Sunday, November 30, 2008

The Episcopal Church and Visual Arts Exhibition

via Brad

"Venite Adoremus" is the title of an online exhibition of artwork inspired by the hymns of Advent, Christmastide and Epiphany. Below are my favorites. Be sure to read the commentary for each work, and the accompanying hymn. (I trust I am not infringing copyright by reproducing these images here...if so, I welcome correction. My sole intent is to give readers a taste of this wonderful exhibition, so that they will want to visit the site for themselves.)

O Antiphons
Digital Art, November 15, 2005
Jan Neal

MIRABLE DICTU (Wonderful to Behold)
gouache on paper board, 1969
15x10 inches
Harvey Bonner


"Rejoice! Rejoice, believers and let your light appear..."
watercolor, ink , and pencil, December 2004
12x9.5 inches
The Rev. Kristy K. Smith

Epiphany
oil on canvas, 2004
48x48 inches
The Rev. Nancy Mills

Meditation for Worship: November 30, 2008


Father,

A new year is beginning for us,
as we turn away from the world’s calendar and return to yours.

Shine on us, Lord, and light our way!

We confess we are an impatient people,
but if your light burns away our restlessness, we will not wander.

We confess we are a complacent people,
but if your light melts our inflated egos, we will watch for you.

We confess we are a weary people,
but if your light shines upon us we will not sleep,
but will rise in the warmth of your love.

Restore us, O Lord God of hosts;
let your face shine, that we may be saved.

Friday, November 28, 2008

Southern Baptists and Advent



Sunday will be the first Sunday in Advent, and lately this blog has been getting lots of traffic regarding an entry I wrote a year ago, entitled "When the Southern Baptists Discovered Advent."

I take this to be an indication that Baptists are no longer defining themselves negatively, but are embracing that which has always been rightfully theirs, as Christians.

When I was growing up Southern Baptist in St. Louis in the 60's-70's, we identified ourselves by what we did NOT do or believe. For example:

1) Catholics and Lutherans had Advent and Lent. Baptists did not.
2) Catholics and Lutherans smoked, danced and drank. Baptists did not.
3) Catholics and Lutherans "read" prayers. Baptists did not.
4) Catholics and Lutherans made their kids go to "confirmation." Baptists did not.
5) Catholics and Lutherans sprinkled. Baptists did not.
6) Catholics and Lutherans believed in sacraments. Baptists did not.
7) Catholics were against abortion, therefore Baptists were pro-choice. (Yes, this is not often brought up, but it is true. Look
here and here and here and here and here).

I am thankful to be able to live to see my Baptist brothers and sisters identifying with the greater history and larger ecclesiology of Christ's Body, the Church. It will be interesting to see if they continue to live into their inheritence, discovering other treasures, such as the practice of the entire church year and the discipline of the lectionary.

Meanwhile, may our voices join together as we sing. "O Come O Come Emmanuel." That is something we all can agree on!

If you are new to Advent and are looking for resources, here is a good place to start. And here is a helpful view on Advent from "the other side."

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Thanksgiving Greetings, with cupcakes














Col. 1:2-3

Grace and peace to you from God our Father.
We always thank God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, when we pray for you!



via Brad, 50 Thanksgiving cupcake ideas

Monday, November 24, 2008

Joanna reads Frost


Joanna, our high school junior, has finally finished the Walt Whitman unit in her lit class, after much agony and gnashing of teeth. Today they moved on Robert Frost. Curled on the sofa, she opened her homework packet. "Listen to this," she called to me. "'Frost describes freedom as moving easily in harness. That's like what we have in Christianity!"

She settled deeper into the cushions and began reading poetry aloud to me as I worked in the kitchen. "This is good. I can go into Christmas with this," she declared.

Friday, November 21, 2008

A Weekend in NARNIA- it starts tonight!


Everything is ready--the sanctuary is transformed for our "Weekend in Narnia!" Imagine, for only $5, making a retreat to one of the most beloved corners of Christendom for an entire weekend!

Tonight at 7:00 pm, Michael Ward, author of Planet Narnia, asks, "If Men are from Mars and Women are from Venus, Who is from Jupiter?" Then Saturday at 10 am, he explains "Why C. S. Lewis Loved the Seven Heavens."

Saturday at 11:00 am, Terry Glaspey explains "Tasting the Truth: How Narnia Prepares Us for the Good News."

We'll break for a Narnian lunch at 12:30, --complete with Turkish Delight.

Finally, Saturday at 7:00pm, Richard Purtill speaks to us on "The Voyage of the Dawn Treader and the Spiritual Life."

Free childcare is available with advance registration. Call 541.345.0055.
Lots of people have worked hard to make this adventure...sola gloria Dei!

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

QUOTES: On holding on to things


Once we wrap our hands around something to hold onto it, our hearts become as small as the thing we are clutching.

--Anthony Bloom



Mir ist zumut,
dass ich die Schwache von allem Zeitlichen recht spiiren muss,
bis in mein Herz hinein, wie man nichts halten soli,
wie man nichts packen kann,
wie alles zerlauft zwischen den Fingern,
alles sich auflost,
wonach wir greifen,
alles zergeht wie Dunst und Traum...

...Leicht muss man sein,
mit leichtem Herz und leichten Händen halten und nehmen,
halten und lassen . . .
Die nicht so sind, die straft das Leben, und Gott erbarmt sich ihrer nicht.

--the Marschellin, Strauss' Der Rosenkavalier, Act I

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Genesis in One Easy Chinese Character?

This is the Chinese character for "soul."

Notice that it is composed of various elements. According to David Yu, our Taiwanese-American friend who has been teaching us Mandarin, the three squares in the center are repetitions of the symbol for "mouth." Above them is the symbol for "rain." (see the raindrops?) Below them are two "let your fingers do the walking" upside-down "y's." One of those "y's is all you need to be the symbol for "human being or person." The "T" on the level base is the symbol for work.

Now, think about it. Do those "mouths" belong to Three Persons, and are the people below made in His Image? Are the waters separated from the soil that the people work?

Is this folk etymology or could it contain the kernel of something deeper?

David is a law student, not a linguist or philologist, so he isn't at all sure, but he finds it very curious. He got this from a book his pastor recommended. It does this same sort of analysis for another couple dozen characters, and claims that those characters can be traced back two thousand years before Christ.

Is there anyone out there reading this who can give a more definitive assesment of this theory?

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Just wondering: After reading Amos 5

Last Sunday I read Amos 5 as part of our worship service. It's been nagging me ever since.

When we stand before the Lord, will we be able to justify the destruction of His creation, the war in Iraq, $10 trillion+ national debt, extension of corporate bailouts while people lack affordable healthcare, by appealing to the fact that we stood against abortion, ethanasia, and immoral stem cell research?

Don't get me wrong, these are all heinous SINS. But isn't it ironic that many of us evangelicals--who supposedly don't make distinctions between "venial" and "mortal" sins--haven't able to see these other issues as equally distressing to our Lord ? (cf. Amos 5).


If we were truly pro-life, we might take a clue from Pope John Paul II's 1988 encyclical "Sollicitudo Rei Socialis" on social justice, which criticizes both capitalism and socialism, and argues for both proper economic development and placing the needs of the poor over the wants of the wealthy.

Satan is always happy if he can get us to be either/or people: either faith or works; either this world or the next; either Black or White; either Catholic or Protestant; either Republican or Democrat; either rich or poor, slave or free, male or female. But our Lord comes not to divide, but to heal. So why are we permitting him the victory by listening to folks like Sean Hannity and Alan Colmes, rather than Stephen Mansfield?

Just wondering...

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

An Invitation to a Weekend in Narnia


Please join us for
A Weekend in Narnia

Lectures, food and fellowship focused on
the Chronicles of Narnia
by C.S. Lewis

Friday, November 21, 2008 -Sunday, November 23, 2008

Valley Covenant Church
3636 W. 18th Ave.
Eugene, OR

(541)345-0055
bethb@valleycovenant.org

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21:

7:00 p.m. Lecture by Michael Ward

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22:

10:00 a.m. Lecture by Michael Ward
11:00 a.m. Lecture by Terry Glaspey
12:30 p.m. A "Narnian" Lunch
7:00 p.m. Lecture by Richard Purtill, "The Voyage of the Dawn Treader and the Spiritual Life"

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 23

9:30 a.m. Panel discussion with Glaspey, Purtill and Ward

10:30 a.m. Worship for Sunday of Christ the King, sermon, “Looking for the Lion,” by pastor Stephen Bilynskyj

------------------------------------


MICHAEL WARD is an Anglican clergyman from Cambridge, England and the author of Planet Narnia: The Seven Heavens in the Imagination of C. S. Lewis. (Oxford University Press, 2007)



TERRY GLASPEY is an editor at Harvest House Publishers in Eugene and author of Not a Tame Lion: The Spiritual Legacy of C. S. Lewis.(Cumberland House, 2001) http://www.amazon.com/Spiritual-Legacy-C-S-Lewis/dp/1581822162


RICHARD PURTILL is professor emeritus at Western Washington University in Bellingham and author of C. S. Lewis’ Case for the Christian Faith (Ignatius, 2004) and Lord of the Elves and the Eldils: Fantasy and Philosophy in C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien. (Ignarius, 2006) as well as his own fantasy series, The Kaphtu Trilogy.

Registration at http://www.valleycovenant.org/events/narnia.htm

$5.00 donation/person for all events

Please let us know if you will need child care
by phone: (541) 345-0055
------------------------------------

What the critics are saying about Planet Narnia:

"I cannot contain my admiration. No other book on Lewis has ever shown such comprehensive knowledge of his works and such depth of insight. This will make Michael Ward's name."
--Walter Hooper, Literary Adviser to the Estate of C.S. Lewis

"Noting Michael Ward's claim that he has discovered "the secret imaginative key" to the Narnia books, the sensible reader responds by erecting a castle of scepticism. My own castle was gradually but utterly demolished as I read this thoughtful, scholarly, and vividly-written book. If Ward is wrong, his wrongness is cogent: it illuminates and delights. But I don't think he is wrong. And in revealing the role of the planets in the Chronicles, Ward also gives us the fullest understanding yet of just how deeply Lewis in his own fiction drew upon those medieval and renaissance writers he so loved."
--Alan Jacobs, Professor of English, Wheaton College and author of The Narnian: The Life and Imagination of C.S. Lewis

"Michael Ward presents an absorbing, learned analysis of C.S. Lewis's bestselling and beloved series, The Chronicles of Narnia . Readily accessible to the average reader, Ward's book reads so much like a detective story that it's difficult to put down."
--Armand M. Nicholi, Jr. M.D., Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School and author of The Question of God: C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud

"All who have enjoyed the The Chronicles of Narnia and indeed are interested in any aspect of Lewis's imaginative work should read Michael Ward's book. He argues convincingly for a hitherto unrecognized inner structure of the Chronicles, and gives excellent reasons for understanding why Lewis should have worked in such a mysterious way, his wonders to perform. Ward has an encyclopedic knowledge of Lewis's writings and uses it to support his theory that each of the seven volumes of the The Chronicles of Narnia is based on the classical, medieval and renaissance mythography of one of the then seven planets. Even those critics who dislike the Narnia books in principle because of their implicit Christianity must consider their planetary structure and its significance. Michael Ward has made an outstanding contribution to Lewis studies."
--Derek Brewer, Emeritus Professor of English, University of Cambridge

"Planet Narnia is not simply one for the fans. Lewis had, and has, many enemies. This brilliant study may not persuade them that he was right, but it should convince them of his extraordinary subtlety."
--The Independent

See also the Books and Culture
review by Tom Shippey

and Ken Myers' conversation on
Mars Hill Audio

Monday, November 10, 2008

Prophetic Distance

"You cannot speak powerfully and objectively to a man if you desperately need something from him. You will bend your message to please him in order to obtain whatever you need from him—praise, money, acceptance, or access for example. To speak truth, particularly the truth of God, you must maintain prophetic distance."

--Stephen Mansfield, http://www.amazon.com/gp/blog/post/PLNK1SDJ2X1NHT0RV

Saturday, November 08, 2008

What if Starbucks Marketed like a church?

via Brad:



I found the You Tube comments worth even more than the video:

"churches don't need marketing churches need prayer. "

"This is the problem with all the protestant evangelical McChurches all competing for each other. This is what you get for fracturing the Christian Church."

"Church isn't a consumer transaction; it's a relationship"

While I am altogether in agreement with those comments (especially the last one), there are other perspectives. Take a look here for example. According to David Deal,

"Some might find it distasteful for a religious institution of any denomination to so nakedly embrace marketing. But religious institutions are no different than secular organizations that seek to attract and retain members: they need to make themselves known if they’re going to succeed. And like secular organizations, they can choose any manner of tasteful or obnoxious ways to spread their message through marketing."

So, according to Deal, it is not a question of whether or not religious institutions should stoop to the market. It is assumed that "consumer" is the default position of everyone in our society, and that churches, synogogues, mosques and temples reduce to markets. So the question is whether or not religious institutions are in tune with how consumers wish to be treated.

From this perspective, Evangelical churches are using outdated techniques to appeal to and manage their consumers, which erodes trust between church as marketer and potential consumers That means churches need to adapt and follow consumer behavior. (Heaven forbid that they should form it!)

Here's what Deal predictions the consumer of 2018 will be like:

The answer is fairly simple: follow consumer behavior — don’t try to “manage” it. To help the marketer, Lisa introduces the four “Ps” of understanding consumer behavior in the digital world: permission, proximity, perception, and participation:

1. Permission: consumers derive comfort by managing with whom and when they engage. Example: Gilt.com is a closed, invitation-only shopping community.

2. Proximity: consumers tap into networks and affiliations based on on content and association. The notion of curated content is important here. Example: Tina Brown’s The Daily Beast content curator connects people with common interests. Daily Beast brings proximity to its readers.

3. Perception: consumers inhabit multiple personas. Marketers need to engage the persona consumers are willing to reveal and allow consumers to manage their own perceptions. Example: Apple enables consumers to customize our iPods however we want, and we pay Apple for the privilege.

4. Participation: consumers participate in order to feel connected. Example: Sprint and and Suave have collaborated to create In the Motherhood, a community managed by moms for moms.

Consumers use these 4 P’s to manage their fluctuations between core need states. We cannot “control” them. We have to let consumers guide us.

Lisa’s closing thoughts: if you’ve gotten permission from consumers to participate in their world, ask them to share their experience with others. Consumers will act as brand advocates for you – if they like you.


Sigh. Too bad Paul didn't do a better job of asking permission to participate in Philippi, Thessalonica, and especially Ephesus. Think of how many more brand advocates they could have made!

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Obama's Metaphysics Lesson

"What about someone who believes in beautiful things, but doesn't believe in the beautiful itself…? Don't you think he is living in a dream rather than a wakened state?" (--Plato, Republic 476c)

Photo: Getty Images






It's no secret that this blog has a low regard for nominalism, the metaphysical view that reality is reducible to discrete individuals, that there are no "universals." (Look here for a collection of entries that explain and criticize nominalism.) It has been the reigning presupposition of modernism, from Abelard to Ockham to Hobbes to Locke to contemporary libertarians, followers of Ayn Rand, and free market capitalists.

I wonder how many people realized that tonight, in his victory speech tonight at Grant Park, our president-elect himself challenged the prevailing winds of nominalism by constantly stressing what unites us, rather than what divides us. In the following excerpts notice how he rejects the nominalist idea that America is just the name denoting the collection of individuals that compose it. Obama clearly believes there is more to the whole than the sum of its parts.

This will not be an easy lesson for Americans to swallow. We have grow accustomed to our autonomy. We much prefer our role as parts and resist being accountable to a whole. But if one of the lessons of the recent economic collapse is that greed is not good, and then we will have to accept that there must be some limits to our individual selfishness. Community is one of those limits. Obama seems to be inviting us to rediscover the notion of participation in something greater than ourselves. He invites us together to discover and participate in the American Dream.

That is not the message of nominalism; rather, it is a return to reason, to a premodernist metaphysic. Perhaps we are finally waking from the nightmare of individualism and are ready to recall that we are persons, not collectives, but also not atoms. We are beings who engage in relationships with each other and who bear the responsibilities entailed by those relationships, not ball bearings that bounce off of one another in cosmic chaos.

Alone, as individuals, we cannot; but together, as a community, as a nation, we CAN. Christians have a special role to play here, because as Church we can demonstrate to the world what genuine community is, through participation in the Divine Community of the Trinity. Hopefully our fellow citizens will get the idea. Even better, they might want the Real Thing.

Alone, you cannot "do it." Alone, I cannot "do it." Alone, Barak Obama cannot "do it." But together, with him, with each other, and most critically, with God, we can. May we as Christians not squander this opportunity for witness, but instead use it to the glory of God.

------------------------------------------------------
excerpts from PRESIDENT-ELECT BARACK OBAMA'S VICTORY SPEECH

"It's the answer spoken by young and old, rich and poor, Democrat and Republican, black, white, Latino, Asian, Native American, gay, straight, disabled and not disabled - Americans who sent a message to the world that we have never been a collection of Red States and Blue States: we are, and always will be, the United States of America...

...Its the answer that led those who have been told for so long by so many to be cynical, and fearful, and doubtful of what we can achieve to put their hands on the arc of history and bend it once more toward the hope of a better day.

Its been a long time coming, but tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America...

...So let us summon a new spirit of patriotism; of service and responsibility where each of us resolves to pitch in and work harder and look after not only ourselves, but each other. Let us remember that if this financial crisis taught us anything, its that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers - in this country, we rise or fall as one nation; as one people.

...And to all those watching tonight from beyond our shores, from parliaments and palaces to those who are huddled around radios in the forgotten corners of our world - our stories are singular, but our destiny is shared, and a new dawn of American leadership is at hand...

This is our chance to answer that call. This is our moment. This is our time - to put our people back to work and open doors of opportunity for our kids; to restore prosperity and promote the cause of peace; to reclaim the American Dream and reaffirm that fundamental truth - that out of many, we are one; that while we breathe, we hope, and where we are met with cynicism, and doubt, and those who tell us that we cant, we will respond with that timeless creed that sums up the spirit of a people:

Yes We Can. Thank you, God bless you, and may God Bless the United States of America.

Meanwhile in Somalia...







These are pictures of women being stoned, in accordance with Islamic law. It is a horrendous way to die. On October 27, 13 year old Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was killed in the Somali port city of Kismayo. Here is the story, as reported by the BBC, 16:42 GMT, Tuesday, 4 November 2008:

Stoning victim 'begged for mercy'

A young woman recently stoned to death in Somalia first pleaded for her life, a witness has told the BBC.

"Don't kill me, don't kill me," she said, according to the man who wanted to remain anonymous. A few minutes later, more than 50 men threw stones.

Human rights group Amnesty International says the victim was a 13-year-old girl who had been raped.

Initial reports had said she was a 23-year-old woman who had confessed to adultery before a Sharia court.

Numerous eye-witnesses say she was forced into a hole, buried up to her neck then pelted with stones until she died in front of more than 1,000 people last week.

Meanwhile, Islamists in the capital, Mogadishu have carried out a public flogging.

Islamists are becoming increasingly open in the capital, Mogadishu
Mogadishu is nominally under the control of government forces and their Ethiopian allies, who face frequent attacks by Islamist and nationalist insurgents.

The BBC's Mohammed Olad Hassan in the city says the flogging was a show of strength.

He says two men accused of helping to kill a man and torture his mother, who they accused of theft, were each given 39 lashes in the north-eastern suburb of Suqa-hola.

The man who actually killed the alleged thief was released, after agreeing to pay his family 100 camels in compensation.

Before the flogging, hundreds of Islamist fighters performed a military parade, our reporter says.

Death threats

Cameras were banned from the stoning in Kismayo, but print and radio journalists who were allowed to attend estimated that the woman, Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow, was 23 years old.

People were saying this was not good for Sharia law, this was not good for human rights, this was not good for anything

However, Amnesty said it had learned she was 13, and that her father had said she was raped by three men.

When the family tried to report the rape, the girl was accused of adultery and detained, Amnesty said.

Convicting a girl of 13 for adultery would be illegal under Islamic law.

A human rights activist in the town told the BBC on condition of anonymity that he had received death threats from the Islamic militia, who accuse him of spreading false information about the incident.

He denies having anything to with Amnesty's report.

'Crying'

Court authorities have said the woman came to them admitting her guilt.

She was asked several times to review her confession but she stressed that she wanted Sharia law and the deserved punishment to apply, they said.

But a witness who spoke to the BBC's Today programme said she had been crying and had to be forced into a hole before the stoning, reported to have taken place in a football stadium.

"More than 1,000 people arrived there," he said.

"After two hours, the Islamic administration in Kismayo brought the lady to the place and when she came out she said: 'What do you want from me?'"

"They said: 'We will do what Allah has instructed us'. She said: 'I'm not going, I'm not going. Don't kill me, don't kill me.'

"A few minutes later more than 50 men tried to stone her."

'Checked by nurses'

The witness said people crowding round to see the execution said it was "awful".

"People were saying this was not good for Sharia law, this was not good for human rights, this was not good for anything."

But no-one tried to stop the Islamist officials, who were armed, the witness said. He said one boy was shot in the confusion.

According to Amnesty International, nurses were sent to check during the stoning whether the victim was still alive. They removed her from the ground and declared that she was, before she was replaced so the stoning could continue.

The port of Kismayo was seized in August by a coalition of forces loyal to rebel leader Hassan Turki, and al-Shabab, the country's main radical Islamist insurgent organisation.

Mr Turki is on the US list of "financers of terrorism".

It was the first reported execution by stoning in the southern port city since Islamist insurgents captured it.

The BBC had a reporter in the area, but he was shot dead in Kismayo in June.

Now read John 8:1-11 and meditate on these images:

Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri; Italian, ca. 1591-1666), Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery, 1621.


Chinese print, no date.



Rembrandt, Christ And The Woman Taken In Adultery 1644, Oil on wood, 83,8 x 65,4 cm, National Gallery, London.


The Woman taken in Adultery by Jobst Harrich, c 1600. CGFA



A sculpture of Jesus and the children, by Mary Southard, C.S.J.

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Singing to Holst's THAXTED


Susan was excited to report that she was able to sing two wonderful hymns in worship this morning.

We have the first one, "Be Still my Soul," (set to Finlandia by Jean Sibelius) in our Covenant Hymnal, but we do not have the second hymn. It is set to the solemn, stately tune in the Jupiter movement of Gustav Holst's The Planets. I love it when words and music "fit" together and reinforce one another. I hope someday we will be able to sing this at VCC.

O God, beyond all praising
Tune: THAXTED, by Gustav Holst

listen to solo organ here or to a choral/orchestral version here (Starting at 3:03)

O God, beyond all praising, we worship you today
and sing the love amazing that songs cannot repay;
For we can only wonder at every gift you send,
at blessings without number and mercies without end:
We lift our hearts before you and wait upon your word,
We honor and adore you, our great and mighty Lord.

The flower of earthly splendor in time must surely die,
Its fragile bloom surrender to you, the Lord most high;
But hidden from all nature the eternal seed is sown
Though small in mortal stature, to heaven’s garden grown:
For Christ the man from heaven from death has set us free,
And we through him are given the final victory.

Then hear, O gracious Savior, accept the love we bring,
That we who know your favor may serve you as our King;
And whether our tomorrow be filled with good or ill,
We’ll triumph through our sorrows and rise to praise you still:
To marvel at your beauty and glory in your ways,
And make a joyful duty our sacrifice of praise!


Saturday, November 01, 2008

Reading Hauerwas' "Reformation Sunday Sermon" on All Saint's Day


What follows is a golden oldie, a sermon preached by the ever-controversial Stanley Hauerwas in 1995. It is a bit elusive to pin down on the internet, so I've reproduced it here in its entirety. Reformation Sunday is commonly celebrated the last Sunday in October, so it would seem that this sermon is "late," but I find it especially appropriate to read as we celebrate All Saints Sunday tomorrow. (At Valley Covenant, we blend All Saints and All Souls, commemorating all the faithful who now see the Lord face to face.)

We Protestants tend to forget that there were reformers before the Reformation. For example: St. Benedict, St. Stephen Harding, St. Robert of Molesme, St. Alberic, St. Bernard of Clairvaux, the Gregorian Reforms of Pope Gregory VII, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Dominic, Erasmus, John Colet, Ximenes de Cisneros, and--arguably--there was Fra Savonarola.

These men prove that reformation was possible without fragmentation and division. On this All Saint's Sunday, let us give thanks for them, rejoice in the unity that they share through Jesus Christ with Basil and Macrina, Wycliffe, Luther, Calvin, the Martyrs of Japan and of Uganda, C.S. Lewis, Oscar Romero, Akbar digal, Fatima Bint Mohamed bin Uthman al Mutairi,Gayle Williams, Margaret Bilynskyj, and countless others who no longer see through a glass darkly.

On this All Saints Sunday, let us pray as our Lord did in John 17;

"As the Father sent you, Lord Jesus, into the world, you also have sent them into the world.
For their sakes you sanctifed Yourself, that they themselves also were sanctified in truth.
You did not ask on behalf of these alone, but for all those who believe in You through their word;
that we may all be one; even as You, Father, are in Christ and Christ is in You, that we also may be in You, so that the world may believe that you are the Christ."

Sermon for Reformation Sunday

29 October 1995
by Stanley Hauerwas
Joel 2:23-32 - 2 Timothy 4:6-8, 16-18 - Luke 18:9-14

I must begin by telling you that I do not like to preach on Reformation Sunday. Actually I have to put it more strongly than that. I do not like Reformation Sunday, period. I do no understand why it is part of the church year. Reformation Sunday does not name a happy event for the Church Catholic; on the contrary, it names failure. Of course, the church rightly names failure, or at least horror, as part of our church year. We do, after all, go through crucifixion as part of Holy Week. Certainly if the Reformation is to be narrated rightly, it is to be narrated as part of those dark days.

Reformation names the disunity in which we currently stand. We who remain in the Protestant tradition want to say that Reformation was a success. But when we make Reformation a success, it only ends up killing us. After all, the very name 'Protestantism' is meant to denote a reform movement of protest within the Church Catholic. When Protestantism becomes an end in itself, which it certainly has through the mainstream denominations in America, it becomes anathema. If we no longer have broken hearts at the church's division, then we cannot help but unfaithfully celebrate Reformation Sunday.

For example, note what the Reformation has done for our reading texts like that which we hear from Luke this morning. We Protestants automatically assume that the Pharisees are the Catholics. They are the self-righteous people who have made Christianity a form of legalistic religion, thereby destroying the free grace of the Gospel. We Protestants are the tax collectors, knowing that we are sinners and that our lives depend upon God's free grace. And therefore we are better than the Catholics because we know they are sinners. What an odd irony that the Reformation made such readings possible. As Protestants we now take pride in the acknowledgement of our sinfulness in order to distinguish ourselves from Catholics who allegedly believe in works-righteousness.

Unfortunately, the Catholics are right. Christian salvation consists in works. To be saved is to be made holy. To be saved requires our being made part of a people separated from the world so that we can be united in spite of-or perhaps better, because of-the world's fragmentation and divisions. Unity, after all, is what God has given us through Christ's death and resurrection. For in that death and resurrection we have been made part of God's salvation for the world so that the world may know it has been freed from the powers that would compel us to kill one another in the name of false loyalties. All that is about the works necessary to save us.

For example, I often point out that at least Catholics have the magisterial office of the Bishop of Rome to remind them that disunity is a sin. You should not overlook the significance that in several important documents of late, John Paul II has confessed the Catholic sin for the Reformation. Where are the Protestants capable of doing likewise? We Protestants feel no sin for the disunity of the Reformation. We would not know how to confess our sin for the continuing disunity of the Reformation. We would not know how to do that because we have no experience of unity.

The magisterial office-we Protestants often forget-is not a matter of constraining or limiting diversity in the name of unity. The office of the Bishop of Rome is to ensure that when Christians move from Durham, North Carolina to Syracuse, New York, they have some confidence when they go to church that they will be worshipping the same God. Because Catholics have an office of unity, they do not need to restrain the gifts of the Spirit. As I oftentimes point out, it is extraordinary that Catholicism is able to keep the Irish and the Italians in the same church. What an achievement! Perhaps equally amazing is their ability to keep within the same church Jesuits, Dominicans, and Franciscans.

I think Catholics are able to do that because they know that their unity does not depend opon everyone agreeing. Indeed, they can celebrate their disagreements because they understand that our unity is founded upon the cross and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth that makes the Eucharist possible. They do not presume, therefore, that unity requires that we all read Scripture the same way.

This creates a quite different attitude among Catholics about their relation to Christian tradition and the wider world. Protestants look over to Christian tradition and say, 'How much of this do we have to believe in order to remain identifiably Christian?' That's the reason why
Protestants are always tempted to rationalism: we think that Christianity is to be identified with sets of beliefs more than with the unity of the Spirit occasioned through sacrament.
Moreover, once Christianity becomes reduced to a matter of belief, as it clearly has for Protestants, we cannot resist questions of whether those beliefs are as true or useful as other beliefs we also entertain. Once such questions are raised, it does not matter what the answer turns out in a given case. As James Edwards observes, "Once religious beliefs start to compete with other beliefs, then religious believers are - and will know themselves to be -mongerers of values. They too are denizens of the mall, selling and shopping and buying along with the rest of us."

In contrast, Catholics do not begin with the question of "How much do we need to believe?" but with the attitude "Look at all the wonderful stuff we get to believe!" Isn't it wonderful to know that Mary was immaculately conceived in order to be the faithful servant of God's new creation in Jesus Christ! She therefore becomes the firstborn of God's new creation, our mother, the first member of God's new community we call church. Isn't it wonderful that God continued to act in the world through the appearances of Mary at Guadalupe! Mary must know something because she seems to always appear to peasants and, in particular, to peasant women who have the ability to see her. Most of us would not have the ability to see Mary because we'd be far too embarrassed by our vision.

Therefore Catholics understand the church's unity as grounded in reality more determinative than our good feelings for one another. The office of Rome matters. For at least that office is a judgement on the church for our disunity. Surely it is the clear indication of the sin of the Reformation that we Protestants have not been able to resist nationalistic identifications. So we become German Lutherans, American Lutherans, Norwegian Lutherans. You are Dutch Calvinist, American Presbyterians, Church of Scotland. I am an American Methodist, which has precious little to do with my sisters and brothers in English Methodism. And so we Protestant Christians go to war killing one another in the name of being American, German, Japanese, and so on.

At least it becomes the sin of Rome when Italian Catholics think they can kill Irish Catholics in the name of being Italian. Such divisions distort the unity of the Gospel found in the Eucharist and, thus, become judgements against the church of Rome. Of course, the Papacy has often been unfaithful and corrupt, but at least Catholics preserved an office God can use to remind us that we have been and may yet prove unfaithful. In contrast, Protestants don't even know we're being judged for our disunity.

I realize that this perspective on Reformation Sunday is not the usual perspective. The usual perspective is to tell us what a wonderful thing happened at the Reformation. The Reformation struck a blow for freedom. No longer would we be held in medieval captivity to law and arbitrary authority. The Reformation was the beginning of enlightenment, of progressive civilizations, of democracy, that have come to fruition in this wonderful country called America. What a destructive story.

You can tell the destructive character of that narrative by what it has done to the Jews. The way we Protestants read history, and in particular our Bible, has been nothing but disastrous for the Jews. For we turned the Jews into Catholics by suggesting that the Jews had sunk into legalistic and sacramental religion after the prophets and had therefore become moribund and dead. In order to make Jesus explicable (in order to make Jesus look like Luther - at least the Luther of our democratic projections), we had to make Judaism look like our characterization of Catholicism. Yet Jesus did not free us from Israel; rather, he engrafted us into the promise of Israel so that we might be a people called to the same holiness of the law.

I realize that the suggestion that salvation is to be part of a holy people constitued by the law seems to deny the Reformation principle of justification by faith through grace. I do not believe that to be the case, particularly as Calvin understood that Reformation theme. After all, Calvin (and Luther) assumed that justification by faith through grace is a claim about God's presence in Jesus of Nazareth. So justification by faith through grace is not some general truth about our need for acceptance; but rather justification by faith through grace is a claim about the salvation wrought by God through Jesus to make us a holy people capable of remembering that God's salvation comes through the Jews.
When the church loses that memory, we lose the source of our unity. For unity is finally a matter of memory, of how we tell the story of the Reformation. How can we tell this story of the church truthfully as Protestants and Catholics so that we might look forward to being in union with one another and thus share a common story of our mutual failure?

We know, after all, that the prophecy of Joel has been fulfilled. The portents of heaven, the blood and fire, the darkness of the sun, the bloody moon have come to pass in the cross of our Savior Jesus Christ. Now all who call on that name will be saved. We believe that we who stand in the Reformation churches are survivors. But to survive we need to recover the unity that God has given us as survivors. So on this Reformation Sunday long for, pray for, our ability to remember the Reformation - not as a celebratory moment, not as a blow for freedom, but as the sin of the church. Pray for God to heal our disunity, not the disunity simply between Protestant and Catholic, but the disunity in our midst between classes, between races, between nations. Pray that on Reformation Sunday we may as tax collectors confess our sin and ask God to make us a new people joined together in one mighty prayer that the world may be saved from its divisions.

http://jmm.aaa.net.au/articles/20493.htm

$10 Trillion National Debt

I don't think I can legally reproduce this political cartoon; so go look at it
here

Then check out the national debt clock
and the National Debt To the Penny and Who Owes It

as of 10/30/08, the total public debt outstanding is:
$10,530,893,033,778.21