These Nine Days - A Sermon Preached on Facebook Live
Easter VII - May 24, 2020
The lectionary lessons can be found here
There’s
a cartoon making its way around Episcopal circles on Social Media which makes
light fun of the Ascension scene which is depicted in the first reading from
the Book of Acts. The first panel depicts Jesus saying to his disciples, “Okay,
boys. Gotta go. Remember everything I taught you.”
The
second panel depicts the feet of Jesus at the top of the frame while the
disciples say, “Bye, boss.” In the third panel, one disciple asks another, “Wait, what did he teach us?” And, one
answers, “Well, it was pretty much to love one another as he and God love us.”
A
third says, “Well, that ought to be easy enough.” In the fourth panel, some
very learned looking men in academic robes are making their way up the hill
toward them.
One of the disciples says, “Uh-oh! Here come the theologians.”
Jesus
was always breaking things down for us, telling us stories to try to illustrate
the point he was trying to make. When you contrast some of the stories of Jesus
with the accounts of some of his last earthly prayers as reported in John’sgospel, well, it can get a bit murky if not downright confusing. (John 17:1-11)
Luke’s
account in the Book of Acts (Acts 1:6-14) tells a story that makes things much clearer in my
mind.
Some
folks who love Jesus don’t pay much attention to the Feast of the Ascension –
which was celebrated just this past Thursday.
Other Christians see it as such a
major event in our journey in faith that they take the period of nine days –
the time from the Ascension of Jesus until he sends the gift of the Holy Spirit
which we celebrate next Sunday as the Feast of the Pentecost – as a time of
specially dedicated prayer.
We
read in the first lesson from the Book of Acts (1:6-14) that, after Jesus
ascended to heaven, the disciples left the Mt of Olives in Bethany and gathered
back in the Upper Room in Jerusalem where they were “constantly devoting
themselves to prayer, together with certain women, including Mary the mother of
Jesus, as well as his brothers.”
There
are many members of the church here and around the world who are dedicating
themselves to a nine-day period of prayer, known as a “novena,” (from ‘novem’
Latin for nine) in anticipation of and preparation for the gift of the Holy
Spirit on Pentecost.
The
disciples in that Upper Room were praying for the strength and guidance to
figure out how they were going to live out the teachings of Jesus after the
crucifixion and resurrection and ascension.
Many faithful disciples today are praying for the strength and guidance
to figure out how it is we are to live in this world in the midst of and after
the cataclysmic event of the pandemic.
How
are we going to be the church when we can’t gather in our church buildings?
And, after the pandemic has passed, how will we
reimagine ourselves as Church, as that community of baptized believers who are
sent to recreate the world?
How are we to become what our Prayer Book defines
the church as: “the community of the New Covenant,” the “Body of Christ,” “the
People of God,” the “New Israel”, a “Holy Nation,” the “New Jerusalem” a “Royal
Priesthood,” and the “Pillar and Ground of Truth”? (p 854)
With so many different theologians
expressing often wildly diverse theologies, how can we become what we pray in
the Creeds: “one, holy, catholic and apostolic”?
Some of you know that one of my
favorite ways to pray and meditate is to walk. Something happens when my feet
are on the ground and I am in the midst of God’s creation. This is why I love
the spiritual discipline of pilgrimage – walking in places where other people
have walked, bringing their questions of faith.
As I walked this week and thought
about these nine days, I remembered a conversation I had just last year, while I was on
pilgrimage in Scotland. It was the day before I left for the sacred isle of Iona, one of the "thin places" of Celtic spirituality.
I had been visiting friends in Glasgow and took an Uber back to my hotel room. My Uber driver was a lovely man named Mr. Patel.
Although he was from South India, he spoke with a decided Scottish accent, which I found disconcerting, so I paid even closer attention to him.
This is what I wrote in my journal
after I got back to my room.
M.P. Which is not the same as karma.
Me: Yes, I'm sorry. I made a bad joke.
M.P.: Yes, but it is true. Christians talk a lot about sin, but usually, it is about someone else's sin. Not their sin.
Me: Yes, I'm afraid that's true.
M.P.: If Christians were more concerned about their own sin rather than worry if someone else is sinning, the world would be a better place, you know?
Me: Indeed.
M.P.: And, Ma'am, if you don't mind me saying, I think if Christians stuck with the basics of their religion, and taught the basics of their religion, they would be better Christians.
Me: How do you mean?
M.P.: Stay with the basics: God is Love. Jesus is love incarnate. The Holy Spirit will guide you in Love. Judge not lest ye be judged. Love your neighbor as yourself. When you sin, when you fall short, repent and God will forgive you because God loves you. Forgive as you have been forgiven. And, be thankful. Always. Always. Be thankful. If you have thanks in your heart, you can not help but love others as God loves you. To forgive others as God forgives you. To worry more about your own sin than if someone else is sinning.
Me: You speak such truth it warms my heart and brings tears to my eyes. I think you are a better Christian than I am.
M.P.: Well, I went to Christian school in South India. I know about the teachings of Jesus. But the brothers and sisters who taught me cared more about nourishing my mind and feeding my body and tending my soul than whether or not they could convert me to their beliefs.
M.P. Which is not the same as karma.
Me: Yes, I'm sorry. I made a bad joke.
M.P.: Yes, but it is true. Christians talk a lot about sin, but usually, it is about someone else's sin. Not their sin.
Me: Yes, I'm afraid that's true.
M.P.: If Christians were more concerned about their own sin rather than worry if someone else is sinning, the world would be a better place, you know?
Me: Indeed.
M.P.: And, Ma'am, if you don't mind me saying, I think if Christians stuck with the basics of their religion, and taught the basics of their religion, they would be better Christians.
Me: How do you mean?
M.P.: Stay with the basics: God is Love. Jesus is love incarnate. The Holy Spirit will guide you in Love. Judge not lest ye be judged. Love your neighbor as yourself. When you sin, when you fall short, repent and God will forgive you because God loves you. Forgive as you have been forgiven. And, be thankful. Always. Always. Be thankful. If you have thanks in your heart, you can not help but love others as God loves you. To forgive others as God forgives you. To worry more about your own sin than if someone else is sinning.
Me: You speak such truth it warms my heart and brings tears to my eyes. I think you are a better Christian than I am.
M.P.: Well, I went to Christian school in South India. I know about the teachings of Jesus. But the brothers and sisters who taught me cared more about nourishing my mind and feeding my body and tending my soul than whether or not they could convert me to their beliefs.
So, my way
of life is Hindu and I try to practice the basic teachings of Jesus. He was a
good man. A very, very good man. He knew the Ten Commandments and the Sanatana
Dharma. You can hear it in the prayer he taught his disciples and the New
Commandment he gave them. If some of the people who say they are Christians
would actually follow his teachings, well, it would be good. It would be very
good.
Me: Hmmmm . . . . Less sin, more Dharma.
M.P.: Ha! I think that would make a good bumper sticker.
Me: Indeed. I'm so glad I came here to Glasgow. I was supposed to go to Edinburgh today. I think part of why I'm here instead is to meet you.
M.P.: I am so grateful that God has put you in my path. I am so grateful to the Christians who gave me an education. You make me think that maybe Christianity has a future.
Me: Well, there are some days when I worry about that.
M.P. Worry less. Be more of who you are, more of the time. Let your light shine. Others will follow. That's how it worked for Jesus, right?
Namaste.
Me: Hmmmm . . . . Less sin, more Dharma.
M.P.: Ha! I think that would make a good bumper sticker.
Me: Indeed. I'm so glad I came here to Glasgow. I was supposed to go to Edinburgh today. I think part of why I'm here instead is to meet you.
M.P.: I am so grateful that God has put you in my path. I am so grateful to the Christians who gave me an education. You make me think that maybe Christianity has a future.
Me: Well, there are some days when I worry about that.
M.P. Worry less. Be more of who you are, more of the time. Let your light shine. Others will follow. That's how it worked for Jesus, right?
Namaste.
I have come to call that story "When Jesus met Krishna in an Uber in Glasgow."
If ever there was evidence of the gift of the Spirit, I experienced it while on that Uber ride with Mr. Patel in Glasgow. Indeed, I often wonder if that wasn’t Jesus disguising himself as Mr. Patel.
If ever there was evidence of the gift of the Spirit, I experienced it while on that Uber ride with Mr. Patel in Glasgow. Indeed, I often wonder if that wasn’t Jesus disguising himself as Mr. Patel.
As we
live out the remaining seven of the nine days of this time between the Ascension
and Pentecost, I ask you to consider the words of Mr. Patel. It would be well, I think, to consider and meditate and pray how it is we get back to basics of
our faith.
What are the basics of your faith
and how are you faithful to them?
How are you being the church in the world –
even without a church building?
How can you make sure that Christianity has a
future?
How can you be more of who God created you to be?
How can you let your
light shine in the darkness of this time so that others might follow the Light
of God and find their own spark of divinity within?
Because all of it really does come
down to this, “Love one another as God and Jesus have loved us so that we all
may be one.”
Amen. Or, as my friend Mr. Patel
would say, “Namaste.”
No comments:
Post a Comment