Sunday, February 28, 2010

February foto fest

In chronological order....


First, some snow photos from 24 February. While the Vermont Greens are getting in tons of snow, this really has been the last snow storm in Rutland. The grounds are almost bare now.


The snow did cover up the messes the huge crows have left on our sidewalks.


The magnolia bushes look lovely with their egg-white snow balls.


The tower also looks splendid in the wet snow.


The cross carries well its white mantle.


Meanwhile, back to the soup kitchen (look at the Lent 2C sermon below for another photo), where Sally greeted guests. About 40 people came, 25 from the community. Next lunch is on Saturday 13 March.


Members of the Treble choir helped out wonderfully.


The storm 25-26 February did some minor damage to the trees out front and the west side of the roof.


Bud helped cut the branches into stove-sized pieces (why let the wood go to waste, even though it is green?).


Jim and Phill also helped out in picking up the yard. Notice the damage on the roof up to the left.


This is what Phill and Wendy found Friday morning when they got to work.


And here's what it looks like today.

Never a dull moment.

Lent 2C

I am going to make a statement that could apply to 100, 200 and many more years ago. It speaks to a universality....

There is so much tragedy in the world these days to cause us to weep. Haiti enters its sixth week of life post earthquake. Chile has now joined the ranks of the suffering and Hawai’i felt the effects of the earthquake’s resultant tsunami even though it was mild. The First Nation people of South Dakota are still struggling to come back to normalcy after an ice storm left them without electricity and water for two weeks. Last week we took up a collection for Episcopal Relief and Development. Know that they will still be there for the long-haul for all these places, just as Vermont-based foundations Cristosal, Pure Water for the World and CHABHA will be (if you’re curious, come to our Lenten series!).

Even as we weep for the people of these places, even as Jesus wept for his beloved Jerusalem, we are constantly called to pick up our spiritual bags and move on. That is what Lent is about.

Last week we entered into the desert and today we continue this faith journey into the desert. Our pilgrimage lasts seven weeks until we arrive in Jerusalem where our saviour, Jesus Christ, suffered, died and rose again. During this time, the church invites us to follow a more serious life, a life that brings us closer to God.

This season, which began with Ash Wednesday asks us to become pilgrims in the journey of love. To become a pilgrim one must become humble, humble like dust and ashes. One has to realise that there is not a clear path to this love and God; by walking the journey creates itself.

The Lenten journey is above all that which asks us to enter into the depths of our hearts where not only the good resides; so also do our sins against God, our neighbour and ourselves. Lent invites us to examine our conscience and then repent of our sins. What strengthens us in this journey is the knowledge that God made us in God’s image and despite our sins, we are not bad; we are still God’s beloved.

A word of caution, however, about the nature of this journey: it is not merely about entering deep into ourselves. Sam Portaro reminds us, ‘Living into relationship with God is the most profound Lenten discipline. Lent is a time for intentional work on our relationship. God feels earth’s sorrows and mine. God shares earth’s work, and yours. God knows earth’s joy, and ours. In relationship we share everything. Yet when we undertake our disciplines, our schemes of self-reformation or community transformation, we only reinforce the notion that we can go it alone, that all is dependent upon us. Withdrawing further into ourselves we unwittingly deny the very thing we confess in the wearing of ashes.

‘It is not we alone who need to turn around in this season. God wants to share our lives. God, too, wants to come in from the distance we have imposed. God longs to be included again, perhaps most deeply longs to be included by those of us who, in our selfish designs and controls, have locked God out. Perhaps God’s deepest grief comes of us who… have denied God any active place. God wants to share our lives again.’ (1)

So, part of our Lenten journey, beyond weeping holy tears for all that is tragic in the world, is letting God back into our lives. That is perhaps the most important aspect of Lent, beyond whatever self-reform we might come up with. Sometimes that means taking a journey to the unknown.

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The first reading for today tells us the story of Abram and his wife, Sarai (though she does not appear in the reading, she has a very important role in the development of the people of Israel). God has asked them to leave their native country to go to a foreign land. At first, Abram protests, saying that he does not want to go so far away with no assurances of the future. Eventually, he decides to leave with all his family. Thus Abram and Sarai become pilgrims in a place that is not theirs. When they begin their journey to the unknown, they have in front of them four promises to guide them: God will make of them a great nation; God will bless them, God will give importance to their names and finally, through them, God will bless all the families of the world. When he receives these promises, Abram no longer asks anything of God; he accepts it all and takes off into his faith journey.

Quite a while later, God reappears to Abram. He speaks to him in a way that normally is reserved for people who speak to angels — the type conversation that happens when God wants someone to do something outrageous. When God speaks to the prophets or Mary or in other cases, God’s first words are, Do not be afraid. (There is no place in the Bible where God begins his wishes by saying: Be afraid!) God continues: I will be a shield for you; and your reward shall be very great. In the original Hebrew, the word, ‘shield,’ was actually ‘garden’ or a secure place — God would be a secure place for Abram and Sarai.

Before saying anything else, Abram stops God with his big question — like most everyone else when God comes to them with an outrageous request: How can this be when I am childless? He can’t even picture the possibility of starting a family because Sarai is so old. God answers by telling him to look at the stars in the heavens; his descendents will be as numerous as them. Further, God will make a pact with Abram in which his descendents will be given the land from the river in Egypt to the great river of the Euphrates.
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How many have you done what Abram did, that is, leave your country to go to an unknown place with little hope? Have you ever asked God: Why do I have to leave? What more do you want me to do for you? It hurts to leave and I am afraid. Have you ever asked yourself these questions or similar ones?

We have someone in our midst who is about to go forth to unknown parts, leaving behind her life here for six to ten months. Noelle will be working in Haiti. She will need our prayers. She will need our support. She can do it because God has said to her as God says to anyone following God’s path: Do not be afraid. But there will be moments when questioning the wisdom of this decision will arise.


We have launched ourselves off onto an unknown journey with our soup kitchen. We don't really know where the road is going to lead us but we have God's promise of accompaniment.

God will always answer us with these words, Do not be afraid. Regardless whether this is an imminent question or one off in an unknown future or at the time of our death, God will always say to us that it will work out — all will be well, all will be well and all manner of thing shall be well. We may not always understand just what ‘well’ means because sometimes our definition is very different from God’s. But all will be well.

How do we trust in this promise? We trust because God has made a pact with us just as with Abram. At the moment of becoming members of Christ’s body through baptism, God promises us that God will always be with us and will never abandon us. From the moment we receive blessed water on our foreheads, we are heirs of God’s kingdom. Above all, we have the promise that God loves us now and always.

This love is so strong. God’s love for us is good news and thanks to it, we can enter deeply into Lent’s journey. With God’s love, we can become pilgrims on this journey of love. This pilgrimage is sometimes bizarre and unknown with many twists and turns, but God always writes straight on the crooked lines of our lives. Like Abram, we have the promise that God will be with us for all times. So, let us be on our way… without fear.

END NOTE
(1) Sam Portaro, Daysprings: Meditations for the Weekdays of Advent, Lent, and Easter (Cambridge, MA: Cowley, 2000), 70.

Photo: Barbara stirring the pot for our first soup kitchen, 13 February 2010

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Shrove Tuesday pancake supper

Despite the snow, two dozen folks showed up for supper (and to watch the kitchen get more and more smoked up).


The guys started cooking about 4.30 and had enough batter for 40 people. Somehow we did not have much trouble polishing off the flapjacks.


This does not really show how smoked up the kitchen got but we did not set off the fire alarm/smoke detector.


Some of the happy diners... and this is before folks got into the ice cream!


The children got to make Mardi Gras masks and had fun running around the parish hall in them.

Thanks to one and all for setting up, cooking and taking down!

Shrove Tuesday


Despite the (mild) snowfall, we're on for dinner tonight from 5.00 on. Then men are at work as I post this and I will wander down later to see how smoky they've gotten the kitchen. So come get the total sugar high you've always wanted.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Epiphany 5C


The scene in the gospel reading has shifted from the synagogue where we have spent the past two Sundays, to the Lake of Galilee, otherwise known as Gennesaret, a lake about as big as Lake Winnepesakee in New Hampshire. In between the teaching in the synagogue and where we pick up again in the narrative, Jesus has healed a man with an unclean spirit, Simon’s mother suffering with a high fever and many others. The gospel reports that the next morning, Jesus withdraws to a quiet place, but people follow him. Jesus answers: ‘I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God to the other cities also; for I was sent for this purpose.’ Off he goes to other synagogues in other towns.
And then Jesus comes to the lake.

There are many ways we can come to this well-known story. We can call it a ‘pronouncement story,’ because there is a declaration at the end; we can call it a ‘nature miracle’ because of the provision of fish. We can call it a ‘gift miracle’ story because of what is provided. And we can call it a ‘commission narrative’ because at the end of the story, Jesus commissions the disciples to follow him. All of these takes on the story are possible and all of them speak to us. But for today I am going to focus on the commissioning part of the story and what it takes to get there.

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It is obvious by now that Jesus has become a popular figure; people are following him around and the gospel has just finished telling us that Jesus has been teaching the crowd. Indeed, despite the one attempt to throw Jesus off the side of a cliff, most of what Jesus has done and said thus far has met with little resistance. The crowd by the lake presses in on Jesus, hoping to hear the word from God. But Jesus is looking for a place to get away form the crowd and spots two boats. The men by the boats have come in from fishing at night — a time when the catch is better and the conditions easier for the fishermen. It is surprising, then, that Jesus — a carpenter’s son — tells the men they should get back into the boat and go out again. It is even more surprising that they oblige, but Simon responds out of faith and gives the order for the men to go back out into the lake.

So they do and, as we know well, they catch more fish than possibly imagined. The implications are immediate: Simon Peter — the first time he is called this full name in the gospel — immediately realises that this catch is of God, not of ordinary circumstances. Jesus commissions him and, by extension, the others, by saying: Do not be afraid, for you will become fishers (really ‘catchers’) of people. And, once the men are back on shore, they leave their miraculous catch behind and follow Jesus.

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What really grabs my attention in this story is Jesus’ invitation to the men to go back out in the lake and their response to it.

Jesus says to Peter, Put out into the deep water. And they do. Why?

It is frightening to put out into the deep water, to go far from the protective shores, to get in over one’s head. Jesus is asking the disciples to stretch themselves further than they imagine possible. Tired, frustrated, worn out, the last thing they want to do is get back into the boats and go out further than where they were before.

But sometimes we are called to do just that, at those moments when we feel the most fragile, the weakest, the most tired.

What does it take to go out into the deep waters, to get in over our heads? Trust... lots of it. Trust that the boat is solid, trust that those with us can help us if we feel we are in it too deeply, trust that we can get back to shore. Without a safe framework, it is too difficult to leave the protective edges of the shore to go out to those deep waters, to go where we have not gone before.

Having companions on the way is essential for going to those deep places in our lives. The voyages that take us into deep waters are not just those that we take by ourselves but also as a community, and as a congregation.

As a congregation we are also asked to stretch ourselves in ways beyond what we think possible. And that can be as scary as undertaking a journey by ourselves. But the gospel this morning leaves few doubts. Three things are clear from what happens to Peter and the disciples when they get into the boat and follow Jesus out into the middle of the lake.

• First, by getting into the boat with Jesus, they indicate their willingness to be open to the wholly Other — to God. They go, not knowing or understanding where following Jesus will lead them, but they go, open to encountering high mystery, the power of God when God breaks into our lives.

• Second, they allow themselves to become vulnerable, and with that vulnerability comes the recognition of the limits of their humanity. That recognition of inadequacy is echoed in Peter’s: Leave me, for I am a sinful man. His cry is less one about particular sins, but rather the recognition of his creatureliness and his limitations as a human being.

• Third, the moment we recognise our inadequacy, our sin, and our smallness before the greatness of God, then we are capable of truly being called out of ourselves. When God calls us, saying, ‘Whom shall I send? Who will go for us?’, we — as the prophet Isaiah has done — can answer: ‘Here I am. Send me.’

It takes a lot of work to overcome the natural human resistance to bumping into the Holy. It is scary to get too near to God. God wants too much. God knows too much. God is too single-minded. Bumping into the Holy can mean sinking to the depths. Bumping into the Holy means losing one’s life as one knows it now. But in losing our life, we gain a new one, touched by God. So, it takes a lot of work to overcome these fears in order to trust that we truly can go out into the deep waters. But once we come to trust, we see that God is there guiding us.

And there is a reason for putting out into the deep waters that goes beyond our own needs. There is a reason why we risk being touched by God, caught by God. It is simply called: Mission. Evangelism. Vocation. Words that carry so much baggage by themselves that I hesitate to use them. But that is what God calls us to do: go out further and cast deeper, stretching ourselves, allowing ourselves to be sent out to spread the Good News. Called by God, we hand down what we have been graced to receive. We are called to proclaim the mercy of God’s grace, God’s love, the gospel. When we do that, we find life.

How can we, the people of Trinity, as individuals and as a congregation, be touched by God? How can we put out into the deep waters? What will putting out into the deep waters look like for us? Where will God lead us? Right now, we are happily casting our nets, content with our life. What will our lives look like when God comes to us? How will the peace of God turn our lives upside down? How will we, as individuals and as a congregation, respond to God’s call? How can we say, ‘Here I am. Send me’?

This Saturday, some folks are going to put out into the deep waters and trust in God’s direction. We are going to have a soup luncheon open to anyone and everyone. Maybe it means that we will end up feeding ourselves... but maybe, some of the people who come to the office weekdays looking for assistance might hear about it and get a hot meal. And if that is the case, who knows where God will take us? Sara Miles says, ‘Anywhere there is food, spirit and matter intersect.’ We are about to go on a huge ride.

Miles, whose first book Take This Bread we’ll discuss in the second half of Lent during a Lenten series devoted to outreach, writes in her second book, Jesus Freak, ‘If Jesus is about anything, it’s the inconvenient truth that a spiritual life is a physical life’ (xvi). And that physical life means putting out into deep waters and seeing where we will go.

Yes, some of it can be scary… but the boat is solid because it is Christ, there is Christ in the boat with us, there are good people in the boat with us and there are good folks on the shore. So let's push off to the deep. We can do it… with God’s help.

photo from here