My friends, today, as I said in the bulletin for this week, brings us to the start of the “holiest” of weeks in our Church Year. Unlike Christmastime, which serves as the “happiest” time for churchgoers as it somehow allows us to do and say what is unsaid and undone the rest of the year – it calls forth our childlike natures and tendencies.
But Holy Week calls us to something else, to perhaps, “adulthood” in our faith—and perhaps this is why many of us shy away from its rigors—it commitments, calling us toward being our best—commitments we said our personal “yeses” to at our confirmations. Responding to these commitments throughout our lives, is, let’s face it, not always easy—in fact, seldom easy.
If we reflect on the Scriptures for today, we see the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. The people shouted, “Blessed is the One who comes…Hosanna to the Son of David[!]” The joy of this day in Jesus’ ministry, does, as a family member said recently, fall apart, at least in human reaction by week’s end, culminating in his physical death on Good Friday. And if we were to stop there, we would be truly looking at a very sad week.
But our faith tells us that death is not the end—for Jesus, or for us—new life follows on Easter in a way that we can’t truly understand through our humanity, but only through our faith. And because “the cross” is not the end, nor even the reason that brought Jesus into our world, I have begun to question whether the “empty cross” with the “white drapes” signifying that Jesus has risen is the best symbol for Easter, as some religious cards depict. In other words, “the cross” should not, in my mind, be the outstanding image, but maybe just one of the images.
I am one for whom, “hope springs eternal,” as I believe are many of you. The sadness that is part of this week in the life of our brother Jesus is a forerunner for our lives walking in his footsteps. The drama unfolded during this holiest of weeks, is not just about Jesus’ life, but about ours as well. If his precious story is simply “words on a page” with no connection to our own lives, then we would have missed the significance of these events. Jesus came to show us how to live our lives and when, especially, the hard times come, we are invited to ask him to walk with us and help us to live these moments well. Modern day stations of the cross are reflective of this idea as they allow us to see that Jesus’ sufferings continue in our day and call us to do what we can to eliminate that suffering. Many people around our city and country stood physically yesterday with others, some were there in spirit to say, what they don’t want for our country and instead, what they do want.
These past 40 days have found many of you carrying your own personal crosses, through responding to sudden illness and hospitalization for yourselves or a family member, caring for a needy loved one, coming to terms with life-changing events within your families, moves, down-sizing, and even death. The new life that Easter brings can be ours as it was for Jesus through our faith, as faith is something we can’t always explain, just as is life at times – but faith in something outside ourselves, in the good we see in each other, gives us the hope that life can be better.
Our faith calls us to keep our eyes on Easter, at the end of sometimes, very long, dark, tunnels. We in our All Are One community have been companions for all who are hurting of late through many of life’s occurrences and that gives us the assurance that others will stand by us in our need.
The beautiful Philippians’ reading about Jesus today indeed shows us the way—it is not about power, fame, who we know, but about being a servant, to others, yes, but to ourselves as well – it’s about balance.
An issue that was lifted up for me this past week in line with the discussion of being a “servant,” was a documentary on the Philadelphia 11, about women’s priestly ordination within the Episcopal church back in the 1970’s, and being that we have Kay and Tyler here with us today working on a similar documentary on women’s ordination within the Catholic church, the topic of the Philadelphia 11 seemed appropriate.
I recalled hearing of these women proclaiming their truth about God calling them individually to priesthood, well before I personally heard the same call, but I realize they were forerunners for me and other women to “answer” in like ways.
In watching this documentary and hearing the women’s individual stories, I was stunned, but ultimately not surprised at how these Episcopal women were treated, and of how their struggles were the same as what Catholic women, and others seeking priestly ordination in church denominations traditionally ruled over by men experienced. And it should be remembered that these women were already ordained deacons!
Some of the male priests’ comments to the 1974 ordinations were appalling in their arrogance. The ordinations were done publicly by valid bishops open to ordaining women, unlike the first Catholic women’s ordinations in 2002 that were done more in secret. One male priest commented that ordained women deacons were always intended to be in second place, as associates to men. He went on to delineate other “appropriate” roles for women, as wives, mothers, sexual partners.
This particular man’s greatest concern was what we would “call” these women, as they couldn’t be called “father.” And further, he said, Jesus had made it clear, in calling God, “father” that this role was intended only for men! This is precisely why I and other women priests and female theologians encourage not reading the Scriptures literally. Certainly, God is not male, nor female for that matter, but more than likely, a wonderful combination of both, and more.
So, my friends, as I said, with Kay and Tyler here today, filming to “tell a story that needs telling,” as Kay has said to me, I made this homily a bit longer to share about the courageous Philadelphia 11.
Let me conclude today with just a couple of thoughts from today’s readings. The prophet Isaiah shows us the “way to go” in continuing the work of our brother, Jesus – “God has given us ears to hear and voices to speak.” No guarantee that it will be easy. Even Jesus, in the garden prayed in his humanity, “if it is possible, let this cup pass me by.” In all that life brings us friends, especially in the hard times, it is important to remember that Jesus doubted too – so asking him to stand with us is a good choice, as he will understand… Jesus relied on God for strength, and so should we!
I would invite each of you to sit with the reality of the coming week as we remember – of how much we each is loved by God who sent Jesus to show us the way. Reflecting this week on the second reading from Philippians especially, which we will hear again on Good Friday is a very good place to start. Reflecting on Jesus’ human journey, reminds us that, as we pray for better times, God is sending us to be the leaders that are needed now! Amen? Amen!