Lent 1: Wilderness Testing

Lent 1: Wilderness Testing

In 1942, Christian author C. S. Lewis published an epistolary novel known as “The Screwtape Letters.” It contained letters of advice from an administrative level devil, Screwtape, to his nephew Wormwood, who was on his first assignment trying to tempt a human (whom they called “The Patient”). 

I’m no C. S. Lewis, but today I am going to engage in a similar enterprise. Today’s sermon is a first-person account, from the point of view of the devil who tempted Jesus. Pray for me…

Image: Rivière, Briton, 1840-1920. Temptation in the Wilderness, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=56821 [retrieved January 27, 2023]. Original source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Briton_Rivi%C3%A8re_-_The_Temptation_in_the_Wilderness.jpg.

Last Epiphany: The Mountaintop

Last Epiphany: The Mountaintop

We get the term “mountaintop experience” from the bible—remember Isaac’s reprieve at the hand of an angel when his father was about to sacrifice him. Remember Moses ascending Mount Sinai to commune with the terrifying presence of God. And, of course, there’s the passage we’ve only just heard—Jesus plus three disciples, plus two giants of the Hebrew Scriptures, plus the voice of God washing over them. What does this mountaintop experience mean?

Image: Anonymous. Transfiguration of Jesus Christ, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=58648 [retrieved February 17, 2023]. Original source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Transfiguration-Sinai.jpg.

Epiphany 6: Anger/ Angry

Epiphany 6: Anger/ Angry

Let’s not forget an incident in which Jesus appears to be angry, reported in all four gospels. Here’s Matthew’s version:

Then Jesus entered the temple and drove out all who were selling and buying in the temple, and he overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who sold doves. He said to them, “It is written,

‘My house shall be called a house of prayer,’
    but you are making it a den of robbers.”     ~Matthew 21:12-13

Jesus sees a wrong in the Temple—the focus on buying and selling as opposed to the worship of God. This passage doesn’t call him angry, but it’s hard to imagine anyone flipping over tables in a state of complete calm. Jesus is angry because he has witnessed something wrong, and he acts in response to that anger. The anger of Jesus is holy.

Image: James, Laura. Sermon on the Mount, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=57891 [retrieved January 27, 2023]. Original source: Laura James, https://www.laurajamesart.com/collections/religious/.

Epiphany 5: Salty

Epiphany 5: Salty

We know salt, chiefly, as a flavoring—what would French fries be without salt? Or corn on the cob? And it’s not simply that the salt tastes good on the food—salt actually brings out the natural flavors of the foods themselves, enhances them. It brings out something in the sweetness of caramel that we could not taste without it.

Image: Bruegel, Jan, 1568-1625. Sermon on the Mount, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=55346 [retrieved January 27, 2023]. Original source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Sermon_on_the_Mount_by_Jan_Brueghel_the_Elder,_Getty_Center.jpg.

Epiphany 4: Be Blessed

Epiphany 4: Be Blessed

What does it mean to be blessed?

I have no doubt, it means different things to different people.

Some of us feel blessed by a parking space at the right place and right time.

Some of us feel blessed by improvement in our health, or good fortune for family members, or the wheels on the airplane touching down.

Some of us feel blessed when we are able to share our gifts, or when the storm veers north and misses us, or when we don’t get the scary diagnosis we were fearing.

What does it mean to be blessed?

Image: Sermon on the Mount, Persian miniature, Anonymous, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=57790 [retrieved January 27, 2023]. Original source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Persian_depiction_of_Jesus_-_Sermon_on_the_Mount.jpg.

Epiphany 2: The Lamb of God

Epiphany 2: The Lamb of God

I think one of the most astonishing things we see in the gospels is the way in which people follow Jesus, almost without knowing anything about him. A retired pastor from Ohio who writes a daily devotional I see in my inbox, had this to say:

 

In our day, following Jesus is often seen as an internal matter, involving primarily our minds, our hearts, and perhaps some behaviors. For the disciples, it meant literally changing their lives. They left their jobs and homes [and I would add, their families] and hit the road.[i] 

[i] Kurt Keljo, “God Pause for Friday January 13, 2023, John 1:29-42. https://www.luthersem.edu/godpause/2023/01/13/.

Image: John the Baptist, by Wolfgang Sauber, Stadtkirche St. Johannes und St. Martin, Schwabach, Germany. 1465. Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain.

Epiphany Sunday: We Are Still Seeking

Epiphany Sunday: We Are Still Seeking

How many among us grew up with a nativity scene in our homes during the Christmas holidays? How many of us have one right now? If you did, or do, close your eyes and imagine that nativity scene. Who is there? The Baby Jesus, of course, at the center, in his manger. His mother Mary and the faithful Joseph. A shepherd or two, surely. The random sheep, and donkey, and camel. And then—there they are—three men, dressed in ornate robes, each holding a container of something precious, if not immediately recognizable as an appropriate gift for a newborn. If we concentrate hard, or, if we by chance saw the recent Tri-Cities Opera production of “Amahl and the Night Visitors,” we may even be able to conjure their names: Caspar, Balthazar, and Melchior. The camel is there because of them, they traveled such a distance from the east. In a carol, moments ago, we called them the three kings of the Orient, but they’ve also been known as the wise men, or even, straight out of the original language of the passage, the magi.

Their story takes up only 12 short verses of scripture, but the magi have captured the imaginations of Christians for nearly two millennia. And yet, we know less about the magi than we think…

"The Golden Pilgrimage" by Carmelle Beaugelin"
Copyright A Sanctified Art, used by Permission

Christmas Day: God Dwells With Us

Christmas Day: God Dwells With Us

I love Christmas lights.

I really love the lights in my neighborhood. I live on the West Side of Binghamton, and while none of the displays I drive past every year is likely to show up in the news—nothing wild, no one trying to break any records or compete with anyone else—still, each year, they are new, fresh, a little different. And each year, as I’m driving home in the late November early darkness and I see a new installation, my heart lifts, it thrills, really, and I feel incredibly grateful for this gift my neighbors share with one another. Christmas lights are a gift to the community…

What is it about light?…

“Ponder” by Hannah Garrity
Copyright A Sanctified Art. Used by permission

Christmas Eve: We Tell This Story

Christmas Eve: We Tell This Story

Every Christmas Eve, we gather together

in this same beautiful sanctuary,

to tell the same story,

the story of a couple traveling so that some ruler can be sure to get their hands on everyone’s taxes.

The story of a baby born, and then laid in a manger, a feedbox for animals.

The story of a sky exploding with light and song and angels.

The story of the first witnesses—the shepherds, the ones to whom the angels entrusted this incredible good news.

It’s the shepherds who have my attention this year…

Image: “How God Shows Up” by Rev. Lisle Gwynn Garrity
Copyright A Sanctified Art. Used by permission.

Advent 4: We See God in One Another

Advent 4: We See God in One Another

…This morning we hear a story about two women coming together at a key moment in both of their lives: Elizabeth, who will bear the prophet, the Christ-proclaimer John the Baptist, and Mary, who will bear the Christ, the Messiah, himself.

Every commentary I’ve read on this passage takes note of how amazing this is—the presence of such a story: A story of two women in scripture, whose coming together is not only noted, but whose actual words are reported. This is rare because women are rare in the bible. Out of 3,237 individuals in scripture who are named, only 205 of them are women—that’s something like 6 percent.

This is also one of the few biblical passages that passes the Bechdel test. For those of you who are not familiar with this test, it’s an assessment of movies. “[It] is a simple test which names the following three criteria: (1) [the movie] has to have at least two women in it, who (2) who talk to each other, about (3) something besides a man.”[i]

Now, Elizabeth and Mary come together because each of them is pregnant with a child who will be an extraordinary man, that is true. But if you examine their conversation, it is entirely about God….

“Dance of the Soul” by Hannah Garrity
Copyright A Sanctified Art; used by permission

Advent 3: We Can Choose a Better Way

Advent 3: We Can Choose a Better Way

This is not where I thought I would be. I don’t mean the road from Nazareth to Bethlehem—of course I knew I would be traveling to fulfill the obligations of the census. No, I mean I never dreamed this path I would be traveling… I, Joseph, son of the law, the righteous man, the just man. I never imagined the path I would be on just now with my wife. That I would find myself taking on marriage, a child not my own, a future I can’t even imagine. Mary is resting now. It has been a grueling day of walking and riding, even more so for a woman as advanced in pregnancy as she is. She looks so young while she’s sleeping—just like a child, a young girl not yet married. But she is not a child. In a week or two, she will be a mother. And here we are, on this road neither of us ever dreamed we’d travel…

Image: “The Courageous Choice” by Rev. Lisle Gwinn Garrity.
Copyright A Sanctified Art. Used by permission.

Advent 2: God Meets Us in Our Fear

Advent 2: God Meets Us in Our Fear

For the last couple of years there’s been a kind of mini-trend I’ve noticed among Christian religious types to search for Christmas angel ornaments that are “Biblically correct” or “Biblically accurate.” By which they mean, from various accounts found in scripture: they have six wings, two covering their eyes, two covering their feet, and two for flying. And/ or their wings are covered with eyes, so that no matter what direction they are moving in, they can see clearly. And/ or they take on the shapes of wheels. And/ or they have various heads resembling those of various creatures. (Google “Biblically Accurate Furby” to see the result of some of these inquiries.)

All of which amounts to this: There is a reason why, when angels present themselves to humans in scripture, at some point in the encounter they must say some version of “Be not afraid”…

Image: “Mary’s Golden Annunciation” by Carmen Beaugelin. Copyright A Sanctified Art. Used by permission.

Advent 1: There's Room for Every Story

Advent 1: There's Room for Every Story

…Here’s the thing about genealogies: They’re full of stories. I did an experiment with the Bible Study folks this week, in which I read this passage aloud and asked everyone to raise their hands when they heard a name whose story was familiar to them. There were several sections in which every hand was raised, and there were others in which every hand—mine included was down. I’ve read the Bible cover to cover, and I’ve studied it at two fine institutions of learning, but I can’t tell you a single thing about Aminadab—except the name rings a bell.

But the writer of this account of the generations is counting on us all to know about, or at least take note of certain names. In fact, those names are the ones that tell us the most about the person whose name comes at the end, that tell us the most about what we, the curious readers and listeners, can expect from Jesus.

I think there are at least three stories this genealogy wants us to know. The first story is this: Jesus is a son of Abraham…

Image: The Genealogy of Christ” by the Rev. Lauren Wright Pittman, Copyright A Sanctified Art, used by permission.

Two Hymns

Two Hymns

Some of my earliest memories of church are about the music. When I was a child we had a lot of guitar music in church, so as soon as I learned how to play guitar, I figured out how to sing some of those songs and accompany myself singing. One of my favorites was “Hear, O Lord, the sound of my call…” It was a gentle, melancholy sort of song, one I think I related to. It was about loneliness, but it was also about God’s love being present for us in that loneliness. I didn’t know it at the time, but it was based on a psalm. And so, through the words and music of that hymn, I began to learn about God. I began to learn a little scripture. The music we hear in church is important. Whether we start coming as little children or find our way here in adulthood, the music and lyrics we sing in church serves as a foundation for what we believe…

Image: Elizabeth and Zechariah, stained glass, from Cathédrale de Sainte-Etienne de Bourge, France, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=54189 [retrieved September 24, 2022]. Original source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/pelegrino/1356007875/.

Considering the Apocalypse

Considering the Apocalypse

I’ll start today with a little bit of UPC history for you. Union Presbyterian Church has had a total of four churches, four different church buildings. Founded in the year 1819, when our original name was the First Presbyterian Society in the Town of Union, our ancestors in faith first worshiped together in a small log church in the middle of what is now our Riverside Cemetery. Just three years later, a new structure was built on that same site, larger and grander, our Colonial Church. It served the congregation well for nearly five decades, when it was decided to the building move to Main Street, because that was where the action was. A new church—the Victorian Church—was built onto the Colonial church, at this site and dedicated in 1872. It grew and flourished for more than thirty years, until its steeple was struck by lightning on May 17, 1906, at 7:30 in the evening. The Victorian Church burned to the ground. A committee to rebuild was quickly formed, ground was broken in July, and the new church—this church—was dedicated on March 16, 1907, just ten months after the fire.

I wonder. What would the members who worshiped in that Victorian building have thought if a local street preacher had told them in 1905 that their beautiful church would burn to the ground, and soon? What a shocking thing to say. What an awful prediction to make about their future—even if it was true.

Image: Destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem by Francesco Hayez. Oil on canvas, 1867. Public Domain.

Saints, Here and There

Saints, Here and There

We have two very different scripture passages this morning. Most Sundays we have one passage that informs most of the content of the meditation or sermon, and it is usually paired with a psalm that holds some of the same key ideas as the sermon passage. Today, it’s very different. These two passages seem incredibly far apart in theme and content. Despite that fact, it’s actually as if the two passages are two views of one thing, two sides of the same coin: the saints of God, what we call the communion of saints…

Image: Hochhalter, Cara B.. Blessed are Those, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=59299 [retrieved September 24, 2022]. Original source: Cara B. Hochhalter.

That Guy's House?

That Guy's House?

…Here’s the scene. Jesus is entering Jericho, a city that shows up several times in the gospels. In one parable, it’s a destination never reached by a man who is beaten and robbed. In one story, it’s a place where Jesus heals blind beggars. It’s a city with a history—something about walls tumbling down, and a woman of the night who happens to be an ancestor of Jesus. A lot of things happen in and around Jericho…

Image: Hole, William, 1846-1917. Christ Speaks to Zacchaeus, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=57184 [retrieved September 24, 2022]. Original source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hole_zachaeus_in_tree.gif.

But She Persisted

But She Persisted

…Parables can be so frustrating. Personally, I want all the characters in a parable to be easily identified…this one is Jesus, this one is God, and so forth. So, really, I want an allegory, not a parable. Much simpler. Parables, on the other hand, are slippery. It’s not necessarily easy to understand the point Jesus is making. It’s not always easy to identify who is who. Case in point: The parable of the widow and the unjust judge. On the surface, here’s what we have: a woman, a widow—is she a stand-in for us?—and she is among the three classic categories of people whom the law of scripture tells us to care for: widows, orphans, and foreigners. The most vulnerable in ancient society, and therefore, the ones to whom everyone had a responsibility to treat them with compassion, and to help them find justice. For someone so vulnerable, though, she’s a powerhouse. An unrelenting powerhouse, who is pressing a judge for justice. (Most likely it’s a property dispute.) And as the parable shows us, she really gets to the judge.

And the judge—the character who, maybe, represents God? He’s a caricature of a bad judge. He says so himself. “Though I have no fear of God and no respect for anyone, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will grant her justice, so that she may not wear me out by continually coming.” That’s a cleaned-up version of the Greek; it actually says, so that she may not come and slap me in the face.

So, the person we expect to be vulnerable is the powerhouse, it turns out, when it comes to justice. And the one who doesn’t give a fig about justice applies it anyway, to avoid the risk of being publicly slapped by this woman…

Image: “Parable of the Unjust Judge” by Nikola Sarić (http://www.nikolasaric.de)

Gratitude First

Gratitude First

There’s being sick, and then there’s being a leper. The newly updated version of the bible we use here at UPC has dropped that word, leper, entirely, except for two instances when it is used to identify a specific individual (Simon the leper). I think that’s because of what the word connotes, more than its technical definition. To be a leper is to be an outcast. To be a leper is to be avoided. To be a leper is to be feared, and ostracized, and seen as a hopeless case.

There’s being sick, and then there’s being the hopeless case nobody wants to be near, unable to be with family, unable to hold a job, those people for whom even the lowest rung of the social ladder is out of reach. People without a home.

Ten men with this problem—a skin disease that cast them into that category of outcast—these men approach Jesus for healing.

Image: Christ and the Lepers from the Codex Aureus Epternacensis; 1035-1040, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=56011 [retrieved September 24, 2022]. Original source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CodexAureus_Cleansing_of_the_ten_lepers.jpg.

Faith, Fear, Friends, Family

Faith, Fear, Friends, Family

Imagine you were going through a difficult moment—something that made you feel afraid, maybe even unmoored. And imagine that you could talk to anyone you’d ever known in your life, living or dead. Whose counsel would seek? Who would you want to talk to?

We have before us today one of the New Testament letters traditionally attributed to the Apostle Paul. But this letter is different than most of Paul’s other letters. It’s written to one person, Timothy, not to a congregation. It’s written to someone in distress, someone who is feeling unmoored. There’s theology in it, to be sure. But what stands out are the words of gratitude for Timothy’s life and faith and gifts. What stands out here are words of encouragement, and stern words, too, urging Timothy to stay the course…

Image: “Lois and Eunice,” Stained glass. St. Mary’s Kemptown, UK. Window by James Powell & Sons, 1897. Used with permission.