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The Rt. Rev. William D. Persell Its a great joy to be here this morning as we honor the State of South Dakota and to ask Gods blessing upon that state all her people. As I thought about being here today, I could not help but think back to where I was on the Third Sunday of Advent one year ago. Then while feelings were strong and controversy raged over certain actions of the General Convention of the Episcopal Church, a situation that sadly continues in many parts of our Communion, I visited a parish in our diocese where the organist took great issue with my votes at the Convention. For the opening hymn he had gone to the 1940 Hymnal and produced copies of a hymn for all to sing as I came down the center aisle, Turn back, O man, foreswear thy foolish ways. Im grateful for your much warmer welcome this morning. I really am delighted and honored to be here. As we move through the season of Advent in scripture and hymnody we are bombarded and blessed with rich imagery and themes of hope, expectation, repentance, apocalyptic visions of the last days, the prophetic ministry of John the Baptist, and preparation for Christs coming, at any time unannounced, like a thief in the night, in the end to judge the living and the dead, and as the child of Bethlehem, the Incarnation of God, the one who comes into our lives and into our world. Todays gospel continues the story of John the Baptist. John is now in prison for his denunciation of Herod for his immoral relationship with Herodias, his brothers wife. John wonders in his prison cell whether or not Jesus is indeed the Messiah John awaited and foretold. So John sends some of his disciples to ask Jesus openly and directly, Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another? Jesus does not answer yes or no but rather points to what he is doing, his mission, Gods mission in the world. Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them. I sometimes wonder when people in our country look to the Church which claims to be the living body of Christ on earth, what they see and hear today. They may see struggling mainline denominations, battling for market share in a dwindling demographic of potential members. They may see a Church called into being to proclaim Gods unconditional love for everyone, erecting boundaries and designing barriers to keep people out, or in their place. They may see a Church divided by race and class. They may see a Church which has lost its passion for justice, truth-telling and peace, a Church which provides therapeutic balm to cover gaping wounds of injustice and oppression. They may see a Church which was formed in opposition to Empire, a Church whose members suffered persecution and death for proclaiming that Jesus, rather than Caesar, is Lord; they may see the Church blessing the Empires deeds, wars and rule. They may see a Church focused inwardly upon its own life, fighting fierce battles over issues of gender and sexual orientation, rather then accepting the rich diversity of people God has called and focusing with a laser-like concentration on Gods mission in the world. The Church does not exist for itself, but for the world. A Church that is weak, divided, demoralized, and not attending to mission is not a faithful representation of Jesus Christ and is incapable of making the kind of impact needed so desperately in our world. UNICEF, the United National Childrens Fund, released a report this past week with the alarming findings that more than a billion children, which is more than half the children in the world, suffer extreme deprivation because of war, HIV/AIDS and/or poverty. Nearly half the 3.6 million people killed in wars since 1990 have been children. Children are increasingly victims of warfare, sometimes as specific targets. In Northern Uganda, rebels called the Lords Army, have abducted countless children forcing them to be warriors and human shields. In Congo children have been systematically raped as a weapon of war. In Iraq, while school enrollment has risen, so has child malnutrition. HIV and AIDS are destroying millions of childhoods, with two million children infected worldwide and the number of children orphaned by AIDS increasing from 11.5 million to 15 million from 2001 to 2003. As a nation we can find all the money we need to fight a war but we cant find the resources fully to fund our promised battle against AIDS, a weapon of mass destruction beyond our imaginations. Poverty places children under threat, with hunger, inadequate, overcrowded housing, and lack of educational opportunities, especially for girls. More than 29,000 children die every day mostly from preventable causes. If a clean glass of water could cure AIDS, a huge percentage of those suffering from the disease would still die from it. Poverty pushes more than two million children into the sex industry, with over half of them being trafficked (New York Times article by Celia W. Dugger, week of December 5, 2004). And all this is not just a problem for other countries. One out of four girls and one out of five boys in the United States have suffered sexual abuse (Article by Barbara Hughes in the recent issue of Sewanee Theological Review). This is our world as it is today. This is the context in which we have been called to serve and to bear witness to the good news of Jesus Christ. This is our world as we anticipate the birth of the baby Jesus. God comes to us as a baby child, how do we respond? Its easy at Christmas to become very sentimental about Jesus birth. We easily put aside the realities of first century Palestine, a brutal occupying force, poverty, oppression, Herods slaughter of the innocents. We look and we rejoice at seeing the Christ child in the manger, God in human flesh. But today can we not also see God in the face of a homeless child, or of a starving child, or of a child dying with AIDS? Many churches are trying to make our world a better, healthier, more joyful place for children, but we have a long way to go. This mission will require even greater spiritual, political, philanthropic and educational work to make a real impact, to change childrens lives. This mornings passage from Isaiah holds before us a vision of restored people and lands based upon the saving power of God. It is a vision of waters breaking forth in the wilderness, blossoms in the desert, of rejoicing and singing, of blind eyes opened, of the ears of the deaf unstopped, of the lame leaping like deer and the tongues of the speechless singing for joy. The prophet envisions a super highway, the Holy Way, to bring Gods people home to Mt. Zion, where, reconciled to God, they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away. What a grand vision to hold before us, to sustain our hope in this Advent season of so much suffering, division, poverty, war and distress. Can we believe that this is Gods world and that God intends only good for all Gods children? Can we believe that God has called us through our baptism to be Christs body and to carry on the mission which Jesus began in fulfillment of Isaiahs prophecy? If so, then we must heed the prophets injunction to strengthen our weak hands, to make firm our feeble knees, and to say to those who are of a fearful heart, Be strong, do not fear! Here is your God! The Epistle of James also calls upon us to strengthen our hearts, for the coming of the Lord is near. The writer of the epistle cautions patience. Just as a farmer must be patient for the rains to come and produce the precious crop, we must be patient for God to act. But first, of course, the farmer has cleared the land, prepared the soil, and scattered the seed. To be patient does not mean to wait for God to do our work for us. Todays readings show us a Jesus with the power to heal and to bless. And the power of that healing and blessing is none other than the power of God, the power which created and sustains the universe. With so much poverty, disease, environmental degradation, warfare and abuse, how we need that power to heal, reshape, and reconcile our world and our own expectations and behaviors. Jesus work is not to make us feel good to help us to accept the status quo and what is unacceptable, nor is it to sanctify our prejudices and opinions. His job is to bind earth and heaven together, setting loose a flow of divine and creative power which reshapes us and all of creation in Gods image. Or as our Orthodox friends say, Let creation cast off all things old, beholding you the Creator made a child. For through your birth you shape all things afresh, making them new once more and leading them back to their first beauty (adapted from The Festal Manaion). With John the Baptist we look to Jesus and to Christs budy and we ask, Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another? What do we hear and see? Where lives are being changed, where hope is kept alive, where healing of bodies and relationships is occurring, where the struggle for justice and peace is engaged, where children are loved and respected and can play and learn in safetythere we observe Gods power at work in our world. There we are to join with others in the mission for the coming reign of God. |