Wednesday, May 13, 2009

ROGARE> latin, "to ask" Sunday, May 17, 2009


The Sixth Sunday of Easter used to be known as Rogation Sunday. The fact that Rogation Sunday was once an annual observance marked by prayers asking for protection of herds and for a thriving crop explains why the day fell out of use in a culture of suburbanites and city dwellers.


In the early church (we're talking 400AD), the days in the week before Ascension Thursday were set aside as days of prayer and fasting as part of the rigor in focusing on the work of tending crops and shepherding herds. In the 5th Century, too, it seems that a certain volcano threatened an Italian diocese, so the Bishop ordered special prayers on the Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday before Ascension. In later years (the 16th Century, and still in some districts today), rural Brits "beat the bounds" on Rogation Sunday, walking along the parish property lines in order to establish the boundaries in the communal memory of the people.


By parish property lines, we don't mean the block on which the church building is situated, nor even if we include a rectory where such church property still exists. We don't even really mean property in the ownership sense. Rather, the parish boundaries, or "bounds," is the extent of a geographical area that a particular church serves. Now, for Saint Luke's Church here in Forest Hills, walking the route of our parish boundary would be quite a path. We'd have to walk from Ridgewood, Queens to Rego Park to Forest Hills to as far east as Westbury in Nassau County. Ok, that's not the Far East, but you get my point: parish boundaries are fairly ambiguous since the automobile.


There's another way to beat/walk the bounds-- in prayer.

Though the observance of Rogation Sunday has pretty much evolved out of our calendar, there are still prayers in The Book of Common Prayer which can help us set our sites on what to ask for this coming Rogation Sunday.


There are three Rogation prayers:


* for the good use of land and sea (for healthy and just distribution of foodstuffs);


* for all people and their jobs (that all work is for the glory of God and our co-creative participation in God's plan);


* for our care taking of God's earth (so that neither our harvesting or extracting gets out of hand).


Seems like there are still relevant and contemporary reasons for Rogation Sunday!

Certainly, the prayer for all people and their work could include our concern for those presently unemployed, and our working to help those out of work.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

The Day of Resurrection

How do you know when you are looking at The Risen Christ?

What does the Re-surrection Body look like?

What does your Resurrection body feel like?!

(Go to http://www.stlukesforesthills.org/ and click on "Sermons" to read my responses to the above questions.)

Why settle for an Easter Bonnet when you can live in the Resurrection Body !

Happy Easter.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Holy Saturday

Still, even though you might have taken the walk from Sunday of The Passion, to Maundy Thursday, through Good Friday, be still. Don't yet leap to Easter.

Jesus was laid in the tomb. A rock was rolled over the opening to seal it.

Visit the tomb. Pay respect to the dead. Remember those you love but see no longer. Feel the admixture of loving and missing. Faith does not take away the bitter and leave only the sweet. No, but by faith one can continue to live and love, though the bitter is a stronger taste at some times more than others.

What do you taste?

Ponder the limits, the boundaries and borders you experience in your body.
Yet while you live, what/where are the graves you obsess over?
Can your moaning be turned into song?
"All of us go down to the dust; yet even at the grave we make our song: -------------"

What is that song; and how is the bitter taste cleansed so that we might form the notes that sing?

See the Book of Common Prayer p. 499 and 497.

Prepare to attend The Great Vigil of Easter

Good Friday - How Good?

I remember a conversation with my grandmother, when I was likely 9 or 10 years old. She was talking with me about the approaching Easter celebration at church. She had always wanted me involved in church as an acolyte, but I balked. However, when the new assistant priest held auditions for a children's choir, I finally gave in. We had been rehearsing for weeks before The Great Vigil, at which we were to sing a Gregorian Chant Mass and Panis Angelicus as the anthem. I was staying with my grandmother; she lived next to the church. It was Good Friday; there was no rehearsal, in keeping with what she said was the solemnity of the day. That night, she asked me a question: "What do you suppose it means that God's Son was crucified?" I very quickly responded that it showed how evil the world could be, that people would kill Jesus. She looked at me with a lot of love in her eyes and then said, "No, the cross is not about the evil of the world but about the goodness of God. God loves the world so much that he is willing to die for the people. God will do whatever it takes to help people love."

Today, The Passion of Jesus Christ is read from the Gospel according to John 18:1-19:42

Take the time to read it, if you cannot attend a liturgy where you can hear it.

Read or listen, asking yourself:
What is so Good about Good Friday; What does it mean that Jesus dies on the cross?

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Maundy Thursday: The Last Gift - Peace

If you read the Gospel account from John 13:1-35, you will be able to ponder Christ's gift of peace, as given in his washing of the disciples' feet.

What is the heart of Jesus' action in washing their feet?
How is it a call to service on the Church's part, as the Body of Christ in the World?
How well does the Church embody this servanthood ministry?
How might you help the Church to serve?

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Wednesday in Holy Week -- Who will you bring to church for Triduum?

The Epistle reading appointed for today is Hebrews 12:1-3.

Two phrases that catch my attention are the following:

-- we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses --

-- Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of our faith --

Scripture is not the only text that touches upon us and informs our faith. Other bodies of text that are rich with the experience of God are those persons who have deeply touched our lives. They are among the great cloud of witnesses; they have been and are a Christ-presence in our lives.

Who are these people in your life who have been sacred text to you, who have encouraged you to be "pioneers" in setting out on the faith journey, who have helped teach you the faith-- in word and deed?

Specifically, as we approach Triduum (Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Great Vigil), who are they who have been revelations of
--Christ's mandatum/commandment to express servant love?
--Christ's willingness to love thoroughly, totally, unconditionally?
--Christ's love rising again?

Carry these people with you in your heart throughout your participation in the coming Christian Passover which begins tomorrow. Let them be the cloud of witnesses with you. Celebrate their love of you and your deepened love of God as a result of their pioneering efforts with you.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Tuesday in Holy Week - Glory in the Cross of Christ

The prayer for the day admits that Jesus' love of God and fellow humanity transforms the cross from "an instrument of shameful death" into being "for us the means of life". As a result, we who follow Christ ask God for the grace to help us to "glory in the cross of Christ."

What does it mean to glory in the cross of Christ?

1Corinthians 1:18-31 is helpful.

Monday in Holy Week - Both/And

The Collect (Prayer) for the Monday in Holy Week reads as follows:

Almighty God, whose most dear Son went not up to joy but first he suffered pain, and entered not into glory before he was crucified: Mercifully grant that we, walking in the way of the cross, may find it none other than the way of life and peace; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord... (The Book of Common Prayer p.220)

Note the sequence of "not...joy but first...suffered pain, ...not into glory before he was crucified..."
This sequence tends to suggest a chronological order which, practically speaking, is the case in Jesus' walking in the way of the cross. Yet, there is also a God-time order in the mystery and wonder of Holy Week which is neither chronological nor causal. That is, we should not equate the Good Friday cross with only suffering the pain of death and Easter's resurrection with a rewarding joy and glory. The heart of Easter is centered firmly in the Cross. If we would walk in the way of Christ's cross, we need to ponder this reality now; we need to look for the glory and even the joy of Christ in the Cross.
What/where might that be?

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Holy Week Begins -- Where Are You?

The waving of palms and the hurling of insults collide existentially and liturgically.

Today is The Sunday of The Passion. Corporate worship begins with the gospel account of the Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem and quickly moves to Arrest and Crucifixion-- How soon accolades mutate into curses!

Where are you this day? Where would you be, how would you be, if you had witnessed those events that forcefully unfolded? That is, rather than being able to worship on this day with the faith knowledge already in hand and in heart that this Jesus would be raised from the dead, what might you be going through were you there when they crucified him? You would not have yet come to faith-- at best, you might have been a trusting follower. To you, what would have just happened?

The Sunday of The Passion prepares us for Triduum-- Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Easter. However, do not rush. Walk the walk "as if" on this day you do not yet have the faith to call it Christ's Passion-- you might see some things in a different light.

Read the Gospel According to Mark 14:1-15:47.
Read Psalm 31:9-16 "as if" your own words, having witnessed the event.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Walking in The Way of The Cross - Preparing for Holy Week

Way back when, Holy Week was actually the original Lent (the seaon of penitence and preparation for Easter). These days, Holy Week is still regarded as particularly important days of preparation for Easter. May I suggest, though, that the importance is such that we should also be thinking about preparing for Holy Week itself.

Holy Week begins with The Sunday of The Passion, this year April 5, and continues with Holy Monday through Holy Wednesday, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday.

So-- how to prepare?

* In the coming week, organize a space on your desk (or pc desktop) where you can place a copy of The Bible, The Book of Common Prayer and The Hymnal. There will be daily blog entries here April 5 through 11, with prayer, meditation and reading cues for each day.

* In the next few days, check your calendar and make a plan to dedicate time for participation in the events of Holy Week.
+ The corporate liturgies marking the Triumphal Entry of Jesus into Jerusalem with the waving of palms and the Arrest, "Trial," Torture and Execution of Jesus are observed together in worship on The Sunday of the Passion. Saint Luke's Church, Forest Hills offers liturgies at 8:30 and 10:30am. If yo do not have a home church, come worship with us. If you are too far from Forest Hills, now is the time to check out the web and decide where you will go to begin Holy Week.
+ Holy Monday through Holy Wednesday you could come here, online, and use the daily posted cues for prayer and meditation; you could read Morning Prayer from the Book of Common Prayer; you could check out a church near your place of work--urban parishes tend to have Noon Holy Eucharist during Holy Week.
+ On Maundy Thursday Saint Luke's offers a 6:30pm Community Supper as a quiet prelude to the 7:30pm Holy Eucharist which includes the Ceremony of the Washing of Feet. This is a real roll up your sleeves and get down on your hands and knees act symbolizing the servant ministry to which we are are called. Other churches do the same on this day; again, if you do not have a home parish, check out what is available in your area if Saint Luke's is not a convenient commute.
+ Good Friday-- A Noon service and Evening service (7:30pm) takes place at Saint Luke's. As with April 5 Sunday of The Passion and April 9 Maundy Thursday, check out the space and plan the time for corporate worship.

Don't let the planning slip by, don't skip church, don't say "I don't do Maundy Thursday or Good Friday"; don't say "I'll do it my own way at home or in the office"

HOLY WEEK is both/and-- BOTH corporate worship AND personal/individual prayer and meditation.

"Walking in the Way of The Cross" is the pathway--Christ's way of true life.
The profound depths of Easter/Resurrection cannot be plumbed apart from the walk that begins on Sunday of the Passion; nor apart from the larger community which we profess to be The Body of Christ.

Do the prep! The above entry outlines the worship and study aspects of preparation. There's still one more: preparing for works of mercy.
Holy Week bring us back to our true selves in Christ. This involves giving ourselves away--giving of ourselves freely in service with/for others.

Plan to make your self-offering during Holy Week. Here are four suggestions:

1) Check out http://www.pajamaprogram.org/
This is Saint Luke's Church Lenten Project. We're making our offering on Sunday, April 5. Bring new pajamas (sizes Large children and Small adult) and new reading books (for middle school-aged children, grades 6-9); you can also bring monetary offerings (checks made out to the Pajama Program); or, if Saint Luke's is too far from you, contribute online.

2) www.er-d.org/GiftsForLife is another option. ERD, Episcopal Relief and Development, is the outreach arm of The Episcopal Church. Your individual contribution helps us to offer both arms in a whole embrace as the Body of Christ with people in need.

3) Offer your services to your parish church during Holy Week. Perhaps you could be one of the people participating in the footwashing ceremony on Maundy Thursday or you could read a lesson at the Good Friday service.

4) Perhaps, as you walk in the way of the Cross on The Sunday of The Passion, Maundy Thursday or Good Friday, in addition to whatever financial offering you place in the alms basin, you could write down a note with your name, email and phone #, offering one of your talents to the church. Whether you are a cook or an accountant, a teacher or a plumber, a teen-ager who babysits or a senior who is retired from publishing: whoever you are and whatever your gifts-- you can make space and time sacred by your joyful offering of self.

HOLY WEEK IS A WHOLE WEEK ABOUT THIS KIND OF OFFERING.
Holy Week-- the dedicated space and time to say (as did the Apostle Paul)
"Christ is Life to Me"

[Easter Worship--
The Great Vigil of Easter on Easter Eve, Saturday, April 11 at 7:30pm;
The Day of Resurrection, Easter Day, Sunday, April 12 at 8:30 and 10:30am.
More on Easter next week!]

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Lent> "lengthen"> Springtime


The season of Lent so often enters upon us as a wintering -- a somewhat cold reminder of our darkness and dislocation. Yet, even in the come-uppance of Lent's arrival, there is a note, a hope, a not-yet-warming trend but certainly a sensed promise of regeneration. Hear it in the early Lenten prayer that focuses us upon the gifts of bread and wine:


"...Jesus Christ... was tempted in every way that we are, yet did not sin. By his grace we are able to triumph over every evil, and to live no longer for ourselves alone, but for him who died for us and rose again" (The Book of Common Prayer, p. 379)


The season then lengthens (Lent is from the German for lengthen, from which the word spring time blooms)-- As we allow the fertilizing, ground-turning Exhortation for living a holy life to become our spiritual almanac, buds do appear, even in the midst of drizzle and grey gloom, with more than words of promise. Yes, we experience the turning over and turning around and growing in us, of us... with Christ.


Just as the coming season of spring already has its heralds in slightly warmer temperatures and less gruesome downpours, to say nothing of that bush near your front door that POP is in bloom, as if overnight, the focusing words of the prayer over the gifts this Sunday shift to a more springlike tone:


"[God:] You bid your faithful people cleanse their hearts, and prepare with joy for the Paschal feast; that, fervent in prayer and in works of mercy, and renewed by your Word and Sacraments, they may come to the fullness of grace which you have prepared for those who love you" (379).


Tomorrow is the first day of spring; and Sunday, the fourth in Lent, is traditionally called "Refreshment Sunday." We are being prepared to bud, blossom and burst forth into the world as the flowering of love-- the bodily presence of care and compassion for others; the Real Presence of Christ. You can feel the refreshing change with all of your senses.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The WEEKENDER -- (not just for Lent)


I am sure you have seen the ads for the NYTimes "weekender" at-home delivery of Friday, Saturday and Sunday newspapers. Well, there's a spiritual weekender, too. In a way, Lent is the time for a 'trial subscription'.


In brief, here's what it's about:

- Friday is The Day of The Cross

- Saturday is The Sabbath, a Day of Rest

- Sunday is The Lord's Day, a Day of Action


FRIDAY - CROSS

The traditional scripture passage can sound a bit daunting: "If anyone wants to follow me, then deny yourself and take up your cross and follow" (Mark 8:34). Perhaps, it helps to know that the meaning of this Gospel passage can be rendered by reading Galatians 6:2, "Bear one another's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ".

On Good Friday, Christians are not commemorating a murder. No, we are remembering that Jesus willingly gave his life for the good of others.

So, every Friday is a day to remember Jesus' self-giving by our own expressions of giving. The traditional phrase for this is 'self-denial' but the dynamic goes beyond denying the self through connecting with the other.

Thus, as the first part of your spiritual weekender, you are encouraged on Fridays to live simply:

* have a plain lunch; spend time instead of money by praying for the poor, the oppressed, victims of war, the homeless, the hungry, the vulnerable...

* dedicate your saved lunch money to help bear someone's burden in a concrete way: give to Saint Luke's Church Lenten Project: The Pajama Progam (http://www.pajamaprogram.org/), Episcopal Relief and Development (http://www.er-d.org/) or to any worthy agency where your offering will partner your prayer.

Yes, on this first day of the 'weekender', don't miss out on the opportunity to turn other people's crosses into tastes of Resurrection!


Saturday - Sabbath/Rest

"...whoever enters God's rest also ceases from laboring as did God" (Hebrews 4:10). You don't exactly need a line from scripture to remind you of the importance of taking time to smell the flowers. However, did you realize that God basically commands enjoyment and recreation? Saturday is that time during the weekender for taking time to have a good time. After all, recreation involves us in Reenacting Creation. God's six-day work week was not a drudgery; God enjoys creating-- it is all good. By our resting on the Sabbath/Saturday, our recreation and leisure comprise not only a day of rest from our usual labors but a reminder that the spirit of joy on the rest day needs somehow be present even in our work the rest of the week. So, take advantage of weekender Saturdays:

* spend time with the people who mean the most to you

* surprise friends and family with some fun

* be hospitable for an hour or so--visit the home bound, hospitalised and those in nursing homes

* say a prayer of remembrance for departed loved ones--let their love live on in you.

And then day two of the 'weekender' gives you another taste of Resurrection!


Sunday - Lord's Day

"On this day the Lord has acted; we will be glad and rejoice in it" (Psalm 118:24).

You are likely now getting the idea about the three-fold opportunity of this 'weekender'. If, on Fridays, Christ's giving becomes our giving and, on Saturdays, God's resting becomes our rest, then what of the first day of the new week on which God acted in raising Jesus Christ to new life? We act in worship:

* attend the Parish Eucharist

* take part in the liturgical action (volunteer to be a reader, sing those hymns with vigor, bring up the bread and wine, add your out loud petitions and thanksgivings during The Prayers of The People

* make your main Sunday meal a festive one; every Sunday is a little Easter. Let the food you prepare and share be a tasting of Resurrection.


That's the spiritual weekender.

Try it during Lent and then subscribe to this practice year-round. You don't have to call an 800 number to get it started. Your credit card won't be billed. There won't be any piles of paper to bundle for recycling. What there will be is a gift.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

“Almighty God… Come quickly to help us who are assaulted by many temptations…”


What is either getting or distracting your attention these days:

Making ends meet in your household economy? A parent’s health; your own? War? Relationship? Children? Aging?

Can you see how a lot of what might be on your mind and in your heart are ‘temptations’? Temptation isn’t just about whether or not to eat that doughnut. Neither does all temptation start out by moving you in the direction of doing something wrong—thoughts, words and things done or left undone that will result in what we classically label as ‘evil’. Temptations are also those worries that weigh upon us good folk and cause anxiety. For that matter, we might even be tempted by the idea of doing the good (that we, ourselves, could do such and such in order to bring about a better situation, a better world). Then again, that same noble ‘to do list’ might lead you and me to fret that there is no way we could accomplish x-y-z, that it is best we disabuse ourselves of such utopian fantasies, that it might just be smarter to mind one’s own little patch of turf. That leads to the temptation to just be and do what tends to cultivate and maintain a sense of normalcy. Yeah, I’ll just take care of my own little patch of turf—not disrupting anything or bothering anyone. I’ll be a good neighbor; wait and put my trash out the evening before pick-up.

Hmm, might this be the really big temptation—attempting to enclave myself in my own little world. If that’s so, it would be better to eat the doughnut this Lent, with a cup of coffee, while reflecting on the ways we shy away from truly engaging with others—especially others who appear different or who are particularly in need.


Yes, for that matter, rather than “giving up” for Lent, maybe it would be better to “take on.” True, eschewing the sweet for a time might help you reduce your dependency on it. However, that is all about you. So instead of giving up, what might you give during this season—how might you practice going out of yourself for others, so that after the Lenten season, you will have established a discipline of being for others?


Yours needn’t be some monumental project. Rather, what small steps can you take in the direction of the other person rather than back stepping your way into your own safe space?


Why bother? Because most of us, when we experience the interconnections between people, then experience a richer, more beautiful life. That’s what Jesus was teaching: that the things which distract and worry us (remember that list at the beginning of this piece?) come to be understood and felt in a whole new way as a result of being open to and active about the interconnectedness of being. Everything is all interconnected—no my space, your space; rather all in all. God all in all. It'sall God's time and space, and we all are related in it.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Lent does not usually win popularity contests


Even a lot of church folk resist it.


So here are a few phrases to ponder. Roll them around in your mind. Share the resultant thoughts with a friend, or post them back here.


The thing about Lent seems to be this: what we resist about Lent are the same things with which we struggle most about in life.


Here are some suggestive thoughts at the beginning of Lent--


Wholeness entails a dismembering.

Dismemberment is part of the transformation that brings atonement-- at-one-ment.

Such oneness is a change.

Such change cannot happen without a dying.


Lent is pilgrimage: a conscious engagement of suffering and death

and a taking stock of the gift of life.

That does NOT mean you are supposed to go looking for suffering. That is a blasphemous insult to those who are suffering and an affront to the Divine by mistaking God for an executioner.

So, back off from suffering. Instead, go looking for support!


Joining this pilgrimage with others will rescue the individual from being his or her own judge, jury and gallows guard. We will be reminded, instead, of the grace of God (and just when we were ready to lock one's self up, too). Lent is not an arraignment; rather, Lent-- the scripture readings, the symbols, the ritual actions--is spiritual training. In your "cell" instead of feeling locked up (ok, honestly you might feel locked up for a longer period than you'd like), the world will open up to you.


Yes, the ritual acts are acts of mortification--dying to the self.

Nobody said the pilgrimage is going to be a vacation.

However, it will be a breath of life, the breath of God.


"Breathe on us, breath of God."

Help us remember not so much that we are nothing but ashes but, rather, in our being touched by ash, humus, dirt we become more in touch and brought down to earth--back to the basics of life.


Lent readies the ground for planting--turning us over, breaking up our clods, that we might accept the fertile basic fact of life: love.

Lent's spring training gets us ready for Holy Week-- that dramatic enactment of the way things are: showing us that the most basic and fertile love of all is that between Jesus and God. Their love bears us and carries us to birth.



Friday, February 20, 2009

What's Love got to do with It?

No, I'm not humming a Tina Turner favorite.
And the quick response is certainly "Love has everything to do with it."

What am I writing about?
Well, last weekend a reading group gathered to discuss a short story entitled "The Book of Martha" by speculative (science) fiction writer Octavia Butler. If you know Butler at all, you know she wrote some fairly wild yet engaging fiction that involved everything from time travel back to a southern plantation during slavery, and vampire-like human-sort-of people who have populated the earth, to novels on how religion in America can lead to disturbing and distorted rather than Utopian possibilities.

And then there's "The Book of Martha"--
It seems a West Coast writer, who loves her craft, has died-- she thinks; though she wonders if she's gone nuts or is somehow aware of her dead self on a slab in the morgue, since everything around her is gray and amorphous.
So she's dead, because next thing that appears against the gray is God-- or someone she thinks must be God (that bearded, enthroned king image is what she is seeing... at that particular moment).
If that's God, then she must be in heaven? she queries.
She queries because if it is heaven, it's all just gray and God and her. "Where's everyone else?" she wonders out loud. "Why?" God asks, in a sort of set up that then plays out throughout the story. "What do you see?" God more or less asks; and Martha says "only you." God then implies that is Martha's vision situation (and that plays out throughout the story too because God goes from being a bearded old man to eventually being a middle-aged African American woman who says yes to a tuna fish sandwich, who Martha thinks could be her own twin and about which God is not so much amused as God is suggesting that Martha (and the reader) should spend some time thinking about how and why we imagine God as we do/need to.

You really need to read this short story to both enjoy Butler's way about certain issues (like What do we know and How do we know it and communicate/process/interpret it?) and then to ponder the issues.

These are important questions both for people of faith and for people who are wondering about faith (and if you are wondering about faith, then you are likely, also, wondering about doubt, too). For that matter, Butler, like the prophets of The Old Testament, might be trying to both comfort the oppressed (those oppressed by doubts) and challenge the comfortable (those too snug in their faith assumptions). For when you do take a sober look at all the violence and enslavement that continue in our world, one then does begin to ask, "What's Love got to do with It?" What does it mean to say we believe in a God who is Love in a world which is so full of un-love? That's not a new question. People ask that question a lot, and have through the ages.

However, what Butler does is pose the question in her narrative (without ever asking it) in such a way as to be able to speak to both the believer and non-believer at the same time. That's the big project at the heart of all Octavia Butler's writing: traversing the divide, not taking Us/Them as a given and, instead, trying to speak to both-- to uncover how we construct reality so as to assure and secure ourselves, and that such constructions often have blueprints that keep the other out.

In "The Book of Martha" Butler teases the reader about Heaven, God and Self (freedom, responsibility, control, power) so that when Martha gets sent back to earth, the reader is brought to an earthly contemplation of what we might mean by "God."

It is a very interesting read; a good way to apply a lens on our own faith texts--the beliefs we carry around inside ourselves and even within our community. Butler is not discounting faith, just challenging faith assumptions so that we do not have too ready an answer to the question "What's Love got to do with It?" She even embeds a Christ-figure in the narrative so as to suggest a response to the question. Can you spot it?

By the way, if you are wondering why "It" is capitalized, that's just me suggesting that not only do we need to consider what we think love is/means, we also need to ask ourselves what is the "It" to which we want God's love applied (e.g., What's love got to do with salvation, my trusting God, God's being good to/with/for me, health, happiness; as well as pain, suffering, things not turning out good etc)

Any thoughts? Leave a comment.
Need a copy of "The Book of Martha"?
Let me know and I can email it to you.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

The Heart of February 14

Sharing something I found in my email inbox today.



From the Fifth Chapter of the Gospel According to Matthew:

I am telling you to love your enemies. Let them bring out the best in you, not the worst. When someone gives you a hard time, respond with the energies of prayer, for then you are working out of your true selves, your God-created selves.


This is what God does. God gives God's best—the sun to warm and the rain to nourish—to everyone, regardless: the good and bad, the nice and nasty.


If all you do is love the lovable, do you expect a bonus? Anybody can do that. If you simply say hello to those who greet you, do you expect a medal? Any run-of-the-mill sinner does that.


"In a word, what I'm saying is, Grow up. You're kingdom subjects. Now live like it. Live out your God-created identity. Live generously and graciously toward others, the way God lives toward you."


V. The Word of the Lord
R. Happy Valentines Day!