Annual Meeting
January 24, 2020
Mark
1.14-20
+ Today is, of course, our Annual Meeting
Sunday.
And let’s
just say that we have never had an Annual Meeting like this one before.
And it is
the Sunday in which I get to be the head cheerleader for our congregation.
And there
is so much to cheer about.
What?
Cheer
about?
Fr.
Jamie, did you sleep through 2020?
Yes, you
heard me right.
There is much
to cheer about, even in the midst of a pandemic.
Despite
all that has happened, for us it has been a year of growth, of crazy, nonstop
activity, of doing and seeing things in a new way.
We have
one of our very best years for giving, for budget.
Even in
the midst of all the darkness and the strangeness of this past year, St.
Stephen’s once again proved itself to be, as it always, a resilient, amazingly
strong congregation that steps up the plate.
I am just
amazed by it all.
I am
amazed at how God has moved in this parish this last year.
God’s
Holy Spirit has been truly present here.
But yes,
it is a very different Annual Meeting Sunday than in the past.
We will
be gathering together by Zoom, rather than in person.
It will
be different.
It is
painful that we are not all here together.
But, let
me tell you, in some congregations, it
is much worse, as many of you know.
And I am
deeply saddened over that fact.
But for
us, we need to be grateful this morning.
We need
to truly thank God, for God’s holy Presence among us.
I know
you feel it.
I
certainly feel it.
And it is
that vitality, that presence of the God’s life-giving and amazing Spirit,
present among us, that we celebrate today.
So much
has happened over this past year.
Yesterday
I was talking by phone with Jennifer Tackling.
And she
was sharing how important St. Stephen’s has been to her over this whole pandemic
and how it was good for her to know that even though she and her family were
unable to actually physically BE in church, it was comforting to know that we
continued to do what we do, without pause.
And that
we have found new ways to “be” together.
I love to
hear things like that from people.
And it is
because of comments and sentiments like that, that we actually are celebrating
St. Stephen’s and who we are, what we have done and what we will do.
I think
our Annual Meeting is also a time for us to pause and to actually orient
ourselves.
It is
important to see where he have been this past year and look forward to where we
are going.
And it is
a time for us also to “turn around,” to have a moment in which we wake up and
see things anew.
In our spiritual
lives, we call those moments, “metanoia,” – a Greek word that I absolutely
love.
But I
will get into that a bit more in just a moment.
For now,
this idea of “turning around,”
this changing of perspective, is what Jesus calls us to do again and again
throughout the Gospel.
And in
today’s Gospel is no exception.
In
it, we find Jesus essentially doing the same thing.
He’s
asking his followers—and us—to turn around, to wake up, to see things anew.
And
he does it with one little word.
“Repent.”
I
think in our contemporary Christian Understanding, we have found this word
hijacked a bit.
Repent
is often seen as a shaming word.
We
seem to hear it only in the context of “repenting” of our sins.
And certainly
that’s a correct usage of the word.
When
we turn from our sins—from all the wrongdoings we’ve done in life—we are
repenting.
But I
think it’s a good thing to examine the word a bit closer and see it in a
context all of its own.
The
Greek word we find in this Gospel is that word I just shared with you—metanoia μετανοειτε (metanoiein), which means to change our mind.
But
the word Jesus probably used was probably based on the Hebrew word, Shubh, which the great theologian, Reginald Fuller, translates
as “to turn around 180 degrees, to reorient one’s whole attitude toward Yahweh
in the face of the God’s coming kingdom.”
When
we approach this word with this definition, all
of a sudden it takes on a whole new meaning and attitude.
What
is Jesus telling us to do?
Jesus
is telling us to turn around and see, for the Kingdom of God is near.
Wake
up and look, he’s saying
We
must turn round and face this mystery that is God.
We
must adjust our thinking away from all the worldly things we find ourselves
swallowed up within and focus our vision on God.
Or,
rather, we should adjust our thinking, our vision of the world, within the
context of God.
Now,
I will share with you a moment of metanoia in my own life recently.
As
you know, I am watch current events very
closely, especially when it comes to Christianity and the Church.
And there
have been some things recently that has shaken me to my core.
It is
this disconnect that I see so many Christians between their praying to Jesus
and their following of Jesus.
I
have seen in the news, and especially in
our national news over the last few weeks, many people who proudly profess and
claim to be Christians, carrying crosses, carrying banners with the name of
Jesus, placing memes on their social media of Jesus, and saying loud prayers to
Jesus, sometimes after they have violently overrun certain government buildings.
I
have been appalled by it all.
I
have been appalled by people who so recklessly throw the name of Jesus around,
who so blatantly claim that name and worship Jesus, but who also so blatantly
do not embody who and what Jesus was and is.
One
of my favorite contemporary spiritual writers is Richard Rohr.
He is
a Roman Catholic priest, a member of the Franciscan Order.
I
have quoted Rohr many times from this pulpit.
Father
Rohr actually addresses the source of my current moment of metanoia when he
also talks about Christians who seem to ignore Jesus very clear command to “Follow
me!”
Christians instead “have preferred to hear something Jesus
never said: ‘Worship me.’ Worship of Jesus is rather harmless and risk-free;
following Jesus changes everything.”
Following
Jesus changes everything.
It does.
It’s
easy to pray to Jesus.
I
have seen those Christians in my own life.
Most
of the people I have had issues with in the Church, especially those I have
known personally, have more often than not been just that kind of Christian.
Bishops
who pray to Jesus, but then treat others disrespectfully, even mistreating
people.
Clergy
who pray to Jesus, but then steal money or use and misuse people over and over
again.
Lay people
who pray to Jesus, been then backbite and gossip and find something always to
complain about.
And
it’s hard for me to say this, but I too have done it.
Well,
I haven’t stolen money or blatantly mistreated people
But I
too have prayed to Jesus and then acted very un-Jesus-like.
I
have prayed to Jesus and acted terribly.
I
have prayed to Jesus because it’s been so much easier to pray to Jesus than to
follow Jesus.
When we
do that we become guilty of the heresy of Christomonism, or the belief that
Jesus is the only expression of God we need.
Doing
so is essentially Jesusolatry—it makes Jesus into an idol that is worshipped.
That
is not what Jesus came to do for us.
Jesus
did not come to be worshipped.
Jesus
came to lead the way—to show us the Way forward, to be Way, the Truth and the Life.
And
our jobs as Christians is to follow Jesus.
What does that mean?
How do we do that?
Well, there's a great meme going around that says this:
THIS YEAR I WANT TO BE MORE LIKE JESUS:
- Hang out with sinner.
-Upset religious people.
- Tell stories that make people think.
- Choose unpopular friends.
- Be kind, loving and merciful.
That's how we follow Jesus.
Now,
of course, I’m not saying we shouldn’t pray to Christ.
I am
definitely not saying that worship of God shouldn’t take precedence in our
lives and that, in our worship of God, we shouldn’t acknowledge Jesus’
intercession before God’s throne. Worship of God should take precedence in our
lives!
But
what I am saying is that our worship of Jesus should not make Jesus into an
idol.
Our
worship of Jesus should not be an easy way for us to avoid having to follow
Jesus.
It’s
easy to throw Jesus’ holy Name around.
We all
do it.
But
when we hide behind our worship of Christ, when we think praying to Jesus and not
following Jesus makes us good Christians, we have deceived ourselves, and the
truth is not in us.
What
Jesus is telling us in today’s Gospel, when he tells us to repent, is,
essentially, this:
He is
telling us to be mindful.
Be
mindful of God.
Be
mindful of the good news.
And
what is the good news?
The
good news is that the Kingdom of God is near.
God
has drawn close to us.
God
is near.
So, be
aware.
Act appropriately.
What
we find here is a very simple lesson in how to live fully and completely.
Essentially,
Jesus is telling us,
Repent.
Wake
up.
Turn
around and see.
Jesus
is saying to us, Stop living foggy, complacent lives. Repent.
He is
saying, Quit being drones, mindlessly going about your duties.
Stop
making Jesus into an idol in your life.
Stop
hiding behind your worship of Jesus and go out and actually follow him.
Actually
embody him and strive to live like him in this world.
Wake
up and think.
Open
your eyes and see.
God is
with us.
God
is here, speaking to us words of joy and gladness.
Listen.
Hear
what God is saying.
Look.
See
God walking in our very midst.
And
when we see God, when we hear God speaking to us, we find that we too want to
do what those disciples in our Gospel reading for today did.
We
want to follow after the One God sent to us.
We
want to be followers of Jesus.
And
we want to help others be followers of Jesus.
We
want to help others see that God is near.
That
is what we are called to do on this Annual Meeting Sunday.
That is
what we are being called to do in this year ahead of us.
That
is what we are striving to do in all we do t St. Stephen’s
Being
followers of Jesus means that we are awake and we see.
So let
us truly follow Jesus in our lives.
We
don’t need to do it in a flamboyant fashion.
But
we can do it in flamboyant fashion if that works for us.
But
we can also do so in a subdued fashion as well.
We
can truly follow Jesus by striving to be spiritually awake.
We
can follow Jesus by allowing ourselves to spiritually see.
And
when we hear and see—awake, aware, not sleeping spiritually—it is then that we
can become truly effective fishers in helping others see as well.
Let
us pray.
Holy and
Loving God, we thank you. We thank you for this parish of St. Stephen’s. We
thank you for who we are and what we are and what we do. We ask you to graciously
bless and prosper the work of our hands. Let your spirit dwell with us. And most
importantly let us get up and heed the calling of Jesus in our lives. Let us
repent, turn around and follow him where he leads. And as we do, help us to
further your Kingdom in our midst. We ask this in Jesus’ holy name. Amen.
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