Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Sunday Sermon: To Be At Peace

Sermon of Christ Lutheran Church, Staunton, VA April 23, 2017
Pastor Robert McCarty

Preaching Texts:  1 Peter 1: 3-9 John 20: 19-31

"Blessed be the G-d and Father of our L-rd Jesus Christ!"  (1 Peter 1:3). "Bless are [you] who have not seen and yet have come to believe."  (John 20: 29b). "Peace be with you."  (John 20: 21b).  Our scripture today grants you blessing and faith, patience and peace.  And you need all of this in the world today.

Peace in your heart differs from peace in the world.  Which I guess is fortunate for us.  We can have peace in our hearts even when chaos and uncertainty surround us.  Today, you hear of Jesus entering into the presence of his followers.  His followers gather in an upper room and lock the door for fear.  Their world has been turned upside down, and to maintain their faith comes with risk.  Their belief in Jesus that inspires them to raise his mantle and follow him comes with mortal risk.  Threats come from those outside the faith, and threats come from the Roman government who will persecute these followers as well.  Confusion and violence reign in the world, and yet Jesus breathes on them a word of peace, a spirit of peace.  

Undoubtedly, Andrew and James gathered in that upper room.  The apostle Andrew would travel and evangelize as far north as Kiev in what is now the Ukraine.  The apostle James, according to legend, went to Spain.  Even the late arriving Thomas would receive Jesus' peace.  The apostle Thomas would travel east to India.  James is the only apostle whose death is recorded in the New Testament, in Acts Chapter 12.  Thomas and Andrew also died for their faith.  Most of the apostles died for their faith.  

This peace Jesus brings does not lessen the confusion in the world.  It does not, at least not right away, make the world a safer place.  Not all of the followers in the upper room are named, but legend has it that only one apostle, John, lives to die of natural causes. Jesus breathes on his believers a word of peace, and only through their actions will the world change, and it will change slowly.  

The Greek word for “peace” is eirene (pronounced "a RRa na" with all long A vowel sounds).  It has a slightly nuanced meaning a bit different from the Hebrew word shalom.  Peace, eirene, for the Christian intimates the way of salvation.  Such peace implies confidence and also contentment.  Your confidence in Jesus' victory that assures your future and contentment with what life sets before you.  This peace rests in your heart and in your spirit. As it rests on you, such peace guides your actions and your life.  

Inner peace exists (confidence and contentment exist) in a world that struggles to understand peace.  That shift between individual peace and global peace often confuses people, because we use different words to define peace globally.  We define global peace by a lack of violence.  If you prefer a positive spin, then we define global peace by a sense of harmony.  Actually, defining global peace (or community peace) by harmony points to our nation’s internal struggle.  We lack harmony as much as the world lacks peace.  

Thankfully, Jesus breathes peace onto you, which creates confidence and contentedness.  You learn to trust with this peace.  You learn patience.  You learn hope.  I know that people struggle with this.  You struggle to practice patience when others get to be rash.  You struggle to say a kind word when others get to hurl around insults.  The rash even get to insult you and those people you respect.  You struggle to be faithful when others use Sunday morning for a leisurely bike ride.  Or they sleep in so they can stay up late and party hard Saturday night.  Faith begins with you, with us, and it begins here Sunday morning.

Martin Luther King Junior and the civil rights movement serves as a modern day reminder of the struggle of the peace of Christ.  He taught non-aggression.  His followers could not hurl insults; they could not fight back.  They were taught ideally love, but loving is hard in the chaos of anger thrown at you.  The movement taught followers patience, but also to crave and sacrifice for justice.  

King gave this definition for faith.  “Faith is taking the first step even when you don’t see the whole staircase.”  Martin Luther King Junior, and many others took that first step and many more.  And I guess we need to admit they are still seeking out that peace.  We still seek that peace with them.  Voices and actions of hate still push against our desire for racial peace in our country and peace in the world.

April 3 next year will mark the 50th anniversary of King's death.  Another martyr like the apostles gathered in this upper room.  Jesus breathes on them peace and they go out and change the world.

Peace, patience, justice, faith (faith and belief): all of these attributes lie in our scripture readings from 1 Peter and John: gifts for you today.  Peace, patience, justice.  I know it helps to speak of peace as confidence and contentment to make peace more real for you.  Because patience takes confidence that what you do means something.  You need confidence that your faith-inspired actions have a positive result even when you cannot see it.

Confidence, contentment, patience, justice, belief: you too can change the world just like those followers in the upper room.  And that desire and power to change the world begins right here in worship.  The power to change the world begins in this variation of the upper room in which we gather.  And the power to change the world begins especially on this day, when the Gospel tells the story of Christ, your savior, reaching across time and blessing you who believe and yet cannot see.  

Thomas comes and sees the wound.  He wants to touch the wound, but you hear that just seeing his L-rd and Savior (seeing) was enough for him.  And in the affirmation of Thomas, Jesus reaches across time and blesses you.  “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”  Jesus knows that belief is a blessing; faith is a blessing.  As that belief rests in your heart, the blessing of peace also falls on you.  The blessing includes confidence and contentment.

You folks have received the blessing of G-d: confidence in Christ, varying levels of contentment.  Although I imagine that contentment ebbs and flows.  You can change the world, and changing the world begins right here in worship.  Changing the world begins in  this our variation on the upper room.  Things may not always be harmonious, but we create a space full of blessing and safety and security.  We work through our differences and change the world a little bit by little bit with our confidence in Christ Jesus.  His peace and presence prepares you for the week in a chaotic world.  Because you do indeed live in a chaotic world.  Do not forget that Jesus works through you in this world.  That itself can be frightening.  Because we mess up.  That is okay, because right now the world needs people willing to admit their mistakes.  And yes, Jesus chooses you to live out his peace in this world.

That Jesus allows patience means we have time to correct our mistakes and get better at living with confidence and contentment.  Because little by little Jesus is changing the world through you and through us.  What you do and how you live this out matters.  Remember, not every marcher in the civil rights movement was able to keep their mouth shut in the face of insults.  But the movement kept on marching.    And they learned, with practice they learned.

Faith you remember is taking that first step even when you cannot see the whole staircase.  "Blessed are those who believe and yet have not seen" the end of the staircase.  Faith as that first step includes being here Sunday morning.  Because, believe it or not, your presence here changes the world, even if you cannot see the good you create.  Blessed are those who have not seen and come to believe.  The world needs more people who have Jesus' peace in their hearts.  The world is lifted up by G-d every time someone hears Jesus bless their lives.

Blessed be the G-d and Father of our L-rd Jesus Christ.

Thank you for being here.

Thank you for believing.

Amen.

Monday, March 27, 2017

Sunday Sermon: On Trusting God

Sermon of Christ Lutheran Church, Staunton, VA March 26, 2017
Pastor Robert McCarty

Preaching Texts:  1 Samuel 16: 1-13 John 9: 1-41

Making sense of how God works is not the same as trusting God.

God does not always work in ways that makes sense to you or me.  Actually Samuel seems somewhat confused in today’s first lesson.  Here you have a prophet, an esteemed prophet, confused.  He recognizes, wrongly, Eliab, son of Jesse and brother to David, as the Lord’s anointed and future King.  Again I say wrongly. I am not sure what Samuel started to do in the selection of Eliab, but God instructs him “do not look on his appearance or height or stature.”  God does not select Eliab one of seven sons of Jesse, despite his height or good looks.  

A different pattern repeats in the Gospel when the disciples ask Jesus, “who sinned, this man or his parents that he was born blind.”  The disciples confuse a physical limitation as a punishment from God.  And the disciples seek to justify God by saying this man deserved it because of his parents, or because God knew ahead of time a sin this man would commit later in life.  For some reason we think all of this should make sense.  Of course, if we think clearly about miracles, what makes them amazing is that they do not make sense.

God does not always work in ways that make sense to you or me.  Making sense of how God works is not the same as trusting God.  Samuel judges David’s brother based on outward appearances.  We know a favorable outward appearance has benefits.  We also know that good looking is not exactly the most important quality for a king to have.  The disciples judge the blind man on his lack of sight.  We know that those who are blind, face challenges, but we have learned from Jesus to look for God in the strength to overcome those challenges.  We learn from Jesus the man was born blind so that the glory of God could shine in him and through him.  And this glory shines in the healing, but even more so does the glory shine in the man’s confession of Jesus as the “Son of Man,” especially against the opposition of these Pharisees.

The Pharisees have every advantage, position in the community, typically wealth, and definitely the knowledge of scripture.  And yet the Pharisees are the ones who stumble.  The Pharisees learn of something they cannot explain, a man born blind now sees.  And their scripture gives no account of this happening before.  They know the signs God has laid out in the past to reveal his activity and show his presence.  No where is scripture does God give sight to a blind man.  A new sign has happened and they need to decide what it means.  The activity of God does not make sense to them either.  It did not make sense to Samuel, it did not make sense to the disciples, it does not make sense to the Pharisees.  

All of this confusion still exists today.  Some people believe God dislikes them.  They look at the moments of misery and suffering in their life and they wonder what in the world have I done to deserve this.  They blame cancer, or poverty, or the misfortune of the day as an act of God.  The same thing use to happen with natural disasters.  We have stopped calling hurricanes and tornados “acts of God,” but still people wonder.  That is like the disciples confusing sin for the reason why the man cannot see.

The reverse is true as well.  Often people see good fortune as a sign of God’s favor.  To be born in the United States, or to be born rich, to be born with athletic ability or musical talent, or to be born to loving parents means that you have or perhaps will do something good to earn the favor from God.  And it is not just these accidents of birth, but success later in life.  You have a good job, good family, good investments, community standing.  Depending on how you want to look at it, we all deserve success, or no one deserves success.  Some give credit to hard work, but I know people who work their tails off only to fall short of just breaking even.  You know people like this too.  I also know people who make success look easy.   

Of course that is like Samuel mistaking Eliab for the chosen of God based on his good looks. I give thanks to God for my good fortune, but I do not confuse myself into believing that I have somehow deserved this.  Such a prayer should be more than just thanks, thank you God, but also keep me from messing this up.

And in the midst of whatever misfortune we can pray, help me God.  I trust that you are with me.  I believe.  Or maybe, in our more honest moments, I believe, help my unbelief.  That is actually a biblical prayer.  “I believe.  Help my unbelief.”   (cf. Mark 9: 23-24)

Samuel trusts God.  Samuel thought wrong.  God corrected him.  Life moves on.

Some of you have probably had those types of moments.  When you think you know what God is up to, and you think it makes sense, and then it doesn’t.  You learn that you are pregnant and then just as suddenly, you are not.  You think you have a job lined up and then if falls through.  This does not always make sense.  Then again, making sense of what God is doing is not the same as trusting God.

Trusting God, learning to trust God.  It happens in ways that catch us by surprise.    (True Story)  Jacob, in another southern state, receives a cancer diagnosis.  He and even more so his wife remain adamant.  They will fight this.  They will fight cancer with everything they have got.  They are adamant and persistent and aggressive.  Knowing full well how the aggressive treatment will eat away at his body, they are adamant and persistent, and they fight.  Their pastor is faithful in the journey with them.  Which becomes more important when the treatment proves ineffective.  His pastor comes to visit Jacob, lying in his bed, facing the reality of dying.  He shares with his pastor, “I give thanks for my cancer.  It is through my cancer that I have truly gotten to know God.”

Maybe that makes sense to some of you.  Maybe not to everyone.  Making sense again, though is not the same as trusting God, having faith.  That God can take something broken and do something new.

The Pharisees fail to trust God, and I guess we all fail to do that one time or another.  Samuel even in his wisdom fails to make sense of what God is doing, but he moves forward with the will of God as it is revealed to him and the young boy is anointed to be the future king.  

And the man born blind.  He sees clearly that God has done something new in him through Jesus the Christ, the Messiah, the Anointed Chosen one to save us from not just our sin, but our doubt of God, and our confusion of things not making sense.  Even as the young man gets tossed out, driven out of the temple and the Jewish faith, and pronounced a sinner and a heretic of false teaching.  He believes clearly in what God does through Jesus Christ.  That Jesus is the Son of Man and worthy of our worship.  The man who now sees, sees clearly and worships Jesus openly.

Miracles amaze us.  Maybe faith should amaze us as well, that kind of faith that even when things do not make sense, people trust God and believe in God.  Such faith stands as a miracle in its own right.  You gather each week in such faith.  You trust God.  Each week you stand in the midst of this amazement.  

Amen

Monday, February 6, 2017

Sunday Sermon: February 5

Sermon of Christ Lutheran Church, Staunton, VA February 5, 2017
Pastor Robert McCarty


Being right with the law is a good thing, but it will not save you.  Being right with the law is not the same as being right with G-d.
And yet being right with the law is a good thing.  Jesus reminds those who will listen today, Do not think I have come to abolish the law or the prophets, I have not come to abolish, but fulfill.
Undoubtedly you hear the nuance, the law and the prophets, which includes all of the Hebrew Scriptures, all of the Old Testament, which includes the commandments and yet so much more.  
The gospel lesson today, paired with the Isaiah reading, gives you a glimpse of what the righteousness of G-d looks like and what the righteousness of G-d does not look like.  
Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount explains the righteousness of G-d in ways that many struggle with.  This gospel passage today continues the sermon that began last week with the Beatitudes.  Today, you hear that you can break aspects of the Holy law and even teach others to do the same and still be called least in the Kingdom of Heaven.  You get in; at least.  The passage ends with the reality that you can dedicate your life to keeping the fine details of the Holy Law and still miss out on the Kingdom of Heaven.  Good works that glorify G-d means something more than dedicating your life to the law.  What righteousness is not. 
Again, that nuance of Law and Prophets stands out.  In the Hebrew Scriptures you will find the story of G-d acting with justice and mercy, faithfulness and grace.  Even within his commands, you can find the gift of the Father’s compassion.  You can find passages within the Old Testament that are both law and grace.  That mixture makes up the righteousness of G-d.
I will show you two example of how to see G-d’s compassion and grace even within his commands and law.  The first example comes from the book of Leviticus, a book largely associate with the Law.  Leviticus is full of commands and instructions.  Sadly, we hardly look at more than a few of them.  Then I will show you a second example from one of the prophets.  Actually, it comes from todays Isaiah reading.
You will find in the book of Leviticus this command regarding the harvest.  “When you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not reap the corners of your field, or gather the gleanings of your harvest; you shall leave them for the poor and for the alien: I am the L-rd your G-d.”  (Lev 23:22).  This is a command of G-d and you could ask the question how big of an area counts as the corner.  How much area in the corner can I not harvest?  Does that include the edges of the field? because that is actually another way of translating the word for corner.  Can my reapers place their basket on the ground to catch some of the heads of grain that fall?  That is being concerned with the details of law.  But to ask those questions is to miss the point of this command, which the text states plainly, “you shall leave them for the poor and the alien.”  G-d is compassionate toward the poor and the foreigner.  The Pharisees seek to honor G-d by making sure they honor the edges and the corners.  But they ask the wrong question.  The question they ask is “How small can I make my corners and edges and still honor G-d?”  Jesus and Isaiah seek to help all people see the poor  and foreigner who glean and collect what is left.  This verse of Law in Leviticus reveals not G-d’s love of the law, but his concern for the vulnerable, the poor and those without a land to call their own.  The passage reveals divine grace and mercy, which seeks to change the question to “How much of my field can I leave so that the glory and grace of God can be seen in this field?”  This difference begins to describe the righteousness described in the Sermon on the Mount. 
You see this again in our Isaiah passage, most obviously when the prophet talks about fasting.  To those who fast and feels like G-d does not notice (verse 3), the prophet responds for G-d, “Look, you serve your own interest on your fast day,”
And then on the top of the next page
Is this not the fast I choose:
to loose the bonds of injustice
to undo the thongs of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to break every yoke?
Is it onto to share your bread with the hungry,
and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked to cover them,
and not hide yourself from your own kin?
Then your light shall break forth like the dawn,
and your healing shall spring up quickly;
(Isaiah 58: 6-8)

To fast just to deny yourself food and honor G-d misses the point.  Fasting seeks to build awareness towards the poor and to build up hunger for justice and righteousness for all people.  For the Israelites, the fast connects them to their past and reminds them that they were a foreigner in the land of Egypt and G-d lead them out with a mighty hand and an outstretched hand.  
You can also see this on our Souper Bowl table.  We have a table set up with the Patriots logo on one half and the Falcons logo on the other half.  And we have invited you to bring cans of food and place them on the table of either your favorite team of the two, or the team you think is going to win the game tonight.  I really do not care how you choose where to place your cans.  You hate Matt Ryan so you place your cans on the Patriots, great.  You walked in and placed your cans on the Falcons because they are closest to the door when you walked in.  Not a problem.  Your best friend is cheering for the Falcons, and you really do not care, so you placed your cans on the Patriots with a big grin on your face just to kid them, push their buttons a little.  Good for you.  This is only in part about the game, but what it is truly about, just like the Leviticus, is sharing in G-d’s concern for those who are hungry.  What this is truly about is helping place food in the hands of the hungry and giving G-d the glory.  And if we can do that with a smile on our face, all the more better.  Righteousness is not about picking the winning team.  Righteousness is about the table and the banquet.  If you believe the Kingdom of Heaven has a banquet table, then you have to know that God wants those who will eat there to eat here on earth.  
Returning to the Sermon on the Mount, the Kingdom of Heaven is now.  Wherever Jesus is, there stands the Kingdom of Heaven.  Our gospel today continues the lesson Jesus shared last week when you heard the Beatitudes.  (You might want to go back and read the beginning of Chapter 5 this afternoon.)  In the Beatitudes, Jesus lists those blessed by G-d, and the blessing of G-d had nothing to do with the Law.  Jesus explained that the blessing of G-d comes to the persecuted, the peacemakers, those who mourn, those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, and even at the beginning the poor of spirit.  Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.  The Kingdom of Heaven happens now as well as in you future.  Wherever you find Jesus, there stands the Kingdom of Heaven.  And when the blessed gather and where the blessed gather and reveal both the glory of God and the compassion of God, in that moment righteousness happens.  Salvation comes from Christ; His righteousness lives in you.  
Amen


Thursday, December 10, 2015

Thoughts from the Pulpit


Pastor McCarty's Sunday Sermon
Christ Lutheran Church, Staunton, VA
December 6, 2015 Luke 3: 1-6
2nd Sunday of Advent
Tags: Luke 3

The world is messy, you understand that reality. In the midst of this messy world, God has provided this worship service to remind you of his affection for you. I will return to that point.

First, I encourage you during this advent season to sit down and read the gospel of Luke from beginning to end. You probably can read it in two to three hours.

You know the best way to start studying the Bible?

This is a joke by the way. I tell you that so that when I give you the punch line you know you have permission to laugh.

My younger son brought home from school a random acts of kindness calendar for the month of December. Wednesday was “Tell a person a joke and make them laugh.” So we sat around the table for breakfast Wednesday morning and told a bunch of light bulb jokes. (How many charismatic pentecostal missionary children does it take to change a light bulb?) I will save those for Epiphany.

This joke is appropriate for today. What is the best way to start studying the Bible?

You Luke into it? You (Look) into it?

So again (anyhow, I will work on my delivery) I encourage you to break open your Bible during your preparations for Christmas and read the Gospel of Luke in the next two weeks. As you read the Gospel of Luke, you will get this sense that even as God works in the world, something bigger is about to happen.

God is at work setting something up and building anticipation.

The first chapter of Luke begins with the Angel Gabriel appearing in the temple to Zechariah and telling Zechariah that his and Elizabeth's prayers have been answered and they will have a son, who they will name John, and John will be great in the sight of the Lord. And then next Gabriel goes to Mary and calls her blessed by God, and she to will conceive a child. Then the pregnant Mary and the very pregnant Elizabeth get together and the child in Elizabeth leaps at the arrival of the mother of our Lord. And Chapter 1 of Luke ends with the birth of John and Zechariah's song of praise that we read in the place of our Psalm this morning.

A lot happens in Chapter 1 of Luke, 80 verses, 4 different scenes, three ordinary people that God chooses to work through—Mary, Elizabeth and Zechariah. One extraordinary person, John the Baptist who leaps in the womb upon the arrival of Mary. And even this extraordinary prophet, pales in comparison to the one who is to come. A lot happens in Chapter 1 of Luke, but we have this anticipation that something even bigger is about to happen.

This brings us to Chapter 3, the beginning of John the Baptist's ministry. Chapter 3 begins with a litany of names of almost extraordinary people, almost extraordinary except for the fact that they behave in less than ordinary ways. And behaving in less than ordinary ways, they have made a bit of a mess of the world in which this story takes place. Almost like the start of a joke: an emperor and four governors were lost in the dessert. Or a father and a son went to church one day. (Annas and Caiaphas, the two high priests were father and son in-law. The story is that Annas was forced into retirement by Tiberius.) If this is the start of a joke, it is the start of a bad joke. The Emperor of Rome, the Governors, the high priest of the temple and the former high priest had the power and position to do something incredible. They had power to save lives. Instead the word of God comes to John in the wilderness, in the middle of nowhere and that gives start to something incredible. His words and the prophet's Isaiah words prepare the world to receive the Messiah.

And you and I know if the word of God is active in someone, something great is about to happen. When I set up the joke at the beginning of the message, you may have had this sensation, anticipation, that you were going to be either mildly disappointed or somewhat amused. When God sets things up, when you see God active, when God is active in someone and you know something great is about to happen, we call that hope. The hope of God acts as a powerful force in the world.

The world even two thousand years after Tiberius, Pilate, Herod, Philip, Annas, and Caiaphas, (the world) is still messy. We can no longer blame that on them anymore. We find ourselves waiting for the next explosion or gunshots or frightening medical diagnosis. In this world God acts for good. His word is on the lips and in the hearts of thousands and millions of men and women. They gather for worship because they know God cares, and we refuse to live in a messy world without hope. This worship is a reminder that hope is for you as well. His holiness, his affection is for you. The coming Savior is for you. With everything going on in the world, be reassured that God is there sharing his love and offering his hope. And yet still, God is here with his hope and his affection for you today and always.

Amen.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

First Sunday of Advent


Pastor McCarty's Sunday Sermon
Christ Lutheran Church, Staunton, VA
1st Sunday of Advent
November 29, 2015
Luke 21: 25-36
Tags: Peace, Quilts, Advent, Luke 21

This Sunday we have with us three peace quilts that were made by the people of Staunton as part of last years Peace Rally in Gypsy Hill Park. These quilts are the joint effort of children and adults, some adults parents, some adults grandparents and some of the adults who have yet to have or never had children. When I saw the quilts I recognized some of the names on them. [Read some children's names from quilts. Acknowledge two adults whose names are on the quilts]. I will read some of the quotes later, yet...

As you hear our scripture passages for today, you need to have the context of peace in your heart and on your mind. Because when you have peace in your heart and mind, then you will understand why Advent begins the first week with the anticipation of Christ's second coming. You celebrate this first Sunday of Advent in anticipation of the return of the Prince of Peace.

The attacks in Paris have made people uncomfortable, again. Heightened security surrounded the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade. I would guess heightened security in our airports as well. People are nervous.

Closer to home, Chicago Illinois has been on edge this week as a 13 month old dash cam video of a police shooting was finally released. City residents and officials feared protests would turn to riots.

Before you lament how the world is changed, remember how on edge the world was before World War II, or at least what you heard about that time. The world was on edge when Nazi Germany was building military forces and annexing Austria and occupying Czechoslovakia and commandeering Jewish businesses and homes and destroying Jewish lives.

And before that worldly trauma, how the depression engulfed this country in deep poverty.

And also, for more of you, in your life how civil rights protesters were not always welcomed in communities where they marched.

It has been 150 years since Staunton experienced the ransacking and fires associated with war, which means not in our life times. And over those 150 years, this community has forgotten what that occupation and destruction was like. Though in other ways you have experienced the tribulation and uncertainties connected with having family members go overseas to fight.

Luke writes a gospel passage, the one that we read this morning, that is as fascinating as it is unsettling. Few Christians doubt that Jesus predicted the destruction of the temple. Even if Luke writes this after the temple has been destroyed, Christians do not question that Jesus prophesied the destruction as part of his teachings. None of Jesus' predictions however describe the horrible onslaught against human lives connected to the temple's destruction. In his book the Jewish Wars, the Jewish historian Josephus records the brutality of the siege by Rome by participants from both sides of the conflict as well as residents starved out during the siege. All I can say is worse than the destruction of the World Trade Towers, worse than Sherman's march on Atlanta, worse than Gettysburg or Antietam. When the first Christians heard what Luke wrote, they wouldn't need to be reminded of what happened in Jerusalem.

They had their Jerusalem. We have France, the World Trade Towers, WWII, the depression, civil unrest and discrimination. We have our own unrighteousness and slowly over the next thousand years these too will fade from memory. What will last? Verse 33 tells us what will last. “Heaven and Earth ill pass away,” Jesus says, “but my words [Jesus words] will not pass away.” These words proclaim truth and grace, reality, forgiveness, and hope. As your redemption draws near, as the second coming draws near, as peace draws near, the words of Jesus will stand strong. And these words, his words, will inspire.

Here are some of those quotes about peace.

Peace is when you are free of fear.      Nancy with drawing by Rony
Share your Birthday presents.      Camryn
Birds chirp a peaceful song.      Samantha with drawing by Lele and Nalia
If you chop down trees, plant new ones.       Sydney with drawing by Charlotte

All of us who live and have faith understand that part of our ministry is to work for peace that will only fully arrive in the return of Christ the savior. We will see fruits of that peace, like panels on these quilts and you will receive words of hope that remind you that you are not alone.

Knowing and Loving our Neighbors,
   even if we don't really like them.       Beverly with drawing by Julian
Peace is no fighting. Everything is Awesome.
   Everything is Awesome.       Carter with drawing by Emmitt.

I am fairly certain I have said this before. The liturgical church year begins right where it ends: with readings focused on the end times, the eschaton. In Advent, this focus reminds us as we prepare to celebrate Jesus nativity, that we also await his coming again. We want [desire] Jesus to come again. We want all of creation to experience the peace that God intended.

Peace is a new generation of children who are taught to choose love.
      Emily with drawing by Andrew.

Amen


Wednesday, July 15, 2015

John the Baptist and the Voice of God

Pastor McCarty's Sunday Sermon
Christ Lutheran Church, Staunton, VA
July 12, 2015  Mark 6: 14-29
Tags: Mark 6, Baptist, Sin

John the Baptist and the Voice of God

The beheading of John the Baptist seems preposterous; an extravagant tale that comes to you straight out of Game of Thrones, or Outlanders, or the Mad Max saga.  Except, except you who are wary of the world know better than to think or to say this could never happen today.

Newspaper stories or gossip of love triangles where one rival tries to take out, squeeze out, push out their competition.  Maybe they do not go to the point of death, but of course it has gone that far, and not just in the movies.

Likewise you hear of modern attempts to silence ones biggest critic by various means: scandal, imprisonment, or death.

The story of Herod, and Phillip, and Herodias, and her daughter, and John the Baptist seems exaggerated to the point of grotesque ridicule.   And yet you know, whether or not you are willing to admit it, that you too deal with this crud to some lesser extent.

Maybe you have a rival? If not a rival someone to gets on your nerves, annoys you--maybe at work, maybe a cousin, maybe a boss or someone who became your boss.  Maybe they are confrontational, maybe they are a bit too perfect, or a bit too perky, or a bit too lucky, or a bit too problematic.  Someone you just wish would go away. You don't want to cut off their head, just cut them off or cut them out.  That is what this story is about.

Maybe someone you love and who loves you back, did something for you that they really should never have done?  They did something they didn't have to do, but they did it anyhow because of love.  Maybe they looked the other way.  Maybe they gave something to you on the side.  Maybe they stood up for you even when you were dead wrong.  That is what this story is about.

Maybe you said something you regret?  Maybe even as soon as it was said, you realized this is going to come back to haunt you?  That is what this story is about.

Maybe you have seen your own sin in your children as if they learned it from you?  That is what this story is about.

Maybe you have partied just a little bit too hard.  And maybe in the frivolity or jubilation of the moment, you came this close to doing something you regret.  Or maybe did something that haunts you even today?  That is what this story is about.

This story is about sin.  John the Baptist spoke clearly against sin, and he is dead.  Trust me when I say there are others relieved to not hear him anymore.  They wished him to go away rather than to get killed, but now at least John is no longer confronting them with his righteous way of living.

Remember, John prepared the way.  Remember what John proclaimed, “A baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.”  Repentance and also urgency when you remember that he said that “The one who is more powerful than I is coming after me.”  Preparation, repentance, and urgency, that message was silenced in the death of John the Baptist.  Death silenced John.

Death, however, did not silence God.

Jesus steps forward from the moment of his baptism and proclaims a message of repentance and forgiveness and faith, and does so with power.   People are healed.  The multitude are fed.  The message pours forth throughout Galilee in the proclamation of his followers.  And the voice of God silenced in John by Herod, still reaches his court and his ears.  The voice of God lives on in Jesus and in his ministry.

And more than Herod will hear, and some again will desire the voice to go away.   Again death will rear its ugly head in the form of the cross.  Death, however, does not, will not silence God.  Even Herod knows what is coming, imagine that.  Herod knows someone is going to be raised from the dead.  He guessed wrongly that it was John.  But he knew it was going to happen.  You and I know that Jesus was raised from the dead.  And the voice of God in the Son of God continues in his ministry and this ministry even today.  And, no maybe about it, his voice is in our voice when...

We praise God that God will not be silenced. 
We sing His praises. 
We give thanks with our voices. 
We speak His word, His Holy Word, with care. 
We speak for justice. 
We lift up, encourage and support the poor. 
We forgive sins. 
We ask others to helps us. 
We teach our children the stories and the practice of faith. 

And when we stand together the voice of God will not be silenced so long as there is a church with breath to sing His praises.

Amen

Monday, July 6, 2015

So They Will Know God...

Pastor McCarty's Sunday Sermon
Christ Lutheran Church, Staunton, VA
July 5, 2015
Tags:  Ezekiel 2, Mark 6, Transitions, Evangelism

So They Will Know God...

[Sermon began with some transitions in the lives of congregation members.  Omitted here.]

Transitions happen quite often in our lives.  Some major transitions, like moving out of state.  Some minor transitions.  Some transitions whose significance you are not quite sure of at the time, like starting high school.

Our gospel lesson has a couple of transitions. You hear how the hometown struggles with the transition of Jesus from rabbi or religious teacher, to prophet. If they cannot accept him as prophet how will they ever be able to accept him as Son of God. You also have Jesus' disciples being sent out on their own, without bread or money in their bag, or an extra tunic just in case. They will be the ones casting out demons, and anointing the sick and even healing them.  They will trust in the generosity of people they have yet to meet to provide for them on their journey.

Transition. I want to take just a minute as we prayerfully consider these transitions and consider the book of Ezekiel. Our scripture this morning included a small portion of the call of Ezekiel.

So far in our summer scripture reading program we have had 4 or 5 days of reading Ezekiel. Depending on today's reading you are somewhere around Chapter 7 or 9. Of those of you reading, how many are already tired of Ezekiel?  One of my pastoral colleagues said of reading Ezekiel, "I guess you need to do it once."

Ezekiel begins with 24 Chapters of judgment, 24 chapters of doom followed by 24 chapter of support and hope. And even those first 9 chapter of supposed hope involve oracles of doom against Israel's enemies, which we do not read as all of that hopeful today. The oracles of hope or restoration begin somewhere around Chapter 33 or 36. For those of you reading, they will come. You will get there.

Today's passage from Ezekiel offers just enough of a platform to proclaim the grace of God to a stubborn people. Some times stubborn is a good thing, occasionally. For example if you stubbornly persist in your reading of Ezekiel, that is a good thing. But most of our stubbornness, frankly works against God. When one stubbornly refuses to come to worship in the Lord's house, or read the scripture, or to thoughtfully examine one's behavior and identify what sins truly need to be confessed. God sent Ezekiel to a stubborn people, not just stubborn, but a nation of rebels living in a land of exile. God will place words in Ezekiel's mouth and give him a message to proclaim and many will not listen to him. [But,] But, eventually they will know and come to realize that there has been a prophet among them, a prophet of the most high God.

When they realize that, they will know that God has not forgotten them. Ezekiel is bizarre, but this bizarre prophet with his apocalyptic like imagery, and visionary use of descriptive language stands as a reminder of the love of God for his children.

The same can be said about Nazareth, Jesus hometown, where he grew up and matured from a child to a teenager to an adult. Eventually, they will know that there was a prophet among them, and not only a prophet, but someone who loved them unto death, and brought them into life.  One day, some of them will realize just who Jesus is, and then they will know God and God's love.

The same can be said about the disciples sent out in pairs to neighboring villages and homes. Even those places where they shook the dust of their feet, one day people in those villages might just realize that God sent to them an ambassador of His love.  And then they will know God.

The same is true with your invitations to friends and neighbors to come to worship or to read scripture or to be faithful or to believe in Christ and be baptized. You invite them, not that they will respond right away. You will invite them to be here next week. They may not come. You will lend them a bible, or give them a bible, they may not open it this year. They might not respond even when you are alive. You invite them however, you encourage them, so that when they come to believe then they will know.  When they come to respond, their eyes will open and they will see in you that God has been with them all along.  Then they will know that God has sent messengers to them all along and that God has loved them all along.  Then they will know that God has believed in them always, since that moment you first said a Christian word in their hearing, since the moment they were born.

Ezekiel is worth reading, stick with it, be persistent, a prophet among us even today.

Amen.