Wednesday, December 28, 2016

The Holy Innocents (Mid-week Message)




“What is he doing with the children; 
who could have let him in?”
The Holy Innocents
Fr. Tony’s Midweek Message
December 28, 2016

The three days after Christmas in traditional Christian lore are the days of witnesses (in Greek, martyrs) to Jesus: December 26 is the Feast of the deacon St. Stephen (a martyr in will and deed; Acts 7:54-60); December 27 is the Feast of St. John the Evangelist (a martyr in will but not in deed, since he died of old age after decades of persecution [see John 21:23]; and the Feast of the Holy Innocents, the babies killed by King Herod’s order in Matthew 2:16-19 (martyrs in deed but not will). 

The massacre of the little children of Bethlehem and environs in the Gospel of Matthew serves clear theological purposes in the narrative; some scholars have doubted its historical nature given its absence in Josephus’ otherwise extremely lengthy and graphic listing of Herod’s atrocities.  Since Bethlehem was quite small then and the actual number of those killed could have been as low as 20 or so, the incident may not have met Josephus’ threshold of telling horror stories about the Judean tyrant.    It is clear that he murdered his own sons to protect his throne; this confirmed event may lie behind the tale Matthew tells.  In any case, the story touches us deeply, and raises profound issues.  In the presence of God made human being, horror exists.  In fact, God breaking into our human affairs and life actually triggers the horror.   The fact that these innocents are not Christians, but Jews, but nevertheless are honored as Christian martyrs (martyrs in deed but not in will) tells us that witnessing to the presence of God in life goes beyond explicit religious faith. 

I was deeply moved by a recent painting by Salt Lake City artist Judith Mehr.  It looks like an icon, and includes angels in the Russian orthodox iconographic tradition.  It is called “Omran, Angels Are Here!”  There, between the angels, is the image of the blood-covered and dazed 5 year old Syrian boy, Omran Daqneesh,  A photograph of the boy sitting in a triage station became a meme for the brutality of the attack on Aleppo Syria after his family home was bombed out by the Russian Air Force and his ten-year old brother Ali was killed. 

Mehr’s placing little Omran into a very traditional icon makes the point that holy innocents come from all traditions and backgrounds.  It underscores Jesus’ teaching that God is present where we least expect:  “Blessed are the poor.  Blessed are the starving.  Blessed are those overcome by grief.”

Cornish poet Charles Causley (1917-2003) wrote the poem “Innocents’ Song” about the Massacre of the Holy Innocents, placing it in a contemporary distinctly post-Christmas setting.  It makes the same point:  we must protect children and innocents, do all in our ability to limit the power and harm done by tyrants and the wicked. 

 
Innocents’ Song 

Who’s that knocking on the window,
Who’s that standing at the door,
What are all those presents
Laying on the kitchen floor?
Who is the smiling stranger
With hair as white as gin,
What is he doing with the children
And who could have let him in?
Why has he rubies on his fingers,
A cold, cold crown on his head,
Why, when he caws his carol,
Does the salty snow run red?
Why does he ferry my fireside
As a spider on a thread,
His fingers made of fuses
And his tongue of gingerbread?
Why does the world before him
Melt in a million suns,
Why do his yellow, yearning eyes
Burn like saffron buns?
Watch where he comes walking
Out of the Christmas flame,
Dancing, double-talking:
Herod is his name.

Grace and Peace. 
Fr. Tony+

Sunday, December 25, 2016

Joy for the Poor (Christmas Year A)


Gerrit van Honthorst-(Gherardo delle Notti) (Utrecht 1592-1656),  
Adoration of the Child, 1619-1620. Oil on canvas. Florence, Uffizi Gallery
 
Joy for the Poor
Homily delivered at Trinity Parish Ashland (Oregon)
24th December 2016: 6:00 p.m., 11:00p.m. Sung Festal Eucharist
The Rev. Fr. Anthony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.

God, give us hearts to feel and love,
Take away our hearts of stone and give us hearts of flesh. Amen.

I remember as a boy hearing for the first time the "naughty choirboy" version of the carol:  "while shepherds washed their socks by night, all seated on the ground."  It was about the time I first heard one of my comrades make the comment "'and there they found Joseph, and Mary, and the babe lying in a manger'--how did all three fit in there?"  We often misunderstand these stories.  We've heard them often, and familiarity breeds inattention.  One thing we miss out entirely is how profoundly political these stories are.  

Our Christmas Gospel reading from Luke today begins with a reference to Caesar Augustus:  Gaius Octavian, the adopted heir of Julius Caesar who conquered all other competitors for power and founded the Roman Empire.   Julius Caesar had been declared a god by the Roman senate after his assassination; when Augustus ascended to the role of First Citizen, he quickly accepted what was to become his favorite title:  divi filius, son of a god.  This was because he honored his adopted father Julius as a god as well, and liked the sound of the title.  His propaganda machine over the years added other terms to make sure everyone understood who Augustus, the son of God, was:  Savior (soter), Lord (dominus or kyrios), and High Priest (pontifex maximus).  Augustus, who brought in the Pax Romana, the Roman Peace, to make Rome the greatest nation on earth, wanted everyone to know that he was great, smart, rich, powerful, the ultimate winner where other Roman politicians and generals were losers.   The propaganda machine in the eastern provinces went even further:  the birth of Augustus had been miraculous and marked with signs in the heaven and divine announcements.   In becoming Emperor, Augustus was merely receiving his due.  He was quality, and had name recognition to beat the band.  It was not civil war that brought him to power, but divine will. 

The gospel writer who places the birth of Jesus against the backdrop of the rule of Augustus is making a point.    It is this little baby born in a stable who is Son of God, Savior, Lord, and High Priest, not Augustus.   The focus in this story is not on the rich, the powerful, and those who claimed they were quality.  The focus is on the lowly of the land: the poor.  The angel choirs and heralds announce the birth, just as the divine Augustus’ birth had been announced, but they do so to shepherds in the fields.  The ones who greet the baby Jesus are not the rich, famous, and powerful.  Shepherds come to the stable.  The prophets Simeon and Anna later in this chapter are both elderly retirees who spend their days in the Temple.  There is not a ruler in sight, nor a master of commerce.   It’s just poor people.  In this Gospel, when Jesus has grown up and finally gives his first sermon, he starts his ministry with these words:  “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor” (Luke 4:18). 

One of the reasons Luke’s infancy story is so warm is that it focuses on those who accept and love Jesus, and these are generally people on the margins of society, the poor. 

Contrast this with the story in Matthew:  Jesus’ people reject him at his birth, but mysterious magi (wizards) from the East bring him expensive gifts fit for a King and a Priest.   King Herod hears of the birth of Jesus from the magi, and along with the rich and mighty of Jerusalem high society, trembles in his boots.  He is afraid of a contender for the title King of the Jews, and begins plotting to rid himself of this unwanted competitor.  Herod lived in a Palace and fortress named after him, the Herodium, just south of Jerusalem.  So he sits in there in his private palace—dare I say, in “Herod Tower?”—driven by his own fear of becoming a loser, and orders a massacre.  The family of Jesus in this story has to flee to Egypt, become refugees and immigrants to save their lives, and later have to take up a new residence in Nazareth because Jerusalem, Bethelehem, and Judea are no longer safe.

But in Luke’s story, the poor welcome Jesus, and he is able to lose himself in the mass of poor people, and return with his family to grow up in his home town Nazareth, where he “increased in wisdom and in years, and in divine and human favor” (Luke 2:52).

The angel says “I bring you news of great joy to all people.”  There is irony here, for such an announcement of good news of a royal birth, or euangelion, are normally made to the elite ruling class.  When the angel says “all” here, he lays a bit of stress on the word "all," meaning, “including you, the poor.”  But he says “joy to all people,” all the same.  This announcement of good news is not just joy for the literal poor, the rich are included.  All are called to rejoice, including the wealthy and the powerful.  But in order to experience this joy, we must in our hearts feel the need and the open-handed sense of expectant hope of most of the poor.   I have lived in several third world countries and seen poverty.  Some of the most perfectly beautiful acts of generosity and sharing I have ever seen were performed by the poorest of the poor.  We see it in our Wednesday homeless shelter here at Trinity:  apart from a very few disturbed and occasionally belligerent people, most of those who come are grateful, generous, and bring as much to the evening as they get out of it.  This is the heart of the poor the angel song seeks. 

In order to accept and receive Jesus as Lord, Savior, High Priest, and Son of God, we need to reject the claims of such political leaders as Augustus and Herod in this broken and unhappy world.  In order to advance the Reign of God Jesus proclaimed, we must find solidarity with the poor, and work hard to help them, bring justice to or social and economic arrangements, and end exploitation and abuse of any and all our sisters and brothers.   We must turn aside from the vainglory of the rich, the powerful, and “quality” people.  We must with intention live simply, not abuse our earth or each other, and live joyfully knowing the Reign of God is in our midst. 

One of my favorite Christmas carols is a Welsh song that teaches this truth, called Poverty.  I learned it from British friends when I first lived in Beijing, where I served as the director of the Peking Diplomatic Carol Choir for several years.  Here are the words in English: 

All poor men and humble,
all lame men who stumble,
come haste ye, nor feel ye afraid.
for Jesus, our treasure,
with love past all measure,
in lowly poor manger was laid.
Though wise men who found him
laid rich gifts around him,
yet oxen they gave him their hay.
And Jesus in beauty
accepted their duty;
contented in manger he lay.
Then haste we to show him
the praises we owe him;
our service he ne'er can despise.
Whose love still is able
 to show us that stable
 where softly in manger he lies.
Poverty sung by the Adelaide Chamber Singers

In the name of Christ, Amen. 

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

St. Thomas the Apostle (Mid-week Message)



The Doubt of St. Thomas, He Qi (2001) 

St. Thomas the Apostle
Fr. Tony’s Midweek Message
December 21, 2016

Today is the feast day of St. Thomas the Apostle.  In the West we know him as “Doubting Thomas,” the one who said, "I won’t believe it until I touch it!”  But the Eastern Church remembers Thomas for his confession "My Lord and my God," and sees in him a model of faith.   The full story is found in John 20:19-29.   Since it is about doubt, experience, and faith, it is a good story to remember just before Christmas. 

I think we often get this story wrong:  when Jesus says “Blessed are you Thomas, because you believed when you saw; but more blessed still are they who do not see and still believe,” we think that this means he is encouraging mindless acceptance of someone else’s word on something and belittling getting our own experience and understanding on it.    Not so.  When Jesus says “believe” here, he means, “give your heart to,” “be faithful,” or “trust.”   Thomas is blessed because he trusts after experience.  Jesus adds that those who can manage trust even before experience, that is, those whose basic default position is trust and openness, have a deeper form of blessedness.

But that doesn’t mean blind submission to authority should trump reason and heuristic use of doubt.  It doesn’t mean that personal testimony and experience are less valuable than taking someone else’s word.   Having one’s own experience, and knowing and understanding mystery and beauty through personal knowledge is a profound real kind of understanding.  Believing someone else’s word for something is a pale imitation.  Note in the story that Thomas in the end doesn’t have to touch the wounds.  It is just seeing and hearing Jesus that brings him joyfully to his knees.  It is openness of heart where blessedness lies, where God can grab hold of us and change us, and it is this that trumps experience.   And it in itself is deep, moving experience.    

Earlier in John’s Gospel, Thomas told Jesus, “Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way [to follow you]?”  To this Jesus said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.  If you know me, you will know my Father also.  (John 14:1-7)   When Thomas says, “My Lord and my God,” it is clear that he now knows the Father and sees him through Jesus.  

Later tradition has Thomas going to India (the Kerala district) and founding the Church there.  He is said to have suffered martyrdom in Madras by a spear thrust.  This has particular resonance, since it was the spear wound in Jesus’ side that Thomas had wanted to touch. 

John Bell and the Iona Community set words about this story to the traditional Scots Gaelic tune Leis an Lurghainn,  and called it Tom’s Song:  

Where they were, I’d have been;
What they saw, I’d have seen;
What they felt, I’d have shown,
If I knew what they’d known.

Refrain
“Peace be with you,” he said,
“Take my hand, see my side.
Stop your doubting, believe
And God’s spirit receive.” 

So I made my demand
That unless, at first hand,
I could prove what they said,
I’d presume he was dead. 

All their tales I called lies
Till his gaze met my eyes;
And the words I’d rehearsed
Lost their force and dispersed.

When I stammered “My Lord!”
He replied with the word,
“Those who live in God’s light
Walk by faith, not by sight.” 

Some, like me, ask for proof,
Sit and sneer, stand aloof.
But belief which is blessed
Rests on God, not a test.

Grace, Peace, and Joyous Holidays. 
Fr. Tony+

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Beyond Right (Advent 4A)


 
Beyond Right
Isaiah 7:10-16; Romans 1:1-7; Matthew 1:18-25; Psalm 80:1-7, 16-18
Fourth Sunday of Advent (Year A)
Homily delivered at Trinity Parish Ashland (Oregon)
18 December 2016: 8:00 a.m. Said, 10:00 a.m. Sung Eucharist
The Rev. Fr. Anthony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.

God, give us hearts to feel and love,
Take away our hearts of stone and give us hearts of flesh. Amen.

Today, the final Sunday of Advent, is Mary Sunday.  But we hear actually very little about her in today’s Gospel.  That is because the cycle of Gospel readings for this year is from St. Matthew, and in general, Saint Matthew does not focus on women as closely as does Saint Luke.  The principal figure in Matthew’s infancy story is not Mary, but Joseph.  There is no annunciation by the angel Gabriel to the Blessed Virgin here, only an unexpected pregnancy and a dream explaining it to Joseph, her promised soon-to-be husband.   Matthew patterns Joseph after the Genesis patriarch by the same name, he of the coat of many colors, of dreams and prophetic interpretations, who saved his family by taking them into Egypt. 

Given how overwhelming the figure of the Blessed Virgin is in Luke and in early and later Christian faith and devotion, I find it somewhat comforting, as a man, that a figure like Joseph shows up in Jesus’ family.    The German carol, “Josef Lieber, Josef Mein” (Beloved Joseph, Joseph Mine), sums up well his role, “hilf mir weigen das Kindelein” “help me rock the little baby to sleep.”  Foster, not biological father, yet father all the same. 
 
There is an important detail in this story: “because he was a just man, Joseph did not want to publicly denounce Mary, so he decided to divorce her quietly.”  This assumes that Joseph could exercise the rights accorded to males in that society and, to protect his dignity (read: male pride), punish the woman who has so shamed him.  He can do this by publicly accusing her of adultery and divorcing her, and perhaps even see her stoned to death to satisfy the honor of a man who had seen his property rights so violated. 

But Joseph just can’t conceive of such a harsh and bitter way of treating Mary, although it is fully within his rights in his culture.   He decides a quiet divorce is the kindest way out of the difficult position into which Mary has put him.   Of course, abandoning Mary and her child would mean probable starvation for both or a life of prostitution for Mary, but at least he would not have to know about any of that if he made a clean break with the faithless girl. 

Joseph here is called a “just” or “upright” man.  In our lives, there different ways of choosing how to live.   We can look out for number one, not play by anyone’s rules, and be nasty, brutish, and get away with what we can.  The religious and legal traditions of most cultures, Joseph’s included, all rightly label such unfettered selfishness and shameless pursuit of one’s own pleasure at the expense of others as wrong, horrible, and deplorable.  Our laws and moral prescriptions aim to moderate and eliminate such bad behavior, and protect everyone by clearly defining our boundaries and rights.

And so we have a system of rights and obligations.  In this story, engaged people are required to be faithful, and faithlessness means punishment to restore the social order.  Wrongdoing must have consequences, after all!  But even here within a system of moral law and protection of rights, an aggrieved person can be either vicious or compassionate.  He may exact vengeance and cause humiliation, shame, or death, or he can quietly break off relations with the offender.   Joseph has every right, in his society, to punish Mary and make her a public spectacle.  But he chooses a less brutal path: quietly break the engagement and send her on her way. Both paths are legal, and “right” in accordance with their law.   

Of course, our values and sense of rights may be skewed and wrong in light of a broader system of ethics:  we can sense this from the distance of our own culture when we think that the basic logic of the rights Joseph enjoys here.  It is based in the oppression of women, in males holding females as chattel property in marriage.  This is an important thing to remember in our own age:  law and morality, so conceived, can be wrong.  People defending exploitation, cruelty and brutality on the basis of “we’re just exercising our legal rights” are still trying to defend the indefensible.

So we can be honorable, law-abiding citizens.  That is far better than selfish and unrestrained narcissists in pursuit of greed, pleasure, and raw power.   Beyond that, within the realm of legal rights, we can seek within limits vengeance and punishment, or be we can try to show compassion to those who have violated us.  Generally, this means not standing on our honor and insisting on our rights and dignities. 

 
This is the situation Joseph is in: out of compassion, he decides to exert the less cruel option of his legal rights: quietly put her away.  What would society be if wrong-doing were never punished, even in a less cruel way?   

There is something to be said on standing on one’s rights.  Back in September, I wrote a Trinitarian article on putting anger aside.  It told of me almost losing it in the Phoenix Arizona airport at rude and cruel TSA officials who put Elena through an ordeal that no one, especially the disabled, should ever have to face.  When I posted the article saying that seeking inner serenity and balance meant leaving rage alone, a dear friend and colleague from the foreign service made this comment:  “It's a thin line.  Are we like sheep? If we don't speak up, does our silence give approval to the [bad] behavior now and on future [victims]?” A Chinese scholar once told me about why he thought there is so little respect for human rights in China: “We get the governments we deserve—we are so focused on getting along, cultivating acceptance, and gracefully eating bitterness that over the centuries we have enabled tyrant after tyrant.  You Americans have stood up for your rights, and your leaders generally respect them.”   

Of course, you can maintain your serenity, not lose your temper, and still be consistent and strong in standing against wrong.   This is what Jesus calls us to do. 

This is because there is a path beyond insisting on our rights, beyond right itself. 

Joseph has a dream, and an angel tells him that Mary has not betrayed him, and rather, that the child to be born is holy.  Joseph must not abandon Mary or the baby.  He is to support and sustain Mary, foster the child, and even give it the heroic, patriotic name Joshua. 

On occasion, God intervenes and talks to us, whether in dreams, or scripture, or contemplative moments, or in the advice of friends.  And sometimes God tells us to go beyond right, beyond good, beyond nice, and truly sacrifice ourselves to make God’s love become flesh in our lives and the lives of others.  Sometimes this means civil disobedience; sometimes simply in forgoing our rights.  

Negatively, this principle lies behind several sayings in the Sermon on the Mount.  Jesus says that a commandment forbidding a bad thing does not mean you get a free pass on related things that have gone unmentioned.  “You have heard the Law say, do not commit adultery, but I tell you do not even look lustfully on another.  The Law  says do not murder, but I say, do not lose your temper in anger or call people demeaning things.” 

Jesus teaches us to forego our rights in a peaceful but robust engagement with evil: “If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him your left.”  If a haughty overlord gives a brutal but dismissive blow with the back of the right hand to someone lower in the pecking order, Jesus says “Don’t strike back.  Instead, stand up tall and turn, forcing them to use their open palm on your left cheek as they would a social equal.”  

He also says “If a creditor sues you for your outer garment, give him your inner garment as well. Let your nakedness shame them and reveal the nature of the exploitative system of the rich despoiling the poor.  Jesus also says, “If the Roman military compels you to carry baggage for them for a mile, insist on going with them a second mile.”   The one mile limit had been set up to prevent unmanageable popular disgruntlement and the uprisings it inspired. “Make those Romans break their own rules in order to show just truly how bad things are.”   Don’t stand on your own rights.  Give them up, and actively use the sacrifice to help bring the Reign of God near. 

Joseph’s path is less militant that this, but all the more self-sacrificing.  He listens to the dream and then spends the rest of his supporting and nurturing the woman and child whose abandonment had been his legal right.

Even in his infancy, even in the womb, Jesus calls us to abandon self, serve those who have no claim on us, and make God’s love present.  May we listen to that dream.  May we follow Joseph’s example and follow this call when it comes to us. 

In the name of God, Amen.

 

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Atrocity and Horror (mid-week message)

 
Atrocity and Horror
Fr. Tony’s Midweek Message
December 14, 2016

The news about the recapture this week of Aleppo by forces loyal to the Syrian President and his Russian allies is horrific:  poison gas used against civilian populations, rape of hundreds of women (including children), beheading of local residents (including infants).   The word horror comes from the Latin word meaning something that makes your hair stand on end.  Closely related is the word atrocity, from the Latin word for fierce and cruel.  “Deplorable” is a milder relative, coming from the Latin word for “something worthy to weep over.” 

I personally was witness to atrocity only twice in my life: both in the spring of 1989 in Beijing China.  It took me years to get over the deep scars that even witnessing such things caused.  These are things for which human beings were not made, things alien to what God had in mind in bringing us into existence when he declared it “very good.”  But unfortunately, they are things that happen all too often, and are the prima facie evidence that there is something very, very wrong with human beings, something that the Church has traditionally called indwelling or original sin, a general brokenness in the race that, absent from help from above, keeps us far from the good that God intends in us.  

Years ago, before living in Ashland, I once heard a parishioner tell me in an unguarded moment that he did not believe in original sin, since “I’m not a bad person, really!  If I’m honest I can’t think of a sin I need to repent of.”   Here in Ashland, I have often heard complaints about the “overly penitential tone” of the Prayer Book Eucharistic Prayers, and comments that “Celtic” spirituality is preferable because it believes in “original blessing” rather than “original sin.”    I’m not so sure about that characterization of Celtic spirituality.  To my mind, it embraces both ideas, not one over the other.  

Interestingly, the people who seem most willing to deny the reality of evil in the human heart are the ones who seem to have the hardest time when faced with such things as Aleppo or even what increasingly looks like a (so-far) bloodless coup against the American constitution by what one candidate in the Presidential election called with uncanny clarity “a basket of deplorables.”  The president elect appears to praise and think highly of the Russian and Syrian Presidents; his prospective Secretary of State has made a fortune in part by close collaboration with them.   

Carl Jung taught that we have to acknowledge and process the darkness and evil in our hearts before we can rightly come out into the light.  Those who make a leap supposedly directly into light without struggling in the darkness are deceiving themselves and are unstable, not wholly integrated psychologically.  Christian mystics have said the same thing again and again.  Today is the feast day of St. John of the Cross, whose magnificent Dark Night of the Soul is a meditation on how it is only by honestly embracing our failings and that we can find hope and unity. 

It is easy to see the evil in others, point to them, and think that somehow if we only got rid of them, we would get rid of evil.  But this is mere scapegoating, and is in itself a major driver in the very atrocity we seek to eliminate.  One of the most basic teachings of Jesus is that evil exists, and that it exists in each of our hearts.  Trusting in the loving God he called Abba is the only way out: surrendering to the God who promised to help us in our weakness and purge our sin. 

In these trying days of turmoil and fear, we must be attentive in seeing our own darkness,  and eschewing it.  We must also be valiant in honestly naming and confronting the evil in the hearts of others.  Speaking truth to power, standing up to the demonic powers that express themselves in our laws, institutions, and society.    By following this “way of the Cross” we can hope to arrive at an Easter morning without atrocity, horror, or deplorables. 

Grace and Peace, 
Fr. Tony+

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Incarnation and Sacrament (Mid-week Message)



Incarnation and Sacrament
Fr. Tony’s Mid-week Message
December 7, 2016

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. … And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us.”  (John 1:1, 14)

This time of year, a major point of our reflection and meditation is the incarnation of God in Jesus of Nazareth.  Incarnation, or God’s taking on of flesh, is a central doctrine of Christianity.  It generates a whole range of beliefs, practices, and feelings in the catholic tradition of Eastern and Western Christianity, whether Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, or Anglicanism.  Anglican Bishop of Oxford Charles Gore, in his magisterial Lux Mundi: A Series of Studies in the Religion of the Incarnation (1890), quotes several earlier Christian theologians on how our view of nature and the world changes in light of the doctrine of Incarnation:

“The wisdom of God, when first it issued in creation, came not to us naked, but clothed in the apparel of created things.  And then when the same wisdom would manifest Himself to us as the Son of God, He took upon Him a garment of flesh and so was seen of men” (Hugh of St. Victor, Migne Patrologia Latina V 177 para 580). 

“As the thought of the Divine mind is called the Word, Who is the Son, so the unfolding of that thought in external action … is named the word of the Word …  The incarnation is the exaltation of human nature and consummation of the Universe”” (Thomas Aquinas, Summa contra Gentiles IV 13).

“The whole world is a kind of bodily and visible Gospel of that Word by which it was created” (Herbert of Bosham, Migne Patrologia Latina V 190 para. 1353.)

“Every creature is a theophany” (John Scotus Eriugina, Migne Patrologia Latina V 122 para. 302). 

“Every creature is a Divine word, for it tells of God” (Bonaventure, Commentary on Ecclesiastes, ci. t. ix). 

Because of this ennobled view of all creation, in which the Creator took on the limits and weakness of being a creature, catholics (again of all stripes, whether Eastern, Roman, or Anglican) see throughout creation and created things the presence of God.  This is clear in how we understand sacraments, those God-given practices and actions where an inward reality and presence of God is made manifest in an outward sign, one that not only points to the inward truth symbolically, but also which actually helps bring about the very truth it points to.  In baptism, washing in water in the name of the Holy Trinity symbolizes and brings about regeneration and life in God.  In the Holy Eucharist, bread and wine not only symbolize Christ’s body and blood, but make them truly and really present for us.  (It is not so much that they “re-present” Christ’s sufferings and victory over death but rather make us present at the original event.) 

But this sacramental view based in incarnation extends much further.  In the words of Fr. Andrew Greeley in his book The Catholic Imagination, we “live in an enchanted world.”  Our lives are full of created objects that hint at and reveal the mystery and light behind and beneath them and all our lives: beautiful art in worship, whether music, heart-felt liturgy, or lovely vestments, be they stained glass, votive candles, incense, images and statues, or holy water or anointing oil.   As Greeley explains, these “paraphernalia are mere hints of a deeper and more pervasive religious sensibility which … see[s] the holy lurking in creation.   [W]e find our houses and our world haunted by a sense that the objects, events, and persons of daily life are revelations of grace.”

In the early 1900s, the Canon at Westminster Abbey, Percy Dearmer, wrote the following hymn.  It sums up better than anything else, I think, this sacramental, incarnational view of our lives:

“Draw us in the Spirit's tether; For when humbly, in thy name,
Two or three are met together, Thou art in the midst of them:
Alleluia! Alleluia! Touch we now thy garment's hem.

“As the brethren used to gather In the name of Christ to sup,
Then with thanks to God the Father Break the bread and bless the cup,
Alleluia! Alleluia! So knit thou our friendship up.

“All our meals and all our living Make us sacraments of thee,
That be caring, helping, giving, We may true disciples be.
Alleluia! Alleluia! We will serve thee faithfully.”

Grace and peace,
Fr. Tony+


Sunday, December 4, 2016

Endurance, Encouragement, and Hope (Advent 2A epistle)

 



Endurance, Encouragement, and Hope
Isaiah 11:1-10; Romans 15:4-13; Matthew 3:1-12; Psalm 72:1-7, 18-19
Second Sunday of Advent (Year A)
Homily delivered at Trinity Parish Ashland (Oregon)
4th December 2016: 8:00 a.m. Said, 10:00 a.m. Sung Eucharist
The Rev. Fr. Tony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.

God, give us hearts to feel and love,
Take away our hearts of stone and give us hearts of flesh. Amen.

“The scriptures from past ages were written down to instruct us, so that by the endurance they teach and the encouragement they give, we might live in hope.   May the God who gives endurance and encouragement grant you to live in harmony with each other, as Christ Jesus wants, glorifying together with one voice the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.     May the God who gives hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope, empowered by the Holy Spirit.  (Romans 15:4-6, 13; my translation)

Hope is understood very differently by different cultures. The ancient Greeks and Romans saw hope and fear as emotions related to a creative act of our minds:  you could hope even in the face of overwhelming bad odds and you could fear even if things looked to turn out well.  In some ways, the emotions were epiphenomena, artifacts of our hearts and minds that really didn’t tell us much about reality or the future.  Our modern way of thinking about hope very much follows this idea:  We fear that as comforting as hope might be, it may not have much to do with the way things are.  We express this in such phrases as “Don’t get your hopes up.”

Ancient Hebrew as a language was very ill-equipped to express abstraction, and as a result tended to focus on examples, contrasts and comparisons, and juxtaposition of concrete cases rather than abstract discourse.  As a result, the ancient Hebrews and early Christians saw hope and fear as two sides of the same coin: expectation.  If you expected good things for you, this was hope.  If you expected bad things for you, this was fear.    Biblical teaching about hope is all rooted in this concrete way of looking at things.  If you really trust in a loving and good God, then your expectation will be that in the end things will be well.

Today’s scriptures are all about hope.  John the Baptist proclaims the coming of the great Day of God when all things will be set straight.  He declares, “Change the way you think, for the Reign of God is near!”  Instead of urging people to go to the Temple, compromised by a corrupt and venal political establishment, to purge sins and guilt in the old traditional way of offering sacrifice, he asks people to perform a once and for all ritual washing and bring forth in their lives fruits that show just how much they have turned away from their old ways.  Hope for setting things right means change in the way we think, believe, and behave. 

The Isaiah reading is about hope for national recovery after the devastating reign of the wicked King Ahaz.  A sprout will spring up into a great tree from the dead, rotten stump that Ahaz has made of the Davidic line.  

The reading from Romans teaches that God is the God of hope.  If you trust in God, then you will expect that in the end all will be well. The Holy Scriptures help us in this: they teach us patience, endurance, and steadfastness through their stories of the faithful few who keep on keeping on despite darkness, suffering, and turmoil.  Such stories give us encouragement.  No matter how dark things appear, there is light behind it all, waiting to burst forth. As Desmond Tutu wrote, “Hope is being able to see that there is light despite all of the darkness.” 

There are moments when we seem to lose hope, when the darkness about seems to overwhelm.  Whether it is dealing with old age or illness, or the death of a dearly loved friend or companion, or what seems to you the unthinkable happening in our national life, we can lose hope.  But our underlying trust in God encourages us and teaches endurance.    Remember that the basic Latin meaning of the word patience is suffering: steadfastness means enduring through the suffering, indeed, that why they call it long-suffering.  The Chinese character for patience, rěn, is the symbol of a heart with a knife above it:  you keep on going, no matter how deeply your heart is wounded.   As Churchill said, “When you find yourself in Hell, all there is to do is to keep going, and get through.” 

This is one of the reasons that Christians have over the centuries come back again and again to the sufferings of Christ on the Cross as a point of contemplation and meditation:  it is not ghoulish pleasure at witnessing the horrible.  This story of ultimate suffering encourages us and give us hope because we know that the story ends well on Easter.  And we know he did it for our sake.  When the sky is darkest is when you see most clearly the brilliant stars. 

 
At the age of 30, St. Julian of Norwich was faced with a terrible illness that threatened her life.  Her mother was called to her bedside, as well as many of Julian’s sister nuns.  Delirious and in pain for over a week, having received last rites, Julian was sure she was going to die.  Lying in great weakness, she was overwhelmed by a sense of the love of God, and had visions.  They gave her hope, and gradually she recovered.  Remembering that during the visions she was told to write them down, she recorded the visions in her book, “Showings of Divine Love.”   In it she tells of the priest setting a crucifix before her eyes as she loses all feeling in her upper body and the ability to adequately draw her breath.  But instead of dying, she draws from the image of Jesus a sense of union with God on the Cross, and a desire to share his wounds and sufferings.  Seeing the blood of Jesus come flowing down, she is reassured that no matter what evil or terror she may encounter, she is safe.  Then she writes,

“As I saw this bodily sight, I caught a spiritual glimpse of his love and affection for us.  He is to us everything that is good and comforting, to our help.  He is our clothing, the love that wraps us and enfolds us, embraces us and guides us, surrounds us in kindness, so tender that he will never desert us. In this I saw that he is in fact everything that is good as far as I understand that word … Then he showed me something small, no bigger than a hazelnut, lying in the palm of my hand. … I looked at it and thought ‘What can this be?’  And then the answer came: ‘It is everything in creation.’  I was amazed that something so little and fragile could last, and not fall suddenly into nothingness.  And then the answer came to my understanding:  It lasts and will last, because God loves it.  [I realized that] everything has its being through the love of God.  In this little object I saw three things: God made it, God loves it, and God preserves it.”

She has further visions of God’s love, seen in the wounds of the crucified Lord and the sorrows of St. Mary the Virgin, his Blessed Mother.   And Julian hears the voice of God telling her, “All shall be well, and all shall be well and all manner of thing shall be well.”

Writing much later, Lady Julian reflected on what this all means: “Know it well, love was his meaning. Who showed it to you? Love. What did he show you? Love. Why did he show it? For love.’ … God did not say, ‘You shall never be tempest-tossed, suffer, or be diseased’; rather, God said, ‘You shall not be overcome.’”  Because of this, “The greatest honor we can give Almighty God is to live gladly because of the knowledge of his love.”

Sisters and brothers at Trinity, we must not lose hope.  We must not be discouraged.  As Langston Hughes wrote,

“Hold fast to dreams,
For if dreams die
Life is a broken-winged bird,
That cannot fly.”

I invite us to trust the loving God that Jesus taught.  I encourage us to realize when suffering that God is on the cross along with us.  I beg that we realize with Julian the whole of universe can be summed up in God’s love and care, and that all will be well, and all manner of thing will be well.   No matter how troubled and painful the present, in the end God will bring us to joy.  And if we do not yet have joy, then we are not yet at the end.   I invite us all to endurance, encouragement, and hope. 

In the name of Christ, Amen