November 7, 2021
Revelation21.1-6a
+ I don’t make any secret about it.
I love this feast day of All
Saints.
After all, from the very earliest
days of the Church, this has been one of the highpoints of the Church year.
It’s an important feast.
And it’s important not just
because we honor saints like St. Stephen, or Mary the mother of Jesus, or St.
Joseph or any of the other saints.
It’s an important days because it
is a day in which we honor also those loved ones in our own lives who have gone
before us.
This feast and the onewe celebrate
on November 2, All Souls, are very important feast days for me.
And because both of them came
this week, I am going to touch on both.
Actually, I’m kind of guilty of
combing the two.
One is about the SAINTS.
One is about all the rest.
I’m just going to talk about
everyone because, let’s face it: you know I’m an unapologetic Universalist.
So, this is a time for us to
honor our departed loved ones, as well as those we might not know about.
Honoring and praying for those
who have departed this life has always been an important part of the Church.
But, there are some branches of
the Church that do not honor saints in this manner.
Being brought up Lutheran, we
didn’t make a big deal about the saints.
If you come from a Methodist or a
Presbyterian background, there have been some honoring of those who have gone
before, but prayers are usually not prayed for
them.
After all, the departed are where
they are, and our prayers aren’t going to make much of a difference.
But, for us, as Anglicans and Episcopalians,
honoring saints and praying for those who have died has always been a part of
our tradition.
You will hear us as Episcopalians
make a petition when someone dies that you won’t hear in the Lutheran Church,
or the Methodist Church or the Presbyterian Church.
When someone from our parish dies,
you will probably get a prayer request from me that begins, “I ask your prayers
for the repose of the soul of…”
Praying in such a way for people
who have passed has always been a part of our Anglican tradition, and will
continue to be a part of our tradition.
And I can tell you, I like that idea of praying for those who have
died.
But, and this is important: we don’t
pray for people have died for the same reasons other branches of Christianity
do, like Roman Catholicism.
In other words, we don’t pray to
free them from “purgatory,” as though our prayers could somehow change God’s
mind.
(Prayer does NOT change God’s
mind)
So, why do we Episcopalians pray
for the departed?
Well, let’s see what the Book of
Common Prayer says.
I am going to have you pick up
your Prayer Books and look in the back, to the Catechism.
There, on page 862 you get the very important question:
Why do we pray for the
dead?
The answer (and it’s very
good answer): We pray for them, because we still hold them in our love, and
because we trust that in God's presence those who have chosen to serve him will
grow in his love, until they see him as he is.
Now, that is a great
answer.
We pray that those who have
chosen God will to grow in God’s love.
So, essentially, just because we die, it does not seem to mean that we stop
growing in God’s love and presence.
But, if you’re still not
convinced, here’s an answer from no greater person than one of the treasures of
the Anglican Church—none other than C.S. Lewis.
Lewis wrote,
"Of
course I pray for the dead. The action is so spontaneous, so all but
inevitable, that only the most compulsive theological case against it would
deter me. And I hardly know how the rest of my prayers would survive if those
for the dead were forbidden. At our age, the majority of those we love best are
dead. What sort of intercourse with God could I have if what I love best were
unmentionable to [God]?”
I think that is wonderful and
beautiful.
And certainly worthy of our
prayers.
But even more so than this
definition, I think that, because we are uncertain of exactly what happens to
us when we die, there is nothing wrong with praying for those who have crossed
into that mystery we call “the nearer Presence of God.”
After all, they are still our
family and friends.
They are still part of who we
are.
This morning we are commemorating
and remembering those people in our lives who have helped us, in various way,
to know God.
As you probably have guessed from
the week-long commemoration we have made here at St. Stephen’s regarding the
Feasts of All Saints and All Souls, I really do love these feasts.
What this feast shows me is what
you have heard me preach in many funeral sermons again and again.
I truly, without a doubt, believe
that what separates those of us who are alive here on earth, from those who are
now in the “nearer presence of God” is truly a very thin one.
And to commemorate them and to
remember them is a good thing for all us.
I do want us to think today long and hard about the saints we have known in our
lives.
And we have all known saints in
our lives.
We have known those people who
have shown us, by their example, by their good, that God really does work
through us.
And I want us to at least realize
that God still works through us even after we have departed from this mortal
coil.
Ministry in one form or the
other, can continue, even following our deaths.
That quote from Lewis is a prime
example.
Even now, almost 60 years after
his death, Lewis can still preach to us.
His words still reveal God’s
truths to us.
He is still doing ministry, even
now.
Hopefully, we can still, even
after our deaths, do good and work toward furthering the Kingdom of God by the
example we have left behind.
For me, the saints—those people who have gone before us—aren’t gone.
They haven’t just disappeared.
They haven’t just floated away
and dissipated like clouds out of our midst.
No, rather they are here with us,
still.
They join with us, just as the
angels do, when we celebrate the Eucharist.
For, especially in the Eucharist,
we find that “veil” lifted for a moment.
That belief comes to us from the
Eastern Orthodox Church.
In this Eucharist that we
celebrate together at this altar, we find the divisions that separate us are
gone.
We see how thin that veil truly
is.
We see that death truly does not
have ultimate power over us.
That is the way Holy Communion
should be.
It’s not just us, gathered here
at the altar.
It’s the Communion of all the
saints.
In fact, before we sing that
glorious hymn, “Holy, Holy Holy” during the Eucharistic rite, you hear me say,
“with angels and saints and all the company of heaven we sing this hymn of
praise.”
That isn’t just sweet, poetic
language.
It’s what we believe and hope in.
In these last few years, after losing so many people in my family and among myclose
friends, I think I have felt their presence most keenly, at times, here at this
altar when we are gathered together for the Eucharist than at any other time.
I have felt them here with us.
And in those moments when I have,
I know in ways I never have before, how thin that veil is between us and
“them.”
You can see why I love this feast.
It not only gives us consolation
in this moment, separated as we are from our loved ones, but it also gives us
hope.
We know, in moments like this,
where we are headed.
We know what awaits us.
No, we don’t know it in detail.
We’re not saying there are
streets paved in gold or puffy white clouds with chubby little baby angels
floating around.
We don’t have a clear vision of
that place.
But we do sense it.
We do feel it.
We know it’s there, just beyond
our vision, just out of reach and out of focus.
And “they” are all there, waiting
for us.
They—all the angels, all the saints,
all our departed loved ones.
So, this morning—and always—we
should rejoice in this fellowship we have with them.
We should rejoice as the saints
we are and we should rejoice with the saints that have gone before us.
In our collect this morning, we prayed
that “we may come to those ineffably joys that you have prepared for those who
truly love you.”
Those ineffably joys await us.
They are there, just on the other
side of that thin veil.
They are there, in that place we
heard about in our reading today from Revelation.
That place in which God “will dwell with them as their God;”
Where we will be God’s peoples
They are there were God wipes “every tear from
their eyes.”
Where “Death will be no more;
mourning and crying and pain will be no more,
for the first things have passed away."
Let us pray.
God of eternity, you are nearer to us than we
sometimes realize; help us to see with
the eyes of our faith that the division between this world and eternity is in
fact a thin one, and that around us we are surrounded by the host of witnesses
who have faithfully run their race and are now rejoicing in their reward; and
may we too come to enjoy that place of light and peace, where signing and pain
are no more but life everlasting; in Jesus’ name, we pray. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment