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Changing the Scaffolding, all lessons, esp Ezek. 18:1-4,25-32;
Mt. 21:28-32
by Bishop Susan Russell
(see below)
Playing the Blame Game, based on Ezekiel 18:1-4, 25-32 and
Matthew 21:23-32
by Rev. Karen Goltz
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Unexpected Intimacy, Exodus 17:1-7,
by Rev. Randy L. Quinn
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Saying
"Yes" the second time around,
Matthew 21:23-32, by Rev. Thomas Hall
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At
the Name of Jesus, all lessons, by DG Bradley
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Flexibility, Matthew 21: 28-32,
Jim from B.C
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Lost
and Found, Mat 21:23-32, by Judith Freeman Clark
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Talk,
and Walk the Talk, by Dave Peterson
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Changing the Scaffolding
all lessons, esp Ezek. 18:1-4,25-32; Mt. 21:28-32
Bishop Susan Russell
Next week is "Bring A Friend Sunday." Now, bringing a friend to church is ALWAYS
a good idea, but next week we've been called to be intentional about it. We'll
have special name tags, extra goodies at coffee hour, new displays on the
bulletin boards; much like getting our home ready when company comes, we're
getting St. Peter's ready to welcome visitors who will come to see what kind of
church this is.
The lessons appointed for today tell us a lot about where we come from - as well
as where I believe we're called to go. And before we can really welcome others
into our tradition, it seems to me that it makes some sense to remind ourselves
just who we are and were we come from; as well as how we got here! So this
morning, I'd like to frame our thoughts around that question: just what kind of
church is this?
First of all, it's the kind of church that believes in love. It's a church that
celebrates its relationship with a God whose almighty power is declared "chiefly
in showing mercy and pity"; in the words of the Collect of the Day - the prayer
that opened our worship this morning. If you listen to Channel 40; check out the
street corner preachers; or venture into the Y2K hysterics of some of the
millenialists, you'll hear a lot about wrath, judgment and persecution - and not
much talk of mercy and pity. A lot more about fear than about hope.
This is a church that believes that the essential quality of God is love; so
what have we to fear? "Nothing can separate us from the love of God" the
scripture assures us. Even our mistakes. Even when we get it "wrong."
"Remember not the sins of my youth and my transgressions; remember me according
to our love and for the sake of your goodness, O Lord."
Words from the Psalm this morning. Words of hope and encouragement to anyone
who's ever needed a second chance. God forever offers us a second; and a third;
and a fourth; a seven-times-seventieth. Our job is to trust God enough to take
it! That, I believe, is Jesus' message in the story about the two sons in
today's Gospel of Matthew, Jesus said: A man had two sons; and he went to the
first and said, "Son, go work in the vineyard today." And he answered , "I will
not"; but afterward he repented and went." It doesn't say how long afterward. It
doesn't say why he changed his mind. But he did. As Maya Angelou once told a
woman who had come to her for spiritual direction, agonizing over past mistakes
and decisions: "You did then what you knew how to do. When you knew better, you
did better."
Like the first son in the parable, she had a second chance and took it.
This is a church for people who are looking for second - third - fourth chances.
People who have been turned off by the rhetoric of judgment and exclusion and
are looking for the Gospel of love and mercy. People who are looking for a
church that has relevance for the lives they live and a community to support
their journey into faith. That's what kind of church this is.
What else can we tell about this church from our lessons today? It's a church
that inherits a tradition of challenging the tradition. Sound confusing? Let's
look at Ezekiel for a moment. "The Word of the Lord came to me again: "What do
you mean by repeating this proverb concerning the land of Israel, "The
fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on edge?" As I
live, says the Lord God, this proverb shall no more be used by you in Israel."
What we need to know about the culture Ezekiel lived in - about the tradition he
challenges here - is that the proverb he was rejecting was a cornerstone of how
Israel understood itself in relationship to God. If bad things were happening;
and at the time Ezekiel wrote, yet another conquest of Israel was about to
occur; they looked to "the sins of their fathers" for the cause of the ills
around them. It was right there in scripture! Yet Ezekiel challenged that
understanding - asking them to reject the tradition; and look to their own
actions and faithfulness; not their fathers'. It's an important shift in the
history of Israel - the beginning of a shift from a purely corporate to an
individual understanding of salvation. A shift that happened because Ezekiel
listened to the Word of the Lord; and challenged the status quo.
It's a story Jesus would have known - maybe even one he taught in the temple the
day he told this parable of the two sons. We hear it as a Gospel Lesson told in
isolation from the rest of the 21st Chapter of Matthew, yet it sits smack dab in
the middle of what amounts to a knock-down drag out confrontation between Jesus
and chief priests and scribes in the Temple at Jerusalem. It comes just after
the triumphal entry into the City on Palm Sunday; immediately after he has
tossed over the tables of the moneychangers and driven them from the Temple.
At this point the chief priests have had it - and come to him asking, "What
authority have you for acting like this? And who gave you this authority?" In
response to their questions, he gives them a riddle they cannot answer, and when
they reply "We do not know", Jesus tells them "Nor will I tell you my authority
for acting like this."
Talk about "in your face"! Jesus goes on to tell the parable of the two sons;
which clearly illustrates that the tax collectors and the prostitutes - the
second, third and fourth chance folks - were going to make it into heaven before
these pillars of the community; these leaders of the Temple. For they could hear
and respond to the Good News of God in Christ Jesus. In the end, the Pharisees
had too much at stake in their own authority and in their own control of the
religious institution - they would have to lose everything in order to receive
the kingdom. And they just couldn't go there. Having given their whole lives
over to their view of God, they have too much invested in the old ways to
consider Jesus' radical call to new life in the Kingdom of God. It reminds me of
an illustration I once heard about the Kingdom of God as a building - a BIG
building. And what it takes to build a big building is a lot of scaffolding: the
outside framework that supports the building until it's done. Well, if what
we're called to build is the Kingdom of God, then the church is like the
scaffolding - what supports us for that work. The problem is, if we get to
spending too much time focusing on the scaffolding, the building isn't getting
built! We can forget what our primary task is - and become so invested in
maintaining the institution, the tradition, the external aspects of our
"scaffolding" that we neglect to build the kingdom; to work in the vineyard;
like the second son in the parable; who said he would go but did not. Got too
distracted rearranging the stones on the wall surrounding the vineyard to work
IN it? We don't know.
What we do know is that when we challenge the church to live us to its mission
and vision, then we walk in the footsteps of Ezekiel and Jesus of Nazareth; we
inherit the tradition of challenging the tradition.The Good News is that this is
a tradition; a church; that - at its best - is pretty darn good scaffolding. Set
on a firm foundation, it's sturdy and it's strong - but it's also flexible and
adjustable; just like good scaffolding needs to be.
Of course we have our share of "But we've always done it that ways;" but have we
really? If we're going to either defend our challenge our tradition, first we
have to understand it; and in researching this sermon this week, I came across a
list that I found most informative. Called "The Anglican Future", the writer
begins by noting that "since the time of Christ, the Church has always been
changing.
The Seventh of the Ten Commandments originally applied only to married women: it
wasn't adultery if the man was married and the woman wasn't. It was changed to
include both men and women - revising what many have believed was literally
"etched in stone."
The Book of Acts chronicles how - after much debate - the infant Church decided
that gentiles could become Christians. In the early church, members held all
property in common; and then the Church changed away from that.
The doctrine of the Trinity - one of the foundations of the faith - did not
begin to develop until 150 and was (more or less!) clarified by the Council of
Nicea in 325; with some revisions at the Council of Chalcedon in 451
Marriage was not considered a sacrament by the western church until 1215. At the
time it was a radical, new and contested concept. The idea of marriage as a
sacrament was only about 150 years old-and yet we hold it as "how it's always
been."
In more recent times, re-marriage became permissible in the Episcopal Church in
the 1950s-in spite of specific scriptural prohibitions against it. And in the
1960s, for the first time blacks and women could serve in the Episcopal Church's
national legislature: the General Convention overcoming objections based in
scripture quotes from Galatians and Titus.
Integration in the 70's, the ordination of women in the 80's [and the adoption
of gay marriage in 2015]* it becomes clear very quickly that there's very little
we've "always done that way."
It becomes clear that the God whose power is declared chiefly in showing mercy
and pity isn't finished with us yet. As we labor here in the vineyard to build
the kingdom, God calls the church to be and do different things in different
ages. If the Church doesn't change, if the scaffolding can't be re-arranged, we
aren't being faithful to God's call.
"We did then what we knew how to do. When we knew better, we did better." That's
us; a church based in love, claiming the tradition, open to change. A church you
can be proud to "Bring A Friend" to next Sunday. See you then! Alleluia. Amen.
________
*editorial by DPS
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