Monday, April 27, 2015

I need to be a sheep

Good Shepherd Sunday
A sermon preached at St. Luke's Church in Scranton, PA
The Rev. Canon Anne E. Kitch


So last night I had an email from Fr. Sweeny saying, “You do remember that you are coming to St. Luke’s tomorrow.” This is because in an earlier email to him I had written that I was looking forward to seeing him and all the people of Good Shepherd. Now this is not because I am confused about which of our churches in Scranton I was visiting today, but because I was thinking about The Good Shepherd.

Today is Good Shepherd Sunday. Always on the fourth Sunday of Easter, we hear about Jesus as the Good Shepherd. The Good Shepherd is one of our powerful and treasured images of our savior, and is worthy of our contemplation as we celebrate the resurrection and new life, abundant life, of Easter.

So why a Shepherd? And what does that mean to us today, in the middle of downtown Scranton?

Shepherds hang out in the wilderness, and on the edge of things. They are nomads, in a sense, wandering from place to place to provide good grazing for their sheep. Shepherds are watchful, looking for green pastures and still waters, keeping an eye out for enemies as well …and for dangerous terrain… and for lost sheep. Shepherds are caring; after all, that is their main job to care for the sheep.

So just maybe a shepherd is useful image for the people of St. Luke’s in this time of transition. Transition can leave you wondering: what is this all about, will it ever end, will I ever feel comfortable and at home again. Perhaps a few of you have felt like you have been in the wilderness, or at least on the edge of things. So it may be a comfort to remember that
in the midst of it all comes Jesus—not just any shepherd, but the Good Shepherd.

The Good Shepherd is not only on the edge of things, watchful and caring, but is the one who goes looking for every lost sheep, and goes so far as to lays down his life for the sheep. Now despite what I have read about real shepherds in the time of Jesus who might sacrifice their lives to protect their sheep from the enemy, I find it hard to fathom. I can see a shepherd being good with a slingshot, fighting off the wolves or lions that might prey on their flock. But to give their lives for those sheep?

But lest we forget the very reason we are here, this is what Jesus did—gave his life for us. Willingly lay down his life for us.  And we weren’t even born yet. After all, this is why we are all here this morning. None of us would be here if we didn’t somewhere in our heart of hearts know that we are loved by God, and that we hunger for that love.

There are many ways the shepherd leads us, but I have three thoughts this morning

One: It’s about relationship. It’s a relationship in which the shepherd cares for us, wants us to be fed and nurtured, and knows us by name. The Good Shepherd wants us to follow him, not for some great glory, but so that he can lead us to good things.

Two: it’s about the flock. Flock is a single noun that encompasses many. Jesus call us to him “so there will be one flock, on shepherd.” We are not in this on our own; we are all in it together. This does not mean that we all do the same things at the same time, or believe exactly the same things, or practice our faith in the same way. It means that we are not alone. We navigate this territory in relationship to one another. It is a shared journey; one each of you shares with everyone here today and with all the people of St. Luke’s. And you know it is more than that. You share in the life of the Diocese of Bethlehem, and beyond. Because what we are, are members together of the Body of Christ. Noting less.

What does it mean to be the flock? To be the Body of Christ? To be St. Luke’s?

Three: it’s about hospitality.  We are to remind each other that we are on the journey together and to point out the gifts along the way. When some of us are walking in the shadow of death, others are to hold up the light and remind us that God is with us. When some of us are hungry, others are to show the way to the abundance of God’s table, to offer food and drink, and, as the First letter of John commends us, we are to love “not in word or speech, but in truth and action.”

How can you offer hospitality now, and in the time ahead? To one another, to someone new to come among you, to those who serve with you along the way?

This is how we survive the wilderness: relationship, togetherness, hospitality. But our lives in Christ are not about survival. This is how we celebrate being the people of God: relationship, togetherness, hospitality. This is how we live the new life, the abundant life, that Jesus gives us.

It is easy to lose sight of this. It is easy to listen to other voices that distract us from the Shepherd’s voice. We can succumb to the siren call of voices tell us we will be happy if we buy certain clothes, cars, or phones. I know that I can be distracted by voices who encourage me to be prideful and arrogant, voices who tell me I am less than who I am…or more, and voices who encourage me to join the chorus of complaint.

When we are distracted by other voices, we can see only the valley of the shadow of death and miss that the Good Shepherd is there, leading us through. Without the voice of the Good Shepherd, we can see only that we are surrounded by enemies and miss the table that is set for us in the midst of those who trouble us.

I don’t know about you, but I need to be a sheep.  I need to be one of God’s flock. I need to be cared for. I need to stop trying to do it all on my own, I need to stop trying to fix everything, I need to stop holding on to useless things and troubling practices. I need to pay attention to the one who calls me by name, who leads me to good places to rest, to holy food and life giving water.  The one who revives my soul, the one who, in the midst of trouble, sets a table in front of me and invites me to sit and taste abundance. I need to put myself in the hands of Jesus, who offers not just life—but abundant life

What does it mean for St. Luke’s to have life? And to have it abundantly? How is this already manifest among you?

In contemplating the Good Shepherd, artist and minister Jan Richardson poses these questions:
As you navigate this shared life, what, or who, is determining the direction of your path these days? Which has more influence over the shape of your path—your reactions, or your intentions? How are you experiencing the hospitality of Christ? How might he be challenging you to know and hear him in this season?      paintedprayerbook.com

In out collect for today we prayed: Grant that when we hear his voice we may know him who calls us each by name, and follow where he leads. Be a sheep. Follow the voice of the Good Shepherd. Receive the new life, abundant life, given to you by Jesus.




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Sunday, April 5, 2015

Alleluia!


Easter Day

…and the buried Alleluias burst forth all at once
breaking through husk and earth
in an instant tendrils becoming branches shooting forth
already laden with full blooms of resurrection joy

Alleluia! Christ is risen!




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Saturday, April 4, 2015

Wait

Holy Saturday


My sight has failed me because of trouble;
Lord, I have called upon you daily;
I have stretched out my hands to you.
Psalm 88:10




Through the dark
the torrents
scour the earth
then abate
leaving in their wake
a paradox of grief and release

Now the sun lavishes brilliant beams
on the storm swept
but its warmth has not yet
touched our hearts

Day of grief
day of waiting
empty hands
still reaching forth





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Friday, April 3, 2015

withstanding emptiness

A sermon preached by Anne E. Kitch
Grace Church, Allentown PA
Good Friday 2015





Sometimes…

you come
to a place
whose only task

is to trouble you

Sometimes… writes poet David Whyte

you come
to a place
whose only task

is to trouble you
with tiny
but frightening requests,


this place
this time
this space where Jesus dies is troubling
this now
calls us to gaze upon love poured out

can you see it, smell it
taste it and hear it
can you touch with all of your being
the breath and life and love pouring out of the body that is broken
pooling at the foot of the cross
to be soaked up by parched earth
leaving…emptiness

how does this place trouble you?
what does it request of you?


Jesus, the lamb of God
Jesus bearer of our sins
of our iniquities
of our inadequate hope
this Jesus emptied himself to become at the same time nothing
and all things
a kind of infinity of emptiness
that somehow both contains and is contained by love
we cannot possibly wrap our minds around this
and yet, nevertheless, we are here
witness to the nothingness

how does this place trouble you?
what does it request of you?

if nothing else
this place requests that we lay down all our burdens
here at the foot of the cross
after all it is too late to do anything else

we are invited--
requested but not required--
to lay down all that troubles us
our anger and disappointment and fear
our obligations and tasks and plans
the forgiveness we have failed to ask for, or to give
the broken relationships we cannot mend

and more
our pride and competencies and accomplishments
our certainty and strength and joy
and our love
our love too is poured out at the foot of the cross

the cross asks of us not only to enter into the emptiness
but to become a part of it
allowing it to scour our souls

this day asks us to stand at the foot of the cross
to stay in this moment of infinite sorrow
and to stand it as long as we can
to be with Jesus here—while Jesus ceases to be
and to stay one moment more
and then another
and to stand our ground still as that moment dissipates into a chasm beyond

It simply cannot be tolerated

we can orchestrate and choreograph our way into and out of this moment
we can give it the care and attention deserved
of the most sacred, the most holy

but it is humanly impossible to stand in the abyss
so we don’t

but Christ does

unbelievably
for us
love is forsaken

Sometimes…

you come
to a place
whose only task

is to trouble you
with tiny
but frightening requests, …

Requests to stop what
you are doing right now.
and

to stop what you
are becoming
while you do it,

questions
that can make
or unmake
a life,

questions
that have patiently
waited for you,

questions
that have no right
to go away*


the cross waits patiently for you
unrelenting in its demand
that you stand here and know yourself loved

because even as inadequate and broken and brave
as faithful and pitiful and beautiful as we are
we are emptied to become both less and more
vessels for God’s grace

and that grace always comes

it is finished
but God is not


*Sometimes, by David Whyte



Done

Good Friday


My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
and are so far from my cry
and the words of my distress?
Psalm 22:1



And what about the why?

Not
Have you forsaken me?
Will you forsake me?
Please, do not forsake me!

But
Why have you forsaken me?
Why are you so far away?
Why do you not answer?

Already forsaken
already abandoned
already broken and torn and spent.
It’s a done deal.

Except the why 
is but the opening note of a lament
flung out across the abyss
whose feeble strains are gathered by other voices
and woven into the song of hope
that will not be quenched.

It is finished.
God is not.





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Thursday, April 2, 2015

The step

Maundy Thursday


Lord, hear my prayer, and let my cry come before you;
hide not your face from me in the day of my trouble.
Psalm 102:1



I hear the clock ticking in the early hours of the quiet house and know that I am about to inhabit a different time. I stand at the threshold, now at the point of no return. Once I set my foot on the heartlessly twisting path laid before me, I will be propelled inexorably from shared meal and tender care to garden and exhaustion and doubt and fear and betrayal.

I am driven and drawn into the sacred triduum that holds my death and my salvation. 

The sun will shine brightly today, but I will walk with deliberation through the shadow of disappointment and treachery and repudiation and on into a darkness where with others I will cry out to God.

I take the first step with a sense of relief. The hour has come. And I do it all for love.




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Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Edge

Wednesday in Holy Week

Hear my prayer, O God;
do not hide yourself from my petition.
Listen to me and answer me;
I have no peace, because of my cares.
Psalm 55:1-2



In the evening and in the morning I offer up the day of contradictions. A celebratory lunch. Stress about upcoming events. Flowers from my husband, just because. Worrisome news from a friend. The swelling red buds on the tree outside my window juxtaposed with the intricate patterns of crystalized ice that has to be scraped off my windshield.

I am acutely aware now of the tension underlying this border territory along the edge of the wilderness. And weaving through it the faint strains of a sacred song of sorrow and heartache that is beginning to take shape. I know that holy ground can bring uncertainty, yet even still I grasp for God, wanting steadiness and reassurance.

The ambiguity of the edge of things. Will I hide? Will I stand still? Will I risk? 



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