Thursday, May 3, 2012

Real Presence


A sermon preached by Canon Anne E. Kitch
Thursday in the Fourth Week of Easter, May 3, 2012


“So many years since I saw you last,” writes the poet David Whyte in a poem called “Remember.”

So many years since I saw you last,
that I couldn’t recognize
your brotherly presence
even as you sat beside me.

So many memories hidden
from a busy present,
that I ate with you without seeing you,
a stranger amongst other strangers,
talking, talking
about nothing in particular.

I wonder, were we ever to meet
with God as we still lived
and breathed, would we do exactly
the same thing,
let time go by
exchanging
pleasantries
about the weather,
not even knowing
how to ask the question?

So many years since I saw you last. As Jesus prepared to die, he loved. Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end. (John 13:1)He loved them all, even the one he knew would betray him. With love, he washed their feet. Even the one. With love, he shared bread with them. Even with the one. Jesus again and again offering his love, even when it would not be received. Jesus employing a generosity that he meant to be generative, to generate more gifts of love. Very truly I tell you, whoever receives one whom I send receives me and whoever receives me receives him who sent me. (John 13:20). I wonder.

I wonder, were we ever to meet
with God as we still lived
and breathed, would we do exactly
the same thing,
let time go by
exchanging
pleasantries
about the weather,
not even knowing
how to ask the question?

What we know, and what I believe the poet knows, is that we meet God all the time.  In all sorts of everyday people and places. Very truly I tell you, whoever receives one whom I send receives me and whoever receives me receives him who sent me. Jesus calls us, invites us, commands us not only to give love, but to receive love, because this draws us closer to God. Remember.


REMEMBER

So many years since I saw you last,
that I couldn’t recognize
your brotherly presence
even as you sat beside me.

So many memories hidden
from a busy present,
that I ate with you without seeing you,
a stranger amongst other strangers,
talking, talking
about nothing in particular.

I wonder, were we ever to meet
with God as we still lived
and breathed, would we do exactly
the same thing,
let time go by
exchanging
pleasantries
about the weather,
not even knowing
how to ask the question?

Once we were one
and now we are two
and the second has grown
and forgotten the first.

The ancient love
we felt a mere fable now,
a story across time,
a distant recognition
across the table,
an ache beneath
the glance and
the seemingly necessary,
ordinary request
to pass the salt.
                                                            (David Whyte)

Very truly I tell you, whoever receives one whom I send receives me and whoever receives me receives him who sent me. We are called to open our eyes and hearts and selves to receive the love of Christ in all sorts of places and from all sorts of people and in all sorts of everyday actions—even in the ordinary act of passing the salt.