Saturday, December 31, 2011

HE PITCHED HIS TENT AMONGST US


The Very Rev Tracey Lind preached one of the best Christmas sermons I've come across in my life at Trinity Cathedral in Cleveland, Ohio.
The real symbol of Christmas is not the Christmas tree, Santa Claus, an angel, or even a star; no, the real symbol of Christmas is a newborn baby. Writing from a Nazi prison during World War II, Dietrich Bonhoeffer articulated this radical truth about Christmas. “We are talking about the birth of a child, not the revolutionary act of a strong man, not the breathtaking discovery of a sage, not the pious act of a saint.”
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The paradox of Christmas is that God chose to enter the world in the very form to which human beings are drawn, and yet in circumstances from which we tend to turn away. Jesus – Emmanuel – God with us was born as a homeless baby on a bed of straw in a cold and dirty stable, amid barn animals. His parents were poor and unwed, a teenage mother and her fiancé who were forced to travel far from home to register for taxes with an oppressive government. Then, after a brief but powerful ministry of preaching, teaching, and healing, at the age of thirty-three, he was condemned of treason and heresy, and executed as a criminal on a cross of wood. Our God’s coming into the world was like that of thousands of children born in similar circumstances every day; his ministry has been both an inspiration and a threat to people, institutions, governments, and yes, even churches throughout the ages; and his death has been repeated all too often in virtually every country on earth.
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As I stand among you tonight, I am mindful of those who, because of war, economic hardship or natural disaster, are forced to sleep in tents and under tarps around the world, and I know that the Risen Christ is dwelling among them. But I’m also aware of those who are intentionally pitching tents on public squares, sidewalks, parks, parking lots, and even church steps as part of what-has-come-to be- known-as the Occupy Movement; and I keep seeing the face of Jesus in that crowd.
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This fumbling, stumbling and sometimes bumbling coalition of young people, many of whom are graduating from college with enormous debt and limited job prospects, joining forces with the out-of-work middle-aged and out-of-luck elders, are doing their best to speak and act prophetically about the transformation they see as essential in today’s world.
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You see, when God wants an important thing done in this world or a wrong righted, God comes and sleeps beside us, sometimes as a new born child and sometimes as homeless adult. And then God waits to see how we respond.
Please read the entire sermon, especially the conclusion, which proclaims the gift of hope, the Good News that the Christ Incarnate dwells amongst us.

While growing up, I heard over and over in my Roman Catholic school religion classes that Easter, the feast of Christ's Resurrection, was the greatest feast in the church. All the children I knew, and I include myself, thought Christmas was the greatest feast, and I wonder if this idea of the children was not just about Santa and presents, but rather that they grasped, if only in a shadowy way, a truth that grown-ups miss. Once again, in my dotage, filled with awe and wonder, I've come to believe that the Incarnation/Nativity, the momentous event of God come down to be one of us, born a helpless babe, human, just like us, sharing our joys and sorrows, is the greatest feast of the Christian church. Without the Incarnation, none of the rest of the Jesus story, including the Resurrection, would have happened.

And I've run on about the Occupy movement probably to the point of boring some of you, and I'm not sure where the movement will go, but I believe the Christian churches ought to be a presence with the rag-tag groups who have pitched their tents around the country, because who knows but that they are God's angels, bearing messages we need to hear?

The lovely Nativity set is Raku pottery and belongs to Penelopepiscopal at One Cannot Have Too Large a Party.

11 comments:

  1. Amen, Grandmere! Amen!! I agree --the Incarnation is the most awesome and radical thing --and the most generous assurance of hope: God With Us. Amen!

    Merry Christmas (yes, we're still partying here!) and Happy New Year.

    Thank you for the link to Rev Lind's sermon.

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  2. Emmanuel...God with us! Let us continue to rejoice and be glad, margaret. 12 days is hardly too long a time to celebrate.

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  3. You will never bore me with Occupy. And, at the risk of being boring myself, I've said it many times before and I'll say it many times again: This sermon is but one more reason why the DioNY really goofed up bad by not electing Tracey Lind as their bishop.

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  4. Elizabeth, Bishop Sisk goofed badly with his message of support for throwing the Occupiers out. I don't know what Bishop-elect Dietsche would have done in the situation, but I will say that any priest who preached a sermon such as this one by Tracey Lind is beyond impressive. And I'm sure this is not her first courageous and excellent sermon. Surely another diocese will benefit from her leadership in the not-too-distant future.

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  5. I'm thinking and hoping that Tracey Lind may become Bishop of NJ. That would be a real treasure in my estimation.

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  6. "And I've run on about the Occupy movement probably to the point of boring some of you"

    Not in the slightest, says I! [Been eye-rolling at some of the critics of the choice of Occupy as a major news story of 2011 }-/]

    Occupy hasn't been the lead story over the holidays (because almost nothing IS a lead story now!), but it isn't going away. "Pitching a tent", now as 2000 years ago, is a POWERFUL way to share Good News! :-D

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  7. JCF, thank you for not being bored. What a lovely New Year present.

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  8. You won't ever bore me, June. Especially not with Occupy. It's nice to know we have such a thoughtful ally. As I've told you, I've been in a lot of churches, retreats, quiet days, etc. I feel the presence of God when I am with and working for OWS than in any of those places. The Holy Spirit envelops me watching this play out.

    It was a gorgeous sermon; thanks for posting it.

    Happy New Year!!

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  9. whiteycat, wouldn't it be lovely if Tracey Lind became bishop in NJ?

    Joe! It's great to hear from you. I know I won't bore YOU when I speak of Occupy. I believe you about the powerful presence of the Spirit with the Occupy group, because I felt the power when I read your words.

    May God bless you and all in Occupy, and I wish you a wonderful year in 2012.

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  10. Mimi, thanks for this sermon link. Dean Lind's sermon is very powerful. And I love the picture! :-)

    I am with you about this feast being the greatest, and for many reasons, including the ones you mention. As wonderful as it is that Christ died for us, it seems for me even more wonderful that God wished to live for and with us in the first place.

    Blessings for the new year!

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  11. Penny, thank you. May you have a Blessed New Year which so soon followed the beginning of a new chapter in your life.

    That God came down to live with us, joining us even in the grit and grime of our dailiness, is the wonder.

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