Tales of a Midwest Lutheran on the East Coast
Showing posts with label Reformation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reformation. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2019

Saint and Sinner, Ash and Starlight


10 -27 – 19 – Reformation Sunday 

Grace to you and peace from God our creator and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ by the Power of the Holy spirit, amen.

A few weeks ago, I mentioned that it feels like nearly everyone I know is writing a book… It turns out that the upside is invitations to participate in a LOT of book launch teams – which usually means getting to read advance e-book copies! One such book was the launched “Holy Disunity” by Presbyterian Pastor Layton Williams, which I highly recommend, partly because I’m convinced that she’s a Lutheran in secret.

In her book, Pastor Williams shares a Jewish teaching called “the two pockets.” Imagine you have 2 pockets, each with a slip of paper in it. One paper says, “I am but dust and ashes.” The other one says, “for my sake, the universe was created.” Williams reflects, we “live somewhere in the midst of being both dust and ash, and once for whom the universe was created,” (56)  This reminded me very much of Luther’s theology of “Simul Eustice Et Peccator” – I am simultaneously saint and sinner… both at the same time. I am both a beloved child of God and a broken imperfect person in need of being forgiven.


In each chapter of Williams’ book, she explores this “Simul” of how such unlikely gifts as Difference, Tension, Doubt, and Uncertainty separate us, how these gifts show up in the Bible, and finally how each of these gifts can ultimately save us and lead us to a more true unity.

This Reformation, we are going to take a page out of the book of this Presbyterian, and add our own chapter, which we will call: “The Gift of Reformation” – How reformations separates us, where reforming shows up in the Bible, specifically in the readings we hear every Reformation Sunday, and how reformation can save – or free us – for unity in Jesus’ name.

How can something that we as Lutherans hold so dear – The protestant Reformation – also be something that separates us? The truth is, the legacy of Martin Luther and the Reformation is complicated. The same can be true of our Lutheran heritage – something that we can cling to and frees us, but also is filled with evil acts we would rather forget about.

 When Martin Luther set out to nail his 95 theses to that church door in Wittenberg five hundred and two years ago, “The protestant reformation” was not his end goal. He did not want to separate from the Catholic Church, but instead reform from within. But nothing ever really goes according to our plans … especially if other people are involved… and especially when the plans involve change and giving up power. The long-term fallout on Luther’s actions (and some of his more controversial writings against Jewish people and minorities) caused centuries-long religious wars, and it has been argued, the rise of Hitler and the Nazi regime. 

And spoiler alert – church splits didn’t start OR stop with the Reformation. Five hundred years BEFORE Martin Luther, the Roman Catholic and the Greek Orthodox church split. And after Luther, we split separated further into the denominations we are more familiar with today – Presbyterians, Methodists, Lutherans, Pentecostals, Baptists, etc. And even Lutherans separate all the time – even AFTER the merger of the ELCA happened, other groups have split of and become their own entities for one reason or another. And the ELCA itself is far from unified.

He may not have known what was to come, but Martin Luther felt he was following in a very long tradition of reforming our faith that comes from the Bible itself… all the way back to the Old Testament. The audience that heard the words of the Prophet Jeremiah were in desperate need of a word of renewal, hope, and reformation. The people of Israel at that time were in exile, scattered, and had suffered so much loss and were facing so much uncertainty. The royal line of King David was broken, their temple in Jerusalem was broken, and their covenant with God had been broken. Just as they wondered if God would abandon them, comes the word from Jeremiah – a new covenant was coming, one written not on dead stones that can be broken, but on their hearts – dynamic and beating with life.

As Lutheran Christians, we see the embodiment of this new covenant in Jesus, and in this particular instance, remember that Jesus is talking to Jewish people who already believed in him! They were not conveniently forgetting the centuries of suffering under the rule of foreign powers. Every year at the Passover they retold and remembered the story of going from slavery in Egypt to freedom. Their declaration to Jesus is an act of defiance that says, even though we have been under the yoke of others, we are only beholden to God. Then Jesus challenges them to take that same defiance and apply it to their own lives – to the sin and brokenness of the human condition that challenges all of us. Jesus teaches that we are beloved children of God, but broken people of dust and ash, ruled by our fearful and sinful natures… and there is nothing that we can do to earn God’s love…. A daring, reforming idea that got him into a lot of trouble, and led to his crucifixion.

In Paul’s letter to the Christians in Rome, Paul is seeking to clarify and interpret the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus and what they mean for us – in reforming previous ideas about what “makes us right with God.” Paul reminds us that it’s not about what we do. It’s about what JESUS did.  Jesus died for the sake of the world, to stand in defiance of those who would hoard God’s love for themselves, to redeem his beloved children of ash and starlight… so that sin and death do not have the last word – resurrection does. New life DOES. Jesus DOES.

And thousands of years after, Martin Luther took these ideas and ran with them. Luther loved the book of Romans, and this passage specifically helped to change the course of his life. From the life and writings of one person in Germany, to us here today, in twenty-first century Pennsylvania. And it’s not just us, bearing Luther’s legacy in a Lutheran church in North America… this reforming work of the church in ongoing and spreading – as I saw so well when I went to Namibia and met Lutherans from all over the world – Ethiopia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Canada, and Guyana…. sometimes even gathered as one over coffee, the third Lutheran Sacraments.

The road that has gotten us there is fraught, but and we are still far from unified in being “of one mind in Christ Jesus” as Paul wrote in another letter. But we are getting there. If one amazing Presbyterian pastor weren’t enough… In the words of another Presbyterian, who wrote a beautiful book of prayers called “Ash and Starlight,” she writes “… freedom sometimes comes in one, glorious breakthrough … More often, freedom comes through a muddy trail run …weaving and winding, not always moving forward….” . Just as we go in search of this freedom, [Jesus says]“You are already free. Now live into that truth.” (49-50).

The gift of the reformation is that it’s not over. Jesus is still freeing us from sin, death, and brokenness of life that holds us captive. Jesus is still sending us out into the world to serve our neighbor who are in need … especially those who are different or with whom we disagree. Jesus is still setting us free from our fear. Jesus is still leading us to constantly be re-making ourselves … even if that means sometimes separating for a time. Sometimes Jesus is still peaking, even if it’s through someone who is not Lutheran. The church is still reforming, and we are still figuring out what this freedom means for us. And sometimes Jesus is every using us saints and sinners to do God’s freeing work.

We have already been made free by Jesus, and there is nothing we can do to earn it – that is the revelation that Martin Luther had all those hundreds of years ago. And that nothing will stand in the way to access the love of God. Just as Jesus was a living person, with a body made of ash and starlight, just like ours, arriving as a baby in a manger show us God’s love in the flesh … our faith is alive, still being made new in every moment, as we are made new people every single day, without fail.

Not death, not sin, not powers or principalities of this world, not our own fear and limitations, can stand it the way. Not even WE can stand in the way of this reforming work begun in Jesus… Which we do all the time. It’s that whole “same time sinner and saint” thing. Despite our urge to fight and divide, Jesus is still forging the way to freedom…. For all. And we’re invited along for the ride. Thanks be to God. Amen.

Monday, February 11, 2019

I is for Inspired to Talk about Things We Don't Normally Talk About In Church.


Content warning: This sermon contains references to sex, sexual violence, abortion, and purity culture. 
Sermon 2-10-19

Grace to you and peace from God our creator and from our lord and Savior Jesus the Christ, by the power of the Holy Spirit, amen.

The good news is that we are over half way through our season of baptism! We’ve covered a lot of ground so far, so let’s do a quick review of all the letters we’ve done:

B = Born anew, A = Affirmed, P = EmPowered, T = Trust.



Today is… Inspired. I thought of the word Inspired way before I read Rachel Held Even’s great new book about the Bible by the verysame name. I will be using it heavily during Lent for our “Eat, Pray, Learn” series on the Bible every Thursday night. In her book, Evans writes about the Bible’s inception –it did not fall out of the sky in perfectly complete English. The Bible was actually written by imperfect people over a period of centuries, with the guidance of the Holy Spirit. The Bible is inspired, or “pneustros”, a Greek word meaning “God breathed.”

Evens explains, “Inspiration….  is rooted in the imagery of divine breath, the eternal rhythm of inhale and exhale… Inspiration is not some disembodied ethereal voice dictating words or notes…. It’s a collaborative process… [and] God is still breathing. The Bible is both inspired and inspiring.” (xxiii)

In the beginning, God soared on the wind over the raging waters of creation… and breathed creation into being by saying the words, “let there be life…” At Pentecost, the Holy Spirit descended upon the first followers of Jesus in a great rush of wind and mysterious tongues of flame. Jesus the son of God came to earth as a person with a body – with lungs, a windpipe, and a diaphragm, and used his breath to tell people the good news, teach about the kingdom of God, to cast out demons, and to heal.

When God breathes and speaks… stuff happens. That’s inspiration… IN – SPIRE… IN – SPIRIT…. The spirit of God dwells in us, gives us life, and creation responds.

Imagine, at that lakeshore, Peter and his fellow fishermen huffing and puffing, out of breath as they ended a long and unproductive night of fishing – exhausted – literally with their breath drained out. Along comes Jesus, who tells them to go into the deep waters and try again. They do, somewhat reluctantly, but then are shocked at the size of their catch – so big, their boat starts to sink from the weight of all that fish!

At this miracle before their very eyes, Peter makes a correct assumption – this man must be from God. When Jesus commands, stuff happens. But this realization terrifies Peter. Jesus is holy. Peter is not. Sacred does not mix with profane. Pure does not mix with impure. Jesus should not be hanging out with Peter, or Jesus will get tarnished by association. Surely, this man of God wants nothing to do with a sinner like Peter.

This makes me wonder – what kind of sinner was Peter? We are given exactly zero details. Was he a gambler, did he drink to much, was he a compulsive liar, did he steal, was he a murderer? We have no idea.

And yet, just a few chapters later, in Luke chapter 7, we meet another person who is ALSO deeply regretful of her past sins, like Peter. Jesus is at a dinner party, and a woman described as “living a sinful life” prostrates herself at Jesus’ feet, sobbing. The hosts of the party are aghast. They agree with Peter – Jesus should not hang out with “sinful” people!
I would like to point out that nothing is said about the woman’s sin either. And yet, in many commentaries and sermons throughout the centuries, this WOMAN was describes as having a sinful SEXUAL past, and Peter is not saddled with this stigma AT ALL. That is a big problem… and says more about US than it does about Peter or this woman.

If you follow the news, you may have noticed that Lutheran Pastor Nadia Bolz-Weber has made the news again. She just published a book called Shameless: A SexualReformation, where she lays out a new kind of sexual ethic within Christianity, based on grace, that is inspired by Luther himself. If each one of us was created with a body that is infused by the breath of God, our bodies are created good. Her manifesto challenges the prevailing notion that sex is a dangerous and terrible thing outside of heterosexual marriage, but WITHIN THAT TINY CORRAL it’s great!! But the experience of many faithful Christians tells us this is a one-size-fits all approach does severe damage to those who do not fit this mold.

Uncomfortable yet? Bolz-Weber takes on all kinds of topics in her book we don’t normally talk about in the church – sex, abortion, pleasure, pastors who are transgender, birth control, and body-shaming. But her book is also filled with things that we DO talk about in church… stewardship, holiness, purity, grace, creation, sin, and the Bible. She is very clear on one point though: purity is not the same as holiness, and for two long the church has conflated the two.

She reminds us that purity is the separation FROM something, and there is no way that any kind of purity system makes us holy and worthy of God’s love. Not the purity codes of Leviticus, nor the purity codes of books like“I Kissed Dating Goodbye” and the “True Love Waits” movement. Purity of any kind does not make us Holy… Jesus does. Over and over again Jesus is extending grace and holiness into places and to people that others deem to be “impure.”

Because the truth is, no one is really “pure” in any form. We have all been tainted in some way or another by the sin and brokenness and realness of the world. Life is complicated – a mixture of both good and bad, sin and holiness, imperfect people doing the will of a perfect God to the best of their ability.

But when institutions perpetuate to vulnerable people that certain actions are beyond even God’s redemption, this flies in the face of who our God has revealed Godself to be.

You may have heard a couple of other things in the news lately. The state of New York recently passed a law to decriminalize legal abortions after 24 weeks performed by medical professionals when it has been determined that either the woman’s life is in imminent danger, or the fetus has no chance of survival beyond birth. 24 weeks is the “magic number” because that is the point in a woman’s pregnancy that a fetus can likely physically live outside of the womb. This has been a struggle for many Christians, because of our mandate in the 10 commandments, “though shalt not murder.” Which seems self-explanatory.  As Luther explains: “We are to fear and love God, so that we neither endanger nor harm the lives of our neighbors, but instead help and support them in all of life’s needs.” 

But life is complex, and so is the magic moment of when life begins. When is that, exactly? At conception? At 24 weeks when the fetus is “viable,” .... when a fetus can feel pain?  The Bible is not actually clear on this. In fact, In the ancient rabbinic tradition, life begins at birth, when a baby takes his or her first breath. That is when they believed that the soul entered the body. And before 1968, that is when conservative evangelical Christians agrees. It’s not until after the 1960s that the Pro-life movement even got started.

Nadia Bolz-Weber in her book writes about her own experience with abortion. According to her: “There are so many varied experiences of conception and pregnancy. Some of us long to conceive and never do; some of us have babies we did not want, some of us miscarried babies we desperately wanted…. There are many ways to view the issue and remain faithful.” 

But I think that everyone can agree on one thing, related to something ELSE that has just come up in the news: when a religious institution looks the other way as their leaders take advantage of female adherents and then force them to have abortions, and yet single-mindedly promotes Pro-life as one of its most cherished tenants, this is a level of hypocrisy that Jesus would have no problem vocally opposing – loudly and vehemently.

Nadia writes: “Jesus kept violating the boundaries of decency to get to the people on the other side of that boundary, who had been wounded by it….. the motherless, the sex workers, the victims, and the victimizers.”… and here I would add, fishermen. Jesus “cared about real holiness, the connection between the human and divine, the unity of sinners, the coming together of that which was formerly set apart.” (28)

In our baptisms, we are both set apart for the holy calling of God’s kingdom, and united with our fellow saints and sinners in living out this calling in a complicated world. The breath of God is present in each of us, enlivening and inspiring us. This cannot be diminished or removed, no matter how hard our fellow humans try. Thanks be to God. Amen.

Monday, October 29, 2018

Reformation: How to Get into the "Good Place."


Sermon 10-28-18 Reformation Sunday

Grace to you and peace from God our creator and from our Lord and savior Jesus the Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit, amen.

501 years ago, on a church door in Wittenburg, Germany, a monk named Marin Luther hammered 95 complaints about institutional religion… and changed the world forever. At least, that’s what we tend to say about Reformation Sunday every… single… year… “Martin Luther changed the world,” “Martin Luther reformed the Christian Church,” “Martin Luther this…” “Martin Luther that…” 501 years later, though… it just might be time to say: what does the Reformation really matter to us NOW? Why should we care about something that happened on another continent, before there was even wifi? 

I mean besides the fact that our denomination happens to be named after the guy… which, by the way, was intended as an insult, and Luther hated it that we are now identified as “Lutherans.”

There are some ways that the Reformation has added to our world for the worse… some of Luther’s writings were used as an excuse for religious wars all over Europe in the centuries that followed. And Hitler cited Luther’s anti-Semitic writings as inspiration for the treatment of the Jewish people in Nazi Germany. The ELCA has made a clear statement that rejects these writings, but it does not erase the damage that has been done, and the damage that continues to occur, as evidenced by the events of yesterday at the synagogue in Pittsburgh.

Did the Reformation do any Good? Sure. Thanks to Luther, we can read the Bible and experience worship in a language we understand. Thanks to Luther, we have choices about what denomination we want to be a part of – for better or for worse. Thanks to Luther, we believe that everyone has a calling and can serve God in any aspect of their lives. And we no longer belong to a system where we have to earn our way into eternal life – either through money or through doing good things.

That last statement, though, is a hard one to shake off. One pastor colleague recently shared an experience she had while teaching confirmation. She asked her class, “how do you know you will get into heaven?” One of her students responded – “because I am a good person.”
Luther would have been aghast at this response, as this pastor was. But we really should not be so surprised… everyone around us tells us that if we are just good ENOUGH…we’re fine.

In fact, there is an entire Netflix show that explores this… it’s called The Good Place. This show, the “good place” and the “bad place” exists, and at the end of your life, a point system determines which place you go. For example, things like:

-         Installed solar panels gets you +1994.49 points
-         Every time you sing to a child: +0.69 points
-         Gave out full-size candy bars at Halloween: +633.59 points

Conversely:
-         Buy a trashy magazine will set you back: -0.75
-         One incident of sexual harassment is: -731.26
-         Poison a river: -4015.55


But not just anyone gets into the “Good Place” - only the very best people, with the highest point values in the POSITIVE get in. Not just the Good Enough. EVERYONE ELSE gets a one-way ticket on the train to “The Bad Place.” Now, this is all hypothetical of course, and exists purely with the fiction of the show. But it DOES make you wonder, doesn’t it?
What if my pastor friend asked YOU the question, “How do you know that you’re going to heaven?” How would you answer?

I feel like most days I am a pretty good person… I don’t steal, I don’t murder, I don’t bear false witness, I don’t mistreat my parents. I use my blinker in traffic, I pay my taxes, I donate my time and money to charity, I post on Facebook about injustices happening around the world. I must be doing ok… right?

Except that I’m really not. I’m not a good person… I actively participate in an economy that enslaves people in other countries in making my clothes, shoes, and electronics, and grow and harvest my food. I have benefited from systems that privileges my skin color over others. I have not spoken up and fought for the human rights of others even as my government has actively tried to make certain types of “unacceptable” people disappear or at least like them away and separate them from their families. If such a point system actually existed, this is a lot of “negative points” …. More negative points than I could ever earn back through being a good person in other ways.

Thanks to Luther, we also know that we are still in bondage to sin and cannot free ourselves by any amount of “good point values,” but that is not the END of the story.

And yet… also thanks to Luther… I believe that I do have a place in “The Good Place” … Why? because – Jesus! Jesus frees me from worrying about being Good Enough and trying to earn God’s love. Through my baptism, God has chosen me as God’s beloved child, loved and given a place in this Family of Faith forever. The GOOD THING for US is that we do not need to worry about raking up points to get into THIS Good Place, and this is the Wild Idea that Luther latched on to, and idea that changed the course of history and sparked the Reformation. Jesus frees us. We can’t do it. That’s it. End of story.

In our confession, sometimes we say – “we are in bondage to sin and cannot free ourselves.” In martin Luther’s time, sin was a hot topic, but now we Lutherans at least don’t talk about it much. A hint can be found in our baptismal liturgy.  Right before we say the Apostles Creed, we renounce – or turn our backs on - the devil, the forces that defy God, the powers of this world that rebel against God, and the ways of sin that draws us from God.” In a nutshell, our understanding of sin is basically anything that draws us from God.

Anything? Anything…. Anything that draw us from God.

Even too much of a good thing. Even the good works that Jesus DOES call us to do – spoiler alert, Luther also says “God doesn’t need your good works… but your neighbor does!” So, if SOME Good Works for our neighbor is good… then doing TONS of good works should make us EXTRA awesome disciples Right? God loves schedules that are fuller and busier, right?

The people of God have become so good at cluttering up the Gospel, and that’s why we needed the reformation. The first one being when Jesus arrived on the scene. The Pharisees cluttered the good news by thinking that God required purity and preached too many rules to follow to be loved by God. And this is not the truth.

Martin Luther’s time needed a reformation because the religious leaders cluttered the good news by thinking that a person could pay to get into The Good Place, and so preached “when a coin in the coffer rings, a soul from purgatory springs.” And this is not the truth.

WE, right now, need a reformation because we clutter the good news by thinking that God requires busyness to prove our faith, and so preach that a good Christian is a tired Christian, and a vibrant church is a busy church. And this is still not the truth.

The truth is, we don’t have to be GOOD ENOUGH… we ARE ENOUGH.

The truth is, the reformation is not over, because the church tends to drift off course after a while. But where there is confession, there is always forgiveness, there is always time to start anew. In fact, Luther reminds us that we are raised with Christ as a new person EVERY SINGLE DAY. The good news is that God is always reforming us, God is always reforming God’s church. Our God is a reforming God and will continued to be faithful in THIS reformation, starting right now. Thanks be to God. Amen.