March 1, 2026
Genesis 12:1-4a; John 3.1-7
+ As you can all feel and sense right
now, it is an exciting time in the Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota.
In just a few weeks time, we will be
consecrating a new Bishop.
And as that happens, we are all full of
hope and anticipation for the future of our diocese.
For those of us who have been on this
journey in the past---for those of us who have experiences multiple bishops
over the years, our hope and anticipation is always a bit tempered.
We know better than to place too much
hope in one person.
We know better than to think that one
person will be able to come in and change everything that will please all of us.
And that is very important for all of
us to remember and be mindful of, especially as we welcome Bishop Shay.
But, it is so vitally important to
remind ourselves:
The ministry of the Church is not just
about a bishop.
Or priests.
Or deacons.
Ministry is also lay people, and lay
leaders.
The Church is made up of all of us as
ministers.
We are all ministers of the Church.
Not just Bishop-elect Shay.
Not just Deacon John or Deacon Suzanne.
Not just me.
Each of you are doing ministry in your
own ways as well.
But don’t take my word for it.
Let’s take a look at our trusty
Catechism.
Let’s take out our Books of Common
Prayer and let’s take a look way in the back.
We’re going to page 855
And there, under the section called
“The Ministry,” we find this:
The Ministry
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Q. |
Who are
the ministers of the Church? |
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A. |
The
ministers of the Church are lay persons [notice that lay persons are listed
first[ , bishops, |
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Q. |
What is
the ministry of the laity? |
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A. |
The
ministry of lay persons is to represent Christ and his |
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Then we get questions on the
ministries of Bishops, Priests and Deacon.
Finally, we get this question: |
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|
Q. |
What is
the duty of all Christians? |
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A. |
The
duty of all Christians is to follow Christ; to come |
So, when we look long and hard at what
ministry is, we need to remember something.
Our ministry together is not just in
what we do.
It is in who we are.
Our ministry is often a ministry of who
we are.
Of our personalities.
Of bearing witness
Of representing Christ---by not only
our words, but also by our actions as well.
Of the person that God has created,
even in our very brokenness.
It’s all bound up very tightly
together.
And if each of us listens, if each of
strains our spiritual ears and hearts toward God, we can hear that calling,
deep in our hearts.
We can find that God is calling us to
the ministry of our day-to-day lives, the ministry of the person God has formed
us to be, the ministry to serve others in the way God sees fit.
In our reading from the Hebrew Bible
this morning, we find a clear call from God to Abram.
“Go from your country and your kindred
and your father’s house to a land that I will show you.”
Essentially this is the call to all of
us who are in ministry.
God calls to us wherever we may be and
when that happens, we must heed that call.
We must step out from our comfortable
places, and we must step out into our service to others even if that means
going to those people in strange and alien places.
And sometimes when we step into those
uncomfortable places, we are made all the more aware of our own brokenness—we
become even more vulnerable.
But that’s just a simple fact in
ministry: when God calls, God calls heedless of our brokenness.
In fact, God calls us knowing full well
our brokenness.
And—I hope this isn’t news to anyone
here this morning—God uses our
brokenness.
God can truly work through our
brokenness and use our fractured selves in reaching out to other fractured
people.
For too many people our brokenness
divides us.
It separates us.
It isolates us.
It prevents us from moving forward in
our lives and in ministries.
I see this all the time in the world
and in the Church.
Our brokenness can truly become a kind
of self-condemnation.
It becomes the open wound we must carry
with us—allowed by us to stink and fester.
But when we can use our brokenness to
reach out in love, when we allow God to use our brokenness, it is no longer a
curse and a condemnation.
Our brokenness becomes a fruitful means
for ministry.
It becomes a means for renewal and
rebirth.
It becomes the basis for ministry—for
reaching out and helping those who are also broken and in need around us.
In our Gospel reading for today we get
that all-too-familiar bit of scripture.
“For God so loved the world that [God]
gave [God’s] only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but
have eternal life.”
How many times have heard this
scripture bantered about?
We have heard that scripture so often
in our lives, we almost don’t realize what it’s really saying.
I actually love preaching on this
scripture.
I love to for one simple reason:
The message is so basic, so
straightforward.
And that simple messsage has gotten
lost over time.
God so loved the world---
The world here is you.
The world here is me.
The world here is us.
God so loved us.
God loves us.
Plain and simple.
How do we respond to that love?
We respond to it by following the One
whom God has given to us—Jesus.
And if we do, Jesus will lead us to
eternal life, to the same eternal life he himself received from God.
Each of us is called.
Each of us has been issued a call from
God to serve.
It might not have been a dramatic
calling—an overwhelming sense of the Presence of God in our lives that
motivates us to go and follow Jesus.
But each Sunday we receive the
invitation.
Each time we gather at this altar to
celebrate the Eucharist, we are, essentially, called to then go out, refreshed
and renewed in our broken selves by this broken Body of Jesus, to serve the
broken people of God.
We are called to go out and minister,
not only by preaching and proclaiming with words, but by who we are, by our
very lives and examples.
So, let us heed the call of God.
Let us do as Abram did in our reading
from Genesis did today.
“Abram went, as the Lord told him…”
Let us, as well, go as God has told us.
Let us go knowing full well that
heeding God’s call and doing what God calls us to do may mean leaving our
country and our kindred and our house—in essence, everything we find
comfortable and safe—and going to a foreign place—a place that may be frightening.
And going will be doubly frightening
when we know we go as imperfect human beings—as people broken and vulnerable.
But let us also go sure in our calling
from God.
Let us go sure that God has blessed
each of us, even in our brokenness.
Let us go knowing that God loves us,
because we too love.
Let us go knowing that God will use the
cracks and fractures within us, as always, for good.
And let us go knowing God will make us
whole again in our eternal life.
God will make us a blessing to others
and God will “bless those who bless us.”
What more can we possibly ask of the ministry God has called us