spent arguing about sex? Yet Jesus rarely speaks on the subject, and when he does all he says is “the person you are sleeping with is not the person to whom you are married. Go and sin no more.”<br /> What Jesus does speak about, again and again, obsessively, we’d rather ignore. Jesus spends his entire ministry denouncing legalism, self-righteousness and greed. Sure, Satan shows up in the gospels… sure, the end time, the eschaton, takes up some text. But again and again it is everyday human conduct that Jesus condemns.<br /> Legalism… the Scribes and the Pharisees and the minutia of hundreds of laws, many of which needed to be re-interpreted for changing times. Boy did they ever have a policies and procedures manual, it even made ours look puny! And enforcement and interpretation of those rules not only took up a ton of energy, it also preserved the power of the elite, it was a subtle system of control, as are all bureaucratic rule books. It was a system which ensured the legalistic were profitably employed. Legalism and obsessive attention to rule and procedure remains one of the greatest threats to a living faith, remains a threat to this faith.<br /> Then there was Jesus’ attack on self-righteousness. We see a bit of that in today’s gospel. The idea that we are better than others, that we can judge others. And hey, I’m guilty of it too… I haven’t had particularly loving thoughts about some of the racist and reactionary groups that have been dominating the media, have been dominating our public discourse. This is my own cross of self-righteousness… I am more than happy to proclaim the splinters in the eyes of others: I am a “holier-than-thou” progressive. Jesus had no tolerance for self-righteousness. In fact, despite the hagiographies that make every follower of Jesus into a near perfect saint, our Savior surrounded himself with knuckleheads and scoundrels, with the unclean and unacceptable. Would we welcome those followers of Jesus into our fellowship hall?<br /> And finally, Jesus takes on greed. Caesar’s coin, the “Eye of the Needle,” and from today’s gospel, the “Widow’s Mite.” It is my duty on this Stewardship Sunday to ask you to give to the church, to the people of God, as the widow did. And no, I don’t mean give two copper coins. The gospel commands us to give beyond our comfort zone, to give more than we think we can.<br /> I’d love to see each and every one of us dig a little deeper this year… this is a world in need. People need healing, they need food, they need shoes and gas cards and a hand to hold and a shoulder to cry on, and what you give makes this possible. The families in crisis are here, physically in this building, every week, and though you rarely see it, you provide for them. The biblical widows and orphans have become the modern day laid-off, homeless, uninsured… the drifters and wanderers and the mentally ill, struck down by modern day demons like schizophrenia.<br /> And we have this Great Commission. Go forth and make disciples of all nations. And that’s intense and scary and not at all cheap, but if we find joy in Christ, if a life formed in Christ gives us joy, how can we not want to share that Good News? And that’s not cheap, and it takes time and talent…<br /> So yes, I want you to give of your time, of your talent, and of your treasure and to give abundantly, for every one of us experiences the abundance of a stable, safe, wealthy nation… so please give! But I don’t want you to give your very last penny. I believe in miracle, but I can’t quite let go, I still want to have some control, to take care of myself, so I’m not going to ask you to take risks I’m not willing to take myself. In fact, if we all followed Jesus’ example, how would society function? If we all abandoned our jobs, our families, if we all just abandoned everything and acted like Christ, well, that would be a disaster. As in all things, our God calls us to do more, to be more, to risk more, than we can ever dream.<br /> I’m not going to ask you to give the widow’s mite. But I am going to challenge you. You see, all of those things Jesus most hates are human made systems of control. Self-righteousness and legalism are about power… if I can use these weapons I won’t feel so vulnerable. And greed is the same thing. The rich people in the Temple, giving a tiny share of their wealth, these were scared vulnerable people, just like us, and they gave a comfortable amount… not a fearful amount. Fearful giving, that’s what I hear in the widow’s mite. Joyful and fearful, an echo of the scripture that declares us fearfully and wonderfully made… they go hand in hand… great risk, great joy!<br /> Hold back enough to feel safe. Every one of our children on the way to an Ivy League education and a professional degree… big savings accounts… we’ll be safe! We’ve got to hold a little back to feel secure… we dare not risk it all. We’re responsible people! We’ve got obligations! You don’t really expect us to be like Peter! What a deadbeat dad he was!<br /> But the widow gave boldly, gave a terrifying amount… trusted fully in the people of God. Where do you place your trust?<br /> I am afraid to admit that my personal road to hell runs right through the mall. I use retail therapy. I buy and I buy. Why, why are we addicted consumers, why is our entire economy dependent on the flow of junk from cheap manufacture to our homes to the garbage dump? We can look to the post-World War II economic planners to find the answer. Retail analyst Victor Lebow stated it simply: “Our enormously productive economy . . . demands that we make consumption our way of life, that we convert the buying and use of goods into rituals, that we seek our spiritual satisfaction, our ego satisfaction, in consumption . . . we need things consumed, burned up, replaced and discarded at an ever-accelerating rate.”<br /> The basic human instinct to hold on to enough, to feel secure, this has been manipulated… we have to own and to buy and to control and to medicate… we have advertising on signs, on our televisions, on our buses and on our clothing. Buy, buy, buy. Build a McMansion! Tell everyone about your lovely riverfront apartment. Then you can feel good, then you’ll have control, then… then… then you won’t die.<br /> But you will die. I will die. And our castles full of stuff, our mountains of things, they don’t make one bit of difference.<br /> Self-righteousness was a way of feeling in control. Legalism was a way of feeling in control. Greed is a way of feeling in control. And Jesus tells it straight. We’re not in control. A life in full is a life that risks, that dares, it is a life in God’s grace. Few of us can let go completely, few of us can truly dare, can pick up our staffs, strap on our sandals, and walk in the way of Christ. But can we loosen our grip just a little? Can we trust God just a tiny bit more? Can we believe in grace? Okay, we might not be the widow… but we don’t have to be those rich dudes either. It’s not black and white! A tithe would be nice, but one percent more would be good too. Risk a little this year.<br /> In fact, maybe I can be so bold as to suggest a retail recovery group, a new small group ministry. Maybe we can support one another in re-examining our priorities. Maybe we can listen to Paul and hold one another accountable. What would our lives be like if we rejected the Lebow economic system and declared one week a month a retail-free week? What would our pledges look like if we took the money we would have spent frivolously those twelve weeks and gave it to the church?<br /> This isn’t just about money. Jesus despised the Temple bureaucracy. The last thing he’d want to see is more money in the hands of the Pharisees and Sadducees. In the very next episode he tells us that the jewel-encrusted Temple would soon be destroyed. This isn’t about money, it’s really about freedom, freedom to dare, freedom from our castles of stuff and our mountains of things. Freedom to live, for Christ is freedom.<br /> We want security, a security few in this world enjoy. We want control, even if that control is an illusion. We want to numb ourselves and occupy ourselves and ignore our terror. Yet, there it is again and again. I will die. You will die. Jesus tells us death is not the end, that we cannot allow the fear of death to control our lives. And by the grace of God we believe, we have confidence in Jesus, confidence in our Creator, confidence in the Spirit. But do we have the confidence to live boldly? The confidence to step out of our comfort zones. To ignore rules, to admit our sinfulness, to give until it hurts.<br /> God is calling. Our savior is calling. Do you dare? Dare! Dare! Dare. </p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2009/11/17/the-widows-mite/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2009/11/17/the-widows-mite/" dc:title="The Widow’s Mite" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2009/11/17/the-widows-mite/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/11/17/the-widows-mite/#respond" title="Comment on The Widow’s Mite">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>25 Sep 2009 09:51 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/09/25/crazy-art-dudes-a-sermon/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: Crazy Art Dudes- A Sermon">Crazy Art Dudes- A Sermon</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p><meta name="Title" /> <meta name="Keywords" /> <meta content="text/html; charset=utf-8" http-equiv="Content-Type" /> <meta content="Word.Document" name="ProgId" /> <meta content="Microsoft Word 11" name="Generator" /> <meta content="Microsoft Word 11" name="Originator" /></p> <link rel="File-List" /><!--[if gte mso 9]><xml> <o:DocumentProperties> <o:Template>Normal</o:Template> <o:Revision>0</o:Revision> <o:TotalTime>0</o:TotalTime> <o:Pages>1</o:Pages> <o:Words>1001</o:Words> <o:Characters>5706</o:Characters> <o:Lines>47</o:Lines> <o:Paragraphs>11</o:Paragraphs> <o:CharactersWithSpaces>7007</o:CharactersWithSpaces> <o:Version>11.1282</o:Version> </o:DocumentProperties> <o:OfficeDocumentSettings> <o:AllowPNG/> </o:OfficeDocumentSettings> </xml><![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 9]><xml> <w:WordDocument> <w:Zoom>0</w:Zoom> <w:DoNotShowRevisions/> <w:DoNotPrintRevisions/> <w:DisplayHorizontalDrawingGridEvery>0</w:DisplayHorizontalDrawingGridEvery> <w:DisplayVerticalDrawingGridEvery>0</w:DisplayVerticalDrawingGridEvery> <w:UseMarginsForDrawingGridOrigin/> </w:WordDocument> </xml><![endif]--> <style> <!-- /* Font Definitions */ @font-face {font-family:"Times New Roman"; panose-1:0 2 2 6 3 5 4 5 2 3; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:auto; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:50331648 0 0 0 1 0;} @font-face {font-family:Calibri; mso-font-alt:"Stone Sans ITC TT-SemiIta"; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:auto; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:3 0 0 0 1 0;} /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:""; margin-top:0in; margin-right:0in; margin-bottom:10.0pt; margin-left:0in; line-height:115%; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:Calibri;} table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-parent:""; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman";} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} --> </style> <!--StartFragment--><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><em>“Crazy Art Dudes”</em></span> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">I was sharing a household that academic year, living with my best friend and her husband. And it was a very, very small freezer, but we rarely overlapped in our shopping, so it was okay. Then there was that day. Ruth had come back with groceries, then headed back out. I came home with groceries and found a freezer that was jam-packed. So when Ruth returned for the second time she found me on the kitchen floor with all of the frozen foods, sorting. She looked at me a moment, then I spoke in exasperation. “You had square stuff on top of round stuff,” I sighed. “How is that supposed to work?” She chuckled and said “OCD man does the freezer.”</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">You see, I like things neat and organized. I love things that start on time. I straighten the papers on my desk, even if they represent tasks I am avoiding. People who know me can be trapped into believing that this desire for neat categories represents the real me. They’re often surprised to find out I was an art major. And not a neat carefully controlled and drawn perspective sort of art major. A big sloppy expressive painter sort of art major.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">So how do these parts of me, the controlled and intellectual, and the expressive and emotional, fit together? They fit together in my faith, in my theology, in the words of the psalmist.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">“There is no speech, nor are there words … Yet their voice goes out through all the earth.”</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">An aesthetic theology? Or a theology of aesthetics? What is it that makes art “art”? I’d like to begin by suggesting that all of the theories about symmetry and color balance and even about content are just that, human attempts to explain the inexplicable. Neurons firing? What a bunch of hooey! Okay, well, maybe, but oh so much more. Art is art because it is a part of something larger. In the visual arts, the art points to something that is beyond. Now, lest you miss it, let me repeat. Art is art when it points to something beyond itself. It cannot “capture” the subject; all it can do is gesture towards it. I can paint a tree, but my painting won’t be a tree, it might, hopefully, evoke “tree-ness.” In the words of the post-modern theorist, we might think of an artistic object as having infinite regress. It cannot be tamed, and there is nothing neat about it. Our hearts soar or ache or leap to our throats because something about that image, that Lucien Freud grotesque or Mark Rothko smear, connects to something else, to our experiences and to this amazing beautiful terrifying creation.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">And then there is God. As we look at the theological trajectory that stretches from the small tribe fleeing slavery in Egypt to the hopefully post-imperial Christianity represented by America’s progressive Protestants, we see a continual struggle to describe God. We can troop out complex and esoteric theological terms, intellectualizing an apophatic theology or the problem of predication. We can fall into traditional but sometimes trite formulations that flatten if not completely misrepresent God. Even statements like “God is Love” become problematic. Maybe, just maybe, the most important moment in the history of the people of God was that moment when the descendents of Abraham realized that you couldn’t make an image of God, that even the name of God was beyond the human.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">You can already see where I’m going. And I’m sure you can see all of the reasons I’m going there. Who isn’t terrified when Westboro Baptist claims to speak for God? Who isn’t ashamed when Joel Osteen preaches a prosperity theology grounded in a distorted reading of early texts that clearly contradicts the preaching of Jesus? And yet, we do it too. We can be just as certain that we know God in our own way, albeit a God who is tolerant and liberal and, well… a lot like us.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">This contradiction is woven into our religious DNA. While the Priestly trajectory was busy creating a self-serving bureaucracy and complex laws, the Prophetic trajectory was undermining it. Be humble, treat each other right, love God. While Jesus looked more like the prophets, the early church looked more like the priests. Codify, define it, understand it, put it in a box.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">We can’t find comfort in a God that is abstraction, there’s simply nothing to grab, no way to connect. But we also can’t turn God into a super-sized human that simply justifies our own desires. We humans are prone to idol worship, to worshipping a God made in humanity’s own image. We always have been. But we’ve also always had voices that challenged us, we’ve had our own prophets.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">Poetry acts in much the same way as painting. It isn’t the thing it represents. It isn’t even language in the way that we normally communicate, depending on some degree of mutual understanding. No, poetry gives meanings a little wiggle room, is a little slack. Maybe this is the only language that can adequately gesture towards God, the only language about God that isn’t in some way too solid. Maybe poetry, the language of the psalmist, is the only honest language we have when confronted with the divine, though I think most of us would be hard-pressed to deliver a sermon in blank verse, to hold a meeting of the membership committee in iambic pentameter.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">The great psalmist of our age, Walter Brueggemann, writes  of God:</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt 1.5in" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">One time holy,</span></p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt 1.5in" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">Two times holy,</span></p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt 1.5in" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">Three times holy,</span></p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt 1.5in; text-indent: 0.5in" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">All cry, “Holy, holy, holy.”</span></p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt 1.5in" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">You… holy,</span></p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt 1.5in" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">You…unutterable, dread-filled, beyond us…</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">Psalmist, poet, painter or prophet, it’s all the same. We gesture towards a magnificent and transcendent “God-ness” that is, as Gerard Manley Hopkins put it, a freshness “deep down things.”</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">Now, I know we’ve got some pretty stained glass, some amazing poets, a painter or two hanging around. But to be honest, we’re a pretty austere bunch.  We ran away from the pageantry and ornamentation of the Roman church, from the gold and splendor. We chose simple buildings, lightly ordained, and though we’ve abandoned plain black clothing, even allowing in the occasional tattooed and pierced, we are still a pretty mainstream bunch. We really do color in the lines.</span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman""><!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--></span></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; line-height: 150%" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"">So I am proposing that what the United Church of Christ needs is more crazy art dudes. Women and men who will not only bring a modern aesthetic into our sanctuaries, but will kick the legs out from under our sometimes static language and theology.  Of course, that means change, the dirtiest six-letter word we know. But isn’t it amazing! We serve a God beyond our understanding but made known to us in Jesus who is beyond our understanding and built in us by the Spirit that is beyond our understanding, and we claim this God to be alive because we are alive and this creation is alive. Art is alive, is reaching for the transcendent. Let us stand on our spiritual toes gesturing towards God, gesturing with paint and plaster and poetry and song. Wonderfully and fearfully made- the works of these hands, these hearts that long for our God. May it always be so. Amen.</span></p> <p><!--EndFragment--> </p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2009/09/25/crazy-art-dudes-a-sermon/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2009/09/25/crazy-art-dudes-a-sermon/" dc:title="Crazy Art Dudes- A Sermon" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2009/09/25/crazy-art-dudes-a-sermon/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/09/25/crazy-art-dudes-a-sermon/#respond" title="Comment on Crazy Art Dudes- A Sermon">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>30 Jun 2009 09:41 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/06/30/update-and-a-sermon/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: Update and a Sermon">Update and a Sermon</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p>I’ve been on the road the last couple of weeks. I wrapped thing up at Vassar College and with First Congregational in Poughkeepsie, and last Thursday appeared before the Ecclesiastical Council, where I was approved for ordination. So now it’s search time!</p> <p>On Sunday I lead worship at First Church in Needham, the second time they’ve been kind enough to invite me. Below is the sermons and some of the liturgy.</p> <p>This summer I won’t be at camp, so I’ll be posting of the material from the last year…</p> <p>Blessings<br /> Gary</p> <p><em>Contagious Cleanliness: Mark 5:21 ff  </em><br /> The last few days have been absolutely lovely. I’ve been out and about, Inman Square where I live, Harvard Square where I meet friends and where my Ecclesiastical Council was held on Thursday night. Everyone getting out, the sun shining, dozens of languages, and a mix of the well-to-do, the vastly over-educated, and the just-hanging on. I suspect this is a bit what it was like in the scenes recounted in today’s gospel. Galilee was in some sense a rural backwater, reclaimed by the Judeans only a century before Jesus. But in other ways it was a thriving cosmopolitan region. The Roman cities of the Decapolis, trade routes, Greek culture… and of course the various sects of the Judean religion.</p> <p>There’s a lot going on in this particular reading just as there was probably a lot going on in the streets on Galilee’s shores. Jesus already has a band of disciples and already has a reputation as a healer. A leader of the local synagogue asks Jesus to heal his daughter, making us question what we think we know about “the Jews.” The scare quotes were on purpose, because there was no such thing as Rabbinic Judaism, and the Judean religion was complex and far from unified. And a woman who is well-to-do enough to have consulted many physicians without relief, who is willing to grasp at any straw, any cloak, for relief. And notice that Jesus doesn’t say “I know who touched me” as those who over-emphasize his divine nature would have him. No, he has to ask, and the disciples don’t wither before their master. “Please, look around you. How are we supposed to know?” And the little girl, did she die because Jesus was delayed or would she have died anyways? Does he leave most of the disciples behind so he can move faster? And of course, there’s the whole secret thing Jesus does. Shhh, don’t tell anyone.</p> <p>We have here stories that are interwoven, a pretty good sign in my book. You see, tradition recorded in the earliest texts about the gospels tells us that the author of Mark wrote down stories as Peter told them, and was never quite sure about the chronology. The author of Matthew is desperately re-ordering the contents of the gospel message and story to cast Jesus as the new Moses, complete with five sermons representing the new Torah. And Luke is very consciously a historian, trying to tell the story accurately. But the author of Mark, well he’s just telling it like he heard it. He doesn’t re-arrange, doesn’t make it into a nice story, its not literature. So for my money, this is a pretty reliable re-telling of an actual event. Jesus was asked by a local Judean leader to heal his daughter. And on his way there, he was touched by a woman and she was healed.</p> <p>But this isn’t just any woman, she was an unclean woman. Hemorrhaging is code for menstrual problems and this woman is as unclean as you can get short of leprosy. So before we talk about what Christ did, let’s think about the purity code.</p> <p>The purity code is part of the very complex six-hundred plus rule system referred to as the Law. The Judean myth was that it was given to Moses by God and that it reflects God’s will. The truth is that the Law was composed over five centuries, combining the customs of the Tribes with the needs of the Kingdom, and with the needs of the conquered remnant. Many things went into the code. There was the need for a complex system of sacrifices to support the Temple economy and its many priests. There was the need to regulate disease and contagion. And during the Exile there was the need to create complex rules to insure the Exiles were not assimilated, to mark them as distinct. After the Exile there was the need to justify marginalizing and dispossessing the non-Elite Judeans who had been left behind. There was a whole lot of human strategy that went into the lines and rules and categories of the code. And the biggest weapon in the Law’s arsenal was uncleanliness.</p> <p>Now, here’s the thing about the state of being unclean, about uncleanliness: it was contagious. If I have become unclean, maybe I’ve touched a corpse or a leper or a hemorrhaging woman, and then I touch you, then you are also unclean. It is a bit like the cooties, but without the circle-circle dot-dot shot that makes it all better.</p> <p>When the woman touched Jesus’ cloak, she made him unclean. Simple as that. I mean, you might argue that the cloak was unclean, but then we’d be missing the point and besides, the purity code is pretty OCD. So when she came into contact with Jesus, certainly enough for healing to move from him into her, he became unclean. But not really, because that’s not what happened. Jesus did not become unclean, she became clean.</p> <p>Here is this complex system of rules that takes as its basic premise that the bad, uncleanliness, idolatry, sin, is contagious, and Jesus flips it on its head. It is not uncleanliness that is contagious, it is cleanliness. The cleanliness flows out of Jesus and into her, for she is not just healed, her illness carries moral freight. We miss this message when we flatten the story to Jesus’ magical mystical Messiah powers, or when we focus on just her faith, though faith certainly comes into play. We often miss a major theme throughout the gospels. Jesus encounters the unclean and makes it clean. He orders the disciples to do the same. Corpses, tax collectors, adulterers, all unclean, all cleansed by Jesus. The man-made system that controls and taxes and protects and oppresses is divinely reversed.</p> <p>Just to drive home the point, Jesus dies in the most ritually unclean manner. Yes, he is severely beaten by Gentiles, by the conquering Romans, but that’s not enough. And yes, he’s in a killing field where hundreds of other Jews have been executed. But the real uncleanliness comes from what, from the Roman point of view, was a happy coincidence. See, the Romans used crucifixion throughout their empire. It was a brutal form of torture execution that was quite effective at quelling political dissent. The victim slowly and painfully died, then the corpse was left there, rotting, a sign to any others that might challenge Rome. There were dozens if not hundreds of crosses visible in every major town controlled by Rome. And as it happens, the Law says that it is unclean to die on a tree.</p> <p>Jesus took the unclean symbol of brutal Roman oppression, the most unclean way to die according to the Law, and defeated it, made it a symbol of triumph over all of the oppressive systems of humankind.</p> <p>Now let me be clear, this is not just about Jesus and magical mystical Messiah-power. “Oh, well Jesus is God, but that’s just him.” Nope, wrong, absolutely wrong. The disciples are meant to do the same, they do the same. And then there are the Gentiles who decide to follow Christ, there’s Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch, well, you get the idea. I’ll let you decide whether Jesus simply reverses the old purity code or whether he informs us that it was bogus all along, though you can probably guess where I land in that debate. But when it is all said and done, contagious uncleanliness is no more, what is contagious is cleanliness.</p> <p>Thanks, Gary, you might be thinking, thanks for the historical-critical-theological lesson, but what does it have to do with me? After all, we know all about disease and contagion these days, and we’ve long abandoned the idea that women and childbirth are inherently unclean. Okay, dead bodies and IRS agents still give us the willies, but it’s not about contagious uncleanliness. So why do we care about a divine reversal of a system we’ve long since abandoned?</p> <p>Well, here’s my question: Have we really abandoned the idea that the bad is contagious? Okay, you don’t want your child hanging out with the bad kids. I get it. And while you were friends with both of them, only one of them cheated, so you were happy with how the friends were divided in the divorce… But really, you don’t worry that the bad is catching… well, but your partner shouldn’t be socializing with philanderers.</p> <p>Nope, you don’t belief badness is contagious… or do you? I know I do. I am sometimes amazed at what a prude I am. I don’t think we should buy products from bad companies, watch exploitive television shows, idolize scoundrels. I see everything as connected and am constantly thinking about how I am contributing to systems of oppression, injustice, evil. Okay, at least I’m not obsessed about my own salvation, at least I’m not a complete Pharisee. But, and it’s a pretty big but, I also don’t act as if cleanliness is contagious. I don’t carry Jesus with me into sinful places. I’m a good post-colonial post-modern progressive liberal kind of guy, so I don’t want to interfere with other people’s beliefs or lifestyle, even if I believe that lifestyle is self-destructive, even if I believe that people can find liberation and joy in a life shaped by Christ.</p> <p>I am too polite to share the good news of Christ, too post-whatever to carry contagious cleanliness, contagious salvation, into the world.</p> <p>Todays’ gospel is really a kick in the pants if you think about it. It’s a little more subtle than the Great Commission, you need to actually study the text to get the meaning, but the meaning is still there. Goodness is contagious, cleanliness is contagious. We are supposed to be the leaven in the loaf, which means getting out of our little jar in the refrigerator and getting in the loaf. Mixing with the unholy, the dirty, the immoral. Touching them. It gives me the willies just thinking about it.</p> <p>I have my own purity code, its very convenient, keeps me out of uncomfortable situations, insures that I am socially acceptable. Ouch! I’m okay with the fact that Sunday morning and Monday morning don’t always seem to connect. Yikes!</p> <p>Does Jesus reprimand the woman who touches him? Does he avoid the unclean dead little girl? Talitha cum! Get up and walk. Carry God’s cleanliness into the world. I have no idea how we do that, but I’m sure willing to try. With God’s grace and the power of the Spirit we have all we need to go out and change lives, to change the world. May it always be so! Amen.</p> <p><em>Pastoral Prayer</em></p> <p>Loving God, we praise and thank you for this amazing creation, for this living, beautiful, growing and shaking and terrifying earth. We ask for the wisdom to care for it, to love it, as you love it, as you love us.</p> <p>Creator God, we thank you for these bodies, healing and growing and thriving and failing, we are truly fearfully and wonderfully made. We ask for comfort for those who suffer, in body and spirit, for those who have lost and those who provide comfort. May we all find our way home to you.</p> <p>Saving God, we thank you for the Kingdom proclaimed by your Son, for the challenge and example of his life, death and resurrection. We ask for courage to step out into the world as witnesses, charged with the Great Commandment and the Great Commission.</p> <p>Calling God, we thank you for bringing us together in this church. Grant, we pray, your wisdom in the deliberations of this congregation and of our sisters and brothers at Synod.</p> <p>God, you are very real and know that we live in a world that is very real, with destruction and conflict. We pray for our sisters and brothers threatened by war, for all who long for justice and liberty. We pray that the power of the your Spirit will touch the hearts of leaders, leading us on a path of wisdom, a path of love.</p> <p>We offer these words of praise and of petition in humility, in love, living into the dream that is your kingdom. Amen.</p> <p><em>Call to Offering</em></p> <p>Our Savior asks for nothing less than our whole hearts, bound in love of our God, of one another, and of this church. Our monetary gifts are but a small part of what we give, but they are a necessary part, one whether it is the widow’s mite or the riches at the Needle Gate. The offering will now be collected and received.</p> <p><em>Prayer of Dedication</em></p> <p>Let us pray. Divine Source, Loving God, these gifts represent our time, our talent, our tithes, represent our whole hearts given over to you. Bless the gifts and the givers, strengthening the missions of this church and of this denomination, helping us to spread this good news, that life in Christ is life in full, that death is defeated, and that our God is great, amazing, agapè. Amen.</p> <p><em>Benediction</em><br /> Our God asks much of us. Go out into the world and change it. But God offers us in return life in full, the power of the Holy Spirit, our companions in Christ. Go forth, blessed by God, reconciling Sunday morning with Monday morning and being as contagious as you can… cleanliness and love spreading across our world. Amen. </p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2009/06/30/update-and-a-sermon/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2009/06/30/update-and-a-sermon/" dc:title="Update and a Sermon" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2009/06/30/update-and-a-sermon/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/06/30/update-and-a-sermon/#respond" title="Comment on Update and a Sermon">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>02 Apr 2009 05:40 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/04/02/great-thanksgiving/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: Great Thanksgiving">Great Thanksgiving</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p>This coming Sunday I will officiate from the Invitation to Communion through the Words of Institution. Below is the material I’ve put together for the service. Sometime next week I will post the Ecumenical Maundy Thursday service I’ve been working on for the campus setting.</p> <p><em>Invitation to Communion</em></p> <p>Officiant: Jesus broke through barriers of race and tribe, through class barriers and gender barriers, through human-created barriers of clean and unclean, holy and sinful. Jesus broke bread with all who came to him. In the same way, the early Christians violated social custom by breaking bread together, rebelling against all that would divide.</p> <p>All: <strong>We come to the table of Jesus, ignoring those things that would divide us, united in our love of God and our salvation in Christ. We join this morning our sisters and brothers in this congregation, down the block, and around the world, that rejoice and that celebrate.</strong></p> <p>Officiant: This table is open to all that love God, to all that follow Jesus. Are you ready to come to the table of our Savior?</p> <p>All: <strong>We are ready to come to Christ’s table, lifting our hearts and voices in thanks and praise.</strong></p> <p><em>The Great Thanksgiving</em></p> <p>Officiant: We gather together as your people, God, called by you, comforted by you, bathed in your grace. You move towards us in love, and we respond with thanks and praise. </p> <p>We thank you, Holy Maker, for this amazing creation, for complexity and chaos, and birth and death, for the winding of DNA and the rush of wind. </p> <p>We remember the great story of our salvation, how you called a people to faithfulness, led them to freedom, blessed their leaders. We remember the prophets, women and men who challenged the people of God, calling them always, making faith in you a living faith, a dynamic faith. </p> <p>We recall how your Son lived among us, taught and prayed. We recall his willingness to ride into Jerusalem, knowing where that journey would end. In the crucifixion and resurrection of our Savior, death and sin have been defeated. </p> <p>We have no words to adequately give thanks for this gift of new life, for our freedom in Christ. We join with those who have gone before us, called to you as saints, and with heavenly choirs, in singing your praise.</p> <p>All: <strong>Holy, holy, holy God,<br /> God of Creation, God of Love,<br /> the whole universe is witness to your glory. </p> <p>Blessed in the one who came and who still comes in the name of our God!<br /> Hosanna in the highest!</strong></p> <p><em>Words of Institution</em></p> <p>Officiant: We remember that on the night he was betrayed and arrested, on the night that those who loved him deserted him, Jesus gathered his beloved community together to celebrate the feast. Jesus took the bread, gave thanks, and broke it, and gave it to his beloved saying “This is my body, which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.”</p> <p>In the same way he took the cup of wine, saying “This is the cup of the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.”</p> <p>Let is proclaim the mystery of our faith.</p> <p>All: <strong>This is our Good News: Jesus Christ, Son of the Living God, has died, has risen from the grave, defeating death, and will come again. Glory to you, O God.</strong></p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2009/04/02/great-thanksgiving/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2009/04/02/great-thanksgiving/" dc:title="Great Thanksgiving" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2009/04/02/great-thanksgiving/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2009/04/02/great-thanksgiving/#respond" title="Comment on Great Thanksgiving">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>17 Dec 2008 09:46 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2008/12/17/january-newsletter-article-on-batman/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: January Newsletter Article on Batman">January Newsletter Article on Batman</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p>The following article was written in support of the adult formation class I am teaching in January on why progressive Christians should care about apocalyptic.</p> <p>Article for January Spire<br /> J. Gary Brinn<br /> Pastoral Intern</p> <p>On the Death of Batman</p> <p>The news media has recently reported that DC Comics will be killing Batman in a coming issue. This might not seem like a big deal to you. After all, while Batman has become an icon in the American Media Culture, our children no longer read comic books. Only a handful of adults continue to care about this medium, with its mixture of the visual and textual, of archetype and narrative. This has resulted in books with an adult aesthetic, with gritty, violent and profane stories, which in turn makes the books less accessible to children. An excellent and recent children’s novel, Mascot to the Rescue, bemoans the state of comics while still showing how the books create meaning in the life of one little boy.</p> <p>I should be upfront and say that I am part of that small group of adults who still cares about comics. To be fair, I stopped collecting when I entered Divinity School, but my collection covers three of decades and thousands of issues, the majority of which feature Batman.</p> <p>Today’s Batman is as gritty and complicated as its adult readers, but the heart of the story is still simple. Batman is dedicated to making justice when the standard systems of the world cannot do so. He sweeps in from above, mysterious and outside of the law, and he makes things right. One moment the bad guys are terrorizing the public, and two pages and a few “ka-pows” later, they’re hogtied, turned over to authorities, and Batman is back in the manor.</p> <p>We all want justice to sweep in and make things right. Sometimes we allow our frustration, individual and collective, get the best of us. That was certainly the case in the painful weeks after 9/11. We want justice, whether it comes through the Divine or through a missile. And we make up stories to justify our execution of justice.</p> <p>This is a pretty tough problem, faith-wise. We are expected to turn the other cheek. God moves to us with irresistible grace. The thief is forgiven and the table fellowship is open to all, even the sinner. The landlord pays all the workers the same wage, and it doesn’t seem fair. Our stomachs hurt when we see the guilty go free, when we see the innocent perish. We want a God like Batman who protects the innocent and punishes the wicked. And we want it now.</p> <p>During the month of January I will be teaching a Christian formation class on our own version of Batman, the tradition of apocalyptic in our scripture and tradition. There won’t be pretty pictures, and the readings are a bit more complicated than the comics, but it will be just as exciting. I invite you to join us in wrestling with this topic, and I promise that we will make it relevant to how you live today.</p> <p>As for the Death of Batman, well you can never trust comics’ writers. The dead just won’t stay dead. Sounds like another story I know…</p> <p>Blessings,<br /> Gary</p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2008/12/17/january-newsletter-article-on-batman/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2008/12/17/january-newsletter-article-on-batman/" dc:title="January Newsletter Article on Batman" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2008/12/17/january-newsletter-article-on-batman/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2008/12/17/january-newsletter-article-on-batman/#respond" title="Comment on January Newsletter Article on Batman">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>29 Nov 2008 09:05 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2008/11/29/update-and-a-pastoral-prayer/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: Update- and a Pastoral Prayer">Update- and a Pastoral Prayer</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p>I haven’t been posting much this year. My day job, as the Inter-Religious Fellow on a college chaplain staff, doesn’t require much writing, and my congregational service this year does not require sermon writing. I do bang out the occasional newsletter article or worship element, so i’ll try to get some of those up…</p> <p>Here is the pastoral prayer for tomorrow’s service. The pastor is using the Marcan apocalypse for the sermon!</p> <p>Let us join together with the people of God in all nations, in all places, as we offers our prayers of praise and petition:</p> <p>Loving God<br /> We are on a schedule<br /> We are a temporal people<br /> Chained to our watches<br /> In control</p> <p>And then there is you<br /> Your time surprises us<br /> Like a thief in the night<br /> Like the pangs of birth</p> <p>We thank you for your time<br /> For your kingdom<br /> For the Son of Man</p> <p>Bless this day the church<br /> Millions who are committed to your time<br /> Who let go for moments<br /> Who sit before you in prayer<br /> Bless especially those who serve the church<br /> Fill them with Spirit<br /> Fill them with love</p> <p>Bless this day those who lead nations<br /> Ours and others<br /> May they not rush to judgment<br /> But await your time<br /> Fill them with patience<br /> Fill them with peace</p> <p>Bless this day those who serve our communities<br /> Those who protect, those who teach<br /> Those who reach out when others turn away<br /> Who embrace what is broken<br /> Grant them time to heal<br /> Fill them with wisdom</p> <p>Bless those who have died this week in religious conflict<br /> For Muslim and Christian, Hindu and Jew,<br /> For those in Mumbai, in Orissa, in Nigeria<br /> Bring the innocent into your kingdom<br /> Overwhelm them with your grace<br /> Comfort those left behind<br /> Those scarred<br /> May these pangs give birth to renewed love<br /> To forgiveness<br /> To reconciliation</p> <p>Bless those who hunger and thirst<br /> Those in pain<br /> The broken-hearted<br /> If it is your will<br /> Let the surprise be healing<br /> On your time<br /> A divine ambush<br /> The shock of love</p> <p>[insert prayer requests here]</p> <p>We offer these spoken prayers<br /> And the prayers buried in our hearts<br /> Hearts in the kingdom<br /> Hearts directed by your time<br /> May it always be so. Amen.</p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2008/11/29/update-and-a-pastoral-prayer/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2008/11/29/update-and-a-pastoral-prayer/" dc:title="Update- and a Pastoral Prayer" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2008/11/29/update-and-a-pastoral-prayer/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2008/11/29/update-and-a-pastoral-prayer/#respond" title="Comment on Update- and a Pastoral Prayer">No Comments »</a></div> </div> <div class="post"> <div class="post-title"><em><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="View all posts in Main Blog" rel="category tag">Main Blog</a></em>07 Jun 2008 09:49 pm</div> <p class="post-info"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2008/06/07/final-sermon-at-current-internship/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link: Final Sermon at Current Internship">Final Sermon at Current Internship</a> </p> <div class="post-content"> <p>“Borderlines”</p> <p>Jeremiah. 23:5-6 The days are surely coming, says the LORD, when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, and he shall reign as king and deal wisely, and shall execute justice and righteousness in the land.<br /> In his days Judah will be saved and Israel will live in safety. And this is the name by which he will be called: “The LORD is our righteousness.”</p> <p>You might have noticed that the two scripture readings don’t seem to go together, that in fact they seem to contradict one another. Now, in case you were momentarily distracted, let’s recap. In the first reading, taken from the First Book of Samuel, the loose confederation of Israelite tribes come to Samuel, judge and prophet, and ask for a king. They have good reasons, the Philistines have moved into the region with advanced technologies and are putting pressure on the western border. Samuel warns them that a king is not God’s plan for the people, but they insist. Even though this text was written in the centuries after a monarchy was established, it records the uneasiness the people still felt about loyalty to anyone other than God.</p> <p>The second reading was written five centuries later. The United Kingdom of Saul, David and Solomon had been torn in two. The Northern Kingdom called Israel had fallen, and the Southern Kingdom, Judah, was at risk, with invaders at the gate. In this reading, God promised through his prophet Jeremiah to raise up a new king for his people. Monarchy had become the theological model from which the Judeans operated. So when the people were in trouble, it was up to a great king, an anointed one, a messiah, to rescue them. Unlike the people of the exodus, these people believed that God worked indirectly, through others, through chosen kings.</p> <p>The readings suggest that God changed plans, though we have adopted from Hellenism an unfortunate notion of a God that cannot ever change. The truth is that the Israelite religion is a trajectory of change. God creates a covenant with one small tribe through one man, Abraham. Then God creates a new covenant with that tribe through all members when he frees them from bondage, a covenant mediated by Moses but executed by the people. Then God changes models again and creates a covenant with a single household through one man with the Davidic covenant. We could fall back on the oft repeated trope “God planned it all that way,” but that would leave no room for human freedom, only a puppet-master God, one that seems less than worthy of our love. So what are we to make of all of this change?</p> <p>Its actually amazingly simple. The world changes. God created for us a dynamic universe. The planet earth, the Milky Way, the universe itself, flinging out into the cosmos at incredible speeds. Humans, free and growing, dynamic, miracle. And when the world changes, when we change, we adapt our beliefs, our values, our practices to the new world. This doesn’t mean that God has changed, if you insist you can stick to your Hellenistic security blanket. But it does mean that we humans encounter God and understand God in different ways at different times. </p> <p>In fact, contradiction and change are part of our religious DNA, they are the dynamic threads of a living faith that flows from Abraham to Moses to David to Jesus, and yes, even to Paul. Our understanding changes if we are open to God, if we listen to God, for as our own denomination has declared, God is still speaking. In fact, we are in a position today to know more about the biblical people and their context than they were 1500 years ago as the fifth century Christians attempted to freeze our faith, to determine once and for all what would be acceptable or orthodox belief and what would be considered heretical. We have used the amazing gifts of God, reason and intellect, to learn. We have dug up ancient ruins and texts, we have deciphered ancient languages.</p> <p>This is pretty uncomfortable. We are humans, we like stability. Sure there is change, just please, not in our back yard. We’re happy that our Christianity came to reject slavery. We’re fond of the Protestant Reformation. That women have a voice in our faith, well we wouldn’t have it any other way. Gay and lesbian people are no longer burned to death by Christians, at least not in the United States and Europe, and we think that’s a good thing. But please, God, can you make sure the next change happens after I’m gone? I like the way things are, they work for me…</p> <p>Of course, they don’t work for everyone, but we can do just enough social justice work to ease our collective conscience and move on. But things change because God made it that way. We change because God made us this way. The universe is not going to stop because we are comfortable.</p> <p>So where do we turn for guidance when things are changing? There is only one place we can consistently look for God’s voice, and that is the scriptures. We can look at the historical and theological trajectories of the Word of God and discern answers for our own time. Though, as we all know, misused the Bible can become a weapon that destroys lives. As I challenged the children, so I challenge you. Study the Bible. Read it. Pray over it.</p> <p>And when you turn to the Bible to hear the voice of God, know that that voice is most consistent, is most clear, in the words of our savior, Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God. The core teachings of Christianity are not the teachings of Paul, though we have much to learn from him. They are the teachings of Jesus. Which brings us back to the problem of change.</p> <p>You see, the world was changing when Jesus walked the streets of Galilee and Judea. And as the world changed, people adapted. But like us, they weren’t happy about it, so they created structures and systems of belief and defended them with their whole lives. The Pharisees sought an answer to the changes of life under an occupation army by clinging to the Law, by self-righteousness and legalism. The Zealots sought an answer by arms, they hoped that a military rebellion would reveal the messiah-warrior-king. The Sadducees and Herodians decided to compromise, to make the Judean and Greco-Roman worlds co-exist. The Essenes moved to the desert, rejecting the world all together. Then there were the Gentiles, but who cares about them? Each group was busy drawing borderlines. On this side you are on God’s side, you are good, holy, you are right. This is the border between us and them.</p> <p>Then Jesus came along. Jesus who healed and exorcised Judean and Gentile alike. Jesus who brought Matthew the tax collector, the agent of the brutal Empire, and Simon the Zealot, enemy of that Empire, together. Jesus who rejected Sadducee and Pharisee alike. As busy as everyone was drawing borderlines, Jesus was busy smashing them. Even the boundary between in-group and out-group was smashed. The radically open table fellowship at the heart of Jesus’ ministry smashed social boundaries, but it also smashed boundaries of righteousness. You didn’t even have to repent, to be bathed in the Jordan, to come to the table. You only had to believe.</p> <p>We still draw boundaries. I still draw boundaries. We are, when we get right down to it, inclined to Social Darwinism. It is at the heart of our socio-economic system. Those people over there are not like us. It’s no wonder they are impoverished, suffering under a dictator, hungry. Feed, cloth and visit Jesus says, ignore the boundaries. Jesus calls us always to move beyond, to be more, to do more, to love more. Hitch a ride on this amazing ongoing creation, smash through the borderlines, and do it now. What are you waiting for?</p> <p>The message of Jesus could not come at a better time. Petroleum is running out. All life in the oceans will be gone in our lifetime. These are not the lunatic ravings of some crackpot scientist. These are facts. We are destroying the planet just as we have always destroyed one another. Economic and political systems are broken beyond repair, including our own. The plans we are busy making for those little miracles in our Sunday School are not going to be realized if they are based on a world that looks like this. </p> <p>This is not the first time in the history of humankind that there have been sweeping changes, great trauma. The world has always changed. Great plagues, colonialism, the scientific revolution, the dawn of modern democracies. But in the last half century man has developed the ability to wipe out life itself. This is new, this is unheard of in the entirety of human history.</p> <p>Of course, we can stick our heads in the sand and pretend none of this is happening. We can call such realities apocalyptic, or offer it all up to God. We can keep doing the same old things. But the world is going to change. And someone is going to recognize that change, is going to bring to that change a value system, and they are going to act. We can sit back and let them do it. But Jesus wasn’t a very sit back kind of guy. Jesus didn’t preach a gospel of sit around and pretend. Jesus preached a gospel of get up off of your rump and go do something. Go change the world. If the world is going to change, then maybe we should be the ones envisioning that change. Would you rather have progressive Christians taking the lead, Bible in hand, or would you rather leave it to extremists, busy with their borderlines? Or maybe our future should be decided in corporate board rooms?</p> <p>Am I the only one who dreams of a new economic system that is grounded in the message of Christ? Surely there is some Christian economist out there who can think outside of the current box! Because our current system is, in the words of Brian McLaren, a suicide machine. It is destroying us.</p> <p>Lead or follow. It’s up to you. Take the Bible in hand, study it, pray with it, work together as communities of love and faith and change the world. Or let the world be reshaped by intolerance and greed, by the keepers of the borderlines.</p> <p>I am asking us to do three things. One, admit to ourselves that the world is changing, stop pretending like everything is okay. It’s not. It never will be. Jesus knew that. Even John Calvin knew that! White middle class life in a North American democracy is not the model of God’s kingdom found in the scripture. Two, get serious about the Bible. As individuals and as a congregation. In classes and study groups. With commentaries and with scholarship. With one another. Because the life that keeps you too busy to read and study the Bible is crashing down around your ears. And finally, three, armed with the Word of God, I am asking you to take action. Don’t sit back and let others decide the shape of our world. Change your life. Then change the life of one other person. Then change our life as a church. Get up, Jesus says. Get up and walk. Get up and go out. Get up and feed and clothe and visit. Get up and do.</p> <p>Let me end with this one dream. Imagine a world in which we put as much time into the Word of God as we put into our love of professional sports, of the Patriots and Celtics and yes, even Red Sox. If we were that serious about our faith! We could save the world through the power of Christ’s saving Word.</p> <p>May we make it so!</p> <p class="post-info"> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://garybrinn.com/2008/06/07/final-sermon-at-current-internship/" dc:identifier="http://garybrinn.com/2008/06/07/final-sermon-at-current-internship/" dc:title="Final Sermon at Current Internship" trackback:ping="http://garybrinn.com/2008/06/07/final-sermon-at-current-internship/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div> <div class="post-footer"><a href="http://garybrinn.com/2008/06/07/final-sermon-at-current-internship/#comments" title="Comment on Final Sermon at Current Internship">1 Comment »</a></div> </div> <p align="center"> — <a href="http://garybrinn.com/page/2/">Next Page »</a></p> </div> <div id="sidebar"> <ul> <li> <h2>About</h2> <div class="block"> <p><strong>Gary Brinn’s Blog</strong><br/> A personal blog of post-modern theology and thought<br/> There are 47 posts and 6 comments so far.</p> </div> </li> <li> <h2>Search</h2> <form id="searchform" method="get" action="http://garybrinn.com/"> <input type="text" name="s" id="s" value="" size="15" /><br/> <button id="btnSearch"> Go </button> </form> </li> <li> <h2>Tags</h2> <ul> <li><a href="http://garybrinn.com/category/a-sometimes-blog-of-post-modern-theology-and-thought/" title="The reflections and theology of a student ofpost-modern theology attending the Harvard Divinity School on ordination track with the United Church of Christ">Main Blog</a> </li> </ul> </li> <li> <h2> Archives </h2> <ul> <li><a href='http://garybrinn.com/2010/01/' title='January 2010'>January 2010</a></li> <li><a href='http://garybrinn.com/2009/11/' title='November 2009'>November 2009</a></li> <li><a href='http://garybrinn.com/2009/09/' title='September 2009'>September 2009</a></li> <li><a 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href="http://www.ucc.org/" title="a progressive denomination in the Protestant tradition">The United Church of Christ</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.promisemasschildren.org/" title="A UU organization advocating for children and families">Promise the Children UU</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.sigep.org/" title="Building balanced men for tomorrow's world">Sigma Phi Epsilon</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.emergentvillage.org/" title="The web hub for Emergent Christianity in the US">Emergent Village</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.spondylitis.org/" title="for those who suffer from spondylarthropies and their loved ones">Spondylitis Association of America</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.judson.org/" title="my other church home, in NYC">Judson Memorial Church</a></li> </ul> </li> </ul> <h2>Feed on RSS</h2> <ul> <li><a href="http://garybrinn.com/feed/">Posts</a> | <a href="http://garybrinn.com/comments/feed/">Comments</a></li> </ul> <h2>Meta</h2> <ul> <li><a 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