September 20, 2025
Amos
8.4-7;1 Timothy 2.1-7; Luke 16.1-13
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This past Wednesday at our Wednesday night Eucharist, we celebrated one of our
very favorite saints on her feast day.
St.
Hildegard of Bingen.
Sandy
brought her beautiful icon of St Hildegard.
We
joyously rang our bell named after her.
And
we celebrated Hildegard in all her defiant, independent brilliance!
Oh,
how we love St. Hildegard!
We
love her because she was something else!
She
was a defiant force.
And
she was one of the first feminists.
In
fact, we love St. Hildegard so much that we even named our bell after her.
St.
Hildegard was a German Benedictine nun, a mystic.
She
was also a great musician, which is also another reason why she is the namesake
for our bell.
But
the real reasons she was chosen as the patron saint of our bell is because she
was quite the force to be reckoned with.
And
let me tell you, St. Hildegard would’ve loved St. Stephen’s and all it stands
for.
She
would fit in very well here.
At
a time when women were not expected to speak out, to challenge, to stand
up—well, Hildegard most definitely did that.
She
was an Abbess, she was in charge of a large monastery of women, and as such she
held a lot of authority.
An
abbess essentially had as much authority in her monastery as a Bishop had in their
diocese.
She
even was able to have a crosier—the curved shepherd’s crook—that is normally
reserved for a bishop.
And
she definitely put Bishops and kings in their place.
There
is a very famous story that when the emperor, Fredrick Barbarossa supported
three of the anti-popes who were ruling in Avignon at that time, she wrote him
a letter.
My
dear Emperor,
You
must take care of how you act.
I
see you are acting like a child!!
You
live an insane, absurd life before God.
There
is still time, before your judgment comes.
Yours
truly,
Hildegard.
(That
could be written to certain leaders—I won’t mention any names—right now!)
That
is quite the amazing thing for a woman to have done in her day.
Even
more amazing is that the emperor heeded her letter.
And
as a result of that letter, she was invited by the Emperor to hold court in his
palace.
By
“judgement” here, Hildegard is making one thing clear in her letter.
There
are consequences to our actions.
And
God is paying attention.
For
us, we could say it in a different way.
If
you know me for any period of time, you will hear me say one phrase over and
over again, at least regarding our actions.
And
let me tell you, this phrase has often felt like ashes in my mouth!
That
phrase is “The chickens always come home
to roost.”
And
it’s true.
That
phrase was made famous in the last 60 years or so by Malcom X, who said, following
the assassination of JFK in 1963, (this quote is actually from the film, Malcom
X)
“I don't think
anybody here would deny that when you send chickens out in the morning from
your barnyard, those chickens will return that evening to your barnyard, not
your neighbor's barnyard. I think this is a prime example of the devil's
chickens coming back home to roost. That the chickens that he sent out, the
violence that he's perpetrated …. I think this same violence has come back to
claim one of their own. Now, being an old farm boy myself, chickens coming home
to roost never made me sad. ln fact, it's only made me glad.”
One
of the things so many of us have had to deal with in our lives are people who
have not treated us well, who have been horrible to us, who have betrayed us
and turned against us.
It’s
happened to me, and I know it’s happened to many of you.
It
is one of the hardest things to have to deal with, especially when it is
someone we cared for or loved or respected.
In
those instances, let’s face it, sometimes it’s very true.
“The
chickens do come home to roost.”
Or
at least, we hope they do.
Essentially
what this means is that what goes around, comes around.
We
reap what we sow.
There
are consequences to our actions.
And
I believe that to be very true.
And
not just for others, who do those things to us.
But
for us, as well.
When
we do something bad, when we treat others badly, when gossip about people, or
trash people behind their backs, who disrespect people in any way, we think
those things don’t hurt anything.
And
maybe that’s true.
Maybe
it will never hurt them.
Maybe
it will never get back to them.
But,
we realize, it always, always hurts us.
And
when we throw negative things out there, we often have to deal with the
unpleasant consequences of those actions.
I
know because I’ve been there.
I’ve
done it.
And
I’ve paid the price for it.
But
there is also a flip side to that.
And
there is a kind of weird, cosmic justice at work.
Now,
for us followers of Jesus, such concepts of “karma” might not make as much
sense.
But
today, we get a sense, in our scriptures readings, of a kind of, dare I say,
Christian karma.
Jesus’
comments in today’s Gospel are very difficult for us to wrap our minds around.
But
probably the words that speak most clearly to us are those words, “Whoever is
faithful in a very little is faithful in much.”
Essentially,
Jesus is telling us this simple fact: what you do matters.
There
are consequences to our actions.
There
are consequences in this world.
And
there are consequences in our relation to God.
How
we treat each other as followers of Jesus and how we treat others who might not
be followers of Jesus.
How
we treat people who might not have the same color skin as we do, or who are a
different gender than us, or how we treat someone who are a different sexual
orientation or sexual identity from our own.
What
we do to those people who are different than us matters.
It
matters to them.
And,
let me tell you, it definitely matters to God.
We
have few options, as followers of Jesus, when it comes to being faithful.
We
must be faithful.
Faithful
yes in a little way that brings about great faithfulness.
So,
logic would tell us, any increase of faithfulness will bring about even greater
faithfulness.
Faithfulness
in this sense means being righteous.
And
righteousness means being right before God.
Jesus
is saying to us that the consequences are the same if we choose the right path
or the wrong path.
A
little bit of right will reap much right.
But a little bit of wrong, reaps much
wrong.
Jesus
is not walking that wrong path, and if we are his followers, then we are not
following him when we step onto that wrong path.
Wrongfulness
is not our purpose as followers of Jesus.
We
cannot follow Jesus and willfully—mindfully—practice wrongfulness.
If
we do, let me tell you, the chickens come home to roost.
We
must strive—again and again—in being faithful.
Faithful
to God.
Faithful
to one another.
Faithful
to those who need us.
Faithful
to those who need someone.
Being
faithful takes work.
When
we see wrong—and we’re seeing a whole lot wrong right now in our world!—our job
in cultivating faithfulness means counteracting wrongfulness.
If
there are actions and reactions to things, our reaction to wrongfulness should
be faithfulness and righteousness.
Now
that seems hard.
And,
you know what, it is.
But
it is NOT impossible.
What
we do, does matter.
It
matters to us.
It
matters to others.
And
it matters to God.
We
must strive to be good.
Hildegard
would say the same thing to us.
She
would wave her finger at us and say, “Do good! God—who loves you!— is
watching!”
Those
good actions are actions each of us as followers of Jesus are also called to
cultivate and live into.
As
Christians, we are called to not only to ignore or avoid wrongfulness.
We
are called to confront it and to counter it.
Hildegard
did it when she wrote to Emperor Frederick Barbarossa.
And
we too should do it.
We
are called to offer faithfulness in the face of wrongfulness.
So,
let us do just that in all aspects of our lives.
Let
us offer kindness and generosity and hope and truth and forgiveness and joy
and love and goodness, again and again and again whenever we are confronted
with all those forces of wrongfulness.
Let
us offer light in the face of darkness.
Let
us strive, again and again, to do good, even in small ways.
For
in doing so, we will be faithful in much.
“For
surely I will not forget any of their deeds,” God says in our reading from Amos
today.
What
we do matters.
God
does not forget the good we do in this world.
We
should rejoice in that fact.
God
does not forget the good we do.
What
we do makes a difference in our lives and in the lives of those around us.
So
let us, as faithful followers of Jesus, strive, always to truly “lead
a…peaceable life in all godliness and dignity.”
Amen.