The Anamchara Fellowship, June 15, 2012 |
A sermon for the
installation of Abbess Barbara Clare, AF
St. Mary’s
Episcopal Church, Wayne, PA
June 15, 2012 –
The Rev’d Dr. Elizabeth Kaeton, preacher
Please pray with me: (sung) Into the woods / It's time
to go, / I hate to leave, / I have to, though. Into the woods / It's time, and
so / I must begin my journey. In the Name of the Triune God, who is Beloved, who is Love,
and who Loves unconditionally. Amen.
It is a somewhat daunting task to preach for the Installation
of an Abbess, especially when said Abbess has been your partner in life for more than half your life. Oh, the stories I could tell – but, won’t. (Well, I promised I
wouldn’t.)
What I do want you to know is that your Abbess is a huge
Disney fan. So, be warned: If you ever have community movie night and she is in
charge of the film selection, be prepared to watch one of the Disney classics
like Old Yeller, Mary Poppins or The
Parent Trap. Failing that, she may also try to convince you to watch The
Bells of St. Mary or The Song of
Bernadette or even, God help us,
It’s a Wonderful Life – even when it’s not
Christmas.
Consider yourselves warned.
I am not a great fan of Disney (I don’t like the way he
treats the women characters), but I do love Broadway plays. Musicals are a
favorite. Your new Abbess, of course, does not. Except for one. It’s the Steven
Sondheim, James Lapine work known as Into the Woods.
In fact, she loves it so much that she asked me if I could
work it in somehow into this sermon. In the more than 26 years I've been ordained, she’s never made any request
of any sermon I’ve ever written. So, given the occasion, how could I refuse?
The thing of it is, she’s right.
She often is, but please don’t let her know
that I said that. (She’s so
nervous, she’s only half listening to what I’m saying. Shhhh….)
Sr. BJ - co-founder of Anamchara Fellowship |
BJ and Julian, have set this community on a firm foundation.
It was their dream, their vision which led us here today and we are all joyful,
grateful debtors of their servant leadership.
And now, a new phase of the life
of this community has begun, with new leadership, building on the vision of what
has - intended or not - become part of the emergent monastic movement.
There are many, many of these groups of rag-tag Christians,
who are deeply hungry to find a way to live a life of prayer and service in
community in ways they cannot find in church.
Some embrace the Benedictine idea
of stability, building neighborhoods of people who live with others or, perhaps, in their own homes with
their own spouses/partners and children, but who share resources and help each
other while providing service to the community.
This community called Anachara Fellowship is unique in that you
are not as concerned with stability of location as stability of life. Your energies are not centered around a
church building, or monastery or convent; rather, you constellate your energies
around being, as you say, “bound to each other by common ideals and a commitment to prayer
and service".
The Pathologist and the Abbess |
How will you do this with new leadership? How will you do
this with an ever-increasing membership base? Make no mistake: the one certain
thing in life is change.
I’m sure both BJ and Julian could not have asked for
or imagined the changes that surround them today – imagined all these faces
sitting around the ever-widening circle of membership – imagined ever not being
in the driver’s seat of this incredible, mystical journey into a new, emerging
form of monasticism.
And yet, here you are, grown and growing and with a new
leader. It can all feel a bit like a fairy tale, complete with a Bishop and
Priests and Deacons, an Abbess and some religious men and women in modern versions and various stages of
medieval clothing.
All we need is a little girl in a red riding hood, a big bad
wolf, a witch and a giant and maybe some magic beans. Where will this new
chapter in this journey take us? God knows.
(Sing) The way is clear / The light is good / I have
no fear / Nor no one should / The woods are just trees / The trees are just
wood / No need to be afraid there— (there’s something in the glade, there). /
Into the woods / Without delay / But careful not / To lose the way / Into the
woods / Who knows what may / Be lurking on the journey?
This is where I think your new Abbess may be right (Did I
just admit that for a second time? Shhhh….). Into the Woods may give us some insights into this event and what is
about to unfold and it may even shed some light on the gospel appointed for
today (Mt. 20:-20-30).
Into the Woods covers
multiple themes: growing up, parents and children, accepting responsibility,
morality, and finally, wish fulfillment and its consequences. William A. Henry
III wrote that the play's "basic insight ... is that at heart, most fairy tales
are about the loving yet embattled relationship between parents and children.
Almost everything that goes wrong — which is to say that almost everything that can
— arises from a failure of parental or filial duty, despite the best
intentions."
In today’s Gospel, the mother of the Sons of Zebedee comes
up to Jesus, and, kneeling before him, asks that her sons sit, one at his right
hand and one at his left, in his kingdom. Jesus looks at her and says, “You do
not know what you are asking. Are you able to drink the cup that I am about to
drink?” And they say to him, “We are able”.
Fools! They have no idea what they are saying, do they? Then
again, it’s easy for us to say. We know how the story ends. Neither James and
John nor their mother had any idea – in their wildest imaginings – what was to
happen to Jesus and what would happen to them. If they knew, they never would
have asked.
We have no idea how this new chapter of your life will end –
much less where it will lead. All we can do is to step out together in
faith.
Bishop Brookhart laying hands on Barbara Clare |
I want to be clear: There’s
great mystery in that, but there is no magic.
In a few moments, the Bishop will
lay his hands on Barbara and she will emerge your new Abbess. Your bishop is
wise enough to know that he doesn’t do that by himself. His action only
confirms what you and she have heard as a vocational call from God.
I have come to understand that Bishops are called to their
role because, while they are supposed to be visionaries, they are also called
to have a firm grasp on the obvious.
Indeed, I think all of us who are called
to ministry - lay and ordained - need to have a wee bit of all three: vision and mystery and reality.
The truth is that there is no magic in the habit – much less
the veil – any more than there’s magic in the collar I wear around my neck or
the mitre the bishop wears on his head. These are just outward and visible signs of the deep mystery of vocation.
And while titles like ‘the Rt. Rev’d’
and ‘the Rev’d Dr. ‘ and ‘Abbess’ sound important, they are no more important
than the fact that our baptism makes us brothers and sisters in Christ. There is no magic in that but there is
a great mystery to our faith.
Magic and mystery. It’s important not to confuse the two. Grace can look like magic but its real power lies deep in the mystery of faith.
It’s like the song Little Red Riding Hood sings after she
emerges from the belly of the wolf:
(Sung) And I know things now, many valuable things /
That I hadn't known before. / Do not put your faith in a cape and a hood / They
will not protect you the way that they should. / And take extra care with
strangers, / even flowers have
their dangers, / And though scary is exciting, /Nice is different than good. /
Now I know, don't be scared. / Granny is right, just be prepared. / Isn't it
nice to know a lot? / ..And a little bit.. not.
Sr. B.J handing her staff to Abbess Barbara Clare |
If your new Abbess is wise – and I believe she is and you
were wise to call her – she will understand this and live into it and out of
it. And, if she doesn’t, I believe you will be wise enough to let her know.
The thing about leadership in community is that there are as
many blessings as there are curses – and sometimes blessings can come disguised
as curses and curses can be reversed and become blessings.
Sometimes, leaders can seem like
witches or giants to those who as we like to say in the church, have “issues
with authority”.
Truth be told we ALL have issues with authority. We’re
Episcopalians, for goodness sake! We broke off from the Church of England in
the Anglican Communion to which we both now belong, and we’ve been squabbling
with her – and she with us – ever since!
That’s really what this so-called Anglican Covenant is
about. ‘Mother Church” is angry with us for upsetting the so-called “orthodox”
members of the family and so she has set out to tell us who we are and the
‘relational consequences” if we are ever naughty again – even though we are a federation
of mutually interdependent churches.
Talk about your ‘issues with authority’!
Bishop Brookhart and Sr. Sheila Brigid, Deacon |
The thing about authority is that it comes, part and parcel,
with leadership. The thing to keep in mind about servant leadership is that
authority comes to the servant leader from Jesus which is always in tension
with the authority inherent in the Body of Christ.
It’s a balancing act – a thing worked out between the vision
of the leader and the firm grasp she has on the reality of the community she is called to serve.
When Barbara called me to tell me that she had been elected,
I, of course, was thrilled and congratulated her.
She asked if I had any advice. I thought for a
minute and responded, “Well, it’s like the old prostitute once said, ‘It’s not
the work. It’s the stairs.’”.
Elevation to a position of authority can bring about
resentment, not because the person is inherently bad or good but because
sometimes, you have to make decisions that are not popular. Sometimes, a leader
will take you places you hadn’t considered before and it makes you anxious or
scared and you don’t want to go but the leader presses on and everyone else is joining so you figure you might as well but really don't want to.
The resentment you harbor in the secret recesses of your heart can help you to turn her into “a
witch” – someone you think is not very good and not very nice. She becomes the object of our passive-aggression and/or scapegoating Except, somewhere inside your
knowing, you know she’s right. It can be infuriating and oh, so easy to take it
all out on the servant leader.
I love what the Sondheim witch sings in the song ‘The Last
Midnight’: “I’m the witch. I’m not good. I’m not nice. I’m just right.
I’m the witch.”
Which is why Jesus teaches his disciples, “You know that
the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great men exercise
authority over them. It shall not be so among you; but whoever would be first
among you must be your slave; even as the Son of man came not to be served but
to serve, and to give his life as ransom for many.”
Abbess receiving the obedience of Br. William Morgan |
In order to accomplish this, you will have to rely heavily
on the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
I love the Celtic understanding of the
third person of the Trinity. She is a Geadh-Glas - the Wild Goose. Celtic
spirituality teaches that the Holy Spirit is the representative of God’s femininity.
It provides a wonderful balance, I think, to the traditional male-dominated
understanding of God.
In many ways, emergent monastic communities like Anamchara
Fellowship are on a "wild goose chase" - in search of the Holy Spirit
to renew and revitalize their souls and, in so doing, rediscover the radical
roots of Christianity in community.
Oh, to be sure, the world sees you as sillies and fools.
Those who chase after wild geese - or tilt at windmills or dream the dreams of
God for a 'beloved community' – are of’t seen as such.
I can't imagine a better endeavor for those who follow Jesus
- nor a new Abbess to lead them in their quest.
Off you go then, into the woods on a wild goose chase. Here’s my four-fold wish for you:
May
the winds of the Holy Spirit be always at your back.
May Ruach dance on the
chaos of this newly emerging creation.
May Shekinah take you through the
pathos, into ethos, and lead you to Theos.
And may your ears always be tuned to
hear the honking of a Geadh-Glas - a Wild Goose - calling you ever closer to home.
Now, in order to get your wish, you must go (sung):
Into the
woods/ Where nothing's clear /
Where witches, ghosts / And wolves appear.
Into the
woods / And through the fear / You have to take the journey.
Into the
woods / And down the dell, / In vain perhaps / But who can tell?
Into the
woods to lift the spell . . . .
Into the
woods to lose the longing.. . . .
Into the
woods to have the child,
To wed the Prince / To get
the money / To save the house, / To kill the wolf,
To find the father / To
conquer the kingdom / To have, to
wed / To get, to save,
To kill, to keep, / To go to
the Festival!
Into the
woods,
Into the
woods,
Into the
woods,
Then out
of the woods--
And happy ever after! (I wish).
Amen.
4 comments:
Sondheim! Perfect.
I can't think of a Sondheim play I don't love. Glad Ms. Conroy suggested it.
I love "Into the Woods!" These wise words in particular:
"Elevation to a position of authority can bring about resentment, not because the person is inherently bad or good but because sometimes, you have to make decisions that are not popular. Sometimes, a leader will take you places you hadn’t considered before and it makes you anxious or scared and you don’t want to go but the leader presses on and everyone else is joining so you figure you might as well but really don't want to.
The resentment you harbor in the secret recesses of your heart can help you to turn her into “a witch” – someone you think is not very good and not very nice. She becomes the object of our passive-aggression and/or scapegoating Except, somewhere inside your knowing, you know she’s right. It can be infuriating and oh, so easy to take it all out on the servant leader."
are so pertinant to where I and some friends are right here and right now. Thanks you--we needed someone else to say what we already know.
Jackie - Wisdom is often born of suffering. Been there. Done that. Got the T-shirt to cover the scars.
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