“Athenians,
I see in everything how devout you are. For passing through and regarding
objects of your worship, I found an altar with the inscription, ‘To an unknown
god.’ What, therefore, you all worship as unknown, this is what I proclaim to
you: The God who made the world and everything in it…Sovereign of heaven and
earth, does not live in temples made by human hands. Neither is God served by
human hands because of needing anything, since God gives to all life and breath
and all things…God made all nations, all persons—women, men, and children—to
inhabit the face of the earth and… ordered the seasons and the boundaries of
their habitation, that they would search
for God and perhaps reach for God and find God, yet indeed God is not far from
any one of us. For ‘In God we
live and move and have our being…’ [Acts 15:1b-28a]
Praise the Ageless God! Sing to the Breath
of Life a new song, her praise in the congregation of the faithful…For
the Ever-Present God delights in
her people; she adorns those afflicted through poverty with liberation. [Psalm 149:1,4]
I commend to you all our sister Phoebe, a
deacon of the church in Cencherae, so that you may receive her in Christ as is
worthy of the saints, and stand by her in whatever thing she may need of you,
for she has been a benefactress of many, and of myself as well. [Romans 16:1-2]
Jesus
said now then, “What is the Majesty of God like? And to what should I compare
it? 19 It is like a mustard seed that a person took and sowed in
their garden, and it grew and became a tree, and the birds of the heavens made
nests in its branches.” 20 And Jesus said again, “To what should I
compare the Mystery of God? 21 It is like yeast that a woman took
and folded in with three measures of flour until all was leavened… Struggle to
enter through the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will seek to enter and
will not be able… There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth… Indeed, some are
last who will be first, and some are first who will be last.” [Luke
13:18-21, 24, 28a, 30]
The reading from Acts this week is long in
excerpt and longer in the text itself. It begins with Paul standing in the
center of the Areopagus (ah-reeoh-PAYgus), which for some context,
is a rock formation just outside of Athens in Greece. It has a very interesting
history and I encourage you to look it up. Indeed a prominent place from which
to address the Athenians, Paul reminds them and us that God is the reason for
the world and everything in it. The sentence that particularly struck me is The
God who made the world and everything in it…Sovereign of heaven and earth…does
not live in temples made by human hands. [emphasis added]. The pairing of that
sentence with the list of names in the reading from Paul to the Romans is a
reminder to us all that our “Ever-Present”
God exists within the community of faith, however and wherever it is dispersed,
the community of the faithful is still connected with and in God’s Presence
anywhere and everywhere. Creation is our “Church.” The buildings humans have
erected for worship are a convenience for gathering in community to celebrate
our Creator, our Redeemer, and our Sanctifier; and, within it (and outside of
it) as the Psalmist reminds us, we are to sing a new song of praise in that
congregation of the faithful.
The Gospel gives us
two brief analogies in the description from Jesus of the Majesty and Mystery of
God. The mustard seed is familiar. I had a necklace of a yellow mustard seed
encased in a small glass orb when I was school-aged. Much later, on a visit to
Israel, I encountered mustard seeds significantly smaller, the size of tiny
flakes of black pepper from a grinder. Either one or many different types of
seeds purchased for a home garden can see the exponentially and unimaginably
greater size of God’s Majesty than the seed. And the Mystery of how some
granulated fungi creates the lift in bread is well beyond us, at least those of
us who aren’t chemistry majors. A further analogy might be that the seed’s use
is visible and outward as we can see the growth of the plant rising from the
ground, while the yeast’s affect is not visible alone until it is mixed into
the flour. Both are transformative as we observe the majestic rise of a stalk
of corn or experience the mystery of the flutter of love within one’s heart.
As for Jesus’s
advice to “Struggle to enter through the narrow door…” let us regroup back into
the passage from Acts 17:30 ~ At one time God overlooked ignorance; now God
commands all women and men everywhere to repent. Repent meaning to confess
one’s sins but also to turn toward God and walk in the footsteps of
Jesus. It isn’t a one and done moment in time but an ongoing, life-lasting
“struggle” at times. Extra points for sincerity, especially with true intent
and effort to change.
In giving us a
glimpse of the Majesty and Mystery of God, Jesus also points us to the Movement
and Magnificence of God. The entry door may be narrow, but if we drop the heavy
pounds of anger, judgment, conceit, the 7 deadlies, etc., through the exercise
of prayer, care, the love of Christ and so on, we can slim our burdens well
enough to slip through that narrow, but always open, door to eternal life.
LET US, GOD’S PEOPLE, PRAY
Leader: ~ O Ageless God, through
giving life and breath to us and to all around us as your offspring, and for
creating this earth to inhabit with its seasons of life, it is truly in you
that we live and move and have our being. May we have the courage to make you
known to all on our path of living, through our words of greeting and actions
of kindness.
O God, Ever-Present
Response: Seed our hearts with your leaven of love
~ O Ageless God,
direct the hearts of those who lead this and all nations of your Creation. Open
the souls of those who choose harm, to hear, to change course, and to enact
plans that ensure justice, peace, and the basic necessities of human life for
every woman, man, and child. We pray especially for: add your own
petitions
O God, Ever-Present
Seed our hearts with your leaven of love
~ O Ageless God,
hear the prayers and heal the bodies and minds of all who suffer through
illness, anxiety, or hopelessness, and grant compassion and empathy to all give
support. We now join our hearts to pray for those in need… add your own
petitions
O God, Ever-Present
Seed our hearts with your leaven of love
~ O Ageless God,
shine the light of Your Presence on all grieving hearts, as those we have sent
ahead, have entered your sacred gates of heavenly peace and life everlasting.
We pray especially for: add your own petitions
O God, Ever-Present
Seed our hearts with your leaven of love
~ O Ageless God,
we pause in this moment to offer You our other heartfelt thanksgivings,
intercessions, petitions, and memorials, aloud or silently…add your own
petitions
O God, Ever-Present
Seed our hearts with your leaven of love
~ O Ageless God,
as we rejoice in you, our Maker, let us rejoice also for those anointed and
ordained to serve in Your Church to bring us your Word and Sacraments, and walk
with us in the love and way of Christ. We pray especially for: add your own petitions
O
God, Ever-Present
Seed
our hearts with your leaven of love
The Celebrant adds: O God of All There Is, our true Breath of Life, fill our spiritual lungs with a new song of
praise for all you that have given us. Turn whatever our despair and anger may
be, into positive energy to serve our human siblings and ensure the health of
this planet and all beyond it. We ask through Christ Jesus, Resurrected; and
the Holy Spirit, the Mother of Wisdom; who together with you are our One Living
God, now and forever. Amen.
*Readings for our Parish in this Year C are from The Rev.
Dr. Wilda [Wil] Gafney, Womanist biblical scholar, and the Right Rev. Sam
B. Hulsey Professor of Hebrew Bible at Brite Divinity School in Fort Worth,
Texas. She is the author of A Women’s Lectionary for the Whole Church Yr
C, and others in her series, and translator of its biblical selections. I
definitely commend her book for the complete readings, to Clergy and Laity, for
her Text Notes, and “Preaching Prompts” whether or not you will use them in
your Liturgies/Services/Preaching. There is much to learn from her work to
inform every facet of our lives in Christ. To learn more about her and
her work, see her website: https://www.wilgafney.com/