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ERD announces arrival of 2008 Lenten devotional

If you are preparing to prepare for Good Friday, ECUSA is here to help. (No kidding, their material is usually very good.)

ERD announces arrival of 2008 Lenten devotional

Episcopal Relief and Development (ERD) has published its 2008 Lenten devotional booklet, titled “Seeking to Serve: A Lenten Exploration of the Millennium Development Goals.”

Also, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori has declared February 10, 2008 — the First Sunday in Lent — as Episcopal Relief and Development Sunday.

(Via Episcopal News Service.)

 

Betting on Helping New Orleans

This story is from the NOLA Times-Picayune. It reminds everyone of the good work still being done by the church in New Orleans.

Heavens! Bishops taking game bets

But proceeds to go to Katrina relief
Friday, January 04, 2008
By Bruce Nolan
The Good Book states the battle is not always to the strong, nor the race always to the swift, but dubious Episcopal bishops in Louisiana and Ohio nonetheless are betting on the power and speed of their opposing Tigers and Buckeyes, inviting their flocks to join in — and promising the proceeds to Hurricane Katrina relief.

That said, there isn’t much smack talk involved — not yet at least, these being Episcopalian clergy.

But there is a promise by Bishop Thomas Breidenthal to put up $250 for every Ohio State touchdown and $100 for every Buckeye field goal in Monday’s Bowl Championship Series game. He is inviting more than 25,000 Episcopalians in his Diocese of Southern Ohio to make similar pledges.

Breidenthal’s call went out Sunday to 82 Episcopal congregations, including those in Columbus, Ohio State’s hometown. Diocesan spokeswoman Richelle Thompson said the invitation likely will be widened in the next few days to target Buckeye Episcopalians wherever they might be found.

In response, Bishop Charles Jenkins of the Diocese of Louisiana has called on Tiger fans to pledge similar dollars for LSU points. That announcement will go out from 54 Episcopal pulpits Sunday, the day before the game, but the call to ante up pledges against Ohio State is posted on the Louisiana diocese Web site now.

The bishops said all the money will go to Katrina relief administered by Jenkins’ diocese in southeastern Louisiana. The Louisiana diocese raises money for Bundles of Hope, with donation levels of $20 to $1,000 that buy goods and relief services in metropolitan New Orleans.

Breidenthal is new to Ohio. His biography suggests a cerebral churchman who last served as a chaplain at Princeton and before that as a seminary professor in New York.

“St. Paul tells us we are called to outdo each other in doing good,” he said. “Competition is sanctified when it does good things for communities and brings people together.”

In truth, though, the idea for the challenge came from a Breidenthal aide “who’s a big Buckeye fan,” Thompson said.

“Clearly, the Buckeyes are going to win. This is just going to make it a little easier for Louisiana to bear,” she said. “If you want smack, we’ll just leave it at that.”

Jenkins, a Louisiana native whose wife, Louise, once taught agronomy at LSU, said he willingly took the bet.

“I am concerned Buckeye fans won’t have to buy very many Bundles of Hope,” the Louisiana bishop said. “We know they will have a hard time scoring any points against our Tiger defense.”

. . . . . . .

The Diocese of Louisiana Web site is www.edola.org. The Diocese of Southern Ohio Web site is www.episcopal-dso.org.

Bruce Nolan can be reached at bnolan@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3344.

 

Central PA Bishop on PBS

I knew nothing of this project until I received the following press release. Unfortunately it is only on HD stations, so I will not be able to see it. Let me know how it is. (Sounds like a curious project to me.)

Bishop Baxter Participates in Dialogues in Democracy – January 4 on PBS

Last fall, McNeil/Lehrer Productions, which produces The News Hour with Jim Lehrer for PBS, invited Bishop Baxter to participate in their latest project, Dialogues in Democracy. The program is part of McNeil/Lehrer’s series By the People—a special project to bring the views of informed, “ordinary” citizens to a national discussion on the important issues of the day.

Bishop Baxter spent November 8-11 in Williamsburg, VA, with approximately 50 other citizens who have made unique contributions to American life and society. The final convocation, at which thoughts on the drafting of a “Declaration of Citizenship for the 21st Century” were debated, took place in Colonial Williamsburg’s Capitol in the Hall of the House of Burgesses, where the founding generation produced the first comprehensive Declaration of Rights.

The one-hour broadcast program created from this event will air on Public Television’s HDTV digital stations on Friday, January 4, 2008 at 10pm. Stations carrying the program in Pennsylvania include WITF/Harrisburg, WQED/Pittsburgh, and WPSU/State College. The program will also be broadcast on Maryland Public Television.

More information on the By the People project is available at:
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/btp/projects/did.html

 

Homily: Second Sunday of Advent

Yesterday was the Second Sunday of Advent and below is my homily.

Second Sunday of Advent, Yr. A RCL
Isaiah 11:1-10
Romans 15:4-13
Matthew 3:1-12
Psalm 72:1-7, 18-19

Merciful God, who sent your messengers the prophets to preach repentance and prepare the way for our salvation: Give us grace to heed their warnings and forsake our sins, that we may greet with joy the coming of Jesus Christ our Redeemer; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Expectations and Preparation

We are just a few weeks away from Christmas Day and the children and perhaps more than a few adults are wondering what they are going to find in their stockings and under their tree when they wake up. What are you expecting? What are you waiting eagerly to unwrap and enjoy?

There is no doubt that anticipation is building. The ads on television and in the papers make even the most ascetic among is twinge with at least a bit of desire. As much as I am supposed to decry commercialism and the excessive lust that such advertisements induce, I think the anticipation and heightened state of expectation that it creates in us can and should serve as a reminder of what this season really is about, yearning for and expecting the coming of Jesus.

This is the season of expectation and preparation. Advent, the Latin term means “coming,” denotes this season when we await the coming of the Messiah, God’s anointed one, who will bring us salvation from our sins, restoring our relationship with God. On the most obvious level we are, of course, remembering that Jesus the Messiah came to earth as a human, but this season is also to be a time of preparation and looking forward to his coming again, as Christus victor, the conquerer of death.

In the years leading up to Jesus’ birth Jews were remembering passages such as that read from the prophet Isaiah this morning. Passages that told of God sending a descendent of David who would restore God’s rule and order and, most of all, God’s justice. Their hopes and expectations were for deliverance from very real and physical oppression. They looked around and saw suffering and hardship, the poor and the hungry, people being arrested and tortured for their beliefs (cf. Macc.) and called out for God to send his promised Messiah. And they looked for a king, a mighty warrior like David who would defeat the Romans and bring a new Jewish dynasty to the throne.

But others, like John the Baptist, looked beyond this world and declared that God’s Kingdom, not David’s was near and immanent. The Kingdom of Heaven was upon them. Their expectations had to be adjusted and preparations had to be made in order to enter into this new Kingdom.
In those days John the Baptist appeared in the wilderness of Judea, proclaiming, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.”

Advent is not yet Christmas. We are not ready for it. This season, like Lent, is a time of preparation and we must head John’s call and repent. This means that we must take stock of our lives, consider our sins, how we have disobeyed God and hurt Him and our neighbors, and ask for his forgiveness.

Most of us spend the weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas decorating our homes, cleaning the house, putting up lights and greens, getting out the ornaments that we have had since we were children, helping our children choose new ones that they will treasure. We prepare our homes for Christmas Day.

In the same way we must prepare ourselves. We need to sweep out our lives, clearing the corners and the cracks, in expectation of the coming of Christ. Not just for the day that we commemorate his first arrival in this world, but in the knowledge that he is coming again. And John tell us what it should look like when we are prepared for his coming, what it means to be members of the Kingdom of Heaven.

Consider that we are the Pharisees and Sadducees. You will recall that these were the leaders of the Jewish community. They were not necessarily priests, but they were those who were active in attending services and working in the community, often doing very good things for those around them. The fact that we are here on this Sunday morning, means that we should consider ourselves as reflected in them.

But when he saw many Pharisees and Sadducees coming for baptism, he said to them, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Bear fruit worthy of repentance. … Even now the ax is lying at the root of the trees; every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.”

These seem awfully strong words for a time we usually associate with the beautiful baby Jesus and angels singing, but we must remember that the Messiah comes to bring God’s justice and that also means punishment for sin. He shall separate the wheat from the chaff. But John does not reject the Pharisees and Sadducees, they are his family, his brothers and sisters too, but he calls them to repent and change and offers them the baptism with water for repentance. And when they, when we have repented and been baptized our condition will be known by the fruit that we bear, fruit that is worthy of repentance.

This fruit is charity, love for one another, even and especially those we do not like. (Never forget, liking and loving are two very different things. God calls us to love others, not to like them.) We should strive for righteousness and justice in all things and at all times and we must never forget that our own righteousness comes solely through the sacrifice of the son of God, who “emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men, humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross.”

As we decorate our homes in preparation for Christmas, let this also be a meditative and contemplative process. Let the ornaments that we hang upon the tree cause us to consider what fruit of repentance we are producing. As we hang evergreens and put up our tree may it remind us of the everlasting life that we have in Christ.

Advent is a time of great expectation, preparation, and great joy. And our joy flows most freely and deeply because we know that we have indeed been forgiven by the one who came as baby to give his life for ours.
Amen.

 

Our Wilderness Moments

So this is the sermon. I also have an audio of it, which is much more expansive, but I have not pulled it off the recorder yet. Please feel free to offer comments!

Patronal Festival for St. Andrew’s, State College

Genesis 28: 10-17
Romans 10: 8b-18
Matthew 4: 18-22

Jacob at the turning point.
When I preached two weeks ago I said that the primary theme of the Bible is the two-fold pattern of God’s love for us and our insistence on pushing God away from us, that is sin. The primary metaphor of God’s love for us in the Bible and his primary way of continually drawing us back to himself is the notion of covenant. A covenant is simply a contract or promise between to groups of people.

In the Bible God made a covenant with Adam and Eve, that he would take care of them in the Garden if they simply would not eat of the fruit. Of course they did and so the intimate relationship we were supposed to have with God was broken. From that moment onward the biblical story is about one of God inexorably providing a path for us to follow back to him. Initially, we were left to our own devices. God waited to see if humanity would call upon him. We didn’t and so the world needed a rather large scale cleansing. After the flood God made his lasting covenant with all humanity that he would never destroy the world again, the rain-bow in the sky, a sign that God had laid down his weapon, was placed in the sky as the sign of this covenant. The requirements for Noah and his descendants, their side of the contract, was relatively slight: do not take another person’s life and be fruitful and multiply. (more…)