Friday, April 20, 2018

God Listern To Us


A Reflection for 4th Sunday of Easter      All Saints’ Church, Southern Shores, NC 

April 22, 2018                                           Thomas E. Wilson, Rector

God Listen To Us!


One of the things that I see in the lessons for today is a demonstration of leadership. It flows out of the imagery of the 23rd Psalm. In the Acts lesson, Peter becomes the Spiritual Father of the Jesus Movement, standing up for its healing ministry against those forces that seek to destroy it; he is the good Shepherd standing in the presence of the enemy so his Community will have no fear. The lesson from the Elder John is a reminder of what is expected of the Spiritual Teacher of the Community of Believers regarding how to behave with and care for each other, as the good shepherd who is anointing with oil and making sure the cup is filled for all. The Gospel lesson has the original model, Jesus, speaking of what is required of leaders following him, which is walking through the Valley of the Shadow of Death.

Some commentators believe the 23rd Psalm began as a poetic song of David, the King and the Ruler of Israel. David was a man with a checkered history of good and bad judgment during his reign, and he had cause to look at all the people he let down and the disastrous consequences of some his actions. One of the best things about failure is that it gives us a chance to learn from our mistakes. I think he wrote this song to remind himself how much he needed God in his life, and he passed it on to be a mirror for future kings who confuse their role as king with being independent of the Power greater than themselves. Good rulers need to know that just because you have the title doesn’t mean that every idea is a good idea.

In the Episcopal Church the title “Rector” comes from a word meaning “ruler”. I cannot tell you how many times I was in a clergy support group with a group of clergy who kept taking themselves so seriously with the “Rector” title that we had to warn them that a certain planned action was a result of their own ego instead of listening to God. Rectors, rulers, need to understand that they are vicars of Christ, serving vicariously in a parish as the Good Shepherd’s - Christ’s - Lamb to assist the ministry of Christ in that congregation.

The title “Pastor” comes from the Latin word for shepherd, the one who leads people, guides sheep into pasture and defends them from all enemies, which is what Jesus is talking about in the Gospel lesson for today using the imagery of the 23rd Psalm. But how we interpret the Shepherd image has a variety of options. I had a classmate from Australia in seminary whose image of a Shepherd was a yelling man on horseback cracking a whip accompanied by dogs snapping at the heels of the sheep to keep the herd in line. That image of a tough, sometimes brutal, taskmaster is not only to be found Down Under. Part of the history of the church had Warrior Popes, Bishops, and Priests keeping order for the sake of the concept of Christendom, as they defined it, by being strong advocates of political and societal viewpoints even to the point of war to kill the “enemies” of the church as heretics and infidels.

In the Episcopal Church as an example of that view of Pastor, we have the Rt. Reverend Leonidas Polk. He was born in Raleigh, educated at West Point Military Academy, and then attended Virginia Seminary. Upon graduation it was found he had never been confirmed, and therefore he was confirmed and ordained the next day in Fayetteville. He became a Bishop of Mississippi and was one of the founders of the University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee where I attended Seminary. Polk resigned his Bishop’s office in order to become a general in the Confederate Army in the American Civil War for his friend and West Point classmate Jefferson Davis. The Leonidas Polk Memorial Society wrote in 2014: “When asked in Richmond if he was putting off the gown of an Episcopal bishop to take up the sword of a Confederate general, to which he replied, 'No, Sir, I am buckling the sword over the gown,'" indicating that he saw it was his duty as a bishop to take up arms.”

Davis continued to support Polk who was a popular general among the ranks of the Confederate Army, but was viewed by many of his fellow generals as genial but pompous, incompetent, refusing to take orders, and slow in implementing them. General Bragg called Polk “an old woman, utterly worthless”. In one battle, one of Polk’s subordinate generals urged his soldiers on by yelling, “Give ‘em hell, boys!” To which the Bishop/General, aware of his dignity, called out “Give it to ‘em boys, give ‘em what General Cheatham says”. Polk was killed in battle during the Atlanta Campaign on June 10, 1864.

The title “Priest” comes from the Old English and German Preost from the Latin Presbyter meaning the one appointed to act as an interpreter of the unknown mysteries and as a leader presiding over rites and rituals in ceremonies of connection with deities and spirits. They were descended from the Shamans, medicine men and healers. Priests were the ones who could confer and withhold blessing based on the worthiness of a person. There were some preachers who made their living with so-called “Crusades”, using hour-long sermons whose aim was to drive the sinner down to his knees with guilt, God’s condemnation, and visions of hell in the first 50 minutes in order to raise him up with Grace in the last 10.

There were others who were given a title of “Parson”, Old English for the weird person with a deep spirituality who could see things with different eyes and could speak God’s truth regardless of the convenient party line. Parsons believed that God’s love is not a reward for repentance from Original Sin, but that love is the hallmark of the original blessing in Creation and the incarnation of Jesus.

Many people call me “Father”, as they called Margaret, the founding Priest here, “Mother”. It is a title that is full of ambiguity. Many priests have had to deal with parishioners with father or mother complexes that were waiting for trapdoors to be sprung by “monstrous mothers” or “seductive fathers”. On the other hand, it is a name to be taken seriously by the person who wears the title. I remember years ago, a couple of churches back, when I had a parishioner who really did not like me, because he thought, correctly, that I was full of myself. He would address me frostily as “FAAAther”. I confronted him one day and said, “Why do call me “FAAAther” when it is a title of relationship?” He put me in my place by pointing out that, in the military, one salutes the uniform and not the man. This is where Pat came in helpful; she softened me a bit, and when I left the church, he still called me “FAAAther”, but it was his accent and the warm tone that I heard instead of the scorn I had imagined. We ended up seeing each other as beloved brothers in Christ loved gracefully by God.

There is also the title of “Preacher” in the role of teacher who have documents of authority issued by Seminaries and Bishops. However, true spiritual authority is not conferred by organizations, but rather is granted by parishioners who have found true worth in the relationship, allowing the Preacher to be a trusted soul friend.

In a couple of weeks you will begin the task of prayer for a new Rector for All Saints. It is important not to rush into making your decision based on what you would like to remain the same. It is the journey, not the destination, that is important. I know God has someone in mind for you, but your task is to enter into a prayerful search for the heart of God in this matter. I cannot be with you on this journey, but my prayers will be.

God Listen To Us!
Ruler, either Rector or Regina, is wanted
by us who we will choose over us to rule,
not like as if over naughty ones in school,
but will tackle our hard tasks undaunted.

We want a Pastor, in the Shepherd mode,
who’ll lay us down in soft green pastures,
keeping us safe from all fearful disasters,
leading us near where living water flowed.

We want one to function as our new Priest,
speaking God to us before we’d be scattered,
speaking to God for us all together gathered,
doing rituals for lives included and deceased.

We want one be a Vicar of your healing love,
demonstrating what forgiveness does look like,
oft in a real world between people who’ll fight,
over things that don’t matter; helps gets rid of!

We want one to be our weird one as a Parson,
who sees the divine in the overlooked ordinary,
feeling breaths of God calling us to the visionary
tasks of sharing grace with all and sundry person

We want one to address as Father/Mother
to turn to when things get somewhat rough,
assuring that we will have strength enough
relying on the Spirit’s strength and no other.

We want one to be a Teacher of the right paths
to inform us walking in faith of the ways of past
journeys made by our ancestors in feast and fast
seeing baptisms as commitments not just baths.

We want one to be our true most trusted friend
keeping all of our secrets, sharing joys and woes,
laughs or tears of stories of All Saints s/he knows
in our hearts, faithfully holding them to the end.

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