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    <title>Rev. Aron Kramer</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/" />
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    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2009-02-20:/aron//5</id>
    <updated>2011-10-09T18:03:27Z</updated>
    
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<entry>
    <title>Sermon for Sun Oct 9, 2011</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2011/10/sermon_for_sun_oct_9_2011.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2011:/aron//5.45</id>

    <published>2011-10-09T18:01:13Z</published>
    <updated>2011-10-09T18:03:27Z</updated>

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        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
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<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">Four words from this
Gospel<span style="">&nbsp; </span>have haunted me all week. Those
four words: And he was speechless.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>What
happens to the man who was speechless?<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>What does the King who has invited all these people, the King who seems
to have a will that blinds his own compassion and love, what does the King do
to the man who was speechless?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He has
him bound and tossed into the outer darkness.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>I mean, come on, the man was invited, wasn't he?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The man was doing nothing wrong, it seems, he
was harmless.</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">Not wearing the right robe as
a parable for the Kingdom
 of Heaven is something I have
trouble wrapping my head around.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I will
be honest with you, the standard interpretation of this Gospel does not sit
well with me.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The first group that
rejected the Kings invitation are the Jews and the second group invited are all
of us. <span style="">&nbsp;</span>We all know where that goes, where
it went.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Besides, there is an important
historical question, was Jesus setting himself against the Jews of his time, or
was he setting himself against the Roman establishment, the oppressive and
corrupt Herodian government?</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">If Jesus' words were directed
at the Pharisees and Saduccees I believe that he was not so much speaking to
them as people who had rejected God, or even Jesus himself, he was speaking to
them, rather, as leaders who stood idly by and watched as their own people were
murdered, oppressed, raped and beaten.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>The people Jesus was speaking to were people who had power and influence
and chose not to participate in an exercise of liberation, chose not to
participate in a process of freedom and dignity.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">We hear a whole lot about
what it means to be silent.<span style="">&nbsp; </span><a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elie_Wiesel" title="Elie Wiesel" rel="wikipedia">Elie Wiesel</a> said,
"...to remain silent and indifferent is the greatest sin of all..."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We have heard or read <a class="zem_slink" href="http://answers.com/topic/desmond-tutu#Gale_Contemporary_Black_Biography_d" title="Desmond Mpilo Tutu" rel="answerscom">Desmond Tutu</a>'s and
<a class="zem_slink" href="http://answers.com/topic/martin-luther-king-jr#Gale_Contemporary_Black_Biography_d" title="Martin Luther King, Jr." rel="answerscom">Martin Luther King Jr</a>'s statements about how those who remain silent side with
the oppressors.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>These are condemning
words, because there is a lot of injustice and corruption in the world and we
tend to remain silent on most issues.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Silence can, apparently, lead to death.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Now we can add Jesus to this list of people who have a deep disdain for
those who remain silent in the face of injustice.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">This person who did not wear
the appropriate attire to the wedding, which presumably was provided by the
King, was rejected outright by the host of this marvelous wedding banquet.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>How was the man brought to the King's
attention?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Did someone else point him
out?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Was what he was wearing so obvious
that the King did not have to look long to find this sore thumb?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And why did this man not have a simple
response?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Why did he not say, I don't
know,, offering the King a teaching moment, or why not say, gosh, the stewards
ran out, I was the last one in the line, leaving Jesus the opportunity to say
the first shall be last?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Why did he
remain silent, and what was so important that the King would not tolerate for
one single ounce or second this man's presence?</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">So I began to ask myself
about what it means to be silent, what it means to speak up, what it means to
make a stand.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I found myself agreeing
with Elie Wiesel, Martin Luther King Jr. and Desmond Tutu, and of course, Jesus
as well.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Silence is a form of
oppression, silence does place us on the side of the oppressors, silence
destroys our own soul, our own identity and even our own faith.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>To stand by silently implicates us in ways we
cannot imagine.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>So does that mean we
have to pick some issue, make it our own and be the voice for that issue in the
world?</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">This is where I found myself
struggling, and empathizing with the man who was cast out to the outer
darkness.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I was driving to work one day,
early, I think it was a Tuesday morning, and I heard a BBC report about how 2
some odd Billion people in the world don't have access to clean and sanitary
toilets.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thirty percent of those people
live in Asia, it might have been more, I can't
remember exactly.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The reporter talked
about how for years the Indian Government has been trying to deal with this
issue of sanitation to no avail.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It is a
dignity issue, to say it simply, these people have had their dignity taken away
from them.</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">So working to get the 2
billion plus people in the world a toilet, or access to sanitary and hygienic
bathroom facilities sounds like a good cause, it is a basic <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dignity" title="Dignity" rel="wikipedia">human dignity</a> issue
that I can get behind.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But as I began to
go through the list of causes, of human rights issues, I became quite
overwhelmed, how in the world does my effort to get toilets in Asia help the
massive and destructive famine that is currently plaguing Africa, which for the
most part, I have been silent on.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And
what about the environment?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>If I work
towards making the global climate change issue a centerpiece of my hope for the
future, how does that impact the immediate need of people who use the processed
food, which is a big part of the global climate problem, we hand out from our Shelf
of Hope?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Is it simply enough to do
something, anything and hope for the best on everything else?</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">Finally, in this struggle, I
found myself circling around to the idea of justice, which has always been
slippery to me, always been ambiguous.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Justice can be defined in so many ways, it can be understood in so many
different contexts.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It was in the midst
of this struggle that the Baptismal Covenant came floating to my eyes, on
Wednesday as I was finishing up the bulletin for today.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>There in all it's glory were the statements
that have changed the Church forever.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0.5in 0.0001pt;"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">Will you
continue in the apostles' teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread,
and in the prayers? <br />
Will you persevere in resisting evil, and, whenever you fall into sin, repent
and return to the Lord?<br />
Will you proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ?<br />
Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself?<br />
Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and<b style=""> </b>respect the dignity of every human being? </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">These words that often seem
so innocuous yet fluffy and nice have a powerful and compelling argument for
speaking up, for not remaining silent.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">The foundation we stand upon
is not the cause we find passion for.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>The foundation we stand upon is our baptism, or our understanding of
Baptism, which claims these five commitments as core to our life in Christ.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>In our understanding of Baptism, which is the
incorporation of an individual into a larger community of faith, the global
community of hope and love, the Human Family as we understand it, we are able
to say that we believe all people must have basic human rights and dignities,
not for any secular purpose but because this is what Christ calls us to offer
the world.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>This is what God desires us
to share and strive for.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And when we are
silent, this great gift we have been given, this gift of life that has been
granted us, remains held in quiet security, not being taught, not being
proclaimed not being served.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Silence is
death, for those who are oppressed and silence is death for our own souls.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 14pt;">It is a fine line to walk,
because we are not here today for our own selves and our own souls.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We exist here today, we gather here today, to
try to change the world.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>To bring voice
to those who have none, to bring justice to the places injustice, to bring love
to places of apathy.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Christ is our
foundation, love is our motivation and our faith is our future.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Today we will not be silent, today we will
not keep our love to our selves, today we will speak, today we will love, today
we will change the world.</span></p>

 

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<entry>
    <title>Circumference People</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2011/09/circumference_people.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2011:/aron//5.44</id>

    <published>2011-09-18T22:38:42Z</published>
    <updated>2011-09-18T22:40:58Z</updated>

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        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
    </author>
    
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    <category term="religion" label="Religion" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="religionandspirituality" label="Religion and Spirituality" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="richardrohr" label="Richard Rohr" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    
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<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">There was once a
stone cutter who was dissatisfied with himself and his position in life.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>One day he passed a wealthy merchants
house.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Through the open doors, he saw
many fine possessions and important visitors.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>"How <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wine_tasting_descriptors" title="Wine tasting descriptors" rel="wikipedia">powerful</a> that <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchant" title="Merchant" rel="wikipedia">merchant</a> must be!" thought the stone cutter.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He became envious and <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wish" title="Wish" rel="wikipedia">wished</a> that he could
become like the merchant.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>To his great
surprise, he suddenly became the merchant, enjoying more luxuries and power
than he had ever imagined.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But he was
envied and detested by those less wealthy than himself.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Soon a high official being carried in a sedan
chair passed by, accompanied by attendants and escorted by soldiers beating
gongs.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>"How powerful that official is!"
he thought, "I wish that I could be a high official!"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Then he became the high official carried
everywhere, feared and hated by the people all around.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It was a hot, sticky summer, so the official
felt uncomfortable in his chair.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He
looked up at the sun.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It shone proudly
in the sky, unaffected by his presence.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>"How powerful the sun is!" he thought, "I wish I could be the sun."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And so, he became the sun, shining fiercely
down on everyone, scorching the fields, cursed by farmers and laborers.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But a huge black cloud moved between him and
the earth, so that his light could no longer shine on everything below.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>How powerful that <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storm" title="Storm" rel="wikipedia">storm cloud</a> is!<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I wish I could be the storm cloud!"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Then he became the cloud, flooding fields and
villages, shouted at by everyone.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But
soon he found that he was being pushed away by some great force, it was the
wind.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>"How powerful it is, I wish I
could be the wind!"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He became the wind,
blowing tiles off the roofs of houses, uprooting trees hated by all below
him.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But then he ran up against
something that would not move, a huge towering <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_music" title="Rock music" rel="wikipedia">rock</a>.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>"How powerful that rock is, I wish I could be
that rock!"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Then he became the rock,
more powerful than anything else on earth.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>But he heard then, the sound of a hammer pounding a chisel into the hard
surface, and felt himself being changed.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>What could be more powerful than I the rock, he thought?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He looked down and saw far below, the figure
of a stone cutter.</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">The stonecutter
in his desire to be more powerful and more influential and more wealthy
traversed the entire universe, he became <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Places_in_The_Hitchhiker%27s_Guide_to_the_Galaxy" title="Places in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" rel="wikipedia">the Sun</a> and discovered in his journey,
the most powerful person, the most powerful presence he could be was himself,
the stonecutter, the man he ought to be, the man he was made to be by <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God" title="God" rel="wikipedia">God</a>.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>God is much more interested in making us what
we ought to be than in giving us what we think we ought to have.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;"><a class="zem_slink" href="http://www.cacradicalgrace.org/" title="Richard Rohr" rel="homepage">Richard Rohr</a>, a
theologian and spiritual writer, calls us circumference people, people who have
little access to our natural Center.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He
believes we spend much of our lives on the boundaries, on the edges of the
worlds that we live in, on the margins of our lives, rarely able or willing to
move back into our center.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And so,
Richard Rohr decided to reframe this idea of having a center within ourselves,
and suggests that we should not look to enter the center of our own beings, but
rather understand that we are already part of a soul, a larger soul that we
exist within.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It is to the center of
this soul that we traverse.</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">I like the idea
of moving in and out of a center of a soul that does not belong to us.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I love the idea that we move from the margins
to the center and back out again.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We are
an active, frenetic, constantly moving people.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>We are.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And so, I asked this
question, what if there is no such thing as centering of ourselves? What if
centering ourselves is participating in the Gospel opportunities we have in our
lives?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>What if participating in God's
mission, moving from the mission we do here at <a class="zem_slink" href="http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=31.779402,35.240197&amp;spn=1.0,1.0&amp;q=31.779402,35.240197%20%28Gethsemane%29&amp;t=h" title="Gethsemane" rel="geolocation">Gethsemane</a>
and in our own lives, back to the worshipful center we experience together and
out again, what if that work, and that movement is the centering activity we
are called to live?</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">Today we
celebrate, we celebrate the work of the Garden, we celebrate the work of the Shelf
of Hope, we celebrate the work our <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malik_Sealy" title="Malik Sealy" rel="wikipedia">Malik Sealy</a> Gym of Dreams, we celebrate the
passion that we place into our worship and into this amazing faith
community.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And today we don't celebrate
us as individuals, that will be for another time, today we give thanks for
these amazing opportunities that have revealed to us how God is acting in the
world.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>What is God up to?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We celebrate the opportunities to reveal to
others that great and abundant love we know God has for the world.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We celebrate these events as our
understanding of all the different ways that we see God at work in our lives,
because all of these things that are around us, all of these opportunities we
participate in are not ours, they are God's, they are God's and they are some
of the most wonderful gifts, the most amazing manna from heaven, that we have
ever been given in our life as a Church, as a faith community in Minneapolis
Minnesota.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">It is these opportunities
are what transform us, these are the things that move us from the centers we
know, to the boundaries and the margins where we can soften the hard edges,
dull the sharp corners, to the places where we can firm up the foundations and brighten
up the dark places.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>These are the opportunities
we have been given to achieve the Reign of God here on Earth.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">&nbsp;</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">And so, today,
let's celebrate, let's throw our hands in the air and proclaim: Thank You God! <span style="">&nbsp;</span>Thank you, God, for the amazing gifts and
wonderful sights we have been given. Let's focus our love on the activity of
God in our marvelous faith community, let's move our own selves out of the way
and see this community gathered as the most vital part of our singular lives,
this community that has shaped and formed and woven itself into our lives in so
many ways.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></span></p>



<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: &quot;Eras Medium ITC&quot;;">Let's journey together
through the universe and take our chances as the Sun, as the wind, as the
clouds, the powerful among us, but always return to that which God has done for
us, that which God has made us to be, that which we ought to be, ourselves, our
beautiful, wonderful, loved, and amazing selves, part of a community where we
are fully loved by God, where we are held by God in God's own hand, where we
are picked up every time we fall and brushed off and encouraged to continue on
the journey.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Let's be God to one
another, God made us for that purpose, so that we, together, could recognize the
holy in every single person we meet and know.</span></p>

 

<div style="margin-top: 10px; height: 15px;" class="zemanta-pixie"><a class="zemanta-pixie-a" href="http://www.zemanta.com/" title="Enhanced by Zemanta"><img style="border: medium none; float: right;" class="zemanta-pixie-img" src="http://img.zemanta.com/zemified_e.png?x-id=ceb33205-aefb-48f2-8013-7189a363f147" alt="Enhanced by Zemanta" /></a></div>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>Unimaginable Forgiveness? </title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2011/09/unimaginable_forgiveness.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2011:/aron//5.43</id>

    <published>2011-09-11T12:44:01Z</published>
    <updated>2011-09-11T12:46:39Z</updated>

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        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
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<p class="MsoNormal">Eliot's best friend is named James. &nbsp;James sister
Catherine is also a dear friend to Naomi. &nbsp;I was at a play date with the
kids when I heard this story. &nbsp;James' Mom knew someone who was on the
first plane that crashed into the Twin
 Towers on this day ten
years ago. &nbsp;She had recently had her first child, a girl, and had gone
back to work after maternity leave. &nbsp;Her flight that day was the first
time she had flown for work since her baby girl had been born. &nbsp;At the
memorial service, towards the end of the service, because the little girl loved
the song so much, all those gathered to remember the young woman who died and
support the family after such a devastating loss, sang If you're happy and you
know it. &nbsp;Simple, sweet, focused on the family who had just lost so much,
a song was offered to console this young girl who had just lost, forever, her
mother.<br />
<br />
This struck me in a particular way, surprisingly, in a hopeful way, I have
asked several people here at Gethsemane what they wanted to hear from the
pulpit about 9/11 and the resounding answers to that question has been "Nothing
at all." &nbsp;I don't blame them, we have been inundated with special after
special about that day, we have been drowned in the sensationalist stories of
new videos, and never before seen clips and first ever highlights of the
experiences of people who saw some aspect of the events of that day. &nbsp;It
is crazy that in a world filled with brokenness, filled with need, filled with pain,
our media can only find time to cover and re-cover issues that only spark
political debates and accusations, or have only sentimental value and cannot
help us face the questions of that day with strength and courage and grace..<br />
<br />
The idea of singing if you are happy and you know it at the end of a funeral
really got to me. &nbsp;How will this girl, who lost her mother in an extreme
act of violence, grow up to understand what forgiveness is? &nbsp;How will this
little girl forgive those who killed her mother? &nbsp;How will she reconcile
when she is able, her own brokenness about losing her mother and the need for
all of us to live together in peace, and love and joy? &nbsp;What would Jesus
say to this little girl if she approached him and asked him about whether or not
she should forgive those who committed such an atrocity against her?
&nbsp;Would Jesus say, forgive them? &nbsp;Jesus never was all that pastoral,
he rarely reached out in compassion, he always challenged and pushed people in
their questioning. &nbsp;What would he say to this little girl if she asked him
about forgiveness? &nbsp;If he said what he said in this Gospel we heard today,
would she hear his words? &nbsp;Do we hear his words?<br />
<br />
Our country is in an out of control, violent and vicious cycle of blame,
accusation and division. &nbsp;We live in a culture that can barely grasp what
this Gospel is proclaiming. &nbsp;We do not listen well to one another, we do
not challenge out of love, those people who are struggling with deep questions
of faith, forgiveness and hope. &nbsp;We do not support with care and
generosity those who are in need. &nbsp;Our country, our culture is focused on
everything but compassion, everything but grace. &nbsp;I wonder what we would
hear from our politicians if we sat them down and gave them this Gospel text
and asked them to discuss it, as politicians, not as private citizens. What
would their conversation say about our current social crisis? &nbsp;What would
Al Franken say? &nbsp;What would Michelle Bachman say? &nbsp;What would
President Obama say? &nbsp;Very little they do as politicians in this country
remotely emulates this Gospel. &nbsp;As politicians they are still waging war,
, they are still supporting torture, they are still creating unjust laws that
put an inordinate amount of people in prisons. &nbsp;As politicians there is
little room in their agendas for an understanding of forgiveness.<br />
<br />
But we elected these people, we provided them with the authority to wage war,
to torture, to create unjust laws, to perpetuate the cycle of violence that
threatens our schools, our communities, our lives. &nbsp;We elected these
people. &nbsp;So it makes me wonder, does forgiveness begin with those on top,
with the leaders of the countries that wage war against one another or does
forgiveness begin with us, the people, the masses, the communities gathered
together. &nbsp;What would it take for me to forgive Rush Limbaugh, Glen Beck
and others for what I see as their egregious and unethical use of manipulation
and hatred to sow division and violence in our country? &nbsp;What would it
take for me to consider forgiveness of people like Christopher Hitchens and his
crusade against Christianity? &nbsp;What would it take for me to forgive myself
for my own role in the divorce I am undertaking now? &nbsp;<br />
<br />
I have to confess, right now is not a good time for me to think about
forgiveness, I don't want to think about it, I don't want to talk about it.
&nbsp;I don't want to have anything to do with forgiveness. &nbsp;The last
thing I want to do right now is forgive. &nbsp;I want to yell, scream and call
people that disagree with my political views bad names. &nbsp;I want to stand
up against politicians I think are sowing divisiveness in our country and take
back with emphasis the values I understand our country to be founded upon.
&nbsp;I want to blame everyone but myself for my own divorce. &nbsp;I don't
want to forgive. &nbsp;But then this Gospel comes along, and I see I have no
choice. &nbsp;I see the hurt and the despair that could grow and live in my
heart, the anger it could become and the horrible person that would form
because I chose not to forgive. &nbsp;So I will forgive, I will forgive slowly,
even though, again, this is not what the Gospel is compelling me to do.
&nbsp;Forgiving someone a little bit, I think is like being a little bit
pregnant, right. &nbsp;You either are pregnant, or you are not. &nbsp;You
either forgive someone or you do not. &nbsp;<br />
<br />
The kind of forgiveness exhibited in the parable of today's Gospel is
atrociously exorbitant. &nbsp;It is interesting when you look at the numbers
behind this parable. &nbsp;It says, the servant of the king owed him 10,000
talents. &nbsp;One talent was 20.4 kg of silver. &nbsp;That equalled 6,000
drachmas. &nbsp;6,000 drachmas was the equivalent of the wages of a manual
laborer for fifteen years. &nbsp;Ten thousand is the largest possible number
that could be imagined. &nbsp;We are talking about 60,000 drachmas, or 900,000
years. &nbsp;The servant could not possibly pay back what was owed. &nbsp;And
it was all forgiven him. &nbsp;On the other hand the amount that was owed the
servant by one of his own fellows was not insignificant, it was a large amount,
about 100 days worth of wages. &nbsp;Of the two debts, the reasonable one was
actually the one owed the servant, not the one owed the king. &nbsp;The numbers
show that this was not an actual story, but rather a parable to make a point
about forgiveness. &nbsp;Imagining the worst and most crazy possible things we
can, we are still forgiven by God. &nbsp;We are still forgiven, we are still
forgiven by God even though we may be horrible and terrible people. &nbsp;<br />
<br />
I had a seminary professor who always challenged us on the idea of heaven and
hell and forgiveness. &nbsp;He was Dutch, and his family was devastated in
World War Two by Hitler and the Nazis. &nbsp;Many of his family members were
killed in gas chambers, buried in mass graves, never to be found for
memorializing or putting bodies to rest, little closure was granted them.
&nbsp;He would always listen as someone in our theology class would get up and
say they didn't believe in hell and gave evidence and support as to why they
didn't. &nbsp;He would then stand up and slowly, always gently, dismantle their
argument and say, as the final statement of his own argument, "If Hitler is in
heaven, then I would rather be in hell." &nbsp;<br />
<br />
These are very important questions for us to consider to hold gently in our
hearts to weigh and process so that we can have meaningful conversations about
forgiveness in our lives and what it looks like. &nbsp;I am coming to believe
more and more that it is not so much our good deeds that get us into heaven, it
is not so much our actions or our words, or even what we believe, rather it
might be the quality of our forgiveness that grants us access to the holy, that
opens the doors to heaven for our entry. &nbsp;It is also the quantity of our
forgiveness that gives us the grace to walk through our days with integrity and
dignity. &nbsp;It is the quantity of our forgiveness that transforms our brokenness
into wholeness, our pain into health, our sadness into joy. &nbsp;The quantity
and quality of our forgiveness is what allows to experience the holy and be
happy all the way to our core.<br />
<br />
If you are happy and you know it, clap your hands. &nbsp;It's grace, it's hope,
it's faith. &nbsp;All of it is summed up in our ability to forgive, which leads
us into our ability to love and to be loved. </p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 ]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>Teenage Mothers and the Toppling of Governments</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2011/08/teenage_mothers_and_the_toppling_of_governments.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2011:/aron//5.42</id>

    <published>2011-08-16T14:45:07Z</published>
    <updated>2011-08-16T14:47:54Z</updated>

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    <author>
        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
    </author>
    
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<p class="MsoNormal"><b>Sermon preached at Mount Olive Lutheran Church, August 15, 2011, 7PM</b><br /></p><p class="MsoNormal"><b>On the Feast of Mary the Mother of our Lord.</b><br /></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color: black;">I found
myself sitting at a bar in the western suburbs after having been contacted by a
young woman who wanted to know more about the church and about theology and
spirituality. &nbsp;It is fascinating to work downtown Minneapolis, as many of
you know, the people you meet along the way are spectacularly interesting.
&nbsp;I had been walking to Target, wearing my collar for some reason, when
this same woman stopped me on 9th Street and asked me, "Are you priest?"
&nbsp;I said I was and she proceeded to ask me all these questions about
perfectionism and true happiness and how these things are achieved. &nbsp;I
told her I would achieve true happiness once I got to Target and bought my
Snickers bars for the week. &nbsp;She laughed and I asked if she would be
willing to meet with me in a less busy place to discuss her questions. &nbsp;So
I found myself in a nice bar somewhere west of the cities, talking about Jesus
over a nice Australian Malbec.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="color: black;">As we talked I found
myself thinking about Mary, St. Mary the Virgin, and the amazing
contradiction's and the amazing paradigms we place on this simple teenage
woman. &nbsp;On the one hand she is this perfect specimen of humanity, this
perfect woman, she holds the world in her hand and there is no human before or
since, for many people even more so than Jesus, who has exemplified what it
means to be the perfect human. &nbsp;My Dad's side of the family are what I
call, "Good Roman Catholics". &nbsp;Lots of kids, very devout and faithful to
the teachings of the Church and the Pope, they don't recognize my own
ordination and chuckle every time I bring up the fact that I work at a Church.
&nbsp;They also have a deep reverence for Mary, and sense of devotion that is
deep and abiding, and the one piece of their practicing faith I find admirable.
&nbsp;But there is this idea of absolute perfection, absolute truth that goes
along with it and it is fascinating that Mary, the Mother of Jesus is the
person who manifests these amazing beliefs and behaviors.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="color: black;">And on the other hand, opposite
this pedestal raised, perfect specimen of humanity is the scriptural
description of Mary. &nbsp;This picture that is of a sweet, obedient woman who
desires the world to be turned on its head. &nbsp;A young woman who sings of
how the world will be transformed and justice will prevail. &nbsp;I never heard
my Fathers side of the family speak of justice in the name of Mary, but the
Magnificat, sung by Mary in tonight's Gospel, clearly lays out a plan that God
has for Mary and for the child in her womb. &nbsp;There is no question that the
Bible has different plans for Mary, different plans for Jesus, plans that
entail justice rolling down like water, righteousness being done, nothing short
of revolution, or even rebellion! &nbsp;Listen, "He has shown strength with his
arm; he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts. &nbsp;He has
brought down the powerful from their thrones and lifted up the lowly; he has
filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty." &nbsp;Where
is the happiness in that? &nbsp;Where is the gentle, peaceful and perfect Mary
in that story? &nbsp;A teenager is singing about the toppling of governments,
the overthrowing of the powerful, the demise of the wealthy.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Imagine if Taylor Swift started singing about
such things.&nbsp; A teenager filled with the Spirit, because this is what God
does, people, God comes to us in our weakest moments, in our most foolish
people, in our times of deepest despair. &nbsp;</span><br />
<br />
<span style="color: black;">James Mays, in his
commentary on the Psalms, and his particular comment on Psalm 34 says, "It is
to the broken hearted and the crushed of spirit to those who know they cannot
help themselves or base their lives on how they live, that the Lord is near."
&nbsp;As I was talking to this young woman, at the bar, drinking wine, as we
talked about her ideas of true happiness I found myself, quite animatedly,
speaking of how it is in our emptiness, in our brokenness, in our despair that
God comes to us. &nbsp;It is in vulnerability that God is near to us whispering
in our hearts, showing compassionate healing to our souls. &nbsp;I even went so
far as to say that God was not really hanging out with us in that bar, God was
with the starving children, women and men who are dying in Africa as I speak
these words. &nbsp;You know how hard it is to try to convince people that
Christianity is great when all you can say is that God is found in the darkness
and the brokenness, that God is present in the despair and loneliness we often
feel in our lives and see in our world? &nbsp;It is really not all that
effective, but there is good news, because it means that after the proud have
lost their minds, after the wealthy have been divested of everything, God will
be with them, when they are broken, when the powerful have fallen, God will be
present to them, and likewise with us, when we are fallen, when we are broken,
when we are finally despairing of the injustice in the world, when we can no
longer depend on ourselves and can no longer base our salvation on how we live,
then, and only then, will God be near us.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="color: black;">I have a story I share at
every wedding I do when I do the homily, it goes like this. &nbsp;A student
went to his Rabbi and asked him, "Rabbi, why is it God writes God's name ON our
hearts and not IN our hearts." &nbsp;The Rabbi thought for a moment, and
replied, "Because, when our hearts break open from grief, loss or despair, a
small piece of God's name falls deep into our hearts, and as our hearts heal,
we come to know God a little more fully than we did before." &nbsp;We are so
afraid of brokenness in our culture, we are so afraid of sadness and loss that
we run as fast as we can from these experiences. &nbsp;But the truth is no
matter how far or how fast we run we are constantly surrounded by the
brokenness of the world, the suffering of people we know and love, the
injustice of systems that deeply oppress and destroy. We cannot escape it, and
as dire as it sounds, we must find strength in that brokenness, as Mumford and
Sons sing in their song, "the Cave", I will find strength in pain, I will know
my name as it's called again. &nbsp;As Bruce Springsteen sings in his song, Into
the Fire, "May your strength give us strength, may your faith give us faith,
may your hope give us hope, may your love give us love." &nbsp;Despite the
great despair in the world, God came to meet us, despite our brokenness, God
made us holy and more powerful than we can ever imagine.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="color: black;">And so I begin to wonder,
I wonder if we are not a small piece of God's name, written on this world.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I wonder if we truly are a piece of God's
name written on this world tasked with seeking out the places where the world
has broken open so that we can fall into those crevices, those dark holes and
bring with us the name of God, the healing presence of God, the deep and
abiding love that God has for the world. &nbsp;And when we emerge from those
places of brokenness, we are bolder, stronger and filled with an appetite for
justice. &nbsp;The psalm says, Taste and see that the Lord is good. &nbsp;This
has little to do with food going into our mouths and everything to do with
practically and physically and actually experiencing the participation we have
been offered in the Kingdom of God. &nbsp;Tasting God has nothing to do with
the communion we will receive here tonight and everything to do with how we
will go from this place desiring to experience the justice God is trying to
bring into the world. &nbsp;Taste and See is actually feel and know, God has no
hands in the world but ours, our hands are what hold this world together, our
hands are where God's compassion resides.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="color: black;">Yes, we celebrate the
Virgin Mary, the Mother of Jesus tonight, yes, it is wonderful to gather and be
with one another as we celebrate this moment, but we should truly tremble at
the words of this young teenage mother, we should truly fall to our knees
begging for God's mercy, for we are the ones facing the indictments Mary has
for the world, we are the proud, we are the wealthy, we are the powerful.
&nbsp;We are the ones who will be turned upside down and we are the ones who
risk losing everything. &nbsp;But!, in our loss, we will find God, and in
finding God we will discover that we are holy, a holy piece of God's name,
tasked with bearing God's presence, God's divine and powerful love to the
broken places of this world. &nbsp;Mary was pierced through the heart when she
saw Jesus hanging from the cross, may we likewise be pierced through the heart
at the site of injustice in the world so that we too can sing with joy for the
transformation of the world, so that we can be God's name written on the heart
of our world.</span></p>

 

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    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>Wrestling with God</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2011/08/wrestling_with_god.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2011:/aron//5.41</id>

    <published>2011-08-03T14:25:35Z</published>
    <updated>2011-08-03T14:28:31Z</updated>

    <summary><![CDATA[ Normal 0 false false false MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) } /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-ansi-language:#0400; mso-fareast-language:#0400; mso-bidi-language:#0400;} The Rev. Aron Kramer &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7...]]></summary>
    <author>
        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
    </author>
    
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    <category term="peterrollins" label="Peter Rollins" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    
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<p class="MsoNormal"><b style=""><u>The Rev. Aron
Kramer <span style="">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span><span style="">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>7 <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentecost" title="Pentecost" rel="wikipedia">Pentecost</a><span style="">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </span><span style="">&nbsp; </span>July 31<sup>st</sup>, 2011</u></b></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">I feel like I am wrestling with <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God" title="God" rel="wikipedia">God</a>.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Especially if wrestling with God feels like <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly" title="Butterfly" rel="wikipedia">butterflies</a>
in your stomach, butterflies with razor sharp wings.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I feel like I am wrestling with God, especially
if wrestling with God feels like God is inside of me rerouting each and every
vein, intestine, <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peripheral_nerve" title="Peripheral nerve" rel="wikipedia">nerve ending</a> and neuron connection I have.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Here, this shouldn't go here, it should go
here!<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I feel like I am wrestling with
God, and I even have a little affinity for <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob" title="Jacob" rel="wikipedia">Jacob</a> at the moment as my hip feels
like it is out of joint as well.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The
commentaries all say that God and Jacob were actually wrestling, human to human
<a class="zem_slink" href="http://bleacherreport.com/wwe" title="WWE" rel="bleacherreport">WWF</a> style wrestling.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It was not a
psychological imaginative event that happened, it was real.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>While I don't know if God has ever physically
wrestled with me, I do know God is at work within me, and it feels like a WWF
smack down.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I just wanted to say that.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">What does wrestling with God feel like for you?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I can't say what it feels like for all of
you, but I might guess that wrestling with God feels truly human, or rather,
makes us feel truly human.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Wrestling
with God feels like we are wrestling with another human being.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Wrestling with God seems to be an incarnational
event, or opportunity or moment to be avoided.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>We all wrestle with God, I think sometimes we call it other things,
wrestling with our demons for instance, struggling with the challenges in our
life.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We all wrestle with God in one way
or another, and in our wrestling we discover that we are much closer to God
than we ever imagined.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">It is said that if you see God face to face, you will
die.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>So maybe getting close to God isn't
such a good idea.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Jacob decided to take
that risk, to attempt to see God face to face.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>As their wrestling carried on through the night and the morning slowly
crept in it was God who saw that there was little time before Jacobs' death
would occur.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It was God who decided to
end the match, but not because God wanted to, rather because God could not
break Jacobs will, could not break Jacobs embrace, could not break Jacobs hold
on God.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Jacob decided of his own accord
to engage the challenge of wrestling with God fully.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Jacob desired deeply God's <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blessing" title="Blessing" rel="wikipedia">blessing</a>, and
God's goodness in his life.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">God's blessing, Jacob wrestled with God, and in the end
received God's blessing.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Jacob is
blessed by God because he struggled, Jacob stayed with God the entire night.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>While we may not wrestle with God in the same
way, we still do, I believe, wrestle with God.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>We often feel those razor winged butterflies during moments of turmoil,
our wrestling is often that experience that makes us feel more human, more
vulnerable, more open to God's presence and love in our lives.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The challenge is remaining locked in that
struggle with God.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The challenge is not
running away from the fear, the loneliness, the pain, but rather making friends
with the fear, the loneliness and the pain, sitting with it to hear its story,
to hear what it has to offer.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I
want<span style="">&nbsp; </span>God's blessing in my life. I want
to know that every step I take forward God will be by my side, that every
struggle I face, every evil that confronts me, every time I fall, God will be
beside me, for the rest of my life.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I
deeply desire God's blessing.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">What would I do for God's blessing?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Would I, could I wrestle with God in a
similar way that Jacob did?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I often feel
like I am wrestling with God, and recently, that wrestling match has amped up,
as if daybreak is approaching and God does not want me to die. Until I read
this <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Testament" title="Old Testament" rel="wikipedia">Old Testament</a> reading, I wanted the match to just be over, I felt tired, I
felt exhausted, I felt spent.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I felt
like there was little to be gained.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But
Jacob has shown me otherwise. Jacob has shown me that there is something to be
gained, there is<span style="">&nbsp; </span>something good that can
and will come out of this wrestling with God.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>God's blessing and maybe even greater than that is the fact that in the
wrestling with God that we experience, we discover that God is rooted to this
world, rooted to our humanity more than we ever imagined.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>God stands beside us through thick and thin,
God walks with us in every danger we experience, God comforts and cries with us
during our deepest sorrows.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We were made
in God's image, so a God that does not do these things for us and with us is a
God that would never struggle with us or connect with us or love us.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">I want to throw you all for a loop right now, I want to
finish by reading a parable of sorts written by the <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theology" title="Theology" rel="wikipedia">Theologian</a> <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Rollins" title="Peter Rollins" rel="wikipedia">Peter Rollins</a>,
he is from Ireland,
and has burst on the theology scene in the past couple of years.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I stumbled across this parable when someone
tweeted about liking it.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">The Rapture, by Peter Rollins, from his new book titled
"insurrection"</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Just as it was written by those prophets of old, the last
days of the earth overflowed with suffering and pain.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Earthquakes, lack of water, war ripped across
the globe.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>In those dark days a huge
pale horse rode through the earth with death upon its back and hell in its
wake.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">During this great tribulation the earth was scorched with
the fires of war, rivers ran red with blood, the soil withheld its fruit and
disease descended like a mist.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>People
everywhere cried out, "Lord, protect us!"<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>One by one all the nations of the earth were brought to their
knees.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Far from all the suffering, high up in the heavenly realm,
God watched the events unfold with a heavy heart.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>An ominous silence had descended upon heaven
as the angles witnessed the earth being plunged into darkness and despair.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But this could only continue for so long,
for, at the designated time, God stood upright, breathed deeply and addressed
the angels with a booming voice.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">"The time has now come for me to separate the sheep from the
goats, the healthy wheat from the inedible chaff."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Having spoken these words God slowly turned
to face the world and called forth to the church with a booming voice.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>"Rise up and ascend to heaven all of you who
have sought to escape the horrors of this world by sheltering beneath my
wing."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>People everywhere were stunned,
saying, "Can it be?"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>God continued,
"Come to me all who have turned from this suffering world by calling out 'Lord,
Lord'".<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">People everywhere called out to God, "Lord, Lord, come
quickly!"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>In an instant, millions were
caught up in the clouds and ascended into the heavenly realm, leaving the
suffering world behind them.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>People were
ecstatic, praising God that they had escaped the tribulations.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>They were filled with joy and laughter.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Once this great rapture had taken place, God paused for a
moment and then addressed the angels, saying, "It is done, I have separated the
people born of my spirit from those who have turned from me.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It is time now for us to leave this place and
take up residence in the earth, for it is there that we shall find our
people.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The ones who would forsake
heaven in order to embrace the earth.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>The few who would turn away from eternity itself to serve at the feet of
a fragile, broken life that passes from existence in but an instant.<span style="">&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="MsoNormal">And so it was that God and the heavenly host left that place
to dwell among those who rooted themselves upon the earth.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Quietly supporting the ones who had forsaken
God for the world and thus who bore the mark of God.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The few who had discovered heaven in the very
act of forsaking it.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

 

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    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>2 Easter Sermon: &quot;Doubting&quot; Thomas</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2009/04/2_easter_sermon_doubting_thomas.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2009:/aron//5.16</id>

    <published>2009-04-20T16:58:24Z</published>
    <updated>2009-10-16T01:54:40Z</updated>

    <summary>Doubting is the moniker we give to Thomas, and I have to wonder if once again the Church is attempting to water down, sanitize and make clean something that underneath the surface could deeply transform us in some way we would have never expected.</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
    </author>
    
    <category term="aronkramer" label="aron kramer" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="doubt" label="doubt" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="doubtingthomas" label="doubting thomas" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="easter" label="easter" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
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    <category term="thegarden" label="the garden" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en-US" xml:base="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/">
        <![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal">Doubting is the moniker we give to Thomas, and I have to
wonder if once again the Church is attempting to water down, sanitize and make
clean something that underneath the surface could deeply transform us in some
way we would have never expected.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>In
this day and age when doubt has become the new faith, is doubting an
appropriate way to describe what Thomas was doing or feeling?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I say doubt is the new faith because it is,
and as Episcopalians we probably relish in that idea.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Sit down with a bunch of people who call
themselves Episcopalians and one will inevitably hear that the Church is good
because it lets people ask questions, it allows people to have doubts.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We have believed all along, as Episcopalians
that one has the right to ask questions, to doubt as Thomas doubted.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas is kind of our unspoken patron
Saint.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas allows us to believe that
we can live a life of faith steeped in the questions we have about God and
God's activity in the world.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But I want to ask us to look a little closer at this text
and wonder with me about the moniker Doubting.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Thomas himself does not say to the Disciples who tell him they have seen
Jesus, "I doubt it."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He says specifically,
"I do not believe you."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He has no qualms
in telling them all that they are lying, all 10 of them, each and every one of
them comes to him saying we have seen Jesus, not to mention the women.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>In this day and age ten people corroborating
the same story would put us in a place we call beyond a reasonable doubt.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas is not a simple doubter who demands
evidence, Thomas is a person who simply does not believe, he does not trust his
own friends, he does not, to put it succinctly, love them enough to believe
them.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">This is a two edged sword I believe, on the one hand, it is
pretty damning to have his sort of unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>To flat out deny the truth in the face of people who were speaking to
him about their experience and probably even looked transformed in some way as
well, you don't see Jesus appear out of no where and remain the same.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We are talking about some serious heights and
depths here in terms of Thomas' doubt.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>It was clearly unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>If
someone had this kind of unbelief in our Church we might throw them out, or
simply ignore them or somehow shun them from our midst.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It's true, someone with such a passionate
disagreement when the entire community speaks the same truth is more than a
simple prank or April Fools joke, this guy needs to go.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">The other edge of the sword is that it is interesting that
he did stand his ground so clearly and with such great passion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>There is something commendable in that.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>His doubt, his unbelief was rooted in
something that he believed strongly.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Clearly he had come to some sort of conclusion about what the future
would hold for the new Christians and was holding fast to that idea or vision
of the future.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He had made plans and was
out acting upon them unlike his comrades who had remained locked in the upper
room.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Maybe that is why he did not believe
them; maybe that is why he denied so completely the individuals he had called
dear friends.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He had made a vision and a
goal out of the desperation and the fear that resulted in the death of their
beloved Jesus.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He was acting on his own
inspiration and his own call, a call he believed Jesus had given him.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>What were these others doing?</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">I like this idea a lot; Thomas had the courage in the face
of the people who had just killed Jesus to be out in the world doing something,
creating something, carrying on Jesus' ministry.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas, of all the disciples, was the one who
had made plans and executed those plans to carry on the work of Jesus.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>How else might you describe his outright
hostility to the disciples in the upper room?<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>I think he probably felt the same way as Jesus did, aghast that these
men, ignorant men, had shut themselves away from the world, a world that Jesus
had clearly told them they needed to engage, love and transform.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The way the world will know we are Christians
is by our love, not our invisibility.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Thomas' passionate unbelief is something that we might want
to consider as we live out our lives of faith, and we may want to consider
changing his moniker as well; Doubting Thomas does not truly grasp the passion,
the zeal, the innovation that this man might have had at his core rather than
mere doubt.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I think we should call him
Thomas the Innovator, or Thomas the Creator, or Thomas the Doer, maybe even
Thomas the unbeliever or Thomas the denier.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>There are a couple of ways that we tend to see doubt in our culture
today.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>First as anathema, something we
should never have or know if we call ourselves Christians.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>This is not something many of us
embrace.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Second, doubt is a
dispassionate expression of our own disagreement, disconnected from the belief
of Jesus and the resurrection, or at best, timidly supportive of an idea we
have no intention of standing up for.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>The ten disciples were this kind of doubters, even after the first
appearance of Jesus they were still locked in the upper room, safe from the
hostile world.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Their doubt was more a
doubt that was rooted in fear and immobility; it was about indifference and
apathy, which often tends to be how we doubt as members of mainline
denominations.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Just let the majorities
decide for me, I am fine with what every one else is doing.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">The other kind of doubt is a spectrum from belief to
unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It is a spectrum that we all
walk and often find ourselves journeying back and forth from unbelief to belief
and back again.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Doubt is a journey, it is
something we do, and not something that describes us.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I think most of us would claim this is where
we land when thinking about doubt and what doubt is.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Indeed, I often say, doubt is not the
opposite of faith, fear is the opposite of faith, and doubt is only the
threshold to belief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Without doubt,
without questions, we cannot deepen and broaden and raise our faith.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Doubt, like the betrayal of Judas, is an
integral part of who we are as Christians.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But let's go back to doubting Thomas and look again at this
idea of what it was that Thomas was doing outside of the upper room away from the
disciples.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Could it have been that in
the absence of Jesus Thomas was the only one with the courage to be in the
world, continuing the work of Jesus?<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Could it have been that Thomas was formulating a vision of mission and
setting it into motion?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Maybe it was a
vision he felt he had to do out of obligation, maybe his work in the world was
empty, cold and not at all fruitful.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Maybe it was his plans, his vision and his mission that were bereft of
belief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Could it have been that the
appearance of Jesus to Thomas was less about making Thomas into a believer and
more about filling him more completely with a hope and passion and of course
the Spirit for the work he was doing.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Was
jesus really saying, do your work, carry out your vision continue my mission
with passion, with zeal, with joy and with spirit, for that is the only way
love will reign, even people as dense as these other ten disciples will see the
Good News in your work if you only carry it out first in love, not out of
obligation and dispassion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Jesus went to Thomas directly; Jesus sought Thomas out in
the midst of all the disciples in that room.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Jesus wanted to affirm what Thomas was doing, while also chastising him
for not loving his neighbor, loving his friends, loving his enemies.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas' character, our character, Thomas'
mission, our mission requires love and peace to be carried out, without either,
our work is nothing but sowing the seeds of unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>May we all have the misdirected passion of
Thomas and be as open as Thomas was to receiving the Spirit and receiving new
direction from Jesus as love guides us in the mission and work we do.</p>

 ]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>Fear, Hope and Easter</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2009/04/fear_hope_and_easter.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2009:/aron//5.15</id>

    <published>2009-04-20T16:54:57Z</published>
    <updated>2009-10-16T03:23:05Z</updated>

    <summary><![CDATA[On the back of the Fantasy novel I am reading it says, "When hope dies, there's still survival."&nbsp; This has caused me to think a lot about humanity, organizations, faith and religion.&nbsp; When hope dies, there is still survival.&nbsp; Our...]]></summary>
    <author>
        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
    </author>
    
    <category term="aronkramer" label="aron kramer" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="easter" label="easter" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="fear" label="fear" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="gethsemanechurch" label="gethsemane church" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="hope" label="hope" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="sermon" label="sermon" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="thegarden" label="the garden" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    <category term="vicar" label="vicar" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en-US" xml:base="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/">
        <![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal">On the back of the Fantasy novel I am reading it says, "When
hope dies, there's still survival."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>This
has caused me to think a lot about humanity, organizations, faith and
religion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>When hope dies, there is still
survival.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Our culture, the American narrative
is littered with stories of survival, stories that say to us, even when you
lose hope, if you just try hard enough, if you just survive, you will make it,
whatever making it might mean.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It seems,
as we live in this difficult economic culture with regular glimpses of a turn
around, often followed by some new controversy or scandal, or economic blow,
all we can do is simply survive, hope has been lost it seems, and we are lost
as well.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">This of course makes me think we have a pretty cheap idea of
hope, a cheap idea of grace, a cheap idea even of the value of our own
lives.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Have you seen that cartoon with
the bird trying to swallow a frog but the frog has its hands tightly grasped
around the bird's neck?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The caption of
the cartoon which I have seen most, and I have seen many, says, "Never give up."
One of these two parties is going to die.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Either the bird will succeed and swallow the frog, or the frog will succeed
by strangling the bird and escape.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>There
is no room to imagine that the two would go out for martinis and dine instead
on a nice fish or some other edible plant that they could both enjoy
together.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>When survival replaces hope,
hope is indeed dead.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But maybe it is not that we have cheap ideas of hope, grace
and our own lives, maybe it is more because we have isolated ourselves from one
another in ways that prevent us from experiencing the glory that is God and the
personal sacrament of presence that was so strongly present in the person of
Jesus.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The extent of our communal
experience often is simply our nuclear families, and today, even that
experience is varied beyond recognition.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>We are in a confusing transition period as we try to discern and
understand how technological advances will change our lives, our future, our
church and our religion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Did you see
that Trinity Wall Street twittered the passion this past week?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And how many of you on Facebook saw the
Passion of Jesus according to Facebook this week as well?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Some will say we are becoming more
disconnected, but I say we are becoming more fearful of claiming value for our
future lives and the future of the life of the communities we belong to.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">I wonder if hope has been replaced by survival, have we
finally gotten to the point where it is not so much our hope for things unknown
and unseen that drives us as it is a game of survival of the fittest?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Hope seems to be lost, or at the least, reduced
to cliché slogans that we do not really believe but continue to say, for the
sake of our children.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Vision has failed
us, personally and corporately.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The
light that has shone from the heart of the Glory of God, human beings fully
alive, has been replaced by darkness, or at the very least, a dark cloud, a
veil of mist impenetrable to our sight, feeling and touch.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Fear has gripped our world, fear has gripped
our Church and it clings to us, desiring not our downfall, not our death, not
our destruction, but rather our apathy, our indifference and our
familiarity.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Yes, I said that, death is not the ultimate goal of fear as
we are pushed into survival mode, or into the darkness, survival is the
ultimate goal of fear.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Our energy and
attention focused entirely upon our survival is what fear seeks to accomplish,
the disciples succumbed to it in their denials of Jesus, the crowd in the cries
of "Crucify him" were coerced or moved towards survival by their own fear.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Anytime that which is familiar in a way that
is warm and gentle and historical comes under some threatening experience, fear
moves us to survival, fear seeks to squash hope and make it disappear.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Brian McLaren, a contemporary theologian and author was
asked at a recent presentation he gave, "Is there any hope for mainline
denominations?"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>His response is one that
is genuinely insightful.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He said that
there is great hope, because while yes, it is difficult to turn the Titanic
around, you have to ask yourself, what is harder, turning the Titanic around or
turning 15,000 individual boats around.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Of course it is the Titanic that is much easier to turn than the 15,000
boats driven by individuals.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He was
referencing our structures and our polity, mainline denominations having a
structure that lends itself to having a few highly placed leaders able to make
certain decisions to turn things around, where as his tradition, the
Evangelical tradition, is one that is quite varied and resists the type of authority
that is represented in most mainline denominations.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But he continued, lest you get comfortable in the false hope
that you can turn the ship around think of this bridge in <st1:place w:st="on">South
 America</st1:place>.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>A beautiful bridge
that was built to perfection, spanning a beautiful river that one year flooded,
and the erosion from the flood redirected the river around the bridge, so that the
bridge was no longer functioning and had no purpose.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Put in tension, those are two examples of our
future that are poignant to consider.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Both require change, transformation, new thinking in how we live and
move and have our being together.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But it
is hard to change, isn't it, we often wish we could change, or simply choose
not to change because we have no hope in the transformation that change would
bring.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">Tom Peters, in his book the
"Pursuit of WOW!" asks, "How long does it take you to achieve change or
spiritual transformation?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>A nanosecond,
but it takes a lifetime of passionate pursuit to maintain that
transformation."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I like this, we can
change in a blink of the eye, it is the lifetime pursuit of that change that is
the difficult part, it is the challenges and obstacles that we and others put
in our ways that keep us from accomplishing our Goals.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">Look at Mary Magdalene in today's
Gospel.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>She changed in the blink of an eye;
she changed at the simple saying of her name.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>The Gardner who stood before her turned into Jesus like that
(snap).<span style="">&nbsp; </span>If we listen, I believe we will hear
Jesus calling our names on a regular basis, every day Jesus calls to us, I am
alive, Jesus says, I have been resurrected, death no longer holds sway, I am
alive.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We hear it, we know it, but we
too often leave it in the far reaches of our minds, never allowing that voice
to filter into our very being, into our broken hearts that long for healing,
human touch and relationship.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">In the naming of her name Mary is
changed and transformed.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Just as today
Emelia and D'Angelo will be transformed by the saying of their names.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>You can feel it as we baptize these children,
you can feel it when you read the Gospel, Mary's exclamation is full of joy,
full of excitement, full of newness, full of possibility it is rich and
wonderful and she has changed, but she falters immediately, because this man
whom she loves, who she walked with is alive, and she desires nothing else but
to hold him, to cling to him, to be with him, but what does Jesus say?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Seeing her need, seeing her desire, he says
to her, do not cling to me.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Do not hold
on to me, for I am going to a place that is more mysterious, more mystical and
more dangerous than anything you have imagined.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Go Jesus says, do not hold on to me, but go and tell others about
me.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And today we start with Emelia and
with D'Angelo, tell them your story, share with them your relationship with
God, don't hold on to a sentimental nice and comfortable Jesus, speak to the
truth, the passion, the fire the excitement of the God we all love so that
Emelia and D'Angelo will be able to grow in the fire that is the love of
God.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">In the letting go we find not
despair, but hope, in the letting go we find not death, but life, in the
letting go we find not nothingness, but abundance greater than we have ever
imagined.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>When we give up our fight for
survival we might just feel once again, in the very beat of our heart, the
power of hope in our lives.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

 ]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

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