Sunday, December 26, 2010

What's Your Perspective

In the Gospel reading for the first Sunday after Christmas St. Matthew tells the story of the newborn Christ-Child. He tells the story of the Holy Family's flight into Egypt at the instruction of an angel. He tells how the Wise Men deceived Herod so that he couldn't murder the newborn King. He tells of the slaughter of the Holy Innocents and of the return of the Holy Family from Egypt to a little village called Nazareth. Basically, St. Matthew tells the story of the Birth of Christ from a human perspective.

But if you were to go and read Revelation 12:1-6 you would see the same story told from a different perspective, a heavenly perspective.

St. John speaks of a woman clothed with the Sun, the Moon under her feet, and on her head a garland of twelve stars. Obviously he is describing the Blessed Virgin Mary. The world looks at the Mother of God and they see a poor Jewish girl from a hick town. When the host of Heaven looks at her they see a woman robed in glory. When the world heard a young girl crying in the pains of labor, they felt pity. When the dragon (Satan) heard the cries of labor he felt his world reverberate in fear at the sound of the birth of the One who would defeat him. The world saw a power-crazed potentate named Herod trying to protect his meager little kingdom by attempting to murder an innocent child, but the host of Heaven saw this as a satanic plot to kill the King of Kings.

When the Child was born the world saw another peasant child born into an oppressed society with no future in front of him, but the host of Heaven saw the Ruler of all nations being born so that He could take His rightful place on His throne. When the Holy Family fled into Egypt the world saw a terrorized family running for their lives, but the host of Heaven saw a royal family resting in the safety that God had prepared for them.

What a difference perspective makes!

What perspective do you see the Birth of Christ in? Do you see it only from a human perspective or from a cosmic perspective? Do you see it as a quaint little story told and believed by a third of the world's population or do you see it as the Story of the ages - good versus evil, light versus dark, God versus Satan?

What's your perspective?

During this season between Christmas and Epiphany I encourage you to truly contemplate the great mystery of the Incarnation. I encourage you to stand in awe of the Event that the world takes so flippantly and lightly. Emmanuel - God is with us. Let us be humbled by the magnitude of this Mystery.

Fr. Rick

Friday, December 3, 2010

Waiting

Waiting. It's one of the hardest things we ever have to do. I think back to the times I've sat in a hospital waiting room with a family as they've awaited the news on the condition of their loved one. I think back to the time my wife and daughters went to Guatemala on a mission trip and I sat waiting in the airport lounge praying for their safe arrival. I also think of the many Christmases that I woke up early in the morning waiting for my parents to awake so I could tear into those beautifully wrapped packages. Waiting does not come easy for us.

Even though we have pithy little sayings like, "Good things come to those who wait," it doesn't get any easier. And yet it seems the majority of our lives are spent waiting on something else. "I can't wait until I finish school!" "I can't wait until the weekend!" "I can't wait until I retire!" But I've discovered that often times when we're focused on the object ahead of us we forget to enjoy what we have right now. We tend to wish our lives away, hoping for something better, when we should be enjoying what we have now.

Advent is about waiting. While everyone around us is focused on Christmas morning, we who celebrate Advent, are focused on the now. We, too, are waiting for Christmas but we do so by celebrating the NOW. For us Christmas is not the end, but the beginning. While everyone is scurrying around shopping we can slow down and enjoy the sights and sounds of the season. We wait expectantly, all the while enjoying the gifts that God has already given us.

While some are already reading the Christmas story we who celebrate Advent are waiting for Christmas by reading the prophecies of old. We are immersed in the stories of Isaiah and John the Baptist. We light candles to mark the time as we wait. We sing of the future while we enjoy the blessings of the present. Advent is about the future, and the past. The Birth of Christ and the return of Christ. The visions of old and the visions of the New Jerusalem. The life of darkness and the life lived in the Light.

Waiting is not a passive thing. Waiting is being actively engaged in the now while steadily looking to the future. The early believers thought that the return of Christ was eminent so they stopped doing. But the Apostles and Saints told us that we would have to wait. And while we wait we are to do the work of the Kingdom: feed the poor, heal the sick, and set the captives free. Time seems to fly when we are actively engaged in doing something while we wait.

During this Advent season learn the lesson of waiting. Learn to embrace patience and do the work of the Kingdom; pray, preach, live! Christmas is coming, but not before we have to wait.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

A Priest with a Badge

I loved the movie "48 Hours" with Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy. One of my favorite scenes in the movie was when Eddie Murphy was pretending to be a cop in a redneck bar and he told the white patrons, "I'm your worst f***ing nightmare, I'm a nigger with a badge!" That's a great line. Well, sometimes I feel the way that Eddie Murphy did in the redneck bar. A lot of times I'm out of my element while I'm policing and I think that people look at me and say, "He's our worst freakin' nightmare, he's a priest with a badge!"

I'm here to tell you that it is not easy being a cop and a priest. I'm completely misunderstood by my co-workers at the police department. I'm completely misunderstood by my fellow clergy. I am definitely misundertood by the citizens that I serve. I sure am glad that God understands me!

More than once I've asked a suspect that I've just arrested if I could pray for them. I haven't been turned down yet. Some look bewildered. Some thank me. Some just cry. But my thought is that if they've done something bad enough for me to have to place handcuffs on them they are in desperate need of God's love and mercy.

Often times I've prayed with the victims of crime. They, too, are in need of God's love and compassion. Sometimes I have to accompany the Coroner to the home of a family and inform them of the death of a loved one. I always ask to pray with them and for them. They need God's love, grace and compassion at that moment.

Being a priest with a badge has afforded me the opportunity to do ministry in some very unusual places and with some very unusual people. It has allowed me to do ministry with the most broken and wretched people in society. These are the very people that Jesus came to save.

I was once rejected by a certain religious order because, according to them, I'm a man of violence due to the fact that I carry a gun. I'm sorry that they feel that way, but I'm glad that they are enjoying their peaceful lives because people of "violence" like me and my brothers and sisters in blue make it possible for them to do so. This "holier than thou" attitude is the cause for many of the people that I put in handcuffs telling me that they will never darken the door of a church building.

Misunderstood? Yes! Rejected? Sometimes. Blessed? Always!!! God has given me opportunities to minister that many believers have never had and I am truly thankful for this. But God has also given you opportunities to minister that I will never have. Are you taking advantage of those opportunities?

I'm a priest with a badge! I don't want to be anyone's nightmare. I want to be a blessing. I pray that the Lord will allow me to be a blessing and I pray that He will allow you to be a blessing too.

God's Peace,
Fr. Rick

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Life is a Highway

I believe that it was Rascal Flatts that sang "Life is a Highway." My grandson got me hooked on this song after we watched the animated movie "Cars" for the umpteenth time! Whether or not you like the song or the movie the truth is that life is a highway.

We are all on a journey. Now you may be sitting in the same house you were born and raised in and thinking, "life is no journey for me." But life is a journey and we're all on it. We are all traveling toward a destination that is out of this world. Your body may not be moving but your spirit is. The question is what direction are you traveling in? Are you going forward or are you falling behind? Are you headed toward a heavenly home our have you settled for where you are?

I'm a wanderer. I get bored easily and I don't like the status quo. I used to think this was a problem until I heard the story behind the phrase "wild goose chase." The early Celtic Christians called the Holy Spirit the Wild Goose. When they felt the Spirit moving them to take a pilgrimage or go on a mission they called it a "Wild Goose chase." As history has shown the Celtic Christians were not afraid to take up their walking sticks or hop in a boat and go wherever the Spirit led them. They were a restless people who sought out adventure and God used that to spread the Gospel throughout the world. I guess I can attribute my restlessness to my celtic heritage, but I can also attribute it to God trying to get me to move out of my comfort zones and spread the Gospel around the world.

You don't have to travel the world to go on a Wild Goose chase! You can go out your front door and find an adventure. The key is to hit the bricks and spread the Gospel. We Christians cannot afford to stay cloistered in our homes, churches, and monastaries. It is time to hit the highway and move forward in our journey. Stagnation leads to atrophy. Many of my brothers and sisters in Christ are atrophying away.

Is the Wild Goose calling you? Are you feeling restless? Maybe it is time to change course and set out on a spiritual journey. As Mark Twain once said, "Throw off the bowlines, sail away from the safe harbor, catch the trade winds in your sails."

Fr. Rick

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

I Can't Do It Alone

Life is hard. It is so hard that many have chosen to give up on it. Some just drop out all together, neglecting family, friends, and work. Others go further and end their lives prematurely. Some continue to go through the motions but on the inside they have shut down completely. Life is hard.

I think we can all agree that life is hard. The question is whether or not it is worth the fight to persevere to the end. I believe that it is. But the problem that most people have with life is that they try to live it alone. They try to fight the battles of life alone and they end up losing. When we lose the battles we end up losing the war.

I discovered long ago that I can't do this thing called "life" on my own. I tried. I lost a lot of battles and I almost lost the war. But then I had an epiphany. I don't have to do it alone. I can have help and I can offer help to others. I also discovered that there is nothing shameful in asking for help. Pride almost destroyed me because it caused me to shut out the love and generosity of others. Wise King Solomon said that "Pride comes before a fall." He was right and he was speaking from experience. Pride almost destroyed him.

God has promised to be with us every step of the way in life. He has sent His Holy Spirit to comfort and guide us. But more than that He has given us many others to help make it through this thing called life. He has given us family. Even as I write this I know that many people have been abandoned by their families. They don't have that resource to turn to. But God, in His infinite wisdom, has given us another source of help called the Church. Now I know that as soon as I use the word "Church" many will be turned off. They have had horrible experiences with the institutional church, as have I. But when I use the term "Church" I am referring to the biblical concept of church, which is also known as the Communion of Saints or the Family of God. Church is a community of worship, not an institution or building. Church is God's people.

My worship community, All Souls Mission, meets in a house. We are part of what is known as the New Monastic Movement. We take seriously the biblical injunction to "bear one another's burdens" and to have "all things in common." We worship together, pray together, serve together, eat together, and have fun together. We have committed to helping each other fight the battles of life. When we need special prayer, we all pray. When someone is in need, we all give. When one cries, we all cry. When one celebrates, we all celebrate.

We have discovered that, by the grace of God, we don't have to live life alone. We have members of our worship community that have been rejected by society and their families. But they have found a new Father in God and a new Mother in the Church. They have found a Big Brother in Jesus and a Friend and Comforter in the Holy Spirit. Even when the world rejects us and tries to destroy us we have the support of the Divine Family to help us fight our battles and win the war. We can persevere to the end because God is for us, and, as the Bible says, "If God is for us, who can be against us?"

Another thing I have discovered about life is that it is not all about me! One of the secrets I have discovered is that the more I try to help others in their journey in life the more blessed I am. When I stop focusing on me I find myself happy and exhilarated. When I find that I can help others I realize that I really do have a purpose in life and that just makes me feel good. That is the way that God intended it to be.

The Church as a whole has lost this since of purpose exactly because we have stopped looking outward and have become self-centered and self-absorbed. We are more concerned about the color of the carpet in the narthex than we are about the homeless guy sleeping outside of the building. We have become fixated on internal power struggles while Jesus continues to whisper in our ears reminding us that the greatest in the Kingdom of God are those who are the most humble and the most hospitable. Our buildings have become spiritual morgues rather than spiritual rescue stations.

When we formed the All Souls worship community we purposefully chose to call it a "mission" rather than a "church." We see ourselves as a mission station sending the Gospel into the world. We remembered our spiritual forefathers and foremothers who lived out their monastic vows, not in the cloistered solitude of a monastery, but on the edges of the wilderness bringing the Good News to a people who had never heard the "old, old Story" before. We also knew that we would not be reaching out to the high and mighty of society, but rather to the rejects of society - the homeless, the suicidal, the addicted, the lonely, the weak, etc. In short, we know that this Mission is not about us. This Mission is about God and about others.

The New Monastic Movement has helped us to look back to our roots in the Desert Fathers, the Celtic missionaries, and the Catholic cloisters. All of these monastics decided that a Rule of Life, a systematic and persevering prayer life, and the support of a devoted community would help them accomplish their purpose in life and help them survive the trials of life. In short, they realized they could not do this thing called "life" alone. We at All Souls have decided the same. With the help of God and our brothers and sisters we are moving forward to bring the Good News to our community and realizing our potential as creatures created with a purpose.

Life is hard. Don't try to do it alone. Turn to God for guidance and find a loving, caring, outward-looking worship community to help you on your journey. With His help you can win the battles of life, and in turn, win the war!

Christus Victor,
Fr. Rick

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

What is a Punk Monk?

I have fallen in love with the term "Punk Monk." I think it describes me and my parishioners at All Souls Mission. I also believe it should describe the Church as a whole.

The dictionary says that a Punk is a member of a rebellious counter-culture group. Isn't that a description of who and what Christians are? As Christians we have rebelled against the prevailing culture of this world. We have rebelled against Satan and the forces of evil. We live counter to a culture that is steeped in greed, sex, and violence by being a giving, loving and peaceful people. And we live our lives, not as individuals, but as part of a group called the Church. According to this definition we are Punks!

The dictionary says that a Monk is a religious person living in cloister and devoting themselves to contemplation, prayer and work. We are a religious people. We come together on a weekly basis to worship the Almighty. We read and study the Scriptures as we contemplate what they mean for our lives. We pray, not just during worship, but everyday at morning, noon, and night. And we work. We all have jobs, whether it be in an office, factory, home, etc. And even though the word "cloister" is used, which means living together separated from the world, we do that as well. We may not always be under the same roof together but we live our lives as part of the community of faith. Therefore we are Monks!

We are Punk Monks! We are living our lives in radical devotion to Jesus Christ. Are you a Punk Monk? Would you like to be? Live your life as Christ has called you to and you will most definitely fit the definition of a Punk Monk.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

The Daily Hours

It has been a while since I blogged. That is because my schedule has been rather hectic (and that is being polite!). Because my life has been so chaotic I have been thinking more and more about how much I treasure the quiet times I spend with God. Our Mission has been studying the New Monastic movement lately and I believe I am being tested to see whether or not I will make time to be more in touch with God.

All of us face almost impossible schedules and live lives inundated by noise and information. But as we are confronted by these distractions God is whispering to us with His still, small voice saying, "Be still and know that I am God." Are we too busy to listen? To ignore God is to risk spiritual and physical peril. God wants to spend time with us, not only for His sake, but for ours as well. We need to remember that God is the God of the Sabbath. The Sabbath, according to Jesus, was created for us so that we can recharge both spiritually and physically.

I have opted to seek God more and more throughout the day. I have always observed the Morning and Evening offices of prayer, but I have recently been trying to pray the Divine Hours throughout the day. I have made it a priority to pray throughout the day according to the ancient monastic tradition of praying the hours of the Church. I carry a missal with me and pray at noon, at compline, at the midnight hour, etc. These five minute interludes throughout the day have helped me stay to focused on what is truly important in my life, my relationship with God.

As I seek to follow the voice of God I have become more intentional in my prayer and Bible reading. The monks lived lives of work, prayer, and study. Their lives were, and are, disciplined and centered upon these ancient practices. I have made the decision to follow these practices in the midst of my chaos to bring order, peace, and power back into my life through the guidance of the Holy Spirit. I encourage you to do the same. Take time to listen to God. He always takes time to listen to you!

Saturday, April 3, 2010

A Good Friday Meditation

It started in the Garden of Eden. A simple bite of a forbidden fruit set in motion a catastrophic series of events. By a conscious decision to ignore the word of God death entered into our world. Communion with God was damaged, our bodies began to decay, and nature rebelled against us.

By rejecting God we surrendered to Satan. We gave up the dominion God meant for us to have over creation and handed it over to the Prince of Darkness. Ever since then our world has been wrecked by wars, floods, earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, and disease. Ever since then our lives have been wrecked by murder, jealousy, envy, guilt, and pain. Our lives are plagued by doubt and fear. But even in the midst of the chaos we've created and the chaos that Satan perpetuates - there is hope! Even as man was sinning in the Garden of Eden God was setting in motion a plan of rescue.
God promised a Savior. He would be born of a woman and bruised by the serpent, but He would crush the head of the serpent with His heel.

Throughout the long and winding annals of history God has continued to promise the coming of a Savior and He has foreshadowed His coming. He gave us a glimpse of the Savior on Mount Moriah as Abraham prepared to sacrifice his only son as an offering to God. He gave us a glimpse of the Savior as Moses led the Israelites to safety through the waters of the Red Sea. He gave us a glimpse of the Savior as David defeated the enemies of Israel and made preparation for the House of God. And throughout the course of history God has sent priests, prophets, judges, kings, and angels to tell us - "Do not be afraid, there is hope, the Savior is coming!"

The Savior came, not in splendor, but in swaddling clothes. He came not from a wealthy family, but from the family of a carpenter. He came not riding on a royal stallion, but on a borrowed donkey. And now He is hanging on a cross between two thieves. Where is the hope?

The hope is found in the words, "It is finished." As He hung bleeding and mangled on the cross, suffocating under His own body weight, He struggled to utter these words. He pulled up with His arms as the nails tore the flesh of His hands, He pushed up with His legs as the nail tore the flesh of His feet, just to get enough air into His lungs to utter each word - "It" - "is" - "finished." And as that final word rolled past His lips with His final breath His life left with it. He was dead.

When the world heard these words they mourned in defeat. When Satan and the host of Hell heard these words they trembled in fear. When God the Father, the Holy Spirit, the holy Angels, and all of the saints of Heaven heard these words they began to celebrate. Jesus wasn't announcing His defeat - He was announcing His victory! St. Paul tells us that the last enemy is death. Jesus died to conquer death. He was facing the enemy on its own turf. In the Creed we say, "He descended to the dead." Why? To announce His victory over death and to set the captives free.

What was finished at the Cross was our salvation. All of the sin, guilt, loneliness, depression, and chaos in our lives can now be given to the Savior and He will make our lives right again. He has broken the bonds of sin and death. He has taken back the dominion from Satan and will restore it to us if we are willing to live in Him.

That's why we call this Good Friday. It signaled the beginning of the end for evil and it points us to the ultimate victory found in the Resurrection.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Time to Pray

I'm angry! I'm angry at a Congress that has ignored the will of the people. I'm angry at the Church for not rising up in holy indignation. But most of all I'm angry with myself. I haven't prayed for my country like I should.

The one person I'm not angry with is God. He's been waiting for me to pray. He's been waiting for the Church to pray. He's been waiting for the people of this country to pray. He's been waiting for you to pray. But we haven't prayed. We've been too busy with protesting and letter writing. We've been too busy with social programming and evangelistic crusades.

If we want to save the soul of our nation and the souls of the lost we have to stop being busy and we have to start praying. We have to pray like our lives depend on it because it does! God isn't moved by protests or programs. He's moved by prayer...not pat petitions and perfunctory prayers, but by gut-wrenching, souls-searching, worshipful prayer. Jesus conquered Satan, death, and Hell by prayer. What makes us think we can do things any differently?

I've been reading a book called "Punkmonk" about the 24-7 prayer groups known as the Boiler Rooms. These groups have developed a 24-7, 365 day a year rhythm of prayer based on the ancient monastic model. They haven't been out protesting...they've been praying and where they set up camp and pray they have seen souls saved, bodies healed, lives and communities changed. They have paid the price with lack of sleep and calloused knees to reach the heart of God. But reach it they have and God is moving their midst.

I want God to move in my midst. I want to touch the heart of God. The question I have to ask myself, and the question you must ask yourself is this: Am I willing to pay the price? Am I willing to give up the things that consume me and my time to spend time alone with the God of the universe and pour out my heart to Him in praise and worship? Until we're willing to do that everything else is just a joke.

I'm not saying that we should stop doing all of the other things I've mentioned. What I am saying is that until we get our priorities right with God everything else is useless. We must seek God and His righteousness and then everything else will fall into place. As the author of Punkmonk says, "The currency is prayer, the price is massive, but the prize is glorious." What are you going to do?

The time to pray is NOW! Pay the price and the high prize of our calling in Jesus Christ will indeed be glorious.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Temptation

Temptation...It is something that is common to every human being. We are all tempted to do that which is wrong even when we know the right thing to do. It is a basic human trait, an instinct. It is part of our fallen, sinful human nature. Notice that I used the word "basic." It is the lowest common denominator amongst us. It is the lowest of the low.

When bad things happen we revert back to our base. If our base is good we will do the right thing. If our base is bad we will screw up royally! Any police officer or soldier will tell you that in the heat of combat you revert back to your basic training. If the training was good you will perform well. If not, you may die. Good training helps you survive the fight. The same is true for us as Christians. We need a good, solid biblical base to overcome temptation. We also need the will to overcome temptation.

In Luke 4:1-13 we are told the story of Jesus going into the wilderness for forty days and battling the temptation that Satan throws at him. The text says that He went into the wilderness "led by the Spirit." Jesus had just come from His baptism in the River Jordan and He had been anointed by the Holy Spirit. He was on, what we Christians call, a spiritual high, when He was confronted with one of the most ferocious battles of His earthly life. Jesus was about to be tested by Satan to see if the events at the Jordan River had truly been life-changing events. You see, it is easy to be spiritually high while surrounded by the minister, the congregation, and the Sacraments. It's not so easy when you are all alone.

We know how the story ends. Jesus passed the test! But have you passed yours? Thnakfully Jesus has shown us how we can overcome temptation and pass the test when we too are confronted by evil.

The first thing that Jesus taught us was we must never enter into any spiritual battle without being full of the Holy Spirit. Whether it was a trial in the desert or the horrors of the Cross, Jesus stayed in touch with His Father and empowered by the Spirit. How did He do this? Well, we know that He prayed incessantly. He was always going away into the woods, up on a mountain, or into a garden to pray. He stayed in touch with the Father through prayer. There are no shortcuts here. If you want to stay in touch with God you are going to have to make time to talk to God. But that wasn't all that He did. We also know that He worshiped in the Synagogue weekly. He gained strength from the public worship of God. He celebrated all of the biblical feasts and festivals. He participated in the Sacraments as evidenced by His Baptism. Jesus stayed filled with the Spirit of God by staying in touch with God through prayer, worship, and sacrament.

Secondly, we know where Jesus' base was - it was rooted in Scripture. He was trained in the Hebrew Scriptures by His parents, the Rabbis, and by self-study. As a good Jew Jesus became a biblical scholar. He had no formal theological training but He absorbed everything He could at home and in the synagogue. Every Christian should be a biblical scholar, immersing themselves in the Word of God.

As we travel through this Lenten season and focus on our human weakenesses and mortality we need to learn the lessons that Jesus has taught us. When we are on a spiritual mountaintop we are going to be attacked by the Evil One. When we are at our weakest we are going to be attacked by the Evil One. Wherever you are in life you are going to be tempted. Are you ready for the attack? Is your base solid and is your will sound? Get prepared for the fight by getting in touch with God. When we are enlightened by the Word and strengthened by the Sacraments and Spirit we can withstand anything the world has to throw at us.

Get ready, stand firm, and overcome through and with Jesus Christ our Lord.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

God is an Artist

James Johnson once wrote that "God is an artist, not a mathematician." These words hit me like a ton of bricks. In this age of post-Enlightenment we tend to break everything down to its most basic components for analysis. This includes the Bible and the symbols of our Faith.

To enjoy and understand a beautiful painting one does not seek to determine the chemical makeup of the paint, but rather stand back and look at the entire picture. We need to treat the things of God in the same fashion. Rather than break down the actual composition of the Bread and Wine of the Sacrament we need to step back and look at the big picture. Rather than break down word by word a text of Scripture we need to step back and listen to what the entire text is saying to us.

We have made Christianity a scientific endeavor rather than a matter of faith.

God is an Artist, the Artist, and we need to enjoy His handiwork. I'm tired of arguing over which denomination is right and which is wrong. We need to step back and see the Church as a whole. The Communion of Saints is made up of many parts and when these parts are viewed as a whole throughout the course of history and into the future we see a thing of mystery and beauty.

If you want to look through a microscope and see the cells of the flower be my guest, but you are going to miss the beauty of the flower. To enjoy a flower one has to use all of the senses. Our Faith is a beautiful flower. We should worship God with all of our senses and this requires us to experience the art the Artist has given us. When we do this we will truly be moved in our souls and we will truly believe.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Cheers!

Do you remember the television show "Cheers"? I loved that show. It was about a bar where everybody knows your name. There was a sense of community about that bar where everyone knew everyone and they accepted each other for who they were. Isn't that what the church is supposed to be?

Most of you know that All Souls Mission is meeting in Beth and Tina's home right now. We've had discussions of looking for a building to have church in but everytime we do the words of our archbishop comes back to my mind. He reminded us that we are the church. Wherever we are is the church. He also reminded us that the Celtic Christians, as did the early Church, met and worshiped God in homes.

As we worshiped together this past Sunday it struck me how much our Mission is like "Cheers." We know each others names and we accept each other just as we are. We are a community. When I forget the words during the Eucharist everyone just gives me a smile and we continue on. When our singing doesn't jive with the music we laugh and continue on. When the dog breaks lose from his cage and joins in on the service we pat him on the head and keep worshiping God.

I like worshiping in a house. There is something extraordinary about tranforming an ordinary living room into a sacred place to worship the Almighty. I feel connected with the roots of our Faith and my Celtic ancestors.

In a setting like this there is no room for pretense and no way to hide our foibles and our faults. We are who we are. But part of being who we are together is growing into who God would have us to be together. When I preach in this setting if someone has a question they can ask it. The formality of a church building is gone and the environment of friendship is present. We gather together around the Word and Sacrament as the family of God. As a family we share that Word and Holy Meal in the spirit of unity and openess.

Don't misunderstand me. I love the glorious churches and cathedrals of Christianity. They stand as monuments to the Glory of God and act as visible signs of His Presence among us. But I also love the small gatherings of Christians who huddle in homes, caves, groves, etc. to share their faith. They have been and will always be the roots of our heritage and the backbone of our Faith. Cathedrals don't change peoples lives. People empowered by the Holy Spirit of God change peoples lives as they live and worship in community.

So whether you are going to a formal building to worship God or someone's house, I say "Cheers!" Even if everyone doesn't know your name, God does, and in the final analysis that's all that really matters.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

The Word Became Flesh

One of the things that intrigues me the most about the Christian faith is the Christmas story. Not because of the stars or shepherds or even the angels, but rather because of the mystery of the incarnation. When we say, "God is with us" we literally mean it. He became one of us.

In John 1:14 the Bible says, "And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us..." John, unlike Matthew and Luke, gives us the Christmas story from a theological perspective. He delves into the mystery of the incarnation. When John used the phrase, "...dwelt among us..." he was alluding back to the Old Testament scenes of God dwelling among men in the Tabernacle and the Temple. The Shekinah Glory would fall from heaven and rest on the Ark of the Covenant...God with us. But now the Shekinah Glory rests in a Man. No longer is God found in tent or temple, now He is found walking the streets among men, flesh and bones.

The Word (Logos in Greek) became one of us. What a staggering thought. In the Greek "Logos" means "a saying, decree, doctrine, precept, wisdom, reason." Jesus is all of these things! He is the saying, the decree of God. It was through Jesus that God the Father spoke the worlds into existence. Jesus is our doctrine and our precept. He is the all in all when it comes to the Bible and our belief. We are to know nothing but Christ, and Him crucified. He is wisdom and reason. God's thoughts are higher than out thoughts and these thoughts find their summation in Jesus. He is the Logos of God.

In Vincent's Word Studies in the New Testament he says that "Logos signifies both the outward form by which the inward thought is expressed." This sounds alot like the definition of a sacrament, an outward sign of an inward grace. It is for this reason that many theologians call Jesus Christ, the God-Man, the Primordial Sacrament. Jesus is the visible and tangible reality of all that the Bible speaks of. He is the grace of God incarnate.

God is with us! What a joyful expression. Emmanuel, Jesus Christ, the God-Man, the Logos. O come, let us adore Him...Christ the Lord!