Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Sermon for the Sunday After the Ascension (Easter 7) ~ anyone who has the Son has eternal life


[click title above for Collect of the Day and scriptural references]
SERMON FOR EASTER 7
“B” * MAY 28, 2006
HOLY TRINITY/ST. ANSKAR

God gave us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. Whoever has the Son has life.

+ In the Name of God, the Holy and Undivided Trinity


To be sanctified is to be made holy. That which is holy is “set apart”. It is not precisely the same as “the sacred”, although the sacred may also be holy. Anything that is specially revered is sacred. Things and places can be sacred without being holy, like the battlefield at Gettysburg or the Anne Frank house in Amsterdam, or your own favorite beauty spot. But if it is also holy, it is connected with the highest kind of reverence. The Basilica of the Resurrection in Jerusalem is holy. The Body and Blood of Christ are holy.

But when human beings are called holy, it means something more. In English and German, the word is related to health in the sense of wholeness, completeness, human perfection. In Slavic languages, the word is related to the word meaning light. A sanctified person is someone who has been changed in an ineffable way: someone set apart from the world of ordinary people. At the same time as our Lord sends us into the world, He sanctifies Himself, so that we also may be sanctified – He sets Himself and us apart. This holiness is not the same as moral purity, although that may well result from holiness. Rather it is a new kind of consciousness, an unending process of opening and freedom.

To be apart from the world in this sense means not to be separate from material creation and human history, but to be free from “the world, the flesh, and the devil”: free from the powerful inclination to sink into sleep and death and nothingness; free from bondage to the flesh, which was Paul’s word for what we would call ego – the illusion of separation from the rest of reality; and freedom from the world in the sense of kosmos – the world of appearance, reality as it appears to unilluminated eyes, eyes that do not see the Divine Glory shining around us constantly, in and through creation.
“The tragedy of humanity is that a paradise of beauty blooms around us but we fail to see it.” Dostoyevsky probably had this insight because, as an Orthodox Christian, he would have been familiar with this notion: the change that happened on the Mount of the Transfiguration happened not to Jesus, but to the disciples. Jesus always radiated the Uncreated Light, but only on Tabor were the Apostles’ eyes opened so that they could see Him as He is. But as soon as they remembered themselves, and sank back into fleshly concerns about tabernacles and so on, they no longer saw reality as it is; a cloud obscured their vision. (Three separate tabernacles, you see: one for Jesus, one for Moses, one for Elijah. The flesh, the ego doesn’t get it!)

Human holiness is not a matter of separation from other humans and the rest of creation; in fact it is just the opposite. It is being set apart – set free – from the illusion of separateness. Jesus has sanctified Himself that we might be sanctified. He has ascended out of the world that He might fill all things.
In today’s Collect, we pray that the Holy Spirit may “exalt us to that place where our Savior has gone before.” That place is not a location above the sky. It is somewhere out of this world only in the sense of the unilluminated world of appearance, not in the sense of creation and history and human society. The “place where He has gone before” is where He got to when He had sanctified Himself. A place of purity, indeed. As we heard a couple of weeks ago, our hope purifies us even as He is pure, because the pure in heart shall see God. Purity of heart is the Holy Spirit testifying in our hearts and opening us to the vision of the Ascended One, in which we discover that we are “like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.” This is eternal life. This is the place where our Savior Christ has gone before, not out of the world, but filling the world with glory – with holiness in the Slavonic sense, with Light.

According to St. John, this happens to Christians who believe in the Name of the Son of God, those to whom John writes in today’s epistle. But not to them only. It happens to all those who have the Son, and to no others, but there is a distinction between all who have the Son and those who trust in the Name of the Son. In other words, there are souls who have eternal life – and thus MUST have the Son – who do NOT necessarily know Him by Name! (Those other sheep… that are not of this fold, perhaps.)
But the fullness of joy, here and now, is given to us who not only have the Son, but who also know that we have the eternal life which is in Him, and that – despite all appearances – we already have whatever we ask of God, provided only that it is really good for us and is thus in accordance with God’s will.

AMEN
ALLELUIA!
CHRIST IS RISEN!

Sermon for Pentecost

SERMON FOR PENTECOST
June 4, 2006
HOLY TRINITY & ST. ANSKAR



+ The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Love of God the Father, and the Communion of the Holy Spirit be with us all.


It is clear that the whole point of the gift of tongues at Pentecost was communication. Not the mysticism of individual ecstasy or some angelic language of private prayer, but the Eucharistic mysticism of communion in love. The communication was intelligible to the hearers in their own languages. The Spirit does not mystify, She illuminates. The Pentecostal tongues unite all people on earth, undoing the confusion and division of Babel.

The gift of the Holy Spirit came on a relatively minor Jewish holiday, called Pentecost by the Hellenized Jews, because it was fifty days after Passover. It had three names in Hebrew: Shavuot (weeks) because 49 days is “a week of weeks” or seven weeks. At this time of year in Israel, that is just enough time to plant, nurture, and harvest the spring wheat, so it is also a harvest festival, with the name Hag ha-Bikkurim, the Feast of the First-fruits. Later, probably, it was associated with the giving of the Law on Sinai: Hag Matan Torah. So, in addition to the recapitulation of the disaster at Babel, there is a second typology here: the First Pentecost celebrating the gift of the Law, the Second celebrating the Gift of the Spirit. As if to underscore the similitude, the tongues of fire descended early in the morning, which was the time pious Jewish legend had Moses receiving the Law on Sinai, while everyone else was fast asleep. They had to “wake up” to hear the law, you see.

Both festivals are about waking up and sanctification. Law is given in order to set the people apart. A unique people, a chosen people, a holy people: different from all other peoples on earth in that it is blessed by a unique relationship with the One and Only God – a God Who commands certain observances, ethical as well as ceremonial, observances that are marks of the people’s separateness, marks of its status as the people of God. The New Pentecost is also about sanctification – about the holiness of the people of God – but here the Covenant is opened and extended to all flesh. Holiness is no longer a matter of separation from other nations; the blessing of the New Pentecost enables Israel to include all the goyim and all creation in the special relationship with God. The separateness of holiness is no longer separation from other peoples but separation of all peoples and of all creation from the dominion of Death, which Holy Scripture calls variously, the world, the flesh, and the devil.

Law and Spirit are sometimes set up as opposites, but perhaps that is a mistake. After all, Jesus said “I am come to fulfill the Law, not to destroy it.” He came to accomplish what the Law was given for in the first place: the union of God with creation, through the agency of humanity. I think this unity is the underlying meaning of righteousness or justification – the state of harmony and concord, of rightness among human beings and between creation and God, which is the purpose of both Law and Spirit. Law can take us only so far in achieving this happy state. (Like the paidagogos - Paul's image of the custodian escorting us to school, at which point it gives us up to the next level of instruction.) At a certain point (the fullness of time) the Law has to go deeper and become Spirit. Spirit is Law transfigured, the Law become Love and Light – the rod of iron now glowing in the fire of Love. The Law is not destroyed but fulfilled, become something New, its goal of holiness achieved – also in a new way – not by separation but by Communion.

All the people who heard the Apostles speak that day heard their own language. Babel undone. Unintelligibility turned into lucid understanding. That is the gift of tongues at Pentecost. But notice that is not the annihilation of diversity. All those people who hear the Apostles early in the morning do not forget their post-Babel languages and start to understand a single tongue; they hear in their own tongues. They do not return to the pre-Babel state in which language and culture are uniform. Rather, they are now awakened to a new and higher level of consciousness: the level of universal righteousness, the perfection of the Law that the Holy Spirit creates.

The ancient festival of the spring wheat is the perfect setting for this fruition of the Law. The Spirit no more destroys the Law than the harvest destroys the nurturing of the planter; both have the same end: the fruition of the grain – grain that can be united into a single, new creation by mill, leaven, and fire. Made holy by the Spirit, this pure, unspotted sacrifice will be offered to God and then given back to all humanity: the communion of the Holy Spirit, nourishing us in all our diversity and variety unto everlasting Life, the Life of the Divine Community, the life of the Community of utterly diverse and unique but at the same time inseparable Persons, the Life of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Alleluia!
The Spirit of God Fills the Whole World!

AMEN
MARANATHA
COME, LORD JESUS!

Sermon for Corpus Christi

SERMON FOR CORPUS CHRISTI
June 18, 2006
HOLY TRINITY & ST. ANSKAR

This is My Body.

+ In the Name of God the holy and Undivided Trinity.

Credo quidquid dixit dei Filius;
Nil hoc verbo veritatis verius


So, the great poetry of St. Thomas Aquinas, specially composed for this celebration of the Mystery of the Body of Christ, in familiar 20th Century translation,

I believe whate’er the Son of God hath told,
What the Truth hath spoken, that for truth I hold.


Jesus said it’s His Body, so it must be true. OK, but what does that mean? Well there are some meanings that we may wish to rule out right away. (Or not.) First on my list of ones to go would be the purely metaphorical approach: the interpretation according to which the Bread and Wine represent – in some poetic, symbolic sense – the spiritual Presence of Jesus Christ. A great many of us settle for that (and insist upon referring to the Most Holy Sacrament as “bread” and “wine” even after the consecration). This has always struck me as a kind of pale, monochrome version of a much more interesting, awe-inspiring, polychrome teaching – the vanilla light of sacramental theology. Don’t we believe, after all, that Jesus is “spiritually” present everywhere? Do we not, in fact stand in a tradition that makes a distinction precisely between spiritual presence and real presence, which means Presence in the thing itself? We Anglicans affirm both the Spiritual Presence of Jesus Christ in the hearts of His faithful people, and His Real Presence, in all the fullness of His Divine and Human Natures, in the Holy Sacrament of the Altar

This is My Body.
What the Truth hath spoken, that for truth I hold.


Thomas’s great hymn conveys his theology: the bread and wine are changed into human flesh and blood, but our senses can’t discern the change. Bread and wine cease to be; Body and Blood take their place. Thomas explained this in terms we no longer use or think in: Aristotle’s distinction between substance and accidents. All the senses can relate to are the accidents. We can never get to what stands under the appearance, the substance itself. Thomas found this distinction useful: by divine command, the command of the Son by Whom all things were made to begin with, the substance of bread and wine is replaced with the substance of Flesh and Blood, the accidents of bread and wine remaining. After the consecration, the elements still appear to us to be bread and wine, but they are NOT as they seem. We know that they are really Flesh and Blood, because we have heard Jesus Christ say so, and we believe it. What the Truth hath spoken, that for truth I hold. Many of us Anglicans also think this way. And we are free to do so, even if Anglicanism does not formally accept Thomas’s doctrine of transubstantiation, preferring to affirm the Real Presence and leave it at that, without bringing in any pagan philosophers to parse the Mystery for us.

There are other possible positions: Luther’s consubstantiation, for example, holding that the substance of flesh and blood is added to that of bread and wine, which is not destroyed, but joined by the substance of Body and Blood. God’s Word is creative, not destructive, and the notion that God would destroy any creature is repellent. These explanations have to do with the objective elements on the altar. But there is also a subjective approach, in which the bread and wine become the Body and Blood of Christ only in the mouths of faithful recipients of the Holy Communion. This is known as receptionism, and it is clearly to be found, also, within the “big tent” of Anglican tradition. It is pretty nearly explicit in the old Prayerbook rite. According to this view, we might just as well throw any remaining fragments into the garbage or feed them to the birds! They aren’t the Body of Christ unless someone receives them.

Well, we can dispute these things endlessly, (and isn’t that an exquisite irony, since the Sacrament is supposed to have something to do with unity? CommUNION!) But all these competing views have something in common: the assumption that somehow, somewhere, there is some kind of change. Jesus took bread and said This is My Body. We don’t think bread is the same as Body, so there must be a change. But Jesus didn’t say anything about a change. He simply said this is My Body. The ideas of transformation, or metamorphosis, or transubstantiation or trans- anything is our interpretation. It just has to be a change because bread is NOT Body.

Now, I hardly think that what I am about to say is going to settle anything, but let me make two observations: 1) we don’t think of the cosmos in Aristotle’s terms anymore; and 2) Jesus said this IS My Body. Let’s look at number two a bit more closely, back to what He didn’t say.
·He didn’t say “this represents My spiritual presence”
·He didn’t say “this is a symbol of your unity with one another”
·He didn’t say “this is a symbol of my Love and sacrifice for you” (although [He did invite us to attach this meaning by saying that as long as we “do this” we “show forth his death until he comes”]
·He didn’t say “This is my human Flesh and Blood, but it only appears to be bread and wine.”
·He didn’t say “By My creative command, which brought heaven and earth into being in the beginning, I am now going to change this bread into My Body.

No. He simply said This IS My Body. What if it’s just that simple – literal, even. What if the bread He holds in His hand is His Body, without any objective change at all? What the Truth hath spoken. That for truth I hold. Oddly, it may be easier for modern consciousness to adore the Mystery this way than it was for Thomas, with his Aristotelian convictions about the reality of substance – convictions that necessitated some kind of change in the substance.

For our modern mythology, reality – thingness – is much more wondrous, a reality more mystical and miraculous. We would say that Thomas was certainly on to something when he said that things were not as they appear. For us nothing is as it appears, in fact, because for us there is no such thing as substance. We no longer speak of matter, only of energy and mass. There is no substance in the bread that needs changing, only vibration.

Unlike Aristotle and the Angelic Doctor, we live in a world in which we hear simultaneously sounds generated on the other side of the world, sounds that pass through walls and mountains. And we have been able to demonstrate the insubstantiality of matter by turning the so-called “substance” of inert matter into light – in a military project code-named Trinity – and then unleashing it on our enemies on the Feast of the Transfiguration, the feast of the Uncreated Light. Maybe minds like Aristotle’s and Aquinas’s would have thought about the Sacrament differently, had they known what we know and seen what we have seen.

What do we know? That matter is a form of starlight. All is frequency and oscillation. We may call the moment of Creation the “Big Bang” but it is really about Light. God’s fiat lux is really nearer the mark. The same God Who said in the beginning Let there be light now says This is My Body.

What this? The bread? OK, but what, exactly, IS the bread? Is it not the Light of the Big Bang, congealed over the æons into gas and liquid and finally mineral elements, which then by the Holy Spirit begin to live and return to the light as they change to vegetation and food for animals, and grain that is further changed and worked by humanity into a new sustenance? So bread and wine become the perfect symbol. Yes, symbol, but in the sense of representative. Bread and wine participate in creation, inseparable from the entire cosmos. What God says of the bread and wine in His hand He says of the whole universe: this is My Body.

His Presence is no less real, no less particular in our view than in Aquinas’s, but in the end his view may be just as vast. I am struck by the felicitous custom of enshrining the Sacred Host in a sunburst of precious metal. God is Light, according to the bible, on the authority of one called the Beloved of the Lord, the Lord Whose Body is displayed as an explosion of dazzling light, as in the Beginning. Perhaps there is no change at all. He said this is My Body, not I hereby change this into My Body. Perhaps what is changed is not the substance of the bread, but the consciousness of Adam – our consciousness. Maybe that’s what Thomas meant: the change is in us, not in a subjective, receptionist sense, but in that we come to see objective Reality for what it is: supersubstantial – beyond substance. The sacramental transformation is the faith that pierces through the veil of appearance

Jesus, whom now hidden, I by faith behold,
what my soul doth long for, that thy word foretold:
face to face thy splendor, I at last shall see,
in the glorious vision, blessed Lord, of thee.


And in the end, brought by these meditations to the limit of utterance, to the vestibule of the Light Itself, St. Thomas put down his pen, left his great Summa unfinished, and declared that “all I have taught or written is as straw and chaff compared with what has been revealed to me.”

God is All-in-all, in Whom we and all things live and move and have our being. God is Light. Could it be that the Body of Christ is the cosmos itself, filled with the Holy Spirit – the universe of energy and relationship called out of nothingness when God said LET THERE BE LIGHT?

AMEN
MARANATHA
COME, LORD JESUS!

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