Eucharistic Community
By Charles Rush
April 6, 2014
Lk. 19: 41-43, 2 Cor. 5: 16-20
[ Audio
(mp3, 5.2Mb) ]
As he approached Jerusalem and saw the city, he wept over it and
said, "If you, even you, had only known on this day what would bring
you peacebut now it is hidden from your eyes. The days will come upon
you when your enemies will build an embankment against you and encircle
you and hem you in on every side.
From now on, therefore, we regard no one from a human point of view;
even though we once knew Christ from a human point of
view, we know him no longer in that way. So if anyone is in
Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see,
everything has become new! All this is from God, who reconciled us
to himself through Christ, and has given us the ministry of
reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to
himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and
entrusting the message of reconciliation to us. So we are
ambassadors for Christ, since God is making his appeal through us; we
entreat you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.
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ue Story: At the State Fair in North Carolina, a strongman show featured a hulking man that cut a lemon in half and crush squeezed it with his bare hands. Then he took the lemon and put it in one of those old fashion presses and he squeezed it down with all his might. He turned to the audience and confidently bragged that he would give anyone in the audience $100 if they could squeeze anymore juice out of that lemon and he tossed the lemon in the trash. Just then an elderly woman with wire rim glasses said ‘wait a minute' and parted her way through the crowd. She reached in the trash, picked up the lemon, turned her back to the audience to get a good grip, turned around, squeezing that lemon and sure enough several drops of juice fell in the glass, to the amazement of the crowd. They all clapped, the strongman reached for his billfold and said, “Ma'am what is the secret to getting that last drop?” She waved him off as she headed back to her seat and said, “Son, I'm the treasurer at the Methodist Church.”
After thirty
years as a Minister, I now know that the best test of character for the finance
people in the church is watch their reaction while I drive my truck a few miles
with the needle below E and the little gas tank light on.
Some people live
their lives with a regular change of oil, and extra check to make sure all the fluids are
topped off. These people work at Morgan Stanley or if they are in the
non-profit world, they are at the Ford Foundation or the Lily Foundation.
In the Church,
and this is true almost everywhere, we say that God will provide. That is
because we have all been to at least one meeting and sometimes years of them
when there was no other visible source of relief on the extended horizon. God
will provide but apparently only after a miracle is required.
I feel like I've
been apologizing to financial people about this sorry state of affairs most of
my adult life. I ran into Ravenel Curry last week,
one of New York's leading investors, and he'd been reading about the parsonage
sale. He asked me how things were at the church and I said, “Ravenel, the church is good but we are cash poor.” He said,
“Chuck, that just means your asset rich”. I said, “Ravenel, I was hoping to have it both ways like you.” Ravenel just smiles…
We are not in
financial peril by any stretch of the imagination. Overextended
perhaps, but in a quite ordinary way. I'm actually modestly optimistic
about the trends in the Church. Last year we had 39 families pledge to the
church for the first time. We also had 17 stop, which is about average for us.
About 15 families move or move on from church every year, reflective of the
fact that we are in a transient part of the world. But to grow by 22 families
is good for us and growing is one of the few trends we actually have some
control over.
We bought the
house next door, 57 New England Ave, in 2001, when we were building the new
building. It couldn't have come at a worse time for us, being financially
strapped. But, we needed a place to move the offices and we did move the
offices over there for two years. And if you can remember back to that era when
we all pretty much believed that real estate would continue to rise in our
area, that optimism was a factor. Also, the sellers made fairly clear that they
were going to sell it to a developer, so we bought it hoping to figure out how
to pay for it later.
September 11th
changed us. The recession of 2007 delayed fund-raising. The house had
structural problems that became clearer. We were hoping that we could develop
this one long piece of property and pay for it which would have been great. But
like a lot of our businesses, certainly a lot of non-profits and churches, like
a lot of our families, we need to amend our plans to adjust to the new
realities of an economy that is recovering but not flush with cash that had in
the late 90's in our era.
So, today we
will have a meeting and vote on the issue. This is what people in the free church tradition do. They decide their own destiny. If
we were Roman Catholic, the Archdiocese would decide what to do. In some other
Protestant churches, we would involve the Bishop in a much bigger way. But I
once heard someone describe Christ Church as an ‘owner/operator' kind of place.
And that is a pretty good description. We make our own way, for better and
worse.
A lot of times,
that can be divisive. There was a bad joke in the South when I was a child.
What do you call it when a church has an ugly fight and one part of the church
gets so angry that they leave and start their own church? You call it missions.
Every town in the south has a 1st Baptist Church and most of them
have a 2nd Baptist Church. Not real creative on the naming front,
admittedly. But it you ask about ho they came into existence, almost every time
it was a fight over something not worth fighting over.
It doesn't have
to be that way. Indeed, St. Paul made clear in his view that God called the
church into being so that we could actually build one another up, inspire one
another, work through our disagreements and become agents of reconciliation. He
comes back to this over and over. Be people that reconcile with one another.
And from the earliest days, we Christians referred to the altar with the
communion elements as the Table of Reconciliation. More than any other thing,
this is what we are supposed to be focused on when we gather around it.
And you know and
I know that sometimes we have to make decisions that are hard, when the way
forward is not clear. About 15 years ago a couple came to me and asked me to
bless their union as a gay couple. Now, I don't actually have the authority to
make those decisions on my own. I represent the congregation, so we put the
question to the congregation.
Fifteen years
ago, we were the first congregation in Summit to consider this vote. At the
time, gays and lesbians were still more in the closet and some people worried
about what might happen if we blessed gay unions. Maybe we'd get the reputation
of being the church of ‘what's happening now' that sort of just follows the
popular trends without any real spiritual substance. Others of us, of course,
wondered how long it would take before we showed some humanity to our children
who happen to be gay and lesbian?
We did some
education, had speakers in about how we develop our sexual orientation. We had
people speak about having gay and lesbian kids, siblings. We did some bible
study on the subject. We listened to people's fears. Finally, the Deacons
proposed that we bless gay unions, the Executive Board endorsed it, we put it to the congregation.
That was a
serious and difficult vote because we asked you to vote your conscience, to
reflect your personal values. There were a lot of u,
frankly, that would rather have not had to think about it. We don't always want
to re-examine our values. But we did.
That day, I
preached on reconciliation, knowing that wasn't going to be easy to practice
after the vote. We opened the meeting, called for people to speak for and
against. We had exactly one person speak for and one person to speak against.
We voted. I think the vote was 84%-16% in favor of blessing gay and lesbian
unions. We had a few families leave the church. By the way, we had a few
families more join the church. People reached out to each other and over the
years, we have become reconciled with each other. Of course, fifteen years on,
it is not such a big deal now and almost all of our churches would like to be
accepting of gays, if they could.
But here is the
thing I forget about those votes. Our kids are watching us. That day, I did
something I've only done once in my adult life. After the vote, I put my kids
in the minivan and I drove home from church as a family. I'm sure I was
reflective about the day and the people that voted no and what would come next.
I turned the car off and just sat there staring ahead. From the backseat I
heard one of my kids say, “Dad, I'll never say you didn't stand for anything.”
It was one of
those things I didn't know I needed to hear until he said it. And I would like
to thank the church for showing the next generation what the church looks like
on its best days. And it has come back to bless us, now as those teenagers are
young parents and they are involved in leading our congregation today.
Which means… that they are still watching us.
I remind you of
that high moment because the vote that we have today doesn't carry any of the
moral or spiritual gravitas that that vote had. We didn't' speak a whole lot on
that issue because we don't feel so confident in the moral or spiritual arena
and we don't really want to reveal that much about ourselves on discussion of
that depth.
But real estate? Almost everyone of
us feels ourselves to be an expert on this subject. We've done very well with
our real estate investments. Balance sheets? More that half of us have to read
balance sheets every week at work, we know about fiscal prudence. And you don't
have to have values or convictions on a debate about property,
you just need to have an opinion. And we are more than confidence about forming
our opinion.
On moral issues,
we might be a bit reticent, but on these issues, we have five times the wisdom
we need in this room to make a mature decision. And there is no ‘right' vs.
‘wrong' here, just better and worse.
Regardless of
which option we pick, we will go on and we will be fine. Fortunately, whatever
decision we make today can be reversed in the future when the congregation
grows and our revenues are higher.
Indeed, one of
the biggest challenges that we face right now, whether we are in the church or
in our business life or in our personal life, is being able to project out
about what we will really need in a decade. The pace of technological
innovation, how we actually connect with each other, and what that means for
the development of community has changed so much in the past decade that I would
hardly venture a guess as to what we will be like 20 years from now. The most
significant technical changes that will shape us socially,
will be invented between now and then. We literally cannot see what is coming
next.
This is what
really is important, particularly in an era where we are shooting the social
and technological rapids together. We need each other to discern ‘the signs of
the times'. Our spiritual needs are evolving. Fortunately for us in the free church tradition, we are free to evolve as well. We
don't have to do things the way that we've done them. No one is going to come
tell us that we have to conform to this or conform to that. That is the upside
of being a spiritually self-directed community.
The downside is
we are on our own. We need each other. When we invoke the Spirit of God in our
midst what we are blessing each and every one of us to tell us how the world is
changing around us and how we need to be evolving in light of it. The changes
are broad enough and profound enough that no one of us is going to be
articulate about the new shape of the way we live and what we think that means
for raising our children. But together, we will give voice to that. And from
there, we will discern where we need to head in the next chapter.
In former times,
our ancestors might have felt like they were sailing a ship through fog. But
for us, it is more like we are riding a speeding rocket, very thrilling
panorama of the universe unfolding before us, but with the anxiety that by the
time you see and impending collision, it is likely to be too late. Our social
world is just morphing and evolving around us in ways that are mostly
beneficent. But it will take all of us together to anticipate what the rising
generation will need and what challenges will preoccupy their spiritual lives. This
is our communal challenge. For that we need understanding of different points
of view, we need empathy and compassion, we need toleration that produces a
different kind of spiritual harmony where respect enters the space between
difference. From that we need to work towards consensus and integration.
St. Paul
described what God wants for us inour broader life
together that we are all ambassadors of reconciliation. And when that happens spiritual love- a divine love- is transfused through
all of us drawing us together as the ‘beloved community' as John called us.
Christians called it ‘koinonia', a communion, a group
contribution, a group sympathy with each other,
healing not only each other but the community around us. God wants to fill us
with that love and point us in the direction of peace.
Our marketplace
is built on competition, sometimes the higher kind that leads to innovation,
sometimes the lower kind that squeezes the weak because it can.
Our political
life is built on partisanship, sometimes the higher kind that leads to popular
charismatic movements, sometimes the lower kind that blocks the opposition
party and brings the national agenda to a standstill to make a loud statement.
But in our
spiritual life, we actually try to transcend the contentious model in favor of
co-operation. This is what God wants us to become. We try to transcend ‘us' and
‘them'. We try to transcend discord. We try to practice forgiveness and
actually embody reconciliation. Jesus taught us that it is a richer way to live
together and it is certainly a more fulfilling way to live at home.
We gather around
the Communion Table, to serve each other in blessing. My brothers and sisters,
come to the table of grace. Amen.