Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Numb

I feel numb and I'm struggling to find words. My mom and I were in the air two hours before the suicide bombers hit the international terminal at the Ataturk Airport in Istanbul. What broke me to tears was thinking about Stephanie, a Transy classmate killed in the Brussels airport terrorist attack, whose family and friends were likely doing the same thing my family and friends were - texting, emailing, calling. Fearful, nervous, anxious. "The longest hour and a half of my life." I was shaking and crying on the plane to think that had we arrived to the international terminal just four hours later, we could have been casualties. I cried more to think about my friends and family who were checking flight times and comparing notes and praying with every fiber of their being that we were in the air, far from the carnage.

I don't have the words to express the gratitude for the prayers and for everyone reaching out. Thank you. I pray this is the closest I ever come, ever again, to such horror. I will never forget landing in Spain, my mom and I turning on our phones, and the texts, emails, messages, and posts pouring in. It was surreal, stultifying. I was shaking as I read through every message and typed responses as fast as I could.

As I sit in our hotel room, wired up on adrenaline and unable to sleep, my thoughts turn to all those who died, and all those who face a more constant and daily threat of terrorism than we do in the West:

I pray that we all remember that some of those who died were likely Turks, some were more than likely Muslims, and they were more than likely just trying to get through security so they could break their Ramadan fast.

Terrorist attacks in the west lead to Facebook creating profile picture "filters" (the French tricolor) and "check ins." I hope we'll see a "Stand with Turkey" Facebook filter following this horror, but sadly, I doubt we will.

Please remember that in the global fight against terror, it is our Muslim brothers and sisters who are at the front lines of the suffering and the fight. Stand with them. Already on Twitter, you can find a diatribe of Islamophobia. It's sickening.

Please, keep the prayers for Turkey coming, especially during this holy month of Ramadan. But in addition to prayers, consider changing your Facebook profile picture to the Turkish flag. Stand in solidarity with Turkey, and all Muslims, who fight to stop terrorism and who sometimes pay the ultimate price. We are all human - and hate does not differentiate. Hate kills.

Monday, July 15, 2013

Posture


I am a dance teacher, and as a dance teacher, I spend a significant amount of time thinking about the human body. Specifically, what is the body saying when it is dancing. When working with children and pre-teens, the struggle is often to help the children to develop self-awareness and confidence. Many approach their dance with eyes cast downward, shoulders rolled forward, posture being pulled to the earth. My job is to help them roll their shoulders back, lift their eyes, and direct their posture and the spirits upward, toward the sky. I play-act sometimes, dancing a series of steps with a certain body language and asking the children to tell me what emotion I am portraying. Fearful eyes, furrowed brow, and sluggish shoulders indicate, “Nervous,” or, “Scared,” or “Sad.” Bright eyes, slight upward curl of the lips, tall stance indicate, “Proud,” or “Mischief!” or “Strong.” Even my youngest dancers begin to understand that how they carry themselves, how they present themselves in the dance and in the world, tells people everything they need to know. You're either open or closed. Warm or cold. Confident or unsure. Joyful or fearful.

My work in the church – in the wider Episcopal Church, in the Diocese of Lexington, and through the ministry of Reading Camp – has given me another lens through which to view the posture of the human body and the human spirit. In my lay ministry, I have seen people operate from a posture of openness, a posture of welcome, a posture of deep and real interest in the lives of others. As with dance, where I have modeled my own dancing on the beautiful styles of other dancers, I have endeavored to model my spiritual and physical postures after these beautiful, warm, and open people. I watch how they communicate, how they offer welcome, the grace with which they speak words both easy and difficult. I have watched how they handle conflict, with a gentle firmness, with strength, and with conviction.

I have also watched people operate from postures of skepticism, negativity, gossip, and “grasping.” I watch them grasp for power and grasp for control. I watch them grasp with envy for things that belong to others. I watch them grasp for other people – their reputations, their relationships, their postures – in attempt to pull them down, to destroy them. It is a fearful and sad posture these people display. In my mind's eye, I see them as dancers – as the Rat King in the Nutcracker Ballet, as Don Dorcha in Lord of the Dance. Characters whose posture indicates darkness, aggression, a desire to possess what is not rightfully theirs.

On July 14, 2013, The Very Rev. Ron Summers, Dean of the Cathedral of St. George at the Cathedral Domain in Lee County, Kentucky, and Priest-in-Charge at Christ Episcopal Church in Harlan, Kentucky, joined volunteers at Pine Mountain Settlement School for our Sunday morning Eucharist to open the week of Reading Camp. Members of Christ Church joined us, too, for worship and for lunch. It was a joyful occasion, meaningful in numerous ways because of the history of Reading Camp, of Christ Church, and of the Diocese of Lexington. It was meaningful because we – Reading Camp volunteers, members of Christ Church, and members of all the churches in the Diocese – have begun to learn how to live from a posture of openness, welcome, joy, and love. It was not always this way, and we've not yet gotten it perfect. To use the dance studio metaphor, I see that we've grown from young children through the storming of adolescence, and we are perhaps now in our early teenage years. We have begun to understand that how we present ourselves, the physical and spiritual posture that we exhibit, tells the world who we are and what we're about. We've become more self-aware, seeing how we previously hunched our shoulders, held our belongings close to our chests, and did not want to share our toys. We were nervous, untrusting, skeptical. Now through the bumps and bruises of adolescence, we've learned to dance with our shoulders back, our eyes lifted, and our hearts open. We have begun to present something entirely new to those around us. Something warm. Something welcoming.

Father Ron Summers' sermon focused on the Parable of the Good Samaritan from Luke 10. It was masterfully woven and presented to the congregation Three Philosophies of Life:

  1. What's yours is mine and I'm gonna take it.
  2. What's mine is mine and I'm gonna keep it.
  3. What's mine is yours and I'm happy to share it.

As Christians, he said, we are not the robber in the parable, nor the Levite and the priest, nor even the Good Samaritan. We are the poor, broken, and bloodied man left to die by the side of the road, and we have been saved, healed, and redeemed by Christ. And now, it is our duty to act as Christ to the world, to save, heal, and redeem all those left poor, broken, bloodied, and alone. It is our duty to adopt the Third Philosophy of Life: What's mine is yours and I'm happy to share it.

The Third Philosophy of Life doesn't come easy; indeed it's a struggle. I would submit, however, that adopting a physical posture of openness and warmth might help us get to the spiritual posture of the Third Philosophy. Amy Cuddy gave a TED talk about the neurological impact of body language. Body language not only changes how people around you view you, your motives, and who you are, but body language informs your brain – your very neurological wiring – about who you are as well. A closed, fearful, and small body posture not only tells others that we are scared, feel small, and feel ineffective, but it tells our brain that too! An open, joyful, confident body posture not only tells others of our confidence, but it tells our brains that too. “Fake it till you make it,” she concludes. Not because it's a cute and trite saying, but because it is neurologically true. If you fake it long enough, your brain will start to believe in your posture, will start to re-route your understanding of yourself. You will fake it until you become it. Open, warm, welcoming, living out the Third Philosophy of Life.

What does your body language say about who you are? More importantly, what does your body posture tell your spirit to do? Do you inform your spirit that you are untrusting, scared, and skeptical? Or do you inform your spirit, by your physicality, of your love, your warmth, your deep interest in the needs and lives of others? How is your physical posture wiring your spiritual posture? How is your physical posture informing your very world view?

Take a moment. Close your eyes. Think of yourself as a young dancer in a dance class. Feel your posture grow taller, from the base of your spine through the top of your head. Feel strength and warmth emanate from within you. Relax your shoulders and roll them back, opening yourself. Slightly lift your chin, and feel a small smile creep over your lips. Find a moment when you felt happiest – the first warm day of spring, a family gathering, an uplifting conversation – and meditate on that moment, holding your new posture.

How do you want to present yourself to the world? And not only to the world – but to yourself? What kind of person do you want to be? Do you want to live from a posture of small-ness, fear, and doubt? Or do you want to live out a posture of openness, joy, curiosity, and confidence?

In the deepest spiritual and scientific senses, you have the ability to decide. Your physical posture informs your spiritual/emotional/neurological posture. And your spiritual/emotional/neurological posture informs your physical posture and how others perceive you.

How will you live out the Third Philosophy of Life?  What's your posture?

Monday, June 10, 2013

Incarnational People

The Episcopal Church of Our Saviour
Madison County, KY
June 9, 2013
1 Kings 17:8-16 (17-24) | Psalm 146 | Galatians 1:11-24 | Luke 7:11-17

 I'm actually going to begin by trying to engage in some short conversation with all of you, so I'm going to start with some questions. And I do hope I get at least one or two responses out of all of you, and if not, Richard told me he's got my back.

So, I wanted to begin by asking you, either from you childhood or from your adult life, which stories in the Bible are most memorable or resonate with you? They stick with you and they're always there.

Members of the congregation responded:

“The Good Samaritan.”  “David and Goliath.”  “Adam and Eve.”  “The birth of Jesus.”

“Jonah.”  I responded: “Yes, and the Big Fish...or the whale, if you want to argue.”


“Noah's Ark.”  “Jacob wresting, Jacob's ladder.”
 “Joseph's coat of many colors.” 
I said: “Yes, and I could start singing like Donny Osmond if I wanted to...”


I finished the conversation, “The Burning Bush for me too, or the Exodus from Egypt.”

These are some really remarkable stories that we remember because there's really amazing plotlines, we stick on to one or two parts of the plot.


So, in the readings this morning, what's most memorable? What stayed with you – especially in the reading from Kings and the Gospel?

“Healing." “Poverty.”

“Grain and oil that never cease.”
 
“The rains will come.”
“Right,” I responded, “because there's a great drought and that's the promise from God.”
I continued:
“

For me, what stuck with me most about those two readings was the resurrections that happened.  Usually we always think of the major resurrection in our story, of Jesus' resurrection, but this morning we heard two stories of resurrection – of Elijah raising the son of the widow and then of Jesus doing the same.


As I reflected on the readings this week, especially the reading from Kings, something new struck me. Something that at least I tend to overlook because I fast- forward to the end of the story to the resurrections.


In the reading from Kings, the widow with whom Elijah is staying is devastated by the death of her son and she lashes out at Elijah: "What have you against me, O man of God? You have come to me to bring my sin to remembrance, and to cause the death of my son!"


Elijah takes the boy's body to the room where he was staying, lays the body on the bed. And he too lashes out, and this time at God: "O LORD my God, have you brought calamity even upon the widow with whom I am staying, by killing her son?"


This week, I wondered about Elijah. What did he feel? What anger was boiling up inside of him? He had served the one true God in the face of great opposition, Ahab's wife Jezebel makes several attempts on his life, had battled with Ahab’s priests of Baal on Mt. Carmel, which we heard last week, and in that episode, proved that God was the one true and living God. And now God seems to have abandoned him. What had he done to deserve this abandonment?


So, for the very first time in my hearing of these stories, my attention was shifting from the resurrections and to Elijah’s predicament and his pain. And I saw in his despair sentiments that probably resonate deeply with all of us … anyone who has lost a loved one, who has had a relationship disintegrate and die, anyone of us who have faced trials or doubt or despair. “Oh LORD my God, WHY HAVE YOU LET THIS HAPPEN?”

A dear friend of mine recently introduced me to the author Cheryl Strayed. Cheryl is a novelist and essayist and several years ago she became the author of an online advice column called “Dear Sugar.” She remained anonymous for a while but eventually she revealed who she was and she published a book with some of her essays from the advice column. The book is called “tiny beautiful things.”
 

While Cheryl is not a confessing Christian, it's amazing how many of her pieces elucidate parts of Christian life previously to me were opaque, that I just didn't get. One exchange of letters in particular came to mind this week as I thought about Elijah.


Cheryl responds to a letter from a woman whose daughter has been hospitalized, and she must make a life- or-death decision for her daughter. Either the daughter's life can be made comfortable, and she'll hold on for as long as she can, or she can have life-endangering surgery and she may never wake up. At the same time that this woman’s family is suffering through this ordeal, the woman confesses to Cheryl her struggle to believe in God. She has placed this ordeal on the altar. If her daughter lives, there is a God. If her daughter dies, no God exists.


She and Cheryl exchange a series of letters throughout this time. In one of Cheryl’s responses, she writes to the woman:  
“Countless people have been devastated for reasons that cannot be explained or justified in spiritual terms. To do as you are doing in asking If there were a God, why would he let my little girl have to have possibly life-threatening surgery? - understandable as that question is – creates a false hierarchy of the blessed and the damned."


And this week I thought, not only does it create this false dichotomy of the blessed and the damned, but it also removes categories of trust and faith and incarnation.
All of these questions are ones that, at one time or another, we scream out to God...
but they also seem to flatten our experience of God and our lives in such a way that we feel that things are happening to us, we're not free agents, we're no more than lab rats in a cage. I think that they can remove our capacity for growth, for learning, and for compassion for others who are going through similarly devastating times.
  So in this sense, if they remove our capacity for understanding and compassion, they also diminish the reality of the incarnation – of us being God's presence in the world, the body of Christ.


And even as these questions do this, they are SO are very human and they are so VERY biblical. They are at the very core of Elijah’s crying out to God. "Why have you let this happen?”
And even as Elijah is crying out, God's there. Present. And we know that at the end of the story, the boy revives.


And the widow, at the end of the story, says, "Now I know that the word of the LORD in your mouth is truth."

Where, just moments before, Elijah had been saying words of doubt and abandonment.

We hear every Good Friday, "Eloi Eloi, lama sabachthani? My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” spoken by Christ himself.
  So I wondered, this week, perhaps God abides in these questions and in despair and in doubt, just as abides in joy and resurrection. For, God was incarnate, and he spoke these words, too. And not only IS he there with us, but he's BEEN there. Quite literally, hanging on the cross.


Cheryl Strayed concludes her letter,

“To use our individual good or bad luck as a litmus test to determine whether or not God exists,” or, I would say, whether or not God is present and abiding with us in our despair, “constructs an illogical dichotomy that reduces our capacity for... compassion. AND, it fails to acknowledge that the other half of rising – the very half that makes rising necessary – is having first been nailed to the cross.”


We believe that God dwelt and dwells among us. God became incarnate and in Jesus’ life, Jesus must have experienced hundreds of tiny deaths and hundreds of small resurrections. And at the end of the story, it was not his crucifixion, but his rising.
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” was not the end of the story, but without it, we couldn't have gotten to resurrection.


So, as fond as Episcopalians are of saying, “We are a Resurrection people,” I would encourage you to view it in a different way. Proclaim we that are a Resurrection people, yes, but more importantly - proclaim, “We are an Incarnational People.” And that God dwells in our dyings and our risings.

Amen."


Monday, June 3, 2013

We Are Enough


Sermon at Trinity Episcopal Church
Danville, KY
1 Kings 18:20-21, (22-29), 30-39 | Psalm 96 | Galatians 1:1-12 | Luke 7:1-10





When I was in elementary school, my social studies teacher assigned a special individual project to our class. We were to artistically represent – through poetry, art, music - a story from one of the cultures we had been studying. We had been making our way through the ancient near east – through the Sumerians, Phoenicians, Greeks, and the Hebrew tribes. Some of my friends bought modeling clay at the craft store and, with toothpicks, they fashioned Sumerian cuneiform script. Others went to the “paint your own pottery” store and they painted plates or bowls to represent the beautiful colors and figures of ancient ceramic art. I, instead, went to Hobby Lobby, and purchased Plaster of Paris and some model train figures, and – with some magic markers, glue, paper towels, and a lot of imagination, Plaster became Mount Carmel and plastic train conductors and passengers transformed into Elijah and Ahab's priests of Baal. The rather expressionless passengers – who I don't think even had facial features - stood around twigs surrounded by blue putty, while the train conductor, with his arm lifted in solute, stood around a small conflagration – a larger pile of twigs with super-glued tendrils of red, yellow, and orange streamers extending higher than his tiny plastic head.

My mini “Mount Carmel” survived one move and more than ten years before my mother convinced me to throw it out. As it happens, miniature biblical scenes are very effective dust collectors. So, I went off to college, and mini Mount Carmel went into the trash.

I've wondered for years why I held onto that model for so long. For a while I attributed it to a minor hoarding habit, but realized that I was quite good at purging my closets and junk drawers of other obsolete objects.

So, I was delighted when Amy asked me to preach this morning and the readings happened to be the story from Mt. Carmel, and the letter from Paul and the Gospel of Luke Luke. I think I've found my answer to why I held onto that model for so long, and surprisingly, it didn't come entirely from the reading from Kings. It came to me from the centurion in Luke 7.

The elders came to Jesus asking for him to heal a slave of the centurion.

“He is worthy of having you do this for him, for he loves our people, and he built our synagogue for us.”

Later, some friends sent by the centurion approached Jesus, speaking on the centurion's behalf: “Lord, do not trouble yourself, for I am not worthy to have you come under my roof.”

Twice in the same passage - just sentences apart - ideas of human “worth” and “worthiness” are brought forward.

Worth. I think that's what lies at the center of my interest in the Mt. Carmel narrative, and one of the reasons I was so reticent to throw this dusty Biblical diorama. Because of worth.

So, let's unpack this.

Ancient baal worship was prominent throughout the near East, and baal was not a singular god but baalim, the plural, was this large array of gods - gods of fertility and ran rand war, the harvest, and so on. And there was this never work of appeasement, to make sure you were offering the proper sacrifices to the gods so that they would give you in turn the desired outcome. This went from sacrifices of food, animals, wines, but even to women and children who were offered to the gods of rain, fertility, war, and on and on. And if your sacrifice wasn't good enough, the sacrifice had to be “upped” because you were not worthy, what you provided was not worthy – of rain, of protection, of fertility, of life. It's a rather disastrous calculus to win favor with these gods.

Despite the evolution of Israelite religious practice from devotion to many gods – as many peoples of the near east did - to the devotion and reverence for the one true God, these ideas continued to creep in, and I think we see it this morning in the Gospel, though it is very subtle, and we see it in our own lives. This appears in this morning's Gospel, where the reason that Jesus should help the centurion and his slave is because the centurion is worthy. He has, in the eyes of the elders, offered the right sacrifices – has financed the construction of the synagogue - and so in our human eyes, he should have procured favor with God. “He is worthy of having you do this for him, because he built our synagogue for us.”

Yet, something amazing happens, and the centurion's emissaries come to Jesus, and they admit that the centurion is not worthy. The centurion, though he sits in a position of such power, acknowledges he is a subordinate to Christ. A man set under the authority, and not in this case of of Rome, or the capricious demands of his pantheon of gods. He puts his faith and his trust in Jesus.

So, this mini-Mt. Carmel, this dusty thing that I was so reticent to get rid of, I think I couldn't let it go because it was reminding me of something so important. Of something VERY important about our relationship to God.

Either we worship a god we must continually appease, to whom we must continually prove our worth OR we are fully, and wholly, and completely worthy by definition. We are children of God. We are enough.

Mt. Carmel was a battle between false gods and the one true God. But I think for us today, it's a battle between the gods of our society and the gods we create to whom we must prove that we're lovable, that we're worthy of love. An eternal rat race to prove we're deserving – OR a God who knows our innate worth, who loves us because we are His children.

Discovered by a friend who heard me preach - see www.momastery.com/blog
So, either prove that you're worthy, or, put your ultimate faith and trust in God and KNOW that we are enough.

These are some of the reasons why I am so honored to be with you today and so excited about your Reading Camp, coming up here in just one week. It is because, as much as Reading Camp is about reading, about school preparedness, about building skills for academic success, it is even MORE about impressing upon the children that we serve that they are worthy. They are loved. And they are enough.

As any volunteer at a Reading Camp knows, each child brings with him a complex life story. Across the seven Reading Camp programs in the Diocese of Lexington, you'll find incredible diversity among these campers who come in all shapes and sizes, from all backgrounds.

Some children will indeed be from middle-class families, whose parents who are seeking every and all possible way to help their children achieve grade-level reading, build the skills they need.

Some children will be from low-income families, whose mothers may work more than one job to put food on the table.

Some will be foster children, some will be children who live in the mountains of our southeastern counties without running water, some will be from the inner-city in Covington who live with their grandmothers because their dad is in jail and their mother is on drugs.

Some will be poor, others will be comfortable. Some will be American-born and others will be refugee children whose families fled war and famine.

And amidst this diversity, there are two major common threads that bind them all together and make them so similar. The first is, as we know, the fact that they are struggling in school. They're really struggling to read. Before third grade, children must learn to read and after third grade, they must be able to read in order to learn, and they are without that basic skills. At risk of falling further and further behind. .

The second common thread is the despairing and hopeless prospect that many of them carry with them – even if they don't know it... I would assume some of us carry this with us too – that they are unworthy. That they're not smart enough, not pretty enough, not good enough. Part of this might stem from their academic struggles. Part of it may stem from their environment - their families, their peers, their schools. But, A large part of it, I argue, stems from our society and our media – tgese modern day false gods and idols – to whom we must prove that we are enough. These modern day false gods that applaud certain very narrow conceptions of beauty, and success and intelligence and diminish all others.

So this is where you, the people of Trinity Danville, step in. This is where the ministry of Reading Camp steps in, all of us, together. We are not only concerned with the children's reading skills, though that's core of what we're doing. More importantly, we are concerned with the children's self-perception, with their sense of worth. We want them to know that they know they ARE capable, intelligent, beautiful, worthy, and loved.

Reading Camp is first about building reading skills for academic success. But the other and far more important part of Reading Camp is Mt. Carmel – a battle between gods to whom we must prove our worth and the one true God who loves us and knows us to be innately worthy.

THAT is what you're doing with Reading Camp. You are disavowing those false gods who would make us sacrifice the best parts of ourselves to prove our worth. You are acknowledging the important truth that we are all children of God.

So, bless you. Bless you for your ministry to the children in Danville and Boyle County. You will, in gentle, kind, and loving ways, let each child know that they are loved, and they do not have to be afraid or ashamed of their struggles. That they are worthy. That you are, too. And we are all children of the one true and living God.

Sometimes I wish that my dusty model of Mt. Carmel was still around, as a reminder. But I know, all I have to do is look to Trinity Danville and to Reading Camp.

And Jesus said, “I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.”

Amen.

Monday, May 20, 2013

From Babel to Pentecost

Sermon at Church of the Ascension
Frankfort, KY
Perhaps the most distracted sermon I have preached, as there was a small black spider - of the jumping variety - crawling around the pulpit as I spoke.  By the time I reached the last line of my sermon, he was sitting atop the microphone, staring me square in the face.  



"From Babel to Pentecost" 

It was a hot day, but the climate was so dry that 95 degrees in the olive grove was much more pleasant than any 80 degree summer day in central Kentucky. My village “sisters” - the 4 and 7 year old daughters of my homestay family in Aoud Lma in southern Morocco – were eyeing me curiously as the men tried to explain to me how to harvest olives. My “mother” Sfia and “grandmother” Barka watched from a short distance, giggling occasionally at this pale-skinned, blue-eyed, curly-haired American girl who insisted on climbing the olive trees with the men instead of remaining on the ground with the women.

My cousin Mohammad gave up on words
and finally took to the trees
Mohammed, my “cousin,” explained in a multitude of ways how to do this job I insisted that I do. He tried Moroccan Arabic, some standard Arabic, some clumsy French and Spanish, his few words of English, and finally, laughing at my determination in spite of my bewilderment, gestures. “Yalla, 'Alia,” he said, motioning for me to follow him up the scrawny trunk of a tree.


My father Mohammad
We spent the afternoon in the olive grove. I climbed tree after tree with Mohammed, my cousin, and Mohammed, my father, and Mohammed my grandfather and shook down the plump green olives. Sfia and Barka gathered the fallen olives in their skirts while my little sisters Ghizlan and Fatima chased each other in circles. At the end of the day we retired for mint tea, bread and olive oil. We sat around the family's mud house and told stories, and while at least half of their words were lost to me and nearly all of my words lost to them, the smiles, the laughter, and the affection were deeply felt and understood.





My sisters Ghizlan and Fatima
Ghizlan and Fatima, who had previously been skeptical of me, now jockeyed for position sitting in my lap. Barka and Sfia showed me how to properly wrap my head scarf. Three generations of Mohammeds chuckled as they smoked hookah and recounted my climbing in the trees. I laughed along with them.


Every year when Pentecost rolls around – with the miracle of understanding, each listener hearing and interpreting the apostles’ words in his own language, the miracle of the Holy Spirit - I think of the afternoon in the olive grove.

My time in Morocco was the first in my life that I experienced what it was like to be “other” - to look different, to have different cultural assumptions, to be a foreign woman. I felt like an alien. It was my first time to be in a place where I understood less than one tenth of what was said around me. It gave me some insight into what being an “other” in America might be like – what it might be like to be an outsider, to be a minority, to be an immigrant, to be gay, to be something other than Christian.

Sfia, my cousin Mohammad, and Barka drinking
tea and telling stories after a long day's work
 At some point in the midst of my confusion and sense of isolation in Morocco, I found a deep sense of peace that I can only explain as abiding in the Spirit. My feeling of other-ness taught me to look and listen more deeply. And when I did that, I began to see the glimmers of God's presence. I was met by grace and welcome. When I quieted my anxieties and opened my heart, when I became intentional about being present in the moment – I met God. I met God in the patience, forbearance, kindness, gentleness, acceptance and radical hospitality of my village family. We may not have been speaking the same language, but we understood the same language. We understood generosity. We understood grace. We understood smiles. We understood love: The universals best expressed through your action, through your body language - and not only words.

 It was out of isolation and confusion that I learned to listen and open my heart. And when I did, Morocco no longer seemed like Babel. As I sought and found the face of God, learning to abide in the presence of the Spirit, I sought and found Pentecost.

The whole experience convinced me that it is our duty, as Christians, to seek, find, and bring Pentecost into the midst of our world of Babel.

Over the last few years, I have been privileged to watch a beautiful thing begin to take root at Church of the Ascension. I have visited this parish twice previously - this is my third morning with all of you - to preach and teach about Reading Camp, to meet and share fellowship and prayer with all of you. And over the last few years, you have discerned that God is calling you to be a welcoming, encouraging, and loving presence to struggling students in Franklin County. As you know, Reading Camp serves children who are grade levels behind in reading skills, children who are caught in a cycle of failure and self-doubt, feeling that they are “too stupid” to read. Children who feel like outsiders. Children who see lines and squiggles and shapes on a page that they are supposed to be able to interpret readily and fluidly, but that instead confuse and play tricks on them.

 I imagine they feel some of the isolation and bewilderment I felt when I lived abroad – the sense of “alone” that any of us feel when we are in a new and unfamiliar place, amongst new and unfamiliar, perhaps unfriendly, people. When we find ourselves in a Babel, where common language and common understanding has been lost.

Now I don't think this is a small thing; I think it's fairly widespread.  Whenever I turn on the news, I see this bewilderment and confusion. Babel, I think, is everywhere we look – our world has forgotten God the creator of all, sustainer of all, the Spirit which moves, guides, and teaches all of us – and we mere mortals have too often put ourselves in God's place. Inflated senses of power, and righteousness and strength, have led to corruption, discord, abuse, and fear. Ignorance and disregard for others' struggles, others' pain and hurt has bred distrust, division, and has broken down the fabric of our communities.  The world is in discord, and people all around us - and us too - are crying out to be heard, for someone to listen to us and to hear our stories.


Lexington Reading Camp 2011
So while your first Reading Camp this summer may seem like a very small, perhaps even insignificant, thing, I say to you – it is one of the most important things you can do in the lives of these children. You will gently and patiently listen to them in a world that has forgotten how to listen, you will be present with them in a world that moves way too fast, you will help them to learn to voice their struggles and their hurt in a world that has ignored them. You can be a place for healing in a world that medicates but doesn't treat the root cause.

And not only these things, but you will provide the tools to help them make sense of what is so confusing and scary. You will lead them from bewilderment to understanding. From Babel to Pentecost. You will offer glimpses of God.

So, abide in the Spirit. Be a presence of understanding, generosity, and patience.

In this morning's Gospel, “Philip said to Jesus, "Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied." Jesus said to him, "Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me?  Have I been with you all this time and you don't know me?"

Photo by Jenny Neat 2012 - Pine Mountain Reading Camp

We are the body of Christ, the children of God. And as you abide in the Spirit, offering a place of hope, joy, discovery, and learning to children this summer at Capital City Reading Camp, there will be no question that you are living out your Baptismal Covenant. And when someone asks, “Show us the Father, and we will be satisfied. Show us the face of God,” they will need only look to the ministry of Capital City Reading Camp to see the work of the Holy Spirit. To see the transformation of our broken world from Babel into Pentecost.

Amen.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Take Up Your Mat, and Walk

Sermon at St. John's Episcopal Church
Corbin, KY
Acts 16:9-15 | Psalm 67 | Revelation 21:10, 22-22:5 | John 5:1-9


“Take Up Your Mat, and Walk”

Sermons about This morning's Gospel often focus on themes of belief, faith, and the Sabbath. Like other healing stories, the man at Bethzatha seems to be healed by his faith in Jesus. After a short exchange with Jesus, he is healed not by the waters of the pool, but because Jesus says to him, “Take up your mat and walk.” Jesus heals on the Sabbath – a big no no in the legalistic view of the Pharisees, for whom working on the Sabbath was anathema, a sin.

Yet this morning, I want to call your attention to some new themes in this morning's Gospel. To pull your attention away from Jesus and instead to pull your attention to the man at the pool. And not his belief, not the idea that his faith made him whole. I want to call your attention to his excuses. To his fear. We will read the story with different inflection.

The man has been ill for 38 years. He has presumably lost his family, his livelihood. His existence has boiled down to a game of chance, of “maybe tomorrow.” He sits by the pool and he waits. He waits for the opportune moment to inch closer to the healing waters, but he is defeated, time and again. But perhaps it is not an external defeat – not that others beating him to the waters, day after day. After all, it has been 38 years. He's had a lot of time to make it to that pool. I wonder if, rather, this is an internal defeat. That he has given up. He's given up on being healed, given up on himself. He's resigned to this lot. Perhaps he believes that he's not worthy of anything more.

Jesus approaches, and knows that the man has been “there a long time.” And I wonder if we could read Jesus' question slightly differently. Not, “Do you want to be made well?” but “Do you want to be made well?” And the sick man says, “There's no one to help me. And when I am making my own way down there, someone else always gets ahead of me.”

Now, either this is a stroke of some chronic bad luck or some chronic “giving up” on himself.

I don't think he is prevented from being healed because external factors are rendering it impossible. I think – I wonder – what if he doesn't want to be healed? What if being healed means that everything he's clinged so closely to and held so tightly would go away? Everything would change, his world would be turned upside down. That's some scary stuff. Everything would be different. What would it even mean if he could walk again?

So he tells Jesus- “someone always steps in before me.”

But, I think that Jesus is a rather mischievous fellow sometimes and I wonder if he didn't have any patience for the man. “Do you want to be made well?” He pauses and listens. I imagine Jesus having a mischievous grin, listening kindly and patiently to the fear and the reticence for anything to change. And then looking down at the man and gently saying, “Take up your mat and walk.”

Take it up and WALK.


It made me think about what excuses we might make for ourselves, what excuses I make for myself.

A dear friend recently introduced me to the author Cheryl Strayed. Cheryl is a novelist and essayist and several years ago she became the author of a column called “Dear Sugar,” which is an advice column on the website The Rumpus. She remained anonymous for a while before she went with her identity, and eventually publishing a collection of pieces in this book, called “tiny beautiful things.”

Now, I've never been much of a fan of advice columns and I thought that when my friend recommended this book to me that she had kind of missed the mark of who I was. I didn't think this book would appeal to me. But, I trusted her, so I started reading.

My mind was changed. This book contains some of the most poignant, sad, hopeful, joyful stories I have ever read. And every response that Cheryl gives kind of rips my heart open. It shocks me every time I read it. I think of this book in some ways as a modern Gospel, with the letters being written by modern day lepers and tax collectors, prostitutes and Pharisees. People who are struggling with some really tough stuff. And Cheryl responds with such compassion and such gentleness, but that doesn't mean that the answers are always very easy to hear. They are very often the hardest answers. The answers no one wants to hear.

To a man struggling with drug addiction:
“Your convergence of physical pain, drug addiction, financial woe, no health insurance, and an unhappy marriage is truly daunting. But you don't have the luxury of despair. You can find a way to overcome these difficulties, and you must. There aren't three options. There is only one. As Rilke says, 'You must change your life.'”

To a young man convinced he will never be loved due to severe body deformities, Cheryl tells the story of her friend, Ian, who was burned horribly in a gas fire. Although his life was happy and complete in most ways, Cheryl says, Ian never had another romantic relationship after his accident. She writes to an advice seeker, the man with the body deformities: “And your question to me – the very core of it – is circling around the same thing [that Ian struggled with]. It's not Will I ever find someone who will love me romantically – but rather Am I capable of letting someone [love me]?

Are you capable of letting someone love you?

Take up your mat – your pain, your anger, your envy, your arrogance, your shame – and walk.

You don't have the luxury of despair.

I think that is what Jesus is saying to us when he visits the ill man at the pool of Bethzatha.

The ministry of Reading Camp – which is a ministry of the whole diocese and its people including St. John's Corbin – works with 2nd-4th grade children who are grade levels behind in their reading.

The children are all shapes and sizes, from all backgrounds and all walks of life.

This summer, we will host middle-class children whose parents are seeking every and all possible ways to help their children build skills and self-confidence.

We will host low-income children whose single mothers work two or more jobs to put food on the table.

We will host foster children, children who live in the mountains without running water, children from the inner-city who live with their grandmothers because their dad is in jail and their mother is on drugs.

We will host the poor and the comfortable, American-born children and refugee children whose families fled war and famine, children from two-parent and two-income homes and children who don't know their fathers.

And beneath all this diversity of class, color, nationality, location, language, and culture lies two common threads that show these children – and all of us – to be oh-so-similar and vulnerable, beautiful, growing children of God.

The first thing is the fact that they are struggling in school with reading, the basic skill that must be attained in order to succeed in school and in life. Before third grade, children are learning to read. After third grade, children must read in order to learn. And these children are behind, at risk of falling further and further behind. So we step in and help in the summer to make sure they retain and build skills.

The second common thread is the despairing and hopeless prospect that many of them carry with them – though they might not even know it – that they are unworthy. That they're not smart enough, not pretty enough, not good enough. Part of this might stem from their academic struggles. Part of it may stem from their environment -their families, their schools, their communities, their peers. A large part of it, I would argue, stems from our society and our media which applauds certain very narrow conceptions of beauty, intelligence, and strength and diminishes others.

So this is where we step in, this ministry of Reading Camp, of all of us, together. We are not only concerned with the children's reading skills, though that is our core mission. That is our foundation. Far more importantly, we are concerned with the children's self-perception, with their sense of worth. We are concerned with their spirits – and I don't mean in the religious sense, necessarily, though that's certainly a part of it. We are concerned with their emotional well-being – that they know they ARE capable, they are intelligent, they are beautiful, they are worthy, and they are loved.

In gentle, kind, loving ways, we let each child know that they are worthy, they are loved, and they do not have to be afraid or ashamed. We extend a patient hand holding a book, welcome the child to sit next to us, and welcome them into a story of their own of self-discovery, of self-confidence. We let them know that we believe so much in the gifts they have to offer to the world.

You do not have the luxury of despair. Take up your mat and walk.

I'll finish with a story that, when I read it, kind of ripped my heart out. Cheryl Strayed tells a story of a time she lived in Brooklyn with her husband, in an apartment building where they were the only tenants. However, they began to hear strange sounds coming from within the walls of their apartment.

She writes, “Something behind the walls, and then from the ceiling. Something close, then distant, then close again, the gone. I didn't know what it was. It sounded awful. Like a baby who was extremely discrete. ..

The sound kept coming and going, all through December, impossible to define or reach... On New Year's Day we woke at seven to a howling. We jumped out of bed. The sound was the same one we'd been hearing for three weeks, but it wasn't discrete anymore. It was coming very clearly from the ceiling of our closet. My husband immediately got a hammer and started pounding away at the plaster with the claw end, chipping it in great chalky chunks that fell over our clothes. Within ten minutes, he'd clawed almost the entire closet ceiling away. We didn't care that we were ruining the place. We knew only that we had to get to the source of the sound...

At first it seemed like there was nothing – that the horrible sound maker had again gone away, or perhaps we really had imagined it – but a moment later two emaciated kittens appeared, coming to peer down at us from the jagged edge of the hole. They were the strangest things I've ever seen. So skeletal they should have been dead, visibly shaking with fear, caked in soot and spiderwebs and globs of black grease, their eyes enormous and blazing.

My husband and I held up our palms and the kittens walked into them immediately. They were so light it was like holding air.

I never found a way to write about this until I realized it was a story you needed to hear. Not how the kittens suffered during those weeks they were wandering inside the dark building with no way out – but how they saved themselves. How frightened those kittens were, and yet how they persisted. How when two strangers offered up their palms, they stepped in.”

The Gospel this morning let me think a lot about what might be my own source of pain or hurt or sadness or sorrow. So I ask you, what might you be holding tightly to, sitting next to the side of a healing pool, resigned to never stepping in? “Someone always gets in ahead of me,” you think. It is too hard to change, that relationship is dead, he/she/they will never forgive me, I'm not worthy of love, my envy, anger, anxiety has taken over me. My life cannot change. “Whenever I try to lower myself into the pool, something else stops me.”

And Jesus looks at us with his warm and loving eyes, extends an outstretched hand, and says -

Take your mat. Get up and walk.”

AMEN.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Reading Camp takes literacy to the world

Reading Camp takes literacy to the world

I'm very blessed to be a part of this ministry of the Episcopal Diocese of Lexington.