Monday, June 20, 2011

In God's Image (Trinity Sunday, June 19 2011)

Homily:  Yr A Trinity Sunday, June 19 2011, Huntley
Readings:  Gen 1:1-2:4a; Ps 8; 2 Cor 13:11-13; Mt 28:16-20

Once upon a time, perhaps some 3000 years ago, there was a poet who wandered out to look at the night skies.  And that poet saw the brightness of the moon, and the stars that were too many to count, and he was struck with awe and wonder at the beauty and the immensity of the heavens above.  When morning came, there was a dazzling sunrise, and he gazed out over the sea, sparkling blue as far as he could see, and he marveled at the variety of animal and plant life in the seas and on land, and the birds in the sky above him. 

And as he marveled at the vast beauty and variety of the universe, he couldn’t help feeling a bit small and insignificant.   And yet, he was aware that there does seem to be something special about humanity.  Our consciousness, our love of beauty, our desire for justice, our yearning for God.  Is there any significance to these traits?  His thoughts were drawn to the Creator who had brought everything into being, the one that his people called Yahweh and he asked the question that so many people have asked both in the centuries before him and in the ones that followed:  Could it be that God really cares about us?  Or, in the language of the psalm that the Hebrew poet wrote all those years ago, “What is man, that you should be mindful of him?”

The passage of time has, if anything, made the poet’s question even more pertinent.  We now know that the universe is orders of magnitude bigger than the poet ever imagined.  The variety of life on this planet that has since been discovered would have dwarfed the poet’s comprehension.  The awe and wonder that we rightly feel when we consider the universe prompts us to ask if there is a power or intelligence or spirit, one that we usually call God, who brought this universe into being.  And if our response is yes, as it is for those of us gathered here, that there is Creator, then sooner or later, there is another question that we ask:  Does that Creator care about me?

The creation story from Genesis was first spoken and eventually written down to try to address this question.  Often we make the mistake of thinking that the primary purpose of the Genesis story that we heard in our first reading is to tell us about how God created the world, and as a result we get ourselves in a muddle.  We try to resolve Genesis with what we understand from science, and we worry about whether we can reconcile the biblical account with the theories of the Big Bang and of evolution.


But the primary purpose of the Genesis story is not to tell us how the world was created.  Its primary purpose is to tell us about God and God’s relationship to humanity.  Does God, the Creator who made the universe and all that is in it, in all its beauty and wonder and immensity, does God care about us?  Do our lives matter in God’s sight or are our joys and sorrows simply fleeting and trivial?  Is there a purpose to our existence or are we just random blips of chemistry and evolution?  What is our relationship to the source of all life in the universe?

The Genesis story teaches us about that relationship and its importance.  It teaches that God the Creator made adam, literally, the earth-creature, in the image of God and gave the human a special role and purpose as the steward of all creation.  It teaches that God the Creator wanted to be in relationship with the human, and that in order to do so, he first made the human as male and female, so that they could be in relationship with each other.  In fact it seems that in order to make humanity in the image of God, humanity had to be made in more than one person.

As the scripture tells us,

So God created humanity in his image,
in the image of God he created them;
male and female he created them.

God created us in his image, but in order to do so he had to create not just one human, but two, because to be in the image of God means to be in relationship.  To love, to forgive, to be intimate, to be vulnerable, to be in communion.  The Genesis story tells us that the Creator of the universe made us as relational beings, capable of all these relational qualities, so that we could be in relationship with each other and with God.  That is what makes us human, that is what makes us the image of God.

But if that’s what it means to say that humanity is created in the image of God, wouldn’t that mean that God is, fundamentally, a relationship?



Welcome to Trinity Sunday, the day of the year when we celebrate the idea that the best way we can picture God is not as an individual, but as a relationship,.  Ever since the early days of the Christian Church we have imagined God as one God in three persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  One in three.  Three in one.  And ever since the early days of the church, people have found this a bit confusing.  But the key I think to sorting out the idea of the Trinity is simply to remember that it’s all about relationship.

Jesus kind of nudged us in this direction, didn’t he.  Jesus was of course an individual human being, just like you and me.  But when people around Jesus encountered him and were amazed by him and asked the question “Who is this man?”, what sort of answers were given?

They said, he is a prophet, that is one who speaks the word of God.  They said he is the Messiah, the one who is chosen and sent by God.  They said he is the Son of God.  They said he is the Word of God made flesh.  They said he is the one who calls God Father, Abba.

To those around him, it became quite apparent that it was near impossible to talk about who Jesus was without talking about his relationship with God.  The essence of who Jesus was as a person flowed out of his relationship with God the Father.  Jesus himself talks this way, saying things like “I am in the Father and the Father is in me.”  It’s all about relationship.  One in three and three in one, Father, Son and Spirit.  God is a relationship and we are created in God’s image.  We are created to love and to give and to receive and to share in each other’s joys and sorrows, to understand ourselves as relationships, as relational beings.

Now I’m well aware that understanding ourselves in this way, and also understanding God in this way, can be a bit difficult for us.

Part of our difficulty is that in this world of ours, we tend to view ourselves as autonomous individuals, competing and surviving and striving for success in a world of scarce resources and limited opportunities.  We value our independence. 

In part, this way of seeing things comes from our modern individualized sense of identity: what makes me me is that I’m not you.


But suppose we change our vision.  Suppose we listen closely to the Genesis story.  Suppose we listen closely to the Jesus story.  Suppose I was to realize that what makes me me is my relationship with you.  Suppose I was to realize that my very identity, my meaning and purpose in life is to be found in my relationships, in my community. 

Would that make a difference?  Would it make a difference in how we live?  I think that it would.  And I think that God would see it as very good.

This is my last Sunday in the Parish of Huntley and so I would like to thank all of you for the love and support you have shown me over the last three years.  You have made me who I am, especially in my vocation in ordained ministry, and for that I am grateful.  It has been my relationship with you that has given meaning and purpose to my journey over the past three years, and I will miss you.  Later this morning, the wardens and I will be telling you who your new minister will be.  I have one request of you:  please welcome her the same way that you welcomed me.  In the years to come, what her ministry will become will flow out of the relationships she will have with each one of you.  Knowing you as I do, knowing what a wonderful parish this is, I’m sure it will be very good.

Amen.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Heaven (Easter 7, June 5 2011)

Homily:  Yr A Easter 7, June 5 2011, Huntley
Readings:  Acts 1:6-14; Ps 68:1-10,33-36; 1Pet 4:12-14;5:6-11; Jn 17:1-11

Jesus was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of the disciples’ sight.  And they were gazing up toward heaven.

And suddenly there were two men in white robes, who said to them, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven?”

One of the great dangers of being a religious person is that we can spend too much time looking up toward heaven.  How often in the history of our Christian faith have we spent way too much time and energy worrying about getting to heaven?

And what does that even mean anyways?  What is heaven?

I’d like you to think about that for a moment.  When you hear the word heaven, what does that mean to you?  What are your images of “heaven”?

Often we think of heaven as "the place we go after we die".  Or perhaps heaven is "where God is".  Perhaps we picture God in heaven as a benevolent old man with a white beard sitting up on a cloud in the sky.

We tend to use geographic terms to talk about heaven.  And that tendency to think of heaven as a place has a long history.  In ancient times, people used to think of the universe as having three layers.  There was the earth where we lived.  There was the underworld which was beneath us, into which we buried the dead.  And there were the heavens above us, that open-ended, never-ending, unchanging space through which traveled the sun and the moon and the stars.  Heaven was a vast domain at which we could only gaze.  And so you can understand why ancient peoples would come to think of this vast spatial realm which was beyond them as the home of the God who is beyond us and transcends us.  Our psalm this morning, written some 3000 years ago, is a reflection of this ancient conception of heaven.  In it, God is pictured as the one who rides upon the heavens, and from the heavens sends forth his powerful voice down upon the earth. 


By the middle ages, we had grown to understand that the earth was a sphere, and so this whole geographic scheme of the universe was converted from flat layers to a set of concentric spheres, with the earth at the centre, and the sphere of heaven, where the throne of God could be found, as the outermost of these spheres.  Heaven was above us and beyond us in the sky, hell was beneath us and below us underground, and humanity was poised in the middle, on the surface of the earth.  The goal of the spiritual life was to live in such a way that when we die we would go up to heaven rather than down into hell.  And this whole conception of heaven and hell was codified and popularized in classic works of literature such as Dante’s Divine Comedy in the 13th century.  It was a neat package, a simple and coherent view of a spiritual and geographic universe which helped people make sense of their lives for centuries.

However this geography of heaven, this neat package, all started to unravel in modern times.  First there was Copernicus.  You remember Copernicus?  He’s the astronomer who took the earth out of its apparently logical, and comfortable position in the centre of the universe, and put it out into the heavens, away from the centre.  It took his contemporaries and it took the church about two centuries to get over the shock of having Copernicus mess with their nice coherent world view.  But of course there were more shocks to come.

In 1961, 50 years ago, Yuri Gagarin, the Russian cosmonaut became the first human to travel in space and to orbit the earth.  And during his flight, Gagarin was famously quoted as saying “I looked and I looked; but there is no god up here.”

And so we as modern people have had to give up on the notion that heaven is the place where God lives and to which we hope to go when we die, at least in its literal, geographic sense. 

But in many ways we haven’t changed our thinking, have we?  We may have given up on the geography and astronomy of heaven.  But we still think of it as the place we go to be with God after we die.  For many, there is still a strong link between our idea of heaven and the after-life.

Does this matter?  Well, I think that it does.  Because the way we perceive of heaven and the after-life has a strong impact on how we regard this life, how we live the life that we have on earth here and now.

If we believe that the main goal of this life is to make sure that when we die we go to heaven instead of hell, what does that say about our present, earthly lives? 

Some Christians believe that this life is some sort of test, that somewhere in the course of this life something needs to happen to insure that we get to heaven.  Some might think we need to be baptized.  Some talk about accepting Jesus as their personal Lord and Saviour.  Some think that we need to be good, to live lives that are good enough.

Other people think that this life must be some sort of training ground for the after-life, a time when we learn the lessons needed to be with God in heaven.  Others, aware of the challenges and suffering that we go through, look at this life as a trial to be endured, the sort of fiery ordeal that Peter talked about in his letter that we read today, an ordeal that, perhaps, builds character or strengthens us along the way.

Does Jesus have anything to say about any of this?

Well surprisingly enough, Jesus has very little to say about heaven.  He does speak clearly about God the Father who transcends the limitations of this physical world.  He does teach us about life:  new life, abundant life, which transcends the limitations of death.  Perhaps surprisingly, he never uses But again, perhaps surprisingly,the term “after-life”.  He does have a lot to say about “eternal life”.  And did you notice that whenever Jesus talks about eternal life, he always speaks in the present tense?  Eternal life is something that is offered to us now.  We don’t have to wait for death to have eternal life.  Eternal life is something that is promised to us here.  We don’t have to go to some place called heaven to have eternal life.

And what is this eternal life?  In today’s gospel, which is taken from the words of Jesus on the night before he died, Jesus tells us simply and clearly what eternal life is.

This is eternal life:  that we may know God.

Are you living eternal life?  Do you know God?  Are you in the intimate sort of relationship with God that Jesus describes by saying “I am in the Father, and the Father is in me”, a loving relationship of knowing and being known?

Perhaps that’s not an easy question to answer.  Perhaps your answer to the question “do you know God?” may range anywhere from “I have no idea what you’re talking about” to “I think so, sort of, sometimes”

And that’s not surprising.  After all, John the author of today’s gospel said himself in the introduction that “no one has seen God”.  So how can we be expected to know God if we’ve never seen God?  It is a bit of a conundrum for us.  But John goes on.  “No one has ever seen God,” he writes.  “It is God the only Son, who is close to the Father’s heart, who has made God known.”

We can know God because Jesus has made God known to us.  In Jesus we get as close as we’re going to come in this earthly life to seeing God.  Jesus has revealed God to us through his birth, his life, his teachings, his healings, his deeds of power, his offering of compassion and forgiveness, by eating at table with the outcast and marginalized, by showing us his love in so many ways and ultimately on the cross.  And through what has been revealed to us, we too can come to know God and have eternal life, here and now.  Heaven becomes any place that God is present and we are in relationship with him.

And so there is no need for us to simply stand here, gazing up toward heaven, hoping that someday we’ll get there.  Nor is there any need to regard this life as some sort of test, hoping that if we pass the test there’ll be a prize for us at the end.  God is here with us now.  He has made himself known to us through Jesus.  So how are we to respond?

The messengers tell the disciples that instead of standing there looking towards heaven they are to go out and be witnesses.  Jesus has been taken out of their sight, but they and we are called to continue his work of making God known, not just in the one hour we spend together on Sunday mornings, but in all of our lives, at home, at school, and at work, with our families and friends and with strangers.

Two weeks ago, I traveled to Minneapolis for the Festival of Homiletics, a preaching conference.  On the way home, I was at the airport in Minneapolis, in the check-in line.  It was a long line.  It wasn’t moving.  The airport was hot and stuffy.  And in the line-up just ahead of me there was a young couple, and the mother had a baby in her arms.  And the baby started to cry.  And the mom and dad started to get a bit agitated. 
Now I used to travel a lot with my work and spend a lot of time in airports, and I always feel a bit of compassion for young parents who travel with infants, because it’s not easy.  And so I took a step sideways so that I could catch the baby’s eye, and when she looked up, just as she was taking a big breath in order to let out another loud wail, I caught her eye and smiled the biggest smile I could.  And instead of crying, she caught my eye and locked onto my face, you know the way babies can stare, and she too smiled the most beautiful smile.  In that moment, though neither of us could have articulated it in the moment, I think that both of us knew that God loved us, and was smiling at us, and we were smiling back in return.

Knowing God and being known.  This is eternal life.  Who would have thought that I could find heaven at the airport in Minneapolis?  One day I’ll have to tell Yuri Gagarin.

Amen.