Tuesday, December 24, 2013

The Eve of the Nativity



Isaiah 9:3-7; Psalm 96; Titus 2:11-14; Luke 2:1-20

A homily by Fr. Gene Tucker, given at Trinity Church, Mt. Vernon, Illinois on Tuesday, December 24, 2013.

“WHY I AM A CHRISTIAN”

            Why am I a Christian?

            The main reason is that I am a selfish and self-centered person.

             Because I am a selfish and self-centered person, I tend to look out for my own welfare, to be sure to take care of the things that will make my life fuller and better.

            So because I am a selfish and self-centered person, I like the fact that God reached out to me personally by sending His Son, Jesus, to seek me out, and to care for my well-being and welfare.  Jesus came for me, personally and individually.

            I like that, a lot!

            I also like the fact that Jesus, God’s great gift to me, came as a baby.  I like the fact that He didn’t come as a conquering hero, riding in on a white horse to tell me what to do, and how to do it.  He didn’t come and demand that I cower in fear of Him.  He didn’t come and do things that would make me want to hide from Him.

            Instead, God’s gift, Jesus, came to serve me, to love me, and to invite me into a close relationship with God, a relationship that has changed my life completely, a relationship that will last as long as I do, and then will endure beyond the end of my life on this earth into all eternity.

            I like all these things, and especially the fact that I matter so much to God that God came for me personally and especially.  He came to find me, and find me, He did!

            For, you see, part of me is selfish and self-centered.  That part of me that is selfish and self-centered needs to be appreciated, to be loved, to be admired.

            Now what I’ve just said about myself, that business about being selfish and self-centered, could also be said about every one of us here tonight….we are all selfish and self-centered, at least to some degree.  (Alright, I’ll admit that most of you aren’t as selfish and self-centered as I am.)  That part of us that needs to be admired, to be loved, and to be appreciated, longs to feed us with the important knowledge that we matter to someone, that someone loves us beyond ourselves. 

            That someone is God.

            God is the One who send His only-begotten Son, Jesus, to seek us out, to find us, to invite us into a deep, loving and abiding embrace, a close relationship that tells us “I am important to God.”

            So what should our response be?

            Since each of us is selfish and self-centered, to some extent at least, should we simply soak up all of God’s attention, love and care, and wallow in all that good, Godly stuff?

            Or should we respond to God’s overture of love by loving Him back?

            Ah yes, that is the answer:  God loved us so much that He gave His only-begotten Son (John 3:16), that God wants us to respond in love to His love, by entering into a deep, abiding and loving embrace with God through Jesus Christ.

            When we do, then everything in life will change, and not only in this life, but in the life of the world to come, as well.

            Thank you, God, for loving each one of us so much, telling us that we are important, that we matter to You, by sending us the gift of your Son to show us the way to your heart.  By your grace, open our hearts to receive your loving gift, Jesus, so that we may respond in love to your overture of love.

AMEN.

           

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Advent 4, Year A


Isaiah 7:10-16; Psalm 80:1–7, 16-18; Romans 1:1-7; Matthew 1:18-25


A homily by Fr. Gene Tucker, that was given at St. Thomas’ Church, Salem, Illinois on Saturday, December 21, 2013.



“BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE”

(Homily text:  Matthew 1:18–25)


“Between a rock and a hard place!”

As we look at our Gospel reading for today, St. Matthew’s account of the events that overtook Joseph and Mary as Jesus’ birth comes to be, we see that Joseph is “between a rock and a hard place.”

To understand why this is, we might need to unpack the situation that both of them faced just a little.

Joseph discovers that his fiancĂ©e is pregnant.  In the time and the place that Joseph lived, in first century Palestine, this was a grave sin, to be pregnant without being married.[1]  The normal punishment which was prescribed by the Law of Moses was death by stoning for a woman who was in that condition.  This the “rock” for Joseph.

And yet, it is clear from what Matthew tells us about Joseph, that he cares for, and loves, Mary.  Matthew says that while Joseph is a “righteous man”, he resolves to spare Mary the harsh punishment that the Law required, and instead, resolves to divorce her quietly, and to send her into a status of what one Bible scholar has called “permanent house arrest”.  Joseph’s care and love for Mary is the “hard place” for him.

So Joseph is in a conflicted situation, his concern for the Law and his love and concern for Mary, presenting him with the need to hold both concerns in tension with one another….Joseph resolves to honor the Law, and to honor Mary, also, by deciding to divorce her quietly.

But Matthew tells us that, just as Joseph has resolved to take action, he is guided by the Lord’s angel, who appears to him in a dream, and who explains to Joseph what has happened with Mary.  The angel tells Joseph that he should not hesitate to take Mary as his wife, for the child she is carrying isn’t the product of an illicit affair, but is the result of God’s direct intervention in human affairs.

(It’s worth noting that this isn’t the last bit of divine guidance that Joseph will receive via a dream from God…later on, after Jesus has been born, another dream, and a visitation by an angel, will warn him to take Mary and Jesus away from Bethlehem to Egypt to escape the wrath of King Herod.)

I submit to you that we, as people of faith, are often confronted with situations that are similar to the one that Joseph faced:  We often find ourselves “between a rock and a hard place” as we attempt to hold God’s standard of righteousness in tension with the requirement to love others.

As I reflect on this, the thought occurs to me that Jesus articulated this requirement in what we call the “Summary of the Law’, which is read at the beginning of each celebration of the Holy Eucharist in our traditional language rite, Rite I.[2]  There, we hear these words of our Lord:  “Hear what our Lord Jesus Christ saith:  Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.  This is the first and great commandment.  And the second is like unto it:  Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.  On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets.”

Put more simply, Jesus says we are to love the Lord, and love others.

The necessity to hold both of these requirements in tension with one another can be more clearly seen if we separate the one from the other, and look at the results of adhering to one requirement, to the exclusion of the other.

Let’s begin by looking at a strict adherence to the requirements of the Law.

This, of course, was the default position of the Pharisees of Jesus’ day.  They were proud of their accomplishments as they attempted to keep absolutely every small detail of the Law, applying it to every deed they committed during the day.

But the result was that the Pharisees reserved harsh condemnation for anyone who didn’t meet their standard of self-made righteousness.

Their strict legalism condemned all who weren’t on their level of spiritual maturity, a maturity that they, themselves, had created.

Strict legalism condemns us all, for all of us are adept at knowing how to fall short of the mark of God’s righteousness….all of us are fully-trained sinners.

Now, let’s turn the tables to the other side of the equation, and see what happens if we adhere to the law of love alone….pretty soon, permissiveness will reign supreme as we allow any and all sorts of attitudes and behaviors to become acceptable.

The Church has had to deal with such free-spirited attitudes before, in the Gnostic heresy of the early centuries…Some Gnostics came to believe that, since they thought that the physical body was simply a mirage, and wasn’t really real, they could engage in all sorts of sinful behavior (even to the point of having sexual orgies!), because there would be no consequence to their actions.

The Church might not be confronted with such blatantly free-wheeling behaviors in our own day and time, but we can still fall prey to a condition in which any and all types of behaviors are accepted, and even celebrated.

The mature Christian is called to honor God’s ways, and to treat all persons with love, care, concern, and respect, all at the same time.

If we think of our own personal walk with God, more often than not, we can see that God approaches us, first of all, with love, concern, care and respect.  He does not hammer us with His standard of righteousness, condemning us – as did the Pharisees in ancient times – with scorn for our lack of holiness.

Of course, this is the pattern we see in Jesus, for it is He who hangs around with prostitutes, with tax collectors, and with the other sinners of His day, making sure that the Pharisees who condemned such people knew that He had come to redeem them with love, first of all, and not to condemn them with hate. 

Jesus’ methods are masterful, for He establishes a relationship based on love, based on the reality that all persons are creations of God, and who are, therefore, deserving of love, care, concern and respect.  Treating people this way allows them to open up to God’s care for them, and in due course, to God’s standard of righteousness and holiness.

So we see that Jesus fully upholds God’s standards, but loves all those with whom He had contact, holding both requirements in tension, at the same time.

If we look at our own path of life, we can see that God has treated each of us with love, concern, care and respect.  He has not condemned us for our shortcomings, as we all deserve, but begins with a deep and abiding love for us.  Once we have come into such a loving embrace with the Lord, then we can learn His ways fully and completely.

So, as we have first known God’s grace, so then we have come to know God’s holiness, as well.

It is into this journey of love and holiness that each of us is called to invite others who do not know the Lord.

Holding the requirement to be holy, and the requirement to be loving at the same time, is a difficult road to walk.  It puts us between a “rock and a hard place”.  Only with God’s help can we hold these two requirements in tension, something that God calls us to do, day in and day out.




[1] The marriage customs of the day made the engagement process a legally binding contract, one that could be broken only by a divorce.  However, though it legally bound the two parties to one another, it did not permit the procreation of children.  That was reserved for marriage itself.[2] Page 324 in the Book of Common Prayer, 1979

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Advent 3, Year A (2013)



Isaiah 35:1-10;  Psalm 46:4-9; James 5:7-20; Matthew 11:2-11

A homily by Fr. Gene Tucker, given at Trinity Church, Mt. Vernon, Illinois on Sunday, December 15, 2013.

“STIR UP SUNDAY”

The Rector of my seminarian parish used to call this Sunday, the Third Sunday of Advent, “Stir up Sunday”.

“Stir up Sunday”, you may be saying?  Are you referring to something related to riding a horse, you know, that thing a person puts their foot in when they’re on a horse?

No.


“Stir up Sunday”, as in our Collect for the day, which says:



“Stir up thy power, O Lord, and with great might come among us; and, because we are sorely hindered by our sins, let thy bountiful grace and mercy speedily help and deliver us; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with thee and the Holy Ghost, be honor and glory, world without end.  Amen.”

The collect asks God to come with mighty power to our aid, recognizing that we are in deep, deep trouble because of our spiritual condition.  The problem is, as the prayer puts it so well, that we are hindered by our sins.

The collect gets right to the point.  The normal pattern of most collects begins with some statement about God’s nature.  Not this one.  It begins with a prayer that is driven by deep need:  “Stir up thy power, and with great might come among us.”

Perhaps the greatest problem we face is that we are so set in our ways that we, ourselves, are in need of some stirring up ourselves.  Like a good soup, we’ve sat for too long, allowing the riches of God to sink out of sight to the bottoms of our hearts.

           

The result is that we offer God, and the world, thin gruel.  We need the Lord to find again the richest and best parts of ourselves, the parts that show God’s presence at work in our lives.  The parts that can sink and separate from the rest of our being.


No Christian walk is without the need for constant work and attention.  No Christian’s life can be maintained without effort.

We are in need of some stirring up, now and again.

This season of Advent is specifically designed to allow God to do some stirring in our hearts and minds, to bring into relationship again those best parts of what God has implanted within us, those things that may have suffered from neglect or inattention for too long a time.

For the Lord wants us to be well-integrated Christians, people whose relationship with the Lord is evident in all areas of life.  Like the richest part of a good soup, it is those God-related parts that are the best parts, and are the parts that give the mixture a reason for being in the first place.

So come, O Lord, among us.  Stir us up with your mighty power.  Stir us up in the same sorts of ways that St. John the Baptist’s message did those many years ago.

AMEN.