Homily – 3rd Weekend of Easter

  Friends, on this Earth Day, I am going to “cut to the chase” this weekend which brings us to the 3rd week of Easter and say very simply and succinctly that the message we all should reflect on as we ponder today’s readings is— “It’s all about love!”

   Now that having been said, next; we need to understand that to truly love is a most challenging activity! It calls us— “this loving” to be our very best selves.  It calls us in our present-day world to somehow get past ignorant statements in place of leadership, selfishness when merciful governing is called for, and move toward those who are truly leading in our Congress and State houses, keeping our eyes on their reflections—witnessing that while, difficult, are what is best for our nation and our world. 

   Today’s gospel from Luke lifts up the fact that in the strange, fearful, yet hope-filled times after Jesus’ rising to new life, people, like those disciples on the way to Emmaus didn’t know Jesus until he did “something that was familiar to them.”  Scripture says, “Their eyes were opened” when he “broke the bread.”  This action of, “breaking the bread,” we must remember, is sign and symbol of Jesus’ own “breaking open” of his entire life—for all of creation, showing us how to truly live. 

   In our time we must move beyond the present chaos, of so many things that plague our Church and Nation: misdirection about issues of gender and sexual expression—the consideration of what constitutes “life,” and whose life is most important, time and energy being spent on “Eucharistic Conferences” designed to keep the “Eucharist” in a tiny, little box with no connection to the “real presence” in the world of Jesus, the Christ.  We must ask, “What is it now that truly “breaks our hearts open” and as the disciples on the way to Emmaus, makes those same hearts, “burn within us?”

   “Being our best selves” in these times that calls for nothing less, will help us to understand the truth when we hear it—truth that works for the good of all, as opposed to lies that are simply—self-serving and many times, dangerous.  On the other hand, our hearts “break open and burn within us” when we hear the head* of the United Nations Food Program share the truth that millions of people in this world are on a trajectory toward starvation!  This number tends to double when anything extra is added, like a world virus, climate catastrophe, etc. *This information was from 3 years ago, but the same could be said today about starvation.

   Last week we talked about what perhaps needs to be “resurrected” within each of us to make Jesus’ resurrection complete.  For me, it comes down to, listening with a heart truly broken open to what our God is trying to tell us, now, in 2023.

   What faces our world, like the call of our brother Jesus, is all about rising to the occasion and becoming all that we can be.  Being OK with the fact that more than half of the people in this world live on less than $10,000 a year is not being our best.  Being OK with the fact that millions of people are headed toward starvation if not for the United Nations feeding them weekly is not being our best selves.  Being OK with the fact that poor and dark-skinned people in this world are hardest hit when a pandemic, or any other catastrophe hits,  is not being our best selves and should call us to make some long-term changes .

   And you might say—well, Pastor, I’m not OK with any of this!  And even though it hurts me to say it, because I indict myself as well, if we don’t actively work to change the present disparity between the rich and the poor in our world, we ARE OK with it! 

   All of the readings this Sunday speak to the idea of “being on a journey.”  In the 1st reading from Luke in Acts; we hear that God “sent” Jesus with “miracles and signs”—which [show us], “the path to life.”  Psalm 16 confirms this notion, “You will show me the path that leads to life.”  Peter, in the 2nd reading, consuls, that we should, “conduct ourselves reverently during our sojourn in a strange land.”   The gospel, also from Luke speaks of disciples, “on their way to Emmaus.” 

   Today, our world celebrates Earth Day plus 50 years.  We have been on a long journey trying to save our planet these past 50 years—there have been ups and downs on this journey.  The “ups” are reflective of the “reverencing” that Peter speaks of today—the literal, breaking open of our hearts at our earthly home’s beauty, so much so that we have been willing to be about initiatives with the countries of the world to save our planet from global warming.  The “downs” of course, are reflective of a lack of that same “reverencing.”  I have to wonder at our diocesan Church in Winona/Rochester, planning to “reverence” the Eucharist in the “mere bread” without making the vital—connection to our beautiful, and in some ways, dying planet.

  Sometimes my friends, the concerns of our daily lives are all, it seems, that we can handle, and that notion is reflective of my life as it is of yours.  As you know, I am recovering from knee surgery and that is about all that I can handle just now.  I say this, not to garner sympathy, but to let you know that I’m cognizant of the reality of “life” at times. 

   We are all on a unique journey together—all belief systems have a sense of this, and this journey is toward an existence greater than this one; where all people—no matter their gender, race, sexual orientation, financial status, or any other, perceived impediment, will be welcomed.

   I began this homily with the statement that basically, “it is all about love” and the challenge that to truly love, is no small task.  I would like to conclude with some words from a ballad by local, singer-songwriter, John Smith, entitled, “Love’s Not Through With Me Yet!”

   I included mention of this ballad three years ago in a homily and I know that in the past, I have thought of its sentiment in a somewhat negative way, thinking that “love is not through with me yet, because I am not yet doing it right.  But this go-around finds me thinking more positively: John Smith very poetically asks, “Can you love without needing?”—which speaks to the notion that “love” is bigger than just about me.  And again, he asks, “Can you love without bleeding?” which is all about the “reverencing” that we must show toward our earth and its people.  And if you can do these things, than basically, there is hope for our world, because, indeed, “love isn’t through with us yet!”

   After the resurrection, Mary Magdala and the disciples on the way to Emmaus knew Jesus when he did something, “familiar”— “calling her by name,” and “breaking bread” with them.  Let us know and realize, that as Jesus’ followers, what others should recognize in us as, “familiar” is doing the “good” and the “right” in our world and for its people.  Amen? Amen!   

Homily – 2nd Sunday of Easter

My apologies friends, I had promised more than this but due to my knee surgery, and not feeling as good as I was expecting, this was all that I was able to get to you–take care all–(: Pastor Kathy

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   My friends, Eastertime is such a hope-filled time and especially when, as this year, in Minnesota, we are experiencing such beautiful, sunny, and warm weather. I wrote this line two days ago and now we are having near-blizzard conditions!  The interesting thing though, that I have noticed of late, is that “hope” can be present, even when all isn’t necessarily going well in our lives. 

   Hope arises naturally in our human lives, I believe, as the impetus to keep us moving forward when the sad, discouraging, and painful things happen in our lives—illness, surgery, and the deaths of loved ones before we are ready.  Sister Joan Chittister had somewhat of an answer for these times that may bring doubt: “Overtime [she has discovered], the cross is supposed to take its toll on us.  It forms us to find God in the shadows of life.  Ironically enough, it is the cross that teaches us to hope.”  As I said, the hard things, keep us moving forward for the most part, especially if we want to keep engaging with life. 

   Eastertime also has the ability to bring forth “gratitude” in our hearts, even amidst the hard times.  Our Scriptures for this Sunday exude gratitude.  In the 1st reading from Acts, even though their brother, Jesus had died, and arose, we hear that, “the apostles performed many signs and wonders—that they divided everything among themselves on the basis of each one’s needs, with exultant and sincere hearts.”

   In the 2nd reading from Peter, he writes about how they are all, “guarded with God’s power through faith.”  And additionally, Peter commends all those who, “love Jesus and even though you have never seen him, you still believe.” 

   Then in today’s gospel from John, Peter’s words are confirmed by Jesus, “blessed are they who have not seen and have believed.”  We are all included here, my friends.  And the other wonderful line that Jesus says in this passage from John, “Peace be with you,” and he uses this greeting with each appearance after the Resurrection. 

   Once these followers are “at peace,” he then gives them their mission, “As Abba God sent me, so am I sending you…” So, let’s take a look at how these Scriptures apply today, bring hope, and gratitude—basically, new life. 

   Our parish, collectively, has been grieving the loss of our sister and friend, Shannon Hanzel, and because we haven’t yet had a celebration of life, a piece of closure is yet missing. And even as I say that, we each realize that we will never forget Shannon or anyone who has been a significant part of our lives and has died.

   This is the “hope” with which each of us lives—that these loved ones can always be a part of our lives, but in a new way. After Shannon’s death, I visited her husband of 52 years, Jim, and encouraged him to “look for her in new ways—in the faces of his family members, in the stories of her friends.” I encouraged him and each of us, in knowing of the many ways that she touched others’ lives, to hold onto, these “heart moments and memories,” and with that, comes “gratitude,” even amongst the present sadness. 

   In my own life this past week, amid the pain and inconvenience of my knee surgery, I find that I am filled with hope for better, more flexibility than I am experiencing now.  And right alongside that hope, is gratitude that I live in a time and place and situation that makes this repair possible for me!

   And since I first wrote the above paragraph, I have been experiencing more pain with my knee post-op, along with other discomforts, so the final word on “gratitude” isn’t fully in…(: So, my friends, I will basically end at this point with a question to ponder this next week—considering that we are thinking about Jesus’ Resurrection and have established that “resurrection changes a person,” –we might want to think about what needs to be “resurrected” in us.  Amen? Amen!

Homily – 2nd Sunday of Easter

My Friends, I had promised the readings and prayers for this Sunday, but needed to stop short due to my less than optimum condition today. (: Hopefully, you will find this homily of help in today’s reflections. Take care all–Pastor Kathy

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  My friends, Eastertime is such a hope-filled time and especially when, as this year, in Minnesota, we are experiencing such beautiful, sunny, and warm weather. I wrote this line two days ago and now we are having near-blizzard conditions!  The interesting thing though, that I have noticed of late, is that “hope” can be present, even when all isn’t necessarily going well in our lives. 

   Hope arises naturally in our human lives, I believe, as the impetus to keep us moving forward when the sad, discouraging, and painful things happen in our lives—illness, surgery, and the deaths of loved ones before we are ready.  Sister Joan Chittister had somewhat of an answer for these times that may bring doubt: “Overtime [she has discovered], the cross is supposed to take its toll on us.  It forms us to find God in the shadows of life.  Ironically enough, it is the cross that teaches us to hope.”  As I said, the hard things, keep us moving forward for the most part, especially if we want to keep engaging with life. 

   Eastertime also has the ability to bring forth “gratitude” in our hearts, even amidst the hard times.  Our Scriptures for this Sunday exude gratitude.  In the 1st reading from Acts, even though their brother, Jesus had died, and arose, we hear that, “the apostles performed many signs and wonders—that they divided everything among themselves on the basis of each one’s needs, with exultant and sincere hearts.”

   In the 2nd reading from Peter, he writes about how they are all, “guarded with God’s power through faith.”  And additionally, Peter commends all those who, “love Jesus and even though you have never seen him, you still believe.” 

   Then in today’s gospel from John, Peter’s words are confirmed by Jesus, “blessed are they who have not seen and have believed.”  We are all included here, my friends.  And the other wonderful line that Jesus says in this passage from John, “Peace be with you,” and he uses this greeting with each appearance after the Resurrection. 

   Once these followers are “at peace,” he then gives them their mission, “As Abba God sent me, so am I sending you…” So, let’s take a look at how these Scriptures apply today, bring hope, and gratitude—basically, new life. 

   Our parish, collectively, has been grieving the loss of our sister and friend, Shannon Hanzel, and because we haven’t yet had a celebration of life, a piece of closure is yet missing. And even as I say that, we each realize that we will never forget Shannon or anyone who has been a significant part of our lives and has died.

   This is the “hope” with which each of us lives—that these loved ones can always be a part of our lives, but in a new way. After Shannon’s death, I visited her husband of 52 years, Jim, and encouraged him to “look for her in new ways—in the faces of his family members, in the stories of her friends.” I encouraged him and each of us, in knowing of the many ways that she touched others’ lives, to hold onto, these “heart moments and memories,” and with that, comes “gratitude,” even amongst the present sadness. 

   In my own life this past week, amid the pain and inconvenience of my knee surgery, I find that I am filled with hope for better, more flexibility than I am experiencing now.  And right alongside that hope, is gratitude that I live in a time and place and situation that makes this repair possible for me!

   And since I first wrote the above paragraph, I have been experiencing more pain with my knee post-op, along with other discomforts, so the final word on “gratitude” isn’t fully in…(: So, my friends, I will basically end at this point with a question to ponder this next week—considering that we are thinking about Jesus’ Resurrection and have established that “resurrection changes a person,” –we might want to think about what needs to be “resurrected” in us.  Amen? Amen!

Homily – Easter Sunday

Happy Easter Friends—this is a day of joy and “Alleluia” truly is our song!  There is much mystery around this feast—we accept the resurrection of our brother Jesus on faith for the most part.  In modern times, our time, we might use the term, “magical” to explain what the Scriptures present as truth.  For us who have believed all of our lives, perhaps this isn’t much of a stretch—or perhaps we don’t even question the story that on Good Friday, our brother and friend, Jesus of Nazareth was put to death through the will of the powers-that-were at that time in Church and State, and that on Sunday, he rose to new life.  I believe to truly get the importance of what Easter was for those alive when Jesus was, we have to try and put ourselves in their shoes, so to speak. 

   Jesus’ apostles, when they could get their heads, and better yet, their hearts around what was truly happening, would recall that their brother had told them that indeed, after his death, he would “arise” in three days.  Having never experienced a resurrection, they had nothing to compare it with.  They all witnessed Jesus bringing Lazarus, “back to life,” and when he came out of the tomb, with his burial wrappings still on, and the same were removed, they recognized him. 

   Now, going back to the Scriptures, we read that those who saw Jesus, in his new life, didn’t recognize him until he spoke familiar words, or performed familiar actions, that would show his identity. 

   In John’s gospel today, in the longer version, Mary Magdala—Mary, the Tower of Faith, knew her friend and rabbi only when she heard him say her name, “Mary” in only the way that he would say it.  Another Easter reading tells us of Jesus, walking with others on the way to Emmaus, and of them not recognizing him until he stopped, at their home, and “broke bread with them”—something that he commonly did with his followers. 

   So my friends, it is good for us, who have heard these stories so many times, perhaps not even, really hearing them, to understand that what Mary, Peter, John, and the others witnessed was something entirely new to them—something out of this world! 

   And it is precisely for this reason that John’s account of what he and Peter found upon entering the empty tomb, is so revealing.  Remembering that the dead in Jesus’ time weren’t embalmed, but simply, “washed, and wrapped with spices” and put into a tomb, John’s account of finding the burial wrappings in one place, and the face covering neatly folded in another place, doesn’t speak of a grave robbing, as the Jewish hierarchy feared.  Someone stealing a dead body would hardly unwrap it first for obvious reasons. 

   John is trying to tell us, in so many words, that what they found in the empty tomb, was something out of the ordinary—Jesus had truly risen—whatever that meant to them!  John simply says, “they saw and believed!” Alleluia! 

   The other very important human notion for all of us to understand, more than 2,000+ years later, is how bereft and saddened Jesus’ followers felt.  We all within our community here can understand these truly human feelings as we grieve the loss of Shannon Hanzel.  Just as we can still, hardly believe that she is gone, Jesus’ followers felt the same.  For many, he was the answer to a life-time of prayers.  Many saw him as their “King”—someone who would defend them against their enemies –bring peace to their land. 

   The idea that Jesus hadn’t been vanquished by death was a new concept for them to understand.  So, if Jesus wasn’t someone who would rout out their human enemies, what was his earthly purpose?

   They would go back to this earthly question again and again until they fully understood.  Some of what they came to know is laid out quite well in today’s Scriptures. 

   The first reading from Acts, read by Eryn speaks about a Roman centurion, a Gentile, named Cornelius, whom Peter is speaking with, sharing the message of Jesus, the Christ—a message that Peter comes to know was truly meant for all people, all who would listen.  These first apostles came to know that Jesus’ true purpose in coming to be one-with-us, was not about “power over” others, but more so, “power for” –strength, goodness, justice, for all. 

   The 2nd reading, Paul’s letter to the people of Corinth, done so well by Elliot, speaks about this “new way” to be in our world, for ourselves and others, in a way that the people would truly understand, and for present-day, “bread makers” as well. 

   Paul uses the idea of “yeast” and how just a little bit in a measure of flour, causes the dough to rise—to grow.  The effect that yeast has, can bring about good, as well as bad, in the case of when the yeast has gone flat. We know throughout Scripture that Jesus always wants us to take the message a bit deeper. If we start with the “dough” of goodness and truth, that is what will grow and multiply.  Likewise, if our “dough” is made up of selfishness, unkindness, injustice, power over others, that is what will grow. I think we see that in our world today.   

   Our brother Jesus came for one purpose—to show us how to live and to love and to grow and share that goodness with others throughout our one, beautiful, human life.  And it would seem that when we all, each one of us learn how to do that, we will have realized that “heaven” is here, now!  Alleluia!

   In closing my friends, just a word about why I used the longer version of the resurrection narrative from John.  If we had stopped at verse 9, instead of going on through verse 18, we would have missed the most beautiful encounter between Jesus and Mary Magdala, the “Tower of Faith” (true meaning of “magdala”).

   In this day and age, within our Church, where the hierarchy seems to feel that women do not “image” Christ, Jesus gives the lie to that notion! Easter calls us all, my friends, “to be our best,” in the footsteps of Jesus! Amen? Amen!  Alleluia!   

Homily – Palm Sunday

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 in our Church Year, because somehow, most, if not all manage to, for a few days—at least, open up their, for whatever reason, closed hearts and do and perhaps say what is within them, somewhere, but goes unsaid and undone for most of the year.  We call this, LOVE, and how we feel is often expressed best, through the eyes of children. 

   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 falls apart, as we know, 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. 

   I am one for whom, “hope springs eternal,” as I believe many of you are as well.  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 too. 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 the hard times especially, come, we are invited to ask Jesus to walk with us and help us to live these moments well. That is why many Christians, like my friend Bede Baldry offer modern-day Stations of the Cross on Good Friday, as happened last year and will be again this year. Modern day stations allow us to see that Jesus’ sufferings continue in our day and call us to do what we can to eliminate that suffering.

   These past 40 days have found many of you carrying your own personal crosses, through responding to sudden illness in yourselves or a family member, caring for a needy loved one, coming to terms with life-changing events within your families, and through death.  The new life that Easter brings can be ours as it was for Jesus through our faith.

   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 as we know they will be there for us when our time comes. 

   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. And so as to not be misunderstood, I am not only speaking about, “caring for others,” but about keeping ourselves in the equation too—balance, in other words.

   Isaiah, in today’s 1st reading, gives us, “the way to go” as it were and I paraphrase, “God has given us ears to hear, and voices to speak.  He does not promise that we won’t be put down or humiliated, but that God will be with us. 

   Our strength can really be taken from Jesus’ example who prayed to the God that he knew loved him, “if it is possible, let this cup pass me by…”

   So my friends, that tells me that our faith in God and our attempts to do what is right, don’t always have to look perfect.  The passion today tells us that Jesus, “relied on God,” and so should we.

   And because you have already been here for longer than usual, I want to end now with some rather prophetic words from the author of Women Who Run With the Wolves, Clarissa Pinkola Estes, who when speaking of the tough times of COVID 19 in its beginnings said, “We are exactly the leaders that we have been waiting for—we were made for these times!”

   And when you think about it, this was our brother Jesus’ entire message to us throughout his life—he wanted us to know too that we have within us all that is needed to make our world the place God intended for us. Perhaps that is the Easter message! Amen? Amen!