Sunday, February 26, 2023

Lent 1, Year A (2023)

Genesis 2:15 – 17, 3:1 - 7
Psalm 32
Romans 5:12 – 19
Matthew 4:1 - 11

This is the homily given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Sunday, February 26, 2023, by Fr. Gene Tucker.

 

“WHAT WE’RE UP AGAINST”

(Homily texts:  Genesis 2:15 – 17, 3:1 – 7 & Matthew 4:1 – 11)

Whenever we consider taking on a project, it’s always a good idea to calculate what it will involve. Specifically, we might consider what the costs will be in terms of time, money, expertise, and so forth. If the project or the undertaking is considerably challenging, we might want to consider and reconsider what will be involved.

So, for example, in planning to build a house, we’d want to know how much material, and what sort of material, will be involved, and also what the cost of those materials might be. We’d also want to plan to engage people with specific skills to make sure the project is done well.

For another example, consider a plan to create a meal or to bake a dessert. Many of the same considerations will apply. We’d want to be sure we have all the ingredients before starting. We’d want to be sure that the oven or whatever we’ll be using to bring our creation to reality is in good working order. And so forth.

It’s mandatory when considering going up against an enemy that a careful review of that enemy’s abilities and ways of waging war are taken into account. (I can’t resist saying that, if Vladimir Putin had done his homework, he never would have invaded Ukraine, for now he’s gotten himself into a mess, and into a war there is no way whatsoever that he can win.)

With the coming of this season of Lent, we ought to face the reality that we are engaged in a war, a battle of spiritual truths versus the destructive ways of evil.

Our Old Testament reading from the book of Genesis, and our Gospel text from Matthew, both describe such a spiritual battle. In the first account, Adam and Eve fail on the spiritual battlefield, but in the second account, Jesus conquers the suggestions and the temptations presented to Him by Satan.

In keeping with the premise with which we began, let’s look carefully at the Genesis account, and at Jesus’ time in the wilderness (forty days and forty nights, this period of time forming the basis for the length of the Lenten season).  We will see, I think some common threads, which are the ways the evil one goes about trying to separate us from God:

·       Naturally occurring tendencies within human beings will often be used as the avenue of approach when temptations are presented.

·       Dividing people, one from another, is a common tactic.

With these two principles in mind, let’s turn our attention to the account of Adam and Eve’s interaction with the serpent, from the Genesis account.

Notice that the serpent (which is – in Holy Scripture – the depiction of evil) approaches Eve (but not Adam) and deliberately distorts God’s instructions about the eating of the fruit of the tree that is “off limits”. Two things are apparent here: One is that the serpent doesn’t approach both Adam and Eve, but Eve only. Then, notice also that the serpent’s appeal is to the need for food. Also present is a deliberate distortion of God’s instructions.

One other appeal is also important: The serpent’s suggestion that, if the fruit of the tree is eaten, it will make her and her husband wise, “like God”. This is an appeal to safety and security, to being able to control one’s own future and environment.

Now, let’s turn our attention to Jesus’ interaction with the evil one, as we hear it in Matthew’s account.

There, some of the same threads are present, just as they were in Genesis.

For example, the evil one approaches Jesus when He is alone.

Then, the evil one makes an appeal to Jesus’ need for food (just as was the case with Eve).

Finally, notice that there is an appeal to safety and security, and to being in control, as Satan suggests that if Jesus will throw Himself down from the pinnacle of the Temple, His feet will be born up by angels (a use of Psalm 91, by the way). Here is an appeal to safety. Also present, as was the case in the Garden of Eden, is an appeal to be in control: The devil offers Jesus control over the kingdoms of the world, if only He will worship him.

With the coming of Lent, it would be wise for us to be fully aware of the nature of the spiritual battles that will come our way. It is also wise for us to be aware of the ways of operating that the evil one may employ against us, for they will often have a lot in common with the ways we read about in Genesis and in Matthew.

The evil one may appeal to some naturally-occurring desire within us, just as he did with Eve and with the Lord.

He may appeal to our need for safety and security, and our desire to be able to control our destiny and our future.

He will, quite often, seek to separate us one from another, in order to make us an easier prey for his attack on us.

What are the defenses that we might employ to ward off the inevitable attacks of the one whose desire for us is to separate us from God, and from one another?

The antidotes are the same as those we read of in the pages of Holy Scripture, specifically:

  •       Proper use of the whole of Holy Scripture, avoiding distortions of its meaning and likewise, avoiding a pick-and-choose use of the passages that seek only to comfort us, but not to challenge us.
  •     Paying particular attention to those naturally-occurring desires that arise within us that might be avenues by which the evil one might approach us, offering temptations.
  •         Maintaining the unity of the body of Christ, the Church, by engaging in regular, in-person worship, study and gatherings. (Frankly, I think we must be wary of widespread use of electronic and online ways of gathering for worship, for it is difficult to discern in each other how our spiritual walk is going if we are not physically present with one another.)

May we calculate with the clarity that the Holy Spirit can provide the nature of the spiritual battles that will inevitably come our way, that we may claim the victory, as our Lord did in His temptation.

AMEN. 

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

Ash Wednesday, (Year A 2023)

Joel 2:1 – 2, 12 – 17
Psalm 103:8 - 14
II Corinthians 5:20b – 6:10
Matthew 6:1 – 6, 16 - 21

This is the homily given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Wednesday, February 22, 2023, by Fr. Gene Tucker.

 

“BRINGING NOTHING, BUT POSSESSING EVERYTHING”
(Homily text:  Joel 2:1 – 2, 12 – 17)

“We brought nothing into this world, and we cannot take anything out of this world.” (I Timothy 6:7)

St. Paul’s words, which we read in his first letter to his disciple, Timothy, summarize our situation and condition before God.

Paul affirms that we come into this world, helpless and dependent upon others. We come empty-handed, in other words. We have nothing to offer but ourselves and the prospect of a fruitful life.

And yet, our arrival is usually the source of joy to those who assisted God in bringing us into this world, and who will care for us, raise us, and see us grow into maturity. (At least that’s the ideal situation…I am well aware that it isn’t always this way.)

At baptism, by which we are brought into the world of faith, we also come empty-handed, possessing nothing to offer but ourselves and the prospect that we will grow into the full measure of faith that God has in store for us.

The coming of this holy season of Lent might remind us of our helplessness and our lack of a suitable offering to make to God. Our wayward ways make us less-than-acceptable to the holy God. Our inconsistent walk with God makes us unreliable companions on the way of faith.

And yet, if we recognize these truths about ourselves, and come to the ugly truth that we come to God empty-handed, then we stand an excellent chance of possessing everything, everything of the great store of God’s goodness, God’s love, His generosity and grace.

For the truth of God is that God’s essential nature is to love. God’s essential nature is also to want to be in relationship with each one of us. God’s desire for us is so great that He is willing to take us into a love relationship in whatever condition we come, offering only ourselves, freed of any pretense. But, of course, the fruits of such an intense, one-on-one relationship with God the Father through God the Son will be seen in the changes that will take place in our nature and in our behavior. The truth of God also carries with it the guarantee that such a genuine relationship will result in changes in us. God never leaves us where He finds us, it is said.

The call of Lent resounds like the call of the ancient prophet Joel, who bids God’s people to come to repentance with the call of the trumpet, a call to alarm, a call to set aside any and everything to enter into a time of self-examination and amendment of life.

Do we really and genuinely have a personal, ongoing and lively faith relationship with the Lord? That question might guide us through this season of Lent.

AMEN. 

Sunday, February 19, 2023

The Last Sunday after the Epiphany – Year A (2023)

Exodus 24:12 – 18 / Psalm 2 / II Peter 1:16 – 21 / Matthew 27:1 – 9

This is the homily given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Sunday, February 19, 2023 by Fr. Gene Tucker.

 

“GOD’S SELF-REVELATION PLAN”

(Homily texts: II Peter 1:16 – 21 & Matthew 17:1 – 9)

Usually, God reveals Himself to us in small increments of truth. This one-step-at-a-time approach allows us to come to know God more fully, more deeply, and more securely. Such a revelation on an installment plan (if you will), also allows us to link together God’s will for our lives and our daily walk with Him, seeing God being present in the depths of human experience, and rejoicing in His presence in times of celebration. (I suspect that, if God chose to reveal a great deal of who He is, all at once, most of us probably couldn’t digest the enormity of that revelation.)

Peter and the other disciples, as they follow Jesus, are on the step-by-step, one lesson at a time, revelation plan.

It might serve us well to back up from today’s Gospel reading, which takes us to the holy mountain where Jesus’ appearance was transfigured (changed) before Peter, James and John’s eyes, to the previous chapter in Matthew’s Gospel account, to see the trajectory of the Lord’s revelation to the disciples, and especially, to these three chosen witnesses of Jesus’ true identity and glory as His appearance is altered.

We need to begin in the middle of chapter sixteen in Matthew’s account[1]. There, we read that Jesus asks His disciples about His identity. The question is posed, initially, in general terms. The Lord asks, “Who do people say that the Son of Man is?” ((Italics mine) The disciples answer that perhaps the Son of Man is John the Baptist, or Elijah, of Jeremiah, or one of the prophets. Then, Jesus narrows the question, asking, “But who do you say that I am?” Notice how “people’ in the first question now becomes “you”, and the “Son of Man” now becomes “I” in the second question. It is Peter, impetuous Peter, who answers, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” Jesus says that Peter hasn’t come to this knowledge by his own personal means, but that the Father has revealed this truth to him.

With this interchange, lesson one in God’s plan of self-revelation is complete.

Now, it’s possible that Jesus concludes that the disciples are ready for lesson two in God’s revelatory plan, for He begins to tell the disciples what will happen to Him as He makes His way to Jerusalem for the great feast of Passover. He says that He will “suffer many things from the elders, the chief priests and the scribes, and that He will be killed, and on the third day, He will be raised.”[2]  It is Peter, again, who speaks up, rebuking the Lord and saying, “Far be it from you, Lord! This shall never happen to you.” The Lord’s response is a sharp one, as He tells Peter, “Get behind me, Satan! You are a hindrance to me….”[3] Then the Lord begins to talk about the need that His disciples will have, each one of them, to take up their cross in order to follow Him.

Lesson two is now complete.

Perhaps it is because God, in His infinite care and love for us human beings, doesn’t leave those initial disciples in a deep, hopeless place, facing the prospect that the One who called them into ministry, and who has been forming and shaping them for that ministry, will soon suffer an awful death. For now, Jesus takes three of them, Peter, James and John, up a mountain[4] with Him. There, they are given a glimpse of the other side of Jesus’ nature, His divine side, as He appears in glory with the Old Testament prophets Moses and Elijah.[5] His appearance reflects the glory of God, and His identity is confirmed by the Father’s voice, which says, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased. Listen to him.”[6]

As we trace the unfolding of these events, the Lord’s asking His disciples what they think about His identity, the Lord’s disclosure of His coming death, Peter’s inability to accept that truth, and the Lord’s transfiguring appearance before Peter, James and John, we see two things at work:

·       God is revealing Himself, and something about His nature, to His followers, bit by bit.

·       God is present and is at work in the depths of human experience, but He is also present and is at work in the heights of knowing the majesty, identity and power of God. We can see the lasting effects of Peter’s experience on that mountain, as he recalled, many years later, God’s revelation of Jesus’ nature in his second letter, heard this morning.

We are about to embark on our Lenten journey this week, as Ash Wednesday rolls around.

Liturgically, throughout this holy season of Lent, we are walking with the Lord from the mount of Transfiguration down into the valley, making our way to Jerusalem, to the Lord’s betrayal, arrest, suffering, death and resurrection.

This holy season allows us the opportunity to ask for the Lord’s help to see ourselves as God sees us. What we might discover with the assistance of the Holy Spirit might be pretty depressing. It might lead us to a deep sense of despair over our spiritual condition. But, perhaps, such an honest look and a willingness to face the truth about ourselves might also allow us to ask God to put away from us those things that are less than honorable in God’s sight.

We can be sure that, as God is present with us in whatever deep places we may find ourselves, there is no depth of human experience that can escape God’s presence and God’s ability to heal us and to save us. For even in the lowest places we may find ourselves, there God will be, also, providing us a glimpse of His identity, power and love.

AMEN.

 


[1]   Matthew 16:13 - 20

[2]   This is the first of three revelations of the Lord’s impending death.

[3]   Matthew 16:21 - 28

[4]   The traditional place where the Transfiguration took place is Mount Tabor, which is located a little southwest of the Sea of Galilee. But some biblical scholars believe that the Transfiguration may have taken place further north, on Mount Herman, because Jesus asked His disciples about His identity, Matthew tells us, in the region of Caesarea Philippi, which is nearby to Mount Herman.

[5]   The Transfiguration is remembered, each year, on the Last Sunday after the Epiphany. But it is such an important event in the lives of the disciples, and in the life of the Church, that it is also celebrated, each year, on August 6th.

[6]   Matthew 17:5b 

Sunday, February 12, 2023

Epiphany 6, Year A (2023)

Deuteronomy 30:15 - 20 / Psalm 119:1 - 8 / I Corinthians 3:1 - 9 / Matthew 5:21 - 37

This is the homily given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Sunday, February 12, 2023, by Fr. Gene Tucker.

 

“OF WORSHIP AND LITURGY”

(Homily texts:  Deuteronomy 30:15 – 30 & Matthew 5:21 - 37)

This morning, let’s take a somewhat unusual approach to our Old Testament reading from Deuteronomy, and our Gospel text from Matthew. Let’s look at how each of these texts share the theme of seeing God clearly, and God’s intent and holy ways, clearly.

Our approach will route us through the business of worship, and specifically, worship that it liturgical in nature and style.

We might begin by defining what worship is.

The word itself comes from a contraction of two words: Worth + ship. In other words, we might say that worship is the practice of giving value (worth) to something or someone.

In the Church, the practice of worship (worth + ship = giving value or worth) is the practice of giving to God the value and due attention that God deserves.

The blunt truth of living is that it’s easy to forget God, or to lose sight of Him, given the daily ins and outs, the demands on time and attention, the things that we are obligated to do or to accomplish.

Given this reality, then, Sunday worship becomes important. For time spent in Church, hearing the Scriptures read and broken open in a homily, sharing in the singing of hymns, being together in Christian fellowship and love, and in the sharing of the sacramental[1] life of the Church, all of these things are meant to remind us of God’s central place in our lives. Worship, then, refocuses us and pulls our eyes and our attention away from the things of the everyday world.

Worship that is truly worthy of the name is that which uses symbol, word and actions that point beyond themselves to the unseen presence and reality of God. (The idea here is to use the visible and the tangible to connect us to the invisible and unseen reality of God…this is the very fundamental definition of a Sacrament.) Liturgy seeks to do these things, for liturgical worship uses established patterns and practices which come to us from an ancient time. Liturgy seeks to remind us of the history of God’s relating to His people.

Worship may make use of a space which is unlike any other. Its appearance, its design and architecture, its decorations and the use of images, statues and the like, are all meant to convey a sense of the holiness of God. (Of course, it isn’t mandatory that the worship space be unlike other spaces, but – I think – worship is enabled if the holiness of the worship space is uniquely arranged to point our attention heavenward.)

Recognizing that worship, faithfully done, seeks to redirect our attention and our gaze toward God reminds us that worship realizes that God is the audience for all we do when we engage in worship. Worship, therefore, can’t descend to being entertainment, for worship isn’t about us, not really. Worship is about God.

Nearly everything about God and about what we know of God is mediated to us in one way or another.

Take, for example, our Old Testament reading from the Book of Deuteronomy, and our Gospel text from Matthew, appointed for this morning. Both texts seek so remind us of the holiness of God and the rightness of God’s will and law. The truth of God is conveyed in the words of the text. The text itself seeks to redirect our attention away from what we might think are good and desirable ways of living, to a higher and better understanding that is in sync with the ways of God, ways which are higher than our ways. The Scriptures, then, mediate God’s truth to us, using the words and the meaning of the text.

Likewise, worship that is the product of careful planning, careful preparation, and diligent conduct is at its best when it, too, enables our senses to focus on God and on God’s totally-other nature. Good worship then, mediates the reality of God, using symbol, text, and actions.

One final thought is in order: Worship that is liturgical in nature encounters a world in which many – if not most – people know next to nothing about the Christian faith, or about the Church and its purpose for being. And, added to this reality is the fact that if many outside the Church have so little familiarity with it, then it’s even more likely that they won’t know much about a liturgical way of worshipping. Given those realities, assisting those who come to join us for worship by assisting and guiding them to be to negotiate its progress becomes an important act of care and welcoming for those who are new to our fellowship. After all, liturgical worship requires all of us to take an active role in its conduct…..there can be no spectators when the worship is liturgical in nature, for the very word “liturgical” has as its roots a definition meaning “work of the people”.

Lord, we pray that our worship may bring glory to your Name, and may enable us to see you more clearly and to follow you more nearly.

AMEN.

 

 

           



[1]   A Sacrament is defined as being an “outward and visible sign of an inward and invisible grace”.