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Sunday’s Sermon – Incarnational Living – Hebrews 13:1-8

September 1, 2019 Leave a Comment

How are you doing today? It’s a question we tend to answer multiple times a day, so much so that it’s become a cursory response. “fine” “good” “ok” “busy, but good” are all culturally acceptable responses, and they may indeed be our true answers. But what about when we have other answers to give? What if we have accomplished something incredible and we want to share how proud we are. What if life is going really well and we have a lot to celebrate. Those responses seem to go over pretty well. And then, there are the other answers. The ones that answer the question just as honestly, but are not really what the asker is looking for. What if we are tired because we have been going non-stop for who knows how many weeks now and we are desperate for a break. What if we are struggling with the weight of the world and our lives in such a way that just getting dressed and out the door was a challenge. What if we are angry and irritated because we’ve just had a fight with a loved one. What if we are anxious or worried because we don’t know how a situation in our lives is going to work out. Typically, I’ll venture that many of us conceal these types of answers, and substitute a “fine” when asked, because we know that the one asking was just making polite conversation, and probably doesn’t want us to go into the whole answer. And, as a result, we engage in routine transactional conversations like this day in and day out, seemingly forming relationships with each other based on reciprocity.

“Let mutual love continue.” This morning, I want to offer that the writer of Hebrews calls us to a different level of engagement with each other. This isn’t just a “hey- ask each other how they are doing, then smile and nod and be on your way.” It is a radical call to be in community with each other in ways that reflect honesty and solidarity. If the rest of the letter is filled with what it means to “do good” and “be good” and follow in the footsteps of the legends of faith, here the author concludes with an earnest plea that this way of living not be solitary, and outlines ways in which that is lived out with these words about community.

The illustrations are striking: offering hospitality to strangers, no doubt referencing Abraham and Sarah’s welcoming of the 3 visitors in Genesis, and spending time with those in prison or who are tortured, along with a note about a marital bed. All have one thing in common: they are places where people, where we, are the most vulnerable.  And that is a hard place to be. I’d venture a guess that’s the reason we hesitate to dig deeper into that “how are you doing” question; because it comes in times and places where we don’t want to make ourselves vulnerable, or slow down to really just be with each other.

Do you have someone in your life to whom you can honestly answer the question “how are you doing?” Or, perhaps even more importantly, when you ask that question are you prepared for the fullness of possibilities it brings? Can those you ask give you their most honest answer? If so, you’re on the way to mutual love. Seeking to go deeper in relationships with others, it is said that John Wesley would open small group meetings with the question “how is it with your soul?” Cursory answers don’t quite fit that. Instead, it’s a deep look in the eyes of another person, and following up that social exchange with “but really. How are you?” Such a question opens the door to truly being in a community with each other that is marked by mutual love, because it opens the door to hearing and holding the challenges others experience in life.

This kind of listening is difficult. More often than not, we approach those experiencing challenges or vulnerability with sympathy. We feel sorry for their situation and attempt to offer some sort of condolences, support, or pity. Doing this is a start, but also continues to keep us at a distance. What the writer of Hebrews pushes, I think, is a more engaged and relational way of being with each other.

Dr Brené Brown is a best-selling author, speaker and research professor. She has spent the past decade studying vulnerability, courage, worthiness, and shame[i]. She argues that the best way to ease someone’s pain and suffering is not sympathy, but empathy. The Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, whose mission is to enrich society through ideas and action, put some of her words with animation to explain the distinction between sympathy and empathy, and what it means to have a genuine empathetic connection, or, as I would offer, a genuine mutual love connection. Let’s check it out:

https://www.thersa.org/discover/videos/rsa-shorts/2013/12/Brene-Brown-on-Empathy

What makes something better is connection. That is Hebrews 13 in a nutshell, maybe even the whole letter and in some ways the sum of all of our scriptures. As people of God, we are a connectional people – not just on some surface passing on the street level, but on a meaningful and significant level as siblings in Christ. Theologican Dietrich Bonhoeffer said:

We belong to one another only through and in Jesus Christ[ii].

He continued to note, as you see on your bulletin cover, that through Christ, we have been given this gift of community with God and with each other, and called to actively participate in it[iii].

In Jesus Christ, God modeled what mutual love was all about. Rather than just look down from a cloud and say “wow, that’s a pretty messed up world. You want a sandwich?” God became flesh and lived among us. Literally came down into the world so that God would know what the human experience was like firsthand. God didn’t just have sympathy for the way things were in the world. God had empathy. God was present with God’s people, just as God had been since the beginning when God led the people of Israel through the wilderness with a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night (see Exodus 13). In Jesus, God continues to be faithful. God sits next to us when we are overwhelmed. God stops to listen to whatever answer we have to that question “how are you?” God promises us that we will never be alone, to the end of the age. We know this as the incarnation, and it sets the tone for how we relate to God, and how we relate to each other.  When we live in empathy, we live out an incarnational theology, reflecting a God who comes alongside us and is present with us as we seek to come alongside and be present with each other.

Maybe it starts by truly asking each other how we are doing, and taking the time to listen. Maybe it continues by finding spaces where we can be brave and vulnerable in ways that open us up to answering with the most honesty we can muster. Maybe then we will be entertaining angels. At the very least, children of God.

Let mutual love continue . . . And, how are you doing today? Amen.

Sermon by Rev. Elizabeth Lovell Milford, Heritage Presbyterian Church, September 1, 2019

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[i] https://www.thersa.org/discover/videos/rsa-shorts/2013/12/Brene-Brown-on-Empathy

[ii] Bonhoeffer.

[iii] “Christian brotherhood is not an ideal which we must realize; it is rather a reality created by God in Christ in which we may participate.” Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Life Together: The Classic Exploration of Christian Community, trans. and introduction by John W. Doberstein, (New York: HarperOne, 1954).

 

 

Filed Under: Church blog Tagged With: community, discipleship, empathy, fellowship, friendship, hebrews, incarnation, jesuschrist, mutuallove, sermon, sympathy

Sunday’s Sermon – Relational Living – Luke 6:27-38, Genesis 45:3-11, 15

February 24, 2019 Leave a Comment

From family and friends to coworkers and classmates, from long-term commitments and contracts to momentary exchanges, relationships are the building blocks of our lives. They are some of the first things that we learn, and are something we spend a lifetime trying to figure out. How well or not we navigate them can impact everything from our psychological well-being and happiness to our success in both social and business worlds.

For many of us, the core of these relationships is marked by the “Golden Rule,” which as we heard a few moments ago, is nestled in the gospel itself: “do to others as you would have them do to you” (Luke 6:31). It’s a reasonable mantra to assume of course, calling us to respect and care for each other. We nod along with these phrases because they appeal to our most basic desire to have things go well for us so that we ourselves might prosper, and fall into our understanding of living in a quid pro quo world. When we invest and give, whether physically or emotionally, we expect something in return. It’s tremendously awkward, isn’t it, when someone brings you a gift say for Christmas or Valentine’s Day and you have nothing for them. Favors are even expected to be returned. This also applies to the negative. When bad things happen, retribution is the expectation. We want to seek revenger or at least “get even.” Much of our living is transactional, even in our relationships.

Jesus takes a look at the ways we relate to each other in his “Sermon on the Plain,” which we continued reading this morning. In it, he presents a vision for what it looks like to live in the kingdom of God. And, as we learned last week, life in God’s reign turns things upside down with radical reversals to our expected norms. Instead of repaying evil with evil, Jesus calls us to choose another path that is diametrically opposed to some of our instincts.Commentator Charles Bugg notes that:

The admonition of Luke to love even our enemies is not just a good idea where we try our best to make it happen. It is not a call to grit our teeth and make a resolution to be nicer even to those who are not nice to us. Rather, the call of Luke is to live in a way contrary to our human nature, a way that is possible only as we “live out” of a new power born from above[i].

What does this look like? Consider the image on the cover of our bulletin, created by Ukrainian sculptor Alexandr Milov for the Burning Man Festival in the Nevada desert in 2015. The sculpture reflects the realities that life often puts us in conflict with each other, perhaps even back-to-back, facing in opposite directions. And yet, we each seem to have something inside of us that longs to be connected to each other, which the artist equated to an inner child or innocence. As darkness falls, the sculpture shifted slightly, and the smaller figures began to shine and glow. The artist noted that:

this shining is a symbol of purity and sincerity that brings people together and gives a chance of making up when the dark time arrives[ii].

Put alongside our text from Luke, I wonder if this sculpture, appropriately titled “love” might also be a reflection of the kind of life Jesus was calling his disciples, and us, to live. Perhaps that something inside of us is the Holy Spirit, God’s nudging us into the kind of relationships that Jesus described.

To live in this way is to proclaim that the inbreaking of God into human history through Jesus Christ makes a difference. It proclaims that the reign of God, the coming of God’s kingdom as described by Jesus, is not just a promise for the future, but is something that can be realized, at least in part, even now in our own reality. And this new reality makes all the difference in the way we respond to other people. Loving and praying for our enemies, and going the extra mile even in the face of adversity, means living in hope – and acting toward the possibility – that even the hardest parts of our lives can be transformed by the goodness of God’s grace in this world. Jesus’ sermon invites us into a life where we let go of the things that trap us: judgment and condemnation, and instead embrace forgiveness and generosity as the markers of our relationships.

To see what this looks like, we might turn to the story of Joseph. Joseph, perhaps more than almost anyone else, has clear reasons to seek retribution and revenge against his brothers. Do you remember the beginning of the story? He is a son of Jesse, who has interpreted dreams and shared these visions with his father and brothers. He is the favored son, given a beautiful coat of many colors. And understandably so, his brothers are jealous. It’s also worth pointing out that Joseph is probably a bit bratty and self-absorbed. He might have even lorded that special coat and “favorite child” status over his siblings, as siblings tend to do. In response, his brothers taken him to the outskirts of town to do him harm, then in an act of “mercy,” leave him in a dried up well for dead. As they wait, a caravan comes along and they decide to make a profit and sell him into slavery in Egypt. His story spans more than a dozen chapters in Genesis, a mixture of winning favor with the king and poor decisions that land him in jail, but wind up with him in the royal court in a position instrumental for the very survival of the people in the midst of famine. It is here where his brothers return, pleading for their very right to existence. Oh how the tables have turned.

It would make sense if Joseph treated his brothers the way that he had been treated. Surely he had not forgotten. We would have understood if he had looked at them and said “I am Joseph, your brother. Remember me? Now you’re going to get what is coming to you.” But instead, we get a radical reversal. Joseph’s confrontational moment reveals his true identity but then, rather than focus on revenge, he offers forgiveness, grounded in an understanding of God’s grace and presence in his own life. He seeks reconciliation in this moment, which will lead to the sharing of a feast of peace with his family. It is a radical act made possible by the overwhelming grace of God.

This morning, we will celebrate another radical act marked by God’s grace as we celebrate the sacrament of baptism. Baptism reminds us that the love and mercy that comes from God, the promise of covenant and forgiveness and relationship, comes not because of anything we have done, can do, or will do, but because of the grace of God through Jesus Christ. This is why we can be so bold as to make the claim of it for infants, because God’s grace comes to us even before we can possibly do anything to deserve it. Baptism reminds us that the work of reconciliation has already been done through Christ, who welcomes us into a new way of living, marked not by transactions, but by grace.

That, I think, is the kind of living in God’s reign that Jesus had in mind with this sermon on the plain; a life marked by an awareness of God’s presence and God’s grace in a way that changes everything about how we view the world, especially our relationship with others. May we live together in aspiration of the way Jesus taught us, for when we do, we get a glimpse at what it looks like to be in the kingdom of God. May it be so. Amen.

~sermon by Rev. Elizabeth Lovell Milford, Heritage Presbyterian Church, February 24, 2019

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[i] Charles Bugg, “Pastoral Perspective: Luke 6:27-38,” Feasting on the Word, Year C Volume 1, David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor, Editors, (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2009).

[ii] https://aplus.com/a/alexandr-milov-love-burning-man-2015-sculpture?no_monetization=true

Filed Under: Church blog Tagged With: community, relationships, sermon

Sunday’s Sermon – Homeroom Lessons: Watch Your Words – Ephesians 4:25-5:2

August 12, 2018 Leave a Comment

“Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me!”

Do you remember learning this rhyme on the playground, perhaps being taught it as a response to name-calling? It’s an old rhyme, with one of the earliest citations of it found in a March of 1862 issue of The Christian Recorder, a periodical published by the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church. The article insisted that:

true courage consists in doing what is right despite the jeers and sneers of our companions[i].

It referenced the popular rhyme as an old adage, one that had been around for a while and had stood the test of time, likely due to its sage wisdom as well as recurring need to hear it. For as much as we nod along and repeat it, we know it to be a truth that pushes against our reality; namely, words can hurt – deeply. And this is true whether they are intended as weapons, spoken without much thought at all, or even voiced in honesty.

Our text for this morning from the letter to the Ephesians zeroes in on the importance of words and speech we use within the Christian community. The premise is relatively simple and straightforward; we are to speak truthfully to one another. Authenticity in speech is what binds the community together. Without it, we will certainly fail. But with it comes a risk, which quickly follows in verse 26. The truth is sometimes going to be messy. It gets intertwined with anger and bickering, gossip and bitterness, and all sorts of other things. Sound about right? The classic example of this, of course is that no-win question “does this dress make me look fat?” But more than just the need for carefully worded answers, words matter to us because alongside the belief that we are to be honest with each other, we are conditioned with being “nice” – almost to a fault. At times, the two seem at odds. In the South, we couch this by adding phrases like “bless her heart.”

In her book, Waking Up White, Debby Irving identifies this as one of the reasons having conversations about race is so difficult. She reflects on the ways in which her upbringing in New England taught her to sweep things under the rug and avoid many topics, particularly racial or controversial ones, because they were things “we just don’t talk about.” Avoidance becomes a marker of success. And somewhere in the midst of that, the ability to speak truth at times gets pushed to the back, because it would most certainly result in feelings of judgment or anger. Irving notes that:

The culture of niceness provides a tidy cover, creating a social norm that says conflict is bad, discomfort should be avoided, and those who create them mark themselves as people who lack the kind of emotional restraint necessary to hold positions of power. Another vicious cycle[ii].

This means that important conversations got ignored, and those without power are silenced. It’s one manifestation of injustice, and it moves us farther away from the instructions to the Ephesians.

So how do we get out of such a cycle, and into the framework where we instead “speak the truth”? In 1992, MTV debuted a show with the following tagline:
Seven strangers picked to live in a house . . . and have their lives taped . . . to find out what happens . . . when people stop being polite . . . and start getting real.

The Real World ran for 32 seasons (!), and essentially was a study in what it meant to be in community together. These strangers, as they got to know each other and built relationships, soon realized that they didn’t all agree on, well, practically anything sometimes. And yet, they were forced together in this microcosm environment where they had to figure it out. Drama and conflict made for compelling television and somewhat manipulated storylines. To be sure, it was often pretty ugly.

I think, though, there’s room for a bit of a parallel with the church and this passage from Ephesians. We have been picked to live in this “house,” the church – called by Christ (remember, the first three chapters of Ephesians captures this gift of grace in a nutshell), and now are called to make something of it. Eventually, the “nice” is going to wear out. No doubt the early church felt that, with mounting pressures and persecutions. And the writer of Ephesians, likely a contemporary or student of Paul’s, is writing about what happens when things start to get real.

Now, hear me out on this – I don’t think it’s a bad thing to want to be respectful and polite. Watching our words absolutely means paying attention to how we phrase things to one another, including an awareness that not all words or terms are appropriate. This is critical if we want to advance conversation and truly get to the heart of what matters to us. But sometimes, we get lazy about our words and simply choose to stay quiet, which can get in the way of our truth telling, and serves simply to avoid conflict. And when we do that, I think we fall short of the kind of community that Ephesians references, because we miss the opportunity to address the truths that we are called as children of God, to speak to our neighbors. Debby Irving continues:

Ignoring feelings and trying to smooth them over with pleasant chitchat only promises to hold people back from allowing their hearts to join their minds in recognizing injustice when it’s right in front of them, or even inside them[iii].

When we start to bottle these things up, they can lead to resentments between us and tension in our relationships. This happens between friends and spouses, within groups and communities, and even on a bigger scale in our society. In fact, I would offer that it’s been happening for quite some time now in our country. It is an understatement to say we live in divisive times, where tensions are high. Words are cutting like swords. Name-calling is rampant. In fact, sometimes that’s as far as it gets before things escalate. Instead of speaking truth to one another, many are simply content to throw out labels and slogans that separate us from our neighbors, even when we know those stereotypes are a lie. Because they are, right? That’s the entire nature of stereotypes – they’re oversimplified images or ideas about a person or thing; the do not tell the whole story, the whole truth about any individual. Consider that for a moment. Words like “conservative” or “Republican” or “liberal” or “Democrat” do not define any one person or even one group. Why, then, are we letting those take such a hold on us? What would it look like for us, as the church, to speak the truth to our neighbors about these divisions? Or even to speak the truth to ourselves about them and the ways in which they are coloring how we see one another? We might just stumble back into Ephesians, with the reminder that “we are members of one another” (verse 25). As such, we are called to do more than throw out labels in anger. That makes room for evil to work. Instead, we are called to a different way of being.

Ephesians acknowledges that speaking the truth will lead to anger and conflict, but it does not leave us there. Instead, it gives us some practical advice for how to make it through it. Verse 29 tells us “let no evil talk come out of your mouths, but only what is useful for building up, as there is need, so that your words may give grace to those who hear.” At first, this might remind us of the advice from the classic Disney movie, Bambi, where the rabbit Thumper recounts advice from his mother, “If you can’t say something nice, don’t say nothing at all.” But considering this in the context of a passage about speaking the truth, we can’t be satisfied with mere silence and avoidance; that’s how we end up in the “culture of niceness,” that gets us nowhere. Instead, we might take a step back, and consider that our words matter, and find a way to offer constructive criticism to one another in love.

One of my seminary courses was on group dynamics, and my professor, much to our chagrin, harped on a concept known as “The Awareness Wheel,” forcing us to use its cycle with almost every comment we made in class. It is especially helpful in conflict, because it focuses on sensory data and “I” statements that remain focused on the core issue. It goes something like this:

  • State your observation “I sense” -or “When I see/hear”
  • Reflect on your thoughts, “I think . . .”
  • Name your feelings, “and I feel. . .”, identifying the core emotion at play.
  • Identify what you want to happen, “I want,” and finally
  • Make a commitment to what you might do to achieve that purpose, “I will. . .”

Truthfully, most of us absolutely hated the Awareness Wheel. It even became a running joke to work into lunchroom conversations. Equally as truthful? It’s totally helpful in conversation particularly when things are tense. It’s a tool I use with couples preparing for marriage and groups in conflict. And when I’m at my best communicating, I employ it in my own life. It’s also helpful in navigating toddler tantrums when you need to keep your sanity. But most of all, I think it points to the kind of grace-filled speech that Ephesians is getting at. This passage reminds us that it’s not about avoiding the tough conversations; it’s about engaging in them faithfully and well, so that we are working towards reconciliation and building each other up.

In school, we might have been told to “watch your words.” This is more than just a reminder not to curse or say hate-filled theme. It’s a call to speak with intention. To put aside the things that are laced with anger and bitterness and spitefulness and instead seek kindness, which I would argue is distinct from the niceness we talked about earlier. As one friend put it, “kindness is telling a friend, or even stranger, who is leaving the restroom that her dress is tucked into her underwear; niceness is not saying anything because you don’t want to embarrass her.”

Kindness is not ignoring the difficulty of conflict and disagreement; kindness is being willing to work through it together. That leads us to an openness to forgiveness, made possible not because we possess superhero type powers of forgetfulness, but because we live in an awareness of the gift of grace that comes in remembering that God has forgiven us through Jesus Christ. This is what gives us the confidence and competence to attempt to forgive each other, and is what can become the work of reconciliation. God who has made us members of one another in Christ, seeks that we follow in his footsteps, that we might become imitators of our Savior himself, and live in the love he first showed to us. It always starts and ends with God. In between are the words we say to one another. May we be attentive to them, take on the bold task of truth-telling and hard conversations with each other, and find ourselves living in love as Christ’s community is built up even now. Amen.

~Rev. Elizabeth Lovell Milford
August 12, 2018

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[i] https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/sticks-and-stones-may-break-my-bones.html
[ii] Debby Irving, Waking Up White and Finding Myself in the Story of Race, (Cambridge, MA: Elephant Room Press, 2014).
[iii] Debby Irving

Filed Under: Church blog Tagged With: Christian, communication, community, ephesians, homeroomlessons, honesty, kind, kindness, nice, racism, sermon, speaktruth, speech, words

Sunday’s Sermon – In Good Company – Psalm 111

January 28, 2018 Leave a Comment

In Good Company

Today is a day of celebration! As a congregation, we gather for special events that allow us to rejoice in the ministry God has called us to here at Heritage Presbyterian Church. The newsletter report this past week is full of excitement and good news about the places and ways we have seen God at work in the past year. Our congregational meeting builds on that foundation as we anticipate another year together. And, of course, there is much to be appreciative of with the incredible response we have received in the face of the tremendous task of replacing and repairing various parts of our HVAC system. Looking around this room today, I see a glimpse of the great cloud of witnesses. I think about the many gifts you offer to our life together, and the ways that everyone here contributes to what it means to be a family of faith. This is just as true for those who have been here since near the beginning to those who have recently held the loaves of bread that welcome new visitors. Without you, all of you, here, it would not be the same. I feel truly blessed to be in such great company. And when surrounded by so many blessings, there is only one thing to do – give thanks.

The Psalmist knew this well. Psalm 111 begins with the exclamation “Hallelujah!” which the NRSV translates rightly as “Praise the Lord!” It is meant to be a joyous song of praise, a boasting in God. We might recall the slogan of the Reformation, “to God alone be the glory.” To begin with this exclamation reminds us of the root of all of that which we celebrate – God. Whenever we become aware of life’s blessings, we are prompted to give credit where credit is due – to God. And, as I shared with the children, in today’s Psalm, the songwriter covers it from A to Z. The Psalm also covers the entire history of the people of Israel. The verses map out a fly-over of the history of God’s interaction with God’s creation, sweeping through all of time and space to remind the community gathered of all that God has done, from creation to the parting of the  sea. This psalm tells the whole story of the people of God. Which means it tells our story, too.

This morning, we have engaged in some storytelling ourselves, as we have recalled moments of celebration in the past year. We have given thanks to those who have gone above and beyond in dedication to ministry through the Watwood Window of Service Award. We have highlighted facts and figures and moments in our common life. But to put this celebration in the context of the Psalm, we might also remind ourselves that God has been at work well before the past year. Those named today will join others dating back to 1991 who have received the same award (you can read them in your bulletin insert, along with the story of the project that inspired the award). We may be worshiping in a unique location for the start of this year, but as one member reminded me, it’s not that different from the very first place this congregation met, in a day care center on highway 92. The stories that we tell today weave together with our past in rich ways.

And, lest we think it’s all about us, the Psalmist reminds us that our stories intertwine with those of God’s people throughout the ages. In faith, we are connected to believers in every time and place. When we read this Psalm, or any psalm, in worship, we are repeating a centuries old worship practice. We are taking our place among the company of the upright. There is a beautiful song released in 2008 by entertainer Julianne Hough that almost reads like a modern interpretation of a psalm. It begins:

            Look at me, can’t believe I finally made it here
Feeling like I’m where I belong, singing my hallelujah song[i]!

It seems that when we sing praises, particularly to God, we find ourselves in good company. Kindred spirits and friends are found. Our thanksgiving and hallelujah songs are the beginnings of community, and are some of the best descriptors of what it means to be “the upright” – that is, God’s people, giving praise. Anne Apple notes:

The essential structure of God’s gathered people is to be an unfolding narrative, rather than a rigid institutional system[ii].

That is the kind of story we tell with our Hallelujahs. The psalm suggests a way of being for us as God’s people. Thanksgiving should mark our time together here in this church and in our lives. The key is an increased awareness of God’s presence and role in our lives. As Thomas D. Parker says:

To live as if there were no God is to live in a space too small for our souls to grow and flourish[iii].

Instead, we are called to notice and name God, so that we are better able to see the big picture. It can begin with the simple practice of asking “where have you seen God today?” What if that was what we said to each other during the passing of the peace, or as we passed in the hallways? Chances are it would be less passing and more bonding. The same can be asked in the car running errands or around a dinner table. Or, differently framed, “what would you thank God for today?” In doing this, we will begin to see the magnitude of the God the psalmist talks about. Parker continues:
Those who revere (“fear”) God live in a larger world, because they allow themselves to be open to something greater, something better, that lies deeply within even the most ordinary experiences[iv].
A life of thanksgiving and hallelujah is “living large.”

The psalmist prepares us for such a way of being. The work begins with a hallelujah, which roots us in an understanding of God’s presence throughout it all. Then, our songs of praise and thanksgiving bind us together in community in powerful ways.  I think this happens in part because our gratitude reveals what we have in common. By offering praise together, we are celebrating that which we have in common. Last year, a Danish tv channel produced a powerful commercial about community titled “All That We Share[v].” Take a look:

Every time those individuals stepped outside of their boxes, they were singing a hallelujah. When there was clapping, or signs of acceptance or reassurance, a knowing look, or even just a moment of acknowledgement for that which we cannot understand about each other, there was a gratitude for the good company they were in. In those moments of naming all that we share, we might also hear the voice of the Psalmist giving thanks to God for what connects us – that we are all beloved children of God. Gratitude and grace go hand in hand.

In her book on prayer, writer Anne LaMott argues that there are only three types of prayers, “Help,” “Thanks,” and “Wow.”  In speaking about thanksgiving, she, too, talks about the importance of it being a fully embodied act just as the Psalm introduces. She writes:

Gratitude begins in our hearts and then dovetails into behavior . . . You breathe in gratitude, and you breathe it out, too. Once you learn how to do that, then you can bear someone who is unbearable[vi].

For LaMott, the idea of gratitude stems from an understanding of grace, and brings us to a sense of community; “from the package of self-obsessed madness to a spiritual awakening[vii].” And it leads us to act accordingly. Our Hallelujahs go from being words on our lips to the words of our lives.

Today, I invite you to live out the Psalm together here and now. Step outside of whatever box you might be in and give thanks to God for all that we share. Find some additional good company, here in this room. Sit next to new people at lunch (and maybe even the next time you come to worship). It is a safe space, and a brave space. Here is where we can learn and grow, so that when we go through those doors, we can step out of the other boxes we are in. This is what it means to give thanks with our whole hearts, offering everything we are to God and to each other. For God has indeed done marvelous and amazing things, and we have been included as part of that story.  Hallelujah! Let’s praise the Lord! For we are in good company. Amen.

~Rev. Elizabeth Lovell Milford
January 28, 2018

___________________________________________________________

[i] Julianne Hough, “My Hallelujah Song” 2008 Mercury Records, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2mu0g3ir_w, accessed 1/25/18.
[ii] Anne H. K. Apple, “Pastoral Perspective: Psalm 111,” Feasting on the Word: Year B, Volume 1, David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor, Editors, (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008).
[iii] Thomas D. Parker, “Theological Perspective: Psalm 111,” Feasting on the Word: Year B, Volume 1, David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor, Editors, (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008).
[iv] Thomas D. Parker, “Theological Perspective: Psalm 111,” Feasting on the Word: Year B, Volume 1, David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor, Editors, (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008).
[v] “All That We Share” Tv2, published on YouTube January 27, 2017 – 3:01 length – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jD8tjhVO1Tc accessed 1/25/18.
[vi] Anne Lamott, Help, Thanks, Wow: The Three Essential Prayers, (New York: Riverhead Books, 2012).
[vii] Anne Lamott, Help, Thanks, Wow: The Three Essential Prayers, (New York: Riverhead Books, 2012).

Filed Under: Church blog Tagged With: blessed, community, company, gratitude, praise, sermon, thanks

Christmas Traditions – November Newsletter

November 1, 2017 Leave a Comment

Few things match the beauty of Christmas decorations, especially the large scale ones in malls and shopping centers. I still get amazed as I look at all of the bright lights and glistening tinsel; looking at these beautiful seasonal displays really gets me in the Christmas spirit. I remember as a child going with my family to the mall this time of year, to do some shopping, and if we had time, to sit on Santa’s knee. There was an excited anticipation for this trip, wishing and dreaming for what would be under the tree, and having the chance to whisper it in the jolly man’s ear.

Alongside this was another tradition in my family. Usually next to Santa’s workshop in the mall was a special tree, full of paper angels. Each year, my mom would help me pick out an angel to shop for – usually a girl my age, although as I got older I had more input. We would talk about how not all children get to sit on Santa’s lap and have presents under the tree, and how we were going to help be Santa’s elves. We would look over the list, come up with ideas, and then go shopping. I would pick out things that I thought she might like – and if I got stuck, my mom would remind me that this was a little girl just like me, so maybe we liked some of the same things. In a small, but tangible way, my parents taught me that this was what Christmas was all about – giving and sharing. One year, my Girl Scout troop even got to help with a Christmas party the local Salvation Army was throwing for those receiving gifts. I was amazed at the room lined up with presents, and the volunteers hard at work to make sure each child had a special Christmas. I remember the faces of those children, too – just like mine had been in line for Santa, filled with the Christmas spirit as we sang carols, played games, and ate cookies. Thinking back on these moments now, I am pretty sure this is some of what the kingdom of God is like, too.

As I interviewed to become your pastor, Santa’s Caravan was one of the first things I learned about Heritage Presbyterian Church. I was hooked, and loved being a part of this vibrant ministry for the first time last year. The angel tree in our Narthex is a wonderful testament to what it means to be the church, reminding us that we are connected with God’s children not just here, but in our community as well. I encourage you to take an angel off the tree this year in honor of a child in your life, or for an extra challenge, one for each of your own children, nieces and nephews, or grandchildren. If they live locally, consider a “shopping date” with them as a part of your Christmas celebration. I can’t wait to let Nathan loose in the toy section as we pick things out for another special 3 year old boy, and have already made plans with my mom to continue our tradition, with some of our gift to each other being a mother-daughter shopping trip to provide for several more angels.

When we take a tag off the tree, we are doing more than just carrying a shopping list – we are carrying the hopes and dreams of a child with us. We are practicing the kind of presence with others that is at the heart of our Christmas season – the revelation of God in the flesh, Jesus Christ, our Emmanuel, God-with-us. And we experience it ourselves, too. And that is the best Christmas tradition of all.

 

Filed Under: Church blog Tagged With: christmas, community, discipleship, giving, mission, newsletter, santascaravan, serving

Food Pantry

Food distribution is scheduled the 1st Saturday of the month at 10:00 am and the 3rd Wednesday of the month at 12:30 pm.

The next Drive-Up Food Pantry is scheduled for Wednesday, May 21 at 12:30 pm.  Accurate pre-registration is strongly encouraged to ensure volunteers pack accordingly.
Please sign- up here!

For other pantry locations, go here
or text “FINDFOOD” 
to 888-976-2232

Church News

Volunteers are needed to help pack family boxes Monday, May 19th at 10 am in the Fellowship Hall. We welcome all volunteers.  

Food Pantry distribution volunteer opportunity Wednesday, May 21 registration here!


Worship Live Streaming and archives can be found by clicking the appropriate link under the worship tab.


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