Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Branches and Vine- Stability



Have you ever tried to discourage or remove a wisteria vine?  It is a tough task because the vine doesn’t want to give up.. even if a small section remains on the ground, even if it’s cut off from the rest of the vine, it will root where it is and keep on growing. The problem with wisteria, as you know, is that despite its verdancy and beauty – despite its purple or white grape like flowers and fragrance - it can easily choke and ultimately kill a tree.
      Contrast that with a grape vine with its branches.  This image Jesus uses speaks to the heart of our relationship with God and it is, without a doubt, one of the most beautiful images in scripture.  Jesus says in John 15, I am the true vine ..and my Father is the vine grower…Jesus is like the grape vine, the sturdy trunk, we are like the branches and, unlike wisteria, if we get cut off from the main vine, we can’t bear any fruit.  So Jesus says, stay connected – remain in me, and I will remain in you…In this brief meditation, I’d like to invite you to think about that word – remain.  You can hear our English word in the Greek verb – meno – it means abide, persevere, remain, stay…
       It’s also the idea of stability or, as Eugene Peterson puts it,  a long faithfulness in a single direction.   Abiding or remaining is one of the core ideas that St. Benedict embodied in his 6th century guide or rule for living as part of a monastic community.  I wonder..did you know that Benedictine spirituality is at the heart of our Anglican tradition?
Stability is the idea of remaining committed to place and people - to stay where you are, to stay focused.  to not go roaming around.  For a monk or a nun, it’s a direct commitment to stay in the monastery where they will live out their lives. For the rest of us, it means staying committed to our families, and communities – to make a long term commitment to their well being – and to remain – to stay the course for better or worse.
      You and I live in a time which seems to be pretty commitment phobic. We want to be able to bail if it gets rough and yet, there are many things in life which need long standing commitment to bring about good fruit.
      I am so thankful that our God has practiced stability -  remaining with us.  For, we are his long view, his long term project and Jesus calls us to persevere in our commitments not only with him but also with each other.
     In a church setting, this means not giving up on the body of believers in that place but being willing to stay together through hard times and good times…through seasons of plenty as well as seasons of drought.  And, why?  Jesus reminds us that this is so that we can bear fruit – beautiful lives and life-giving, long lasting works that tell about the love of God for all people and for the whole creation.
     Here’s a thought – our remaining in Christ, our stability in Christ is what makes it possible for us to have stability with each other. 
      That we might bear fruit and remain, that is, that we might abide in Christ - this is my prayer for you and for me this week.  Let us pray.

Lord God, Creator of the universe, grant that we might ever  abide in you and you in us. So that we might come to glorious flower and bear bountiful fruit for well being of your people and the sake of the kingdom. This we ask in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Sprit AMEN.


Friday, May 1, 2020

Easter 3-C 2022 Catching Fish and Tending Sheep


                                                             Sea of Galilee at Dawn


Easter 3C 2022 – St. Mark’s Charleston, May 1, 2022

Cast the net on the right side of the boat- Jn.21.6

Link to Audio 

Have you ever left a room intending to do something and forgot what you wanted to do along the way?  

My favorite story about this comes from my first year in parish ministry when I went to see a beloved senior church member who was living in what today we would call assisted living (apologies to those who have already heard this). We visited and I asked, “Miss Effie, what have you been thinking about lately?”   She paused and, looking very serious, she said, “I’ve been thinking a lot about the hereafter.” I leaned forward and said, “Tell me more.”  She responded, “Well, I get somewhere and then I ask myself, ‘What was I here after?’”  Then we both laughed.  She got me.

I wonder if something like this was happening in today’s gospel reading from John.  Jesus has already appeared twice to the disciples.  The first time, he appeared to the ten and said peace be with you.  Then, he breathed on them and said- receive the Holy Spirit – as the Father has sent me, so I send you.  The next time, he appeared was when Thomas was with them (who knows where he was the first time? Gone to the grocery store? )  But this time, eight days later, Thomas was there, and Jesus came and said put your finger here and see my hands...do not be faithless but believe.  Then, Jesus added, blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe.

So, here we are some time later and the disciples have apparently packed up shop in Jerusalem and gone home to the area around the Sea of Galilee  also referred to as the Sea of Tiberias. This was home base for most of them and where they had first encountered Jesus.  Were they thinking –it was good while it lasted? Were they still in grief and shock over the death of Jesus?  Perhaps they were just trying to do something that felt normal – like fishing – which, please notice, was initiated by Simon Peter. “I am going fishing,” he announced.  “We are coming too,” they responded.  

Sometimes when we try to turn back the clock to another time, it just doesn’t work. In this case,  the fishing trip did not go well.  They fished all night and did not catch anything until a stranger standing on the beach, said “Cast your nets on the right side of the boat.” 

Archeologists tell us that the first century fishing boats which plied the Sea of Galilee were about 27 ft long and 7.5 ft wide... so, to move the nets just 7 and a half feet?  It probably seemed absurd but they did it, and, and as we heard, the catch was amazing. 

Then,  they put it together that it was the Lord. And, I love this detail, Peter got dressed and jumped into the water and the rest came bringing the catch...and they had breakfast with Jesus on the beach.

Jesus came, I believe, to round them back up and recall them to the mission – as the father has sent me, so I send you – to declare forgiveness and reconciliation, to heal, to serve, to restore to life – to show the love of God to all persons... bringing them into for first time or restoring them into relationship with God. and then to nurture and care for each other. Jesus appeared to re-commission them. In particular,  he had that quiet side conversation with  Peter - the rock on which the church was founded – to remind him of who he was and that his call was to leadership.. and to care for God’s people.

Michael Green was an English theologian and evangelist with a wonderfully effective world wide ministry.  In his autobiography,  Adventure in Faith,  he observes that the Church really only has two tasks – Catching Fish and Feeding Sheep.  These are for us as individuals as well as for us as a faith community –

So, I want to ask you—how are you doing with these?  How is St. Mark’s doing?  How is St. Francis doing with these?

It is so easy to get distracted and to forget the “what am I here after” – to forget who and what we are by virtue of our baptism.. ministers of the gospel – sent to catch fish and to feed sheep for the kingdom.  It has been especially easy to lose sight of our mission  these last ten years as our diocese has waged its legal battles.  And, now, it appears that it may be coming to a close - although the other side, truthfully, has some things they can do to delay along with lots of negotiations that will need to happen.  So, we are looking at some time.

Even so, in the midst of all of that struggle, grief, and expense.. we are challenged to not forget what we are supposed to be about – catching fish, tending sheep – and everything we do, every decision we make as church and as members of the body  needs to be considered in light of how best to support those ends.

Another thing,  so often we come up with ideas about how to catch fish and feed sheep and then we usually pray to talk the   Lord into blessing it and, when it doesn’t work, when there are no fish despite having fished all night,  we wonder what went wrong.

Notice in our passage, the tradition tells us that many of the disciples were professional fishermen.  These were not novices out there fishing that night.  They really knew how to fish but came up empty-handed UNTIL they listened to Jesus who told them where to cast their nets..

If we are trying to catch fish and feed sheep, and carry out the  mission which has been entrusted to us, we need to ask Jesus where to cast the net! We need to do this first before we go charging off...doing what we think is the right thing to do.. Let Jesus lead and we need to follow. And,  the best way to follow is to listen for his guidance.

How can we do this?  We listen in prayer, we listen for God speaking to us through others, through Word and Sacrament...and, we listen for the movements of the Spirit both within and outside of ourselves.

One of my favorite undergrad teachers was a brilliant man-  a hard core atheist who insisted we call him by his first name. – Harry.  He was firmly convinced that God was a fiction because he had never heard from God...consequently, God did not exist..  One day it struck me that perhaps a reason he had never heard God was that he (Harry) never stopped talking. It was almost impossible to get a word in edgewise or even to ask a question.  Harry was brilliant but he did not have a listening heart.

It's not an accident that when St. Benedict, who lived late fifth and early sixth centuries, was writing his guidelines for how his monastic community was to live that the very first word he wrote in his Rule was Listen—and he encourages us to listen with the ear of our heart.

Because, we cannot follow, we cannot effectively catch fish or feed sheep, if we can’t hear the  voice of our living, resurrected Lord or receive his guidance...

So, is there something for which we need God’s guidance?  Here’s a suggestion:  

1. Come to God with your request for guidance. Lay it out.  Speak it to God.  i.e. Lord, what’s the best way to deal with this situation?

2. Then, be quiet, still your heart and mind (easy for me to say, often hard to do) and wait in silence for God to respond for 10-12 minutes. ...sometimes longer...but start the process. Start the conversation.

3. God can speak by bringing to mind  words – often from Scripture -  music, impressions, or images.  God can speak through the imagination and our emotions – warming or cooling our hearts in certain directions.

4. Then, if you believe you have gotten a response, share it with someone.  We are called together as a faith community for a reason.  Sometimes when I think I have heard God and then shared it, the other person has said.. I’m not sure that’s right – please pray again. This is important because we humans seem to have an endless capacity for justifying what we want to do.

This also can work in groups – in vestries or small gatherings .. putting a concern before God and then taking the time to listen – often the answer will come in a most unlikely form.  We tend to get wrapped up in a business model for our church meetings and somehow forget to pray beyond a brief opening and closing prayer.

Do you know the story about how the Kairos prison ministry solved a serious problem they were having?

Kairos is a weekend spiritual retreat for those who are in prison. It’s modeled on Cursillo and is a national movement.  When the ministry began, they discovered a serious problem.  Inmates who had signed up to come to the talks and meals were regularly beaten up when they returned to their cell block.  The organizers realized that could shut down the whole enterprise, and so they called a day long retreat-meeting to try to problem solve.  They talked about it and then had an extended period of silence for prayerful listening – I thin theirs was several hours..  Afterwards, people were asked to share what they had heard. One older lady said, “This is crazy, and I don’t know if its because I am hungry,  but I keep getting the image of a cookie.”  They listened, talked, prayed and then decided that, after a session, they would send each participant back to their block with a dozen home made cookies which they could share.  It worked..

Sometimes when we are trying to follow Jesus and listening for his guidance, it comes to us in an unexpected way.. but it does come if we listen faithfully and patiently.

In closing here is some good news...when the disciples came ashore bringing their nets with the amazing catch,  they saw a fire with fish and bread already cooking on it.. Jesus said, bring some of the fish you’ve just caught... He invites us to add to what he is already doing.  If we are following, then he is already ahead of us and invites us to add our efforts to his.

So, beloved, we have a mission – may you embrace catching fish and feeding sheep..and, above all, listen with the ear of your heart for the voice of our risen, living Lord Jesus and follow where he leads.  AMEN.


jtco