Welcome to Blessings and Meanders

For several years now, the blessings I've pronounced at the end of the Sunday eucharist are based on the lectionary readings. Generally, I've improvised them -- and thankfully something coherent has always emerged. Now that I'm taking some time off from parish ministry and working as a stay-at-home father of twins, I thought I'd begin to write down some of these blessings.

I'll be meandering through the Sunday lectionary, offering one or two blessings, and sometimes a few thoughts on the readings themselves. Feel free to use these ideas in your own ministry and as part of your meditation on the upcoming Sunday.

blessings,
Devin+

3/5/12

Giving Up Seriousness for Lent

Third Sunday in Lent, Year B

Blessings

Tripartite Blessing
May God who has made you strong, teach you to be weak; may God who has made you wise, teach you to be a fool; may God, who has cast down the mighty from their thrones, grace you with a poor heart; that the blessing of our Saviour, who died as a fool and rose as a  king, may be with you this and every day.

Simple Blessing
You are fools for Christ; go forth into the world and proclaim the folly of God!

Really Simple Blessing
THBPBPTHPT!

Meanders
For the last several years, we've had plenty of opportunities to preach about the 'cleansing of the temple,' to talk about the injustice of the wealthy profiting rapaciously from the needs of the poor.  Not all of us might agree with Ken Livingstone, the former mayor of London, who suggested that the solution to the current economic woes would be to “hang a banker a week until the others improve,” but many can understand where that anger and violent imagination comes from. The economic divide between rich and poor was at least as great in Jesus' time -- perhaps the last time the division was quite so extreme -- and in Jerusalmen, it was perhaps even worse as the violence imposed by the Roman Empire was passed along by the religious elites to the most vulnerable of their people under occupation.

But what kind of meander would this be if I went for the big target? There's a great straight-up sermon already set for us by the lectionary, Jesus' zeal and the 10 commandments, and the way that the idolatry of wealth tempts us away from the justice of God's law. Straight-forward call to worship God alone, and to have purged from our heart ("Cleanse me of my secret faults," pleads the psalmist) every sort of idolatry -- the worship of wealth, the worship of power over others, the worship of strength.
The fear of the LORD is clean
and endures for ever; *
the judgments of the LORD are true
and righteous altogether. 
More to be desired are they than gold,
more than much fine gold, *
sweeter far than honey,
than honey in the comb.

By the way, it's another excellent psalm this week -- another lovely path to wander down for the sermon. "Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart..."

 So let's leave that sermon there for now -- you can pick it up on your way back -- and take a walk away from the big red bull's eye for a moment and look at foolishness.
The message about the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. 
No one likes feeling foolish. None of God's creatures; I love the affronted dignity my cat puts on when he's failed to make the leap from couch to couch and lands in a heap on the floor. My children love to be silly when they choose to be, but as a parent I would never laugh at them. At least not until after they've gone to bed. But Paul knew, contrary to his own terribly serious character, that there is holiness in foolishness.

Holy Fools are found in pretty much every religious tradition.  It is, however, fundamental to Christianity -- most religious traditions have a trickster, a fool, but Christians are unique in worshiping him --  which is perhaps why so much of the Church has run as far away from foolishness as possible.

But the truth is, we follow a fool, a messiah who did crazy things, told terrible jokes, upset the high and mighty and tweaked the noses of the powerful. Peter couldn't stand that foolishness -- remember how he condemned Jesus in last week's reading? Paul struggled with it, writing letters that strove to sound wise even while he recognized that his faith was built upon the foolishness of the cross.

Paul made a great Episcopalian, uncomfortable with the depth of his own faith; if you're not somehow embarrassed about your faith then you're obviously missing something.

One of the things that makes me so sad about my fundamentalist co-religionists is how drearily, cheerfully serious they are. The bible is something akin to a cookbook, a set of literal instructions that can go toe-to-toe with the wisdom of the world: Which is why evolution, climate change, the rights of women and of LGBT folks, are all so threatening -- they are truths that challenge a literal bible. But the Gospel of Fools snickers at the wisdom of the world and mocks the  social rules of order that say 'here is where women should stand, here is where the poor can and cannot live, here is where people must die because they cannot afford healthcare.'

What if for Lent we gave up seriousness? Not for self-congratulatory joy, but for the disruptive foolishness of the cross.

 It would be chaos -- it's a terrifying way to run a Sunday service, much less a life, I suppose, and perhaps not everyone is called to become a Holy Fool. And yet, and yet, and yet....

My father was a terribly serious lawyer, who worked on complicated contracts, utilities, assets and acquisitions, all very serious stuff.  And I think he know, deep down, that this serious stuff was actually terribly silly  -- so the carried a bright pink umbrella and wore a Mickey Mouse watch. He needed a touchstone of foolishness to stay sane in a world that took silly things so seriously.

Become a fool.  Perhaps, like the servants in Luke 16, you first need to let God trust you with a little foolishness. Invest that talent of foolishness, and let it grow with interest until the Cross and the wildness of Jesus are wiser than all the puffed up self-importance, wealth, and pride of the world.



Thplthhhhhhhhh.

3/3/12

May your heart live forever!

Readings
Genesis 17:1-7, 15-16
Psalm 22:22-30 Romans 4:13-25Mark 8:31-38

Blessings

Trinitarian Blessing
May God the Father, who has made you good, teach you to live without shame; may God the Holy Spirit give you the wisdom to set your mind on holy things; and may God the Son, who shall return in glory, greet you with joy and delight in the age to come. And the blessing of God almighty be with you this day and ever more.

Simple Blessing

Live without fear: your Creator has made you holy, has always protected you, and loves you as a mother. Go in peace to follow the good road and may God’s blessing be with you always.
(source: from Saint Clare)



Meanders


Too often the psalm rushes right past us on Sunday mornings, wedged between the first and second reading. Perhaps in your church it's sung by a choir and no one can make out a word. Or perhaps it's spoken by the congregation in the tone of voice usually reserved for fifth graders reciting the Pledge of Allegiance on a rainy Monday morning.  But today's psalm is worth taking a second look at. Well, they all are - today's isn't shockingly unique. It's just that there's a few lovely little details about it that are quite perfect for Lent.
The first lovely little detail is that this cheerful psalm of hope, justice and faith has a rather different, and more familiar, beginning:
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
 
The choice of this psalm is a lovely lectionary answer to Peter's shock at Jesus' preaching of 'doom and gloom.'  Why would Jesus talk about his betrayal and death? Because

 The poor shall eat and be satisfied,
and those who seek the LORD shall praise him

For some, Jesus' words on the cross are shameful and disturbing, a son physically abused and betrayed by his father. But when we know the whole psalm, the crucifiction ceases to become about God punishing his Son like a whipping boy; instead, Good Friday becomes a reminder that a commitment to truth and freedom cannot be stopped by anything, even death itself. No matter how despairing this moment is, we are walking inexorably from glory to glory, to a time when the poor shall eat and be satisfied and those who seek the Lord shall praise God!

2/25/12

Wild Country

Readings

First Sunday in Lent (Year B)

 (Hymn suggestion: Auden's He Is the Way 463/464)
Blessings


Trinitarian Blessing
May God who made the world, make a wilderness for you in this world. May God whose Spirit descended on you at your baptism, drive you to that wild country.  May God the Son, who walked amongst us, travel with you always and may his angels tend to you. And the blessing of God almighty, our creator, redeemer and sustainer, be always with you.

Simple Blessing
May God almighty bless you and keep you from all danger but God himself.

Meanders



Promise and trust. Compassion and mercy. But also destruction and exile. Like a lot of spiritual journeys, this year’s start to Lent begins with confusion and contradiction.  And where the other gospels choose to expand this formative experience at the inauguration of Jesus’ ministry, Mark disposes of it in a few brief words, A story worthy of Félix Phénéon, a novel in three lines:


“He was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan; and he was with the wild beasts; and the angels waited on him.”

A good sermon is about two things, Truman is reputed to have said: About God, and about seven minutes. Mark brings that down to 45 seconds.

Human beings expect our experience of God to be linear, logical, and grand. To me today, it feels as though Mark is letting us know -- hey, crazy crazy irrational mystical stuff happens around the Divine. I can't explain it and I'm not going to try. It happens. When it happens to you, roll with it. The Holy Spirit is up to something, and we can't fight it any more than Jesus could. 

Don't fight it? What an un-American notion. We fight everything! My mother, when she was diagnosed with cancer, felt so exhausted by the idea that she had to "fight" her cancer. She wasn't a fighter. She was a tough woman, but she was a storyteller and a charmer and a saleswoman. She didn't fight her cancer - she didn't want to give her cancer that much attention. Instead, she lived, irregardless of her cancer.  She told stories and she created and she thrived, cancer be damned. 

“He was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan; and he was with the wild beasts; and the angels waited on him.”

God has a mad, difficult, unique adventure for you. Don't fight it -- run with it! 

2/13/12

Last Sunday after Epiphany (Year B): Silence and Awe

Last Sunday after Epiphany (Year B): Silence and Awe


Readings

Blessings
Trinitarian Blessing
May God, whose very name begins in silence, be with you in the silence of your heart;
   may God, whose transfiguring Word calls out with joy, fill your heart with holy song;
      may God, whose Spirit gives voice to all creation, teach you to sing God's song to the world;
and may the blessing of God Almighty, creator, redeemer and sustainer,
  be with you now and evermore. Amen.


Simple Blessing
May God Almighty bless you with a listening heart and a courageous voice,  that you may hear his Word in the silence of your heart, and speak his Word to the world, with joy.

Meanders
This was the first time I noticed Elisha repeatedly telling the other prophets "Yes, I know; keep silent." The whirlwind and the fiery chariot, Elisha tearing his robes in grief and crying "Father, father! The chariots of Israel and its horsemen!"... these had stuck with me ever since my own father died when I was a teenager.   But today, something caught me in that "Yes, I know; keep silent."  Was it too painful for Elisha to speak about? Was he angry that the prophets were gathering like flies and vultures, rubber-necking the coming tragedy? Was Elisha trying to preserve the holy mystery of what was to come, telling his colleagues to get out of their own heads and the pride of their commentary, and simply come to experience God?

Today's Hebrew Scripture reading from 2 Kings, along with the mystery of the Transfiguration in the Gospel, and Paul's meditation on light and revelation, can be paired with that beautiful hymn, "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence"
It's a hymn that makes a wonderful bridge into the solemnity of Lent, and lets us also get out a few more Alleluias!

Let all mortal flesh keep silence,
And with fear and trembling stand;
Ponder nothing earthly-minded,
For with blessing in his hand,
Christ our God to earth descendeth,
Our full homage to demand. 
King of kings, yet born of Mary,
As of old on earth he stood
Lord of lords, in human vesture --
In the Body and the Blood --
He will give to all the faithful
His own self for heavenly food. 
Rank on rank the host of heaven
Spreads its vanguard on the way,
As the Light of Light descendeth
From the realms of endless day,
That the powers of hell may vanish
As the darkness clears away. 
At his feet the six-winged seraph;
Cherubim with sleepless eye,
Veil their faces to the Presence,
As with ceaseless voice they cry,
Alleluia, alleluia,
Alleluia, Lord most high.