Monday, August 20, 2012

Sermon for August 19th 2012 - PROUD of the UCC!!



 EUGENIA UNITED / ST. JOHN’S UNITED
Summer Worship 2012

AUGUST 19TH – 12TH of Pentecost

Scripture Readings:
          I Kings 2:10-12; 3:3-14
            Psalm 111                                                    (VU 833)
            Ephesians 5:15-20
            John 6:51-58

Hymns:
          Eugenia:
410 VU           This Day God Gives Me
                        651 VU           Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah
501 VU           Break Now The Bread of Life
224 VU           Sing a Happy Hallelujah
                        509 VU           I The Lord of Sea and Sky
         
St John’s:
410 VU           This Day God Gives Me
                        224 VU           Sing a Happy Hallelujah
                        501 VU           Break Now The Bread of Life
                        651 VU           Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah
509 VU           I The Lord of Sea and Sky

Call to Worship:
One: Come to us, Holy God, as we gather before you;
ALL: encircle us with your love.
One: Bless us with your sustaining presence;
ALL: surround us with your grace.
One: Draw us ‘round your living Word,
ALL: and bind us to one another as disciples of Christ,
One: whose Spirit is in our midst.
ALL: Amen.

 SERMON:

Diana Butler-Bass writes in her recent book “Christianity after Religion”:
The history of Christianity can be told as a story of the tension between order and prophecy. Jesus came as a prophet, one who challenged and transformed Judaism. A charismatic community grew up around his teachings and eventually formed into the church. The church organized, and then became an institution. The institution provided guidance and meaning for many millions. And then it became guarded, protective of the power and wealth it garnered, the influence it wielded, and salvation it alone provided.  (pg 89)
I offer this quotation today because for the first time in a very long time, I can honestly say that I am proud to be part of this United Church of ours … I’ve had a long and winding road in the United Church, and have often felt that as a bureaucracy, the United Church has lost its connection with that which makes it the United Church. We’ve let the rules and the policies and procedures define us – we’ve listened to the lawyers so much in the wake of the Residential School findings, that our core of being a Church engaging the world with values of faith has slipped away … today prophecy has pushed back the order and something courageous has happened …
But this past week as I watched, listened and read about what was happening at the 41st gathering of our General Council, I felt the refreshing winds of the Spirit blowing not only through that court of the Church, but outwards into the circles of community we call home … For the first time in almost 30 years our Church has embraced and enacted spirit fueled change. And over and over and over, as resolutions were discussed, debated and voted on, delegates and Church voices spoke of prayer … spoke of discernment … and spoke of listening for and listening to the Spirit …
It was a truly remarkable week, and one that stirs hope … this past week we’ve moved and grown and embraced our faith like never before.
Some of the highlights from this General Council include the changes to the United Church crest to reflect our long history with the First Nations of our country. Our Crest now bears the four directional colours in the background panels, and the Mohawk words for “That all may be one.” As GC ended, a formal protocol was signed between the Church and the First Nations ministries to reflect not only the past that we’ve walked, but to help improve relations in the future … we’ve taken another step in living the historic apologies our Church has offered our First Nations sisters and brothers for the errors of the past.
At GC we’ve also had the adoption of the three articles of faith we were part of studying through the fall and winter – now, in addition to the Articles of Faith we include the Statement of Faith, the New Creed and the Song of Faith as part of the definition of who we are …
GC also stood with the First People of BC and said an emphatic NO to the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline that would carry oil into Kitamaat and send tankers out through the rugged BC coastline.
GC took the unpopular stand to call on Israel to stop building settlements on the occupied territories and to change its approach to the Palestinian people. The initial proposal was modified, and we are called now to boycott products from the Occupied territories and to prioritize our support of the Palestinian people.
And perhaps most significant of all – our new moderator The Reverend Gary Paterson, the minister from St Andrew Wesley in Downtown Vancouver steps into the role bringing with him a gracious and gentle leadership, a deep personal spirituality, a gift for preaching, and a poet’s sense of the prophetic role of Church. Gary also happens to be gay, and his spouse of over 30 years, Tim Stevenson, are very much part of the historic journey we’ve taken as a Denomination in our acceptance of Lesbian and Gay people not only in our congregations, but in our leadership.
We stand in an interesting time … our Church has courageously and boldly wrestled with issues of economics, politics and spirituality, and for the first time in a very long time we have a positive feeling coming out of our National meetings …
Yet, yesterday the media offered a ‘study’ that claims the United Church is doomed … a researcher at a very conservative Bible College examined the results of a survey conducted with a small cluster of University students and announced that we – the United Church – we lost and we are in an irreversible decline …
According to their findings, our bent for social justice, our political involvement, and our wandering away from things of faith – have resulted in our increasing irrelevance. I read the article and found myself laughing at the one sided bias it offered – the study’s authors are standing outside and yet again taking aim at the United Church and saying “They’re no longer Christian.”
As I read it sitting at the farmer’s market, I wondered what their criticism of the Church would be like NOW with a Gay Moderator … or with our stand against the Northern Gateway … or our stand WITH the Palestinians …
Yet, in those public stands, I see hope.
As people get to know us through our booth at the farmers’ market I see and experience hope … yesterday a woman bought one of our “Love They Neighbor” t-shirts saying – “I can’t believe a Church group ACTUALLY offers something like this. Too many church say the words, but won’t live them … I think it’s great that your Church offers these to the community … you’re saying AND living the words …”
And that simple idea is key to sharing our faith and moving forward in our world.
People are not interested in Church the way it has BEEN. They have wrestled with, and struggled with the hypocrisy that has too often marked our journey. We have been rightly accused of saying one thing, but living another … we haven’t been living the words we share and we’ve suffered the consequences of that.
But today – there is every indication that within the life of our church – locally AND as a denomination, something is stirring that not only calls us back to that place of speaking, living and sharing a consistent message, but it is also something that draws other people into becoming part of that journey.
Theologian and researcher Diana Butler-Bass shares an experience she had while on a flight across the US. The gentleman sitting next to her commented on her going to a Church Conference that he used to attend Church but didn’t any more.
He noted that Churches didn’t care about his questions, so there was no reason to keep going.
Diana pressed him about what questions the church didn’t care about and he replied “Oh doubt, life making the world a better place – you know – questions … They seemed more interested in things that don’t really matter. And then perhaps most telling was his last observation – “Church is disconnected from life …”
Ouch.
We have been disconnected from life. We’ve built our comfortable worship spaces and shut the door and tried to create the Kingdom of God here within our neat and tidy walls … and we’ve failed …
We’ve failed, not because there is anything wrong with the Kingdom of God, but rather because the Kingdom of God is not something that will prosper and grow behind closed doors, but because the Kingdom of God is about going out into the world and engaging our neighbors, our community and our world in sharing, celebrating and LIVING the Kingdom.
The Kingdom of God is about living the words we speak.
ALL around us our world is struggling … economically many people are struggling to make ends meet and to keep food on the table and a roof over their heads … politically we see struggles all around the world from far flung corners like Syria where that struggle is bloody and violent and devastating to our own nation where conflicting ideals are being wrestled with, people are discontented and alienated … and socially, we are awash in a myriad of issues that can frighten and divide us … Comedian and political commentator Jon Stewart observed that we live in Hard times, but not in the end times like some voices would counsel … Diana Butler-Bass picks up on Jon’s observation by noting that we do indeed live in hard times, and perhaps the opportunity is there for Church folks – you and I – to step up and engage the world with what we have to offer.
We are the Body of Christ – the risen and transformed community that has the Gospel to share … we are the Kingdom of God and we have that message to offer not to one another, but to our neighbours, our community and the world.
AND, today, perhaps like never before we have an opportunity to LIVE our faith because of the discontent rampant in our society:
Butler Bass observes of discontent:
Not many people think of discontent as a gift – however, discontent is the beginning of change. Only by noticing what is wrong, seeing the systems and structrures that do not foster health and happiness, can we eve make things different. If people were satisfied, there would be no reason to reach for more, no motivation for creativity and innovation. Discontent is one short step from longing for a better life, a better society, and a better world; and loning is another short step from doing something about what is wrong. Indeed, restlessness possesses a spiritual quality – as Jesus said – blessed are the poor in spirit, for their’s is the kingdom of God!” (pg 84)
Butler Bass goes on to celebrate the spiritual dimension of discontent noting:
Religious discontent is indistinguishable from the history of spiritual renewal and wakening. Relgion is often characterized as contentment, the idea that faith and faithfulness offer peace, security, and certainty. … religion has another guise as well – the prophetic tradition. In the prophetic mode, faith discomforts the members of a community, opens their eyes and hearts to the shortcomings of htier own lives and injustice in the world, and presses for human society to more fully embody God’s dream of healing and love for ALL peoples.
Religious faiths struggle between the pastoral and prophetic comfort and agitation. In a very real way, institutions are inherently pastoral – they seek to maintain those things that give comfort by baptizing shared values and virtues of a community. They reinforce the way things are (or were) through appeals to divine or supernatural order. They are always slow to change. Institutions resist prophets. Prophets question. They push for things to be different. They push people to behave better toward one another. They want change.
… What the church taught seemed at odds with their experience of life or God. They became increasingly disenchanted with what the Church offered. Discontent grew. They questioned the way things were done. They experimented with new ideas and spiritual practises. They  met on the sly, singing subversive songs and praying to their favourite (often unapproved) saints, and served people the institution overlooked or oppressed. They bent the rules and often broke them. The established Church typically ignored them, sometimes tolerated them, or often branded them heretics, tried to control them and occasionally killed them. When enough people joined the ranks of the discontented, the institutional church had to pay attention. In the process, and sometimes unintentionally, the church opened itself up for genuine change and renewal
Today, the movements of the discontent are remembered by names many people REVERE: the Benedictine renewal, the Franciscan movement, the Brethren, the Protestant Reformation, the Anabaptist community and THE METHODISTS. (pg 88-89)

We DO live in hard times – times of discontent and uncertainty … and every indication is there to tell us that as the Spirit moves among us, we are embodying and sharing a faith that when lived rather than just spoken of, has the potential of transforming not only ourselves, but the world around us.
Being willing to engage the world and wrestle with the big and uncomfortable issues has been part of who we are as United Church, and today, for the first time in almost a generation we seem to have once again remembered that … research tells us that people today are searching for places to explore their spiritual issues and to wrestle with life’s questions. They want a place where they can feel God’s presence and where the people practise what they preach …
Today it would seemt hat the United Church of Canada has remembered our heritage as a Church that was born of spiritual and Spirit-FILLED discontent!!
Look around this sanctuary … we’re doing that in real and tangible ways every day … the doors are open … let’s go out in to the world and offer the whisper of hope that arises from our faith engaging the discontent ALL around us!!
May it be so … thanks be to God … Let us pray …

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