Sunday, July 5, 2020

Comfortable Words for Uncomfortable Times- Sermon for Pentecost 5, 2020


  Comfortable Words for Uncomfortable Times

The Readings for the 5th Sunday of Pentecost

Zechariah 9:9-12  Psalm 145:1-13   Romans 7:21-8:6     Matthew 11:25-30



Preface

It’s an honor and a joy to be invited to preach once again here at Holy Trinity.  I don’t recall our worship space being quite so expansive, however.  It’s not quite as nice as being in our beautiful church, but it is pleasant being out here in the open air like this.  In colonial times, when this region was all wooded frontier, itinerate preachers would come through preaching where there were otherwise few preachers.  One of the most famous was George Whitefield who had a great influence of this area and all colonial America up and down the eastern seaboard.  He was an Anglican clergyman with a booming voice, ready-made for open-air preaching.  It was said that you could hear him 5 miles away when he was preaching.  That sounds like and exaggeration, but in any case, Whitefield has no competition from me.



The Readings

In today’s reading from the Prophet Zechariah, he says the King is coming and He will release the captives and restore hope.



In our Romans reading today, St. Paul reminds us that a life submitted to the Spirit of God is true life – and the Spirit brings that elusive quality to our lives known as peace.  We Americans do indeed yearn for peace in these less-than-peaceful times in which we live.



And finally, in our Gospel reading today, Jesus says that if you are tired… worn out… burned out… weighed down- come to Him and find rest.  What a great invitation.

These are comforting words for these less than comfortable times.  Carl Marx’s in his famous charge against Christianity declares that “Religion is opium for the masses.”  What if instead Marx had said “Religion is a comfort for the masses?”  That would not have achieved his intended effect, but it would have been more accurate.  Marx, of course is looking at Christianity from the outside and cannot speak with any real sense of knowing, reminding us of what St. Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 1:18, “For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved, it is the power of God.”  Marx wants to suggest that the promises of our Scripture readings today are an illusion, not real; however, for us who are “in Christ,” these words are the power of God for living in this broken and crazy world. 



Cranmer’s Comfortable Words

In the late medieval period of Western history, Christianity had morphed into a religion that largely did not offer comfort.  Late medieval piety was focused on earning your way to heaven, rather than looking to the power of God to save us, as we were just saying.  Our fallen human nature thoroughly makes earning our own way back to God an impossibility, and the Old Testament is a witness to this.  For the medieval Christian, then, what they knew was only fear, anxiety and hopelessness, all because the love of God and our hope to be found in Christ had become hidden from them.

To this reality, Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, the head of the Church in England author of our Book of Common Prayer included in our Eucharistic Liturgy what is known as “Comfortable Words.”  They are thankfully still in our Prayer Book to this day.   Cranmer’s “Comfortable Words” are simply four Scripture passages that go to the true heart of the Gospel.   He presents them to the people such that they could not possibly miss the comfort and power that can be found in their union with Christ.  The first of these four passage is from our Gospel reading for today- listen to Jesus’ words again, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”  What a promise!  What a comfort! 

Cranmer chose three other passages to be included in his “Comfortable Words.”  Father Theo will be reading those to us later in this service.  I hope they are a comfort to you.  As we are repeatedly reminded of in the psalms, we are to take comfort and shelter under the shadow of God’s wing.  I love that image.  God’s comfort is a comfort that is eternal. 

Seeking Comfort in Our Time

On this 4th of July weekend, we find ourselves focused as a nation on our centuries-old struggle against our own fragilities and fallenness that have kept us from making the ideals of our Founders a reality for all.  What we really struggle against, however, is to be found in the dark recesses of the human heart, and to heal the human heart, we need God.

Just about all our Founding Fathers were religious men, and many expressed in their writings and speeches the sense that this great enterprise we call the United States needs God, and that this nation is made possible only because we are under the providential care and guiding hand of God, under the shadow of the wings of the Almighty, to use the psalmists’ imagery.  Two quotes from George Washington speak to this. (Washington was, by the way, for many years on the vestry of the Anglican Church in Alexandria, just to let Holy Trinity’s vestry know they follow in good footsteps). He wrote, “Of all the habits and dispositions which lead to political prosperity,  religion and morality are indispensable supports.” He was also quoted, "The propitious smiles of heaven can never be expected on a nation which disregards the eternal rules of order which heaven itself has ordained.”  Thank you, George Washington!   

On this 4th of July, it is right, therefore, to celebrate God’s providence and blessing upon this nation.  We have been blessed over the centuries to be a beacon of freedom and opportunity for millions who have come to be part of this great American enterprise, the most recent among us here at Holy Trinity being our beloved Iwuji family who became American citizens just this past year.  Congratulations to them once again.  The ideals and Godly wisdom of our founders has resulted in a nation of phenomenal success and security for the vast majority of its citizens.  Our nation has created a rising standard of living for its people and been blessed with the ability to export food, technology and the economic opportunity that democracy and capitalism bring.   According to World Bank, we have contributed to reducing world poverty by half over the last number of decades.  This is our day to celebrate and give thanks for this.  This is a phenomenal statistic, although it is strangely not talked about, presumably because there is yet so much work yet to be done against world poverty.  God blessed this nation with the will and the ability to defeat the institution of slavery in this country, take on fascism in two world wars, and to face down the godlessness of Marxism in our day, thus securing the economic and personal freedom for countless numbers of our fellow human beings here and around the world.  Not forgetting that we are a work in progress, this is nonetheless our day to count our blessings.

On this 4th of July weekend, we should pray for two things: first, that  God’s hand of blessing continue to rest upon this great nation; and secondly, that God continue His good work of healing of our people and our society.  Our 4th of July celebration should also be a time of repentance, not only for our sins as a nation, but also for something that overshadows our whole future- that we as a culture in these modern times have actively and perilously sought to remove ourselves from under the shadow of God’s wing.   

Conclusion

So, this morning, Jesus invites us to come to Him and find rest for our weary souls.  I don’t know about you, but I’m feeling a bit weary.  It makes me appreciate the fact that Father Ross is using the Kenyan benediction in our worship these days: “All the devil’s works we send to the cross of Christ.  All our hopes we set on the risen Christ.”    

Where do you turn for comfort?  Where do you go for answers to this crazy, mixed-up world?   The answer to this here at Holy Trinity is what it always has been is–Jesus!  28 Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, He says, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.”   In these less than comfortable times, we should take comfort that God is still in charge. 

Let me close by circling back to my opening reflections on George Whitefield.  His message was a simple one of “conversion.”  Conversion is submitting to the regenerating, transforming and comforting power of God in our lives.  Whitefield ushered in a movement known as the Great Awakening.  On this 4th of July, we should all pray for another Great Awakening.

Prayer

Let us pray:  Lord, we thank you for the great blessings you have bestowed on this nation and on the world through this nation.  Thank you for walking with us to bring comfort and peace amid our struggles.  Receive our repentance.  Heal our land.  Push back the darkness in our hearts.  Remove not your guiding hand from us but awaken us afresh with your Holy Spirit.  Place us back under the shadow of your wing and bless this nation. We pray these things in the mighty name of Jesus, Amen.
The Reverend Rob Hartley, July 5, 2020


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