Friday, August 30, 2013

A Kyrie for Today


In peace, in peace, let us pray to the Lord
Kyrie Eleison
For peace from above, and for our salvation, let us pray to the Lord
Kyrie Eleison
For the peace of the whole world…

For the peace of the whole world.
Peace—peace.
Not the stillness of children killed with chemicals.
But peace.
Not the slaughter of civilians or the rise of radical rebels
But peace
Not cruise missiles with their GPSes saying “recalculating.”
But peace
Not “kinetic military actions”
But peace

Kyrie Eleison
Knee-jerk politicians and pundits
A count down clock to a new ratings bonanza
Partisanship and cable channel loyalty informing the flock more than our faith

And our faith has things to say about this, you know!
For 2000 years we’ve struggled with being faithful in the world as it is
Faithful in times of persecution, famine, feast, power.
Kinetic military action, and yes, even war.
The line that sticks in my soul
From my tradition
Is this:
"Any decision for war must be a mournful one."

Kyrie/Christe/Kyrie Eleison--Amen

Thursday, August 29, 2013

A Pastoral Letter on the Eve of an American Led Attack on Syria



            This morning I received a pastoral missive from my internship supervisor, Pastor Gregg Knepp formerly of St. John’s Pimlico, now of St. Peter’s Ocean City, on the subject of the likely upcoming attack by our country on Syria. It is entitled “A Kyrie for Today.”
            Kyrie, as in “Kyrie Eleison” “Lord, have mercy.” The start of our opening prayer to God at every service—the start of the prayer, in which we pray for peace from above and for our salvation—peace for the whole world…
            Peace for the whole world.
            Peace for the whole world while a regime who has killed tens of thousands of its citizens commits crimes against humanity in the context of a civil war.
            Peace for the whole world while we in the West, along with a few Arab States, prepare for some sort of limited war.

            I have to admit the whole situation breaks my heart. I have friends with ties to the Syrian people. I am of the generation for whom the shadow of Iraq looms especially large. I have a mother who works for the Veterans Administration and has seen the long term results of nations choosing to go to war.
            And I know there are no easy answers.

            But I also know our faith means something, the Church has something to say.
            “Kyrie Eleison.”
            We pray first for those who have died, and for those who will die. We pray for our leaders, that they might act as rightly as our world allows.
            We pray: “Gracious God, grant peace among nations. Cleanse from our own hearts the seeds of strife: greed and envy, harsh misunderstandings and ill will, fear and desire for revenge. Make us quick to welcome ventures in cooperation among the peoples of the world, so that there may be woven the fabric of a common good too strong to be torn by the evil hands of war. In the time of opportunity, make us be diligent; and in the time of peril, let not our courage fail; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.”

            We also remember that our faith is not something limited to Sunday mornings and hospital visits. For two thousand years we Christians have been struggling with being faithful in the world as it is, in situations of persecution, famine, feast, might, and war. And those struggles have given us a rich tradition of thought and action, something much deeper than the knee-jerk reactions of TV pundits, or even the careful and vigorous debates currently going on in the UK’s House of Commons.
            The Lutheran tradition follows in this rich tradition—a tradition that includes Just War Theory, “which requires certain conditions to be met before the use of military force is considered morally right.  These principles are:
  1. A just war can only be waged as a last resort. All non-violent options must be exhausted before the use of force can be justified.
  2. A war is just only if it is waged by a legitimate authority. Even just causes cannot be served by actions taken by individuals or groups who do not constitute an authority sanctioned by whatever the society and outsiders to the society deem legitimate.
  3. A just war can only be fought to redress a wrong suffered. For example, self-defense against an armed attack is always considered to be a just cause (although the justice of the cause is not sufficient--see point #4). Further, a just war can only be fought with "right" intentions: the only permissible objective of a just war is to redress the injury.
  4. A war can only be just if it is fought with a reasonable chance of success. Deaths and injury incurred in a hopeless cause are not morally justifiable.
  5. The ultimate goal of a just war is to re-establish peace. More specifically, the peace established after the war must be preferable to the peace that would have prevailed if the war had not been fought.
  6. The violence used in the war must be proportional to the injury suffered. States are prohibited from using force not necessary to attain the limited objective of addressing the injury suffered.
  7. The weapons used in war must discriminate between combatants and non-combatants. Civilians are never permissible targets of war, and every effort must be taken to avoid killing civilians. The deaths of civilians are justified only if they are unavoidable victims of a deliberate attack on a military target.”
            Additionally, this Church, the ELCA, in 1995, created a document “For Peace in God’s World” which particularized our understanding of Just War Theory to the challenges of the 20th and 21st century. Here are a few stand out statements:
            “Wars, both between and within states, represent a horrendous failure of politics. The evil of war is especially evident in the number of children and other noncombatants who suffer and die.”
            “Helping the neighbor in need may require protecting innocent people from injustice and aggression. While we support the use of nonviolent measures, there may be no other way to offer protection in some circumstances than by restraining forcibly those harming the innocent. We do not, then--for the sake of the neighbor--rule out possible support for the use of military force. We must determine in particular circumstances whether or not military action is the lesser evil.”
            “From the posture of the just/unjust war tradition, the aim of all politics is peace. Any political activity that involves coercion should be held accountable to just/unjust war principles. They are important for evaluating movements, sanctions, embargoes, boycotts, trade policies to reward or punish, and other coercive but nonviolent measures.”
            “We give priority to treaties to ban the production, sale, and use of biological and chemical weapons.”
            And finally, and most solemn, "Any decision for war must be a mournful one."
           
            And so, I conclude this letter as it began, Kyrie Eleison.
In Christ’s Peace,

Pastor Christopher Lee Halverson

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Sermon: Our Bad Religion


Jesus often gets in fights with religious authorities—the scribes, the leaders of the Synagogue, the Pharisees and the Sadducees.
In fact, if you’re a religious leader you can almost be guaranteed to get in a fight with Jesus.
         Think of that for a second—God shows up in human form and the people who pick a fight with God are the religious ones.
         That’s because Jesus reveals bad religion.
         And it’s worth remembering that.
         It’s worth remembering that, because we too are religious people.
         One of the dangers of reading about the conflicts Jesus had in his time, is we keep them there.
         We spend needless time railing against those religious hypocrites without checking ourselves.
         The danger is, it becomes a religious leader of a church—the pastor—and the religious people of the church—the assembly—reading about the religious leaders and religious people of Jesus times, without reflecting on our own sin.
         For that reason, this week and next week, as we read about two particular conflicts Jesus gets into with particular religious people—I want us to reflect explicitly on what these conflicts might say about our own misuse of the faith.
         I want us to reflect upon “Our Bad Religion.”
Prayer
         Yes, Jesus reveals bad religion, and it would be foolishness on our part if we didn’t include our own simultaneously saintly and sinful faith in this revelation.
         Our Bad Religion.
        
         Jesus is teaching in the Synagogue on Saturday, as a good Jewish religious figure is want to do.
And there is this woman, who for 18 years was crippled,
was curved in upon herself… her body was so fully twisted that in the Greek the description of her infirmity itself is twisted and convoluted—a pretzel of grammar—warped words.
         And Jesus takes that pretzel, and changes it into praise.
         A hunched over question mark, and makes it an exclamation point.
         She praises God for her healing—for 18 years of slavery becoming liberation.
         And an argument erupts!
         The religious folk, want to fight about Sabbath rules, about Blue Laws, about what you can and can’t do on the Sabbath!

         And the argument that follows is actually quite interesting, something religious folk of the time debated.
In fact, it’s an argument we find right in the Old Testament, when it tells of the 10 Commandments.
         In the book of Exodus the 3rd commandment—keep the Sabbath Holy—is justified by a description of God creating the world in 6 days and rested on the 7th. That’s the starting point for the leader of the synagogue’s argument.
         God worked for 6 days, and rested for one. If that’s good enough for God it’s good enough for us!
         In the book of Deuteronomy, however, the 3rd commandment is justified differently. It is justified in this way
—you were slaves in Egypt, and didn’t get to rest then—you know what it’s like to be worked to death and you’ve been liberated from that bondage to slavery in Egypt. Act like it.
         This is Jesus’ response to the religious folk’s attack—there is no better day to release this woman from her bondage of 18 years than the day in which we rest from the bondage of slavery in Egypt.
        
         Additionally, Jesus brings up a common rabbinic debate about whether you can untie donkeys and oxen on the Sabbath. He seems to know what side the Synagogue’s leadership falls on, that they are on the more liberal side that allows for sustaining lives of livestock on the Sabbath.
         To make it plain, it’s okay to liberate livestock from their stockades on Saturday.
         Then he argues from small to large—if a cow can be freed from it’s fence, how much more can this woman be freed from her bondage and bending and oppression by the devil!?!

         But, as fascinating as this argument is, between Jesus and the Leaders of the Synagogue—how rooted it is in arguments of the time—how Jesus skillfully argues in favor of this woman he’s healed—focusing on the argument is the very problem Jesus has revealed.
This is an example of Our Bad Religion.
         They have before them a concrete example of God’s goodness, that God has freed this woman from 18 years of horrible disfigurement.
Yet they prefer to debate religion.
They prefer to use it as a way to get one over on their opponent—in this moment Jesus.
In short, they are too busy fighting to see the Goodness of God right in front of them and praise God for it.
         Praise God like this woman is doing.

         In a way, it’s like reading comments in an online news article.
         For example, I was reading a news article online about Antoinette Tuff,
the lady who talked down, and prayed for, a gunman who was intent on murdering children at an Atlanta elementary school this last Wednesday.
         It was a fine article—very uplifting—a story worth praising God about.

         But then I got to the comments section at the bottom.
         People were arguing guns. Arguing politics—even politics from 2 decades ago. Arguing Race. Arguing Religion. Arguing Divorce. Arguing about EVERYTHING. Because they just wanted to argue.
         They could have been so overjoyed that those 500 rounds of ammunition didn’t find 500 targets—but instead, they argue.

         And, that’s just what these leaders of the Synagogues wanted to do—argue instead of praise God.
         That’s what Jesus ends up calling them out for, even as they argue. That they ignore God’s loving action even as they fight.
         And that’s their bad religion and it can be Our Bad Religion too.
         Take a moment—think of a time you’ve done such a thing?—Arguing Religion instead of praising God.
         I’m guessing you have—I know I have.
(pause)
         To these leaders of Synagogues, and to us here today, I want to say.
 Praise God.
         Praise God for finding us when we’re bent-in-on-ourselves—sinners that we are—paralyzed by our own self-centered nature.
         Praise God who is the salve for our scars of cynicism and self-righteousness.
         Praise God for straightening us out when we get bent up.
         Praise God for Jesus’ miraculous healing on the Sabbath and for the faith of Antoinette Tuff on Wednesday.
         Praise God who hears not our babble and our noise—our sound and our fury, but instead the clear voice of His beloved Son.
         Praise God who is faithful to us despite our bad religion.
A+A

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Racial Diversity and the ELCA



So, I've been looking at the ELCA's social statement on race "Freed in Christ: Race, Ethnicity, and culture" for my pub theology discussion tonight.
One of the goals coming out of this statement was for the ELCA to grow non-white membership to 10% of overall membership by 2003.
Here's a chart comparing the church I serve, the national church, and the community I serve in (please note the South Plainfield statistics don't add up to 100% because of how they count Latinos... the national church one is slight off too... I fused wiki with this):


White
90%
94%
67%
African Descent
7%
1%
10%
Asian
0
1%
14%
Other
0
1%
5%
Multiracial
1%
1%
3%
Latino
2%
1%
13%

Friday, August 09, 2013

156 10 word or less quotes Or 3 years worth of Good Church Signs! The Last Batch



  1. Be captured by love of one another.
  2. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light
  3. Neither do I condemn thee: go and sin no more

Thursday, August 08, 2013

156 10 word or less quotes Or 3 years worth of Good Church Signs! Eighth Batch



  1. Holy, holy, holy is the Lord
  2. He will swallow up death forever
  3. God will wipe away the tears from all faces
  4. Comfort O Comfort my people
  5. He was despised, and we held him of no account
  6. The righteous one shall make many righteous
  7. God’s word is in my heart like a fire
  8. Do no wrong to immigrants, orphans, or widows
  9. I have continued my faithfulness to you
  10. How lonely sits the city
  11. His mercies never come to an end
  12. Go down the mountain
  13. I will search for my sheep
  14. Mortal, can these bones live?
  15. I see four men unbound in the fire!-Nebuchadnezzar
  16. I desire steadfast love, not sacrifice
  17. They sell the needy for a pair of sandals
  18. Let justice roll down like mighty waters
  19. Should I not be concerned about Ninevah?
  20. Do justice, love kindness, walk humbly with your God
  21. My spirit abides among you; do not fear
  22. We are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses
  23. Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers
  24. Be quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to anger
  25. Pray for one another

Tuesday, August 06, 2013

156 10 word or less quotes Or 3 years worth of Good Church Signs! Seventh Batch



  1. You intended harm, God intended good—Joseph
  2. You shall be holy
  3. See, I receive a command to bless
  4. Justice, only justice shall you pursue
  5. The Lord your God is with you wherever you go
  6. Speak, for your servant is listening
  7. Nathan to David, “You are the man!”
  8. The Lord is my rock and my fortress.
  9. God’s steadfast love endures forever
  10. Consider my servant Job
  11. I know my redeemer lives
  12. The Lord is my shepherd
  13. Be strong, and let your heart take courage
  14. Why are you cast down, O my soul?
  15. Create in my a clean heart, O God
  16. Two or three gathered—there I am.
  17. Teach me your way, O Lord
  18. In his word I hope
  19. I am fearfully and wonderfully made
  20. Get wisdom get insight!
  21. Vapor vaporizing, vapor, all is vapor.—Ecclesiastes
  22. For everything there is a season
  23. Do not be quick to anger
  24. Love is stronger than death
  25. Here am I; send me!

Sunday, August 04, 2013

Scarcity and Abundance (An outline of My sermon on Luke 12:11-24)



 A roughly filled out outline of today's sermon:
Money and Luke:
The Gospel of Luke emphasizes very heavily the dangers of wealth. For example it starts with the Magnificat—in it Mary says the hungry will be filled, but the rich will go away empty. Similarly Luke does not just have beatitudes in which the poor are considered blessed, but it also includes a part in which Jesus states, “Woe to the rich.”
Finally, as we see in a few weeks, it is pointed out you can’t serve both God and Mammon.

I bring this up because
The 1st two weeks of August & the last two weeks of September are week in which it is impossible not to preach about God and Mammon—God and money. On top of that  Synod Stewardship Guy will be preaching in a few weeks time, and I bet he’ll mention money in one way or another.

Dangers of talking about wealth:
There are several dangers when the church talks about wealth.
1.    There is the danger we’ll say nothing, after all it’s impolite to talk about sex, politics, and money. But that’s not an option—Money is 15% of what Jesus talks about—there are well over 2,000 verses in scripture dedicated to the subject.
2.    The next danger is that the Pastor will say—“Love of money is the root of all evil—but none of my concregation would love money—so we don’t need to worry about it.
3.    Lastly, the Pastor might simplify things and say “Money is evil—unless you’re giving it to church, then it’s good stewardship… and call it a day.
This week and next week—Scarcity and Abundance
I would like to define these two ways of looking at the world, by the first questions they bring up in us—they are:
ScarcityàWhat don’t I have? What do I need?
Abundanceà What do I already have? What has God already provided for me?
Prayer
Jesus begins today’s lesson by telling everyone it’s going to get rough, they’ll be drug before religious and political leader—but they shouldn’t worry, the Holy Spirit has them covered—they have an abundance of God’s help
Then he’s interrupted, with a question from the back—what about my inheritance? What about money?
Jesus responds to this request, as he often does, with a story… in this case a Story of Scarcity
A man collects massive amounts of possessions, then he dies, unable to “take it with him.”
There are a few things we should take away from Jesus’ story:
1.    Talks to self (The man in Jesus’ story talks to himself—he says I, Me, or My 13 times in 3 sentences—because he’s obsessed with scarcity he is constantly looking out for #1, he’s stuck in a defensive crouch
·       For that matter he sounds like Smeagol from Lord of the Rings, whispering “My precious” to his possessions
·       He’s the classic definition of sinful—he’s Homo Incurvatus in Se a person curved in on their self—he’s so concerned about his needs that he’s stuck in his own belly button.
2.    A Dis-ordered life (The man also has a disordered life—think about this number sequence:17, 2, 3, 4. 17 shouldn’t be the first number, one should—likewise scarcity can make possessions, our number one thing, which isn’t where they should fit in our life.
·       Think about it, he’s put things before his very life! And now that his life is being called for he realizes his mistake. You’ve heard the old phrase, there are People to love, things to use—well scarcity can disorder this formula so you use people and love things.
·       Think of our reading from Ecclesiastes—the author chased after money, and wisdom, and such things, and when attaining them found it all to be “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity” “Vapor vaporizing, all is vapor.” The wealth he grasped at in his barn was elusive, and fled from his fingers like smoke.
But Jesus doesn’t stop there, he follows this story up with a Story of Abundance
He says, “Hey, look at that Raven—it looks plump and happy, God provided for it… and it doesn’t have a barn! It has enough!
Jesus is saying to the man who interrupted him:
1.    Order your life. Consider what you have (You’re alive, the person you’re inheriting from is dead, count your blessing!)
2.    Talk to brother. Consider who you have (You’re in danger of breaking your relationship with your brother over material things—don’t do that!)

In conclusion, when you start with abundance instead of scarcity you are thankful for your life and all you have. Also, you might even start saying I, me, and my less and saying we, us, and our more.
I’ll more about that last one next week.
Amen and Alleluiah!

156 10 word or less quotes Or 3 years worth of Good Church Signs! Sixth Batch



  1. Go and make disciples
  2. The Good news of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.
  3. Who do people say that I am?
  4. Whoever welcomes a child, welcomes me
  5. The Son of Man came to serve
  6. Terror and amazement had seized them.
  7. My soul magnifies the Lord
  8.  Glory to God in the highest
  9. Every mountain and hill shall be made low
  10. Do not judge, and you will not be judged
  11. Love your enemies
  12. The Kingdom of God has come near to you.
  13. Our Father who art in heaven
  14. God searches for the lost
  15. Father, forgive them.
  16. In the beginning was the word
  17. The Word became flesh
  18. I am bread, water, light etc.
  19. New Commandment—Love one another.
  20. That you may believe and have life
  21. I see open heavens and the Son of Man!
  22. What is to prevent me from being baptized?
  23. We too are his offspring.
  24. The Lord bless you and keep you.
  25. Indeed it was very good

Saturday, August 03, 2013

156 10 word or less quotes Or 3 years worth of Good Church Signs! Fifth Batch


Scripture:
  1. Sighs too deep for words.
  2. Nothing separates us from the love of God
  3. I am not ashamed of the gospel.
  4. We are justified by grace!
  5. There is now no condemnation
  6. If God is for us, who is against us?
  7. We are the Lord’s!
  8. There are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit.
  9. This is my body that is for you.
  10. This cup is the new covenant in my blood.
  11. My grace is sufficient for you.
  12. Power is made perfect in weakness
  13. For freedom Christ set us free.
  14. Bear one another’s burdens
  15. Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Generosity, Faithfulness, Gentleness, Self Control.
  16. Forgive as you’ve been forgiven
  17. He emptied himself.
  18. Rejoice in the Lord always; against I say, rejoice!
  19. It’s a lion… no wait… it’s a lamb!-Rev. 5
  20. This is my Son, the beloved.
  21. Salt and Light
  22. Come and see!
  23. Lord, let our eyes be opened.
  24. Love God. Love Neighbor.
  25. Did you hear the one about the Samaritan?

Thursday, August 01, 2013

156 10 word or less quotes Or 3 years worth of Good Church Signs! Fourth Batch



Miscellaneous:
  1. What vitamin is best for a Christian? B1.
  2. We support the separation of Church and hate.
  3. Buckle Up!
  4. You are welcome here.
  5. Thank God Almighty, I’m free at last
  6. Love
  7. I gave in, and admitted that God was God.
  8. Pray, and let God worry.
  9. "We have one word for people like you: Welcome"
  10. "Our pastor is on vacation...it is a great time to visit!"
  11. "Christians aren't perfect - just forgiven."
  12. "Now accepting new members!"
  13. Wanted: sinners.
  14. Sign broken. Come inside to hear the message.
  15. Sinners only.
  16. Now open between Easter and Christmas.
  17. "Christians are like this road - always under construction"
  18. "This is a sign from God"
  19. Still plenty of good seats up front.
  20. Established 33 A.D.
  21. Our speakers go to eleven....
  22. We're on a mission from God.
  23. all are welcome come as you are
  24. "We need not think alike to love alike."—Francis David
  25. I bow in trust, forgive, sustain, here.