Sunday, January 30, 2022

Sermon- Funeral Service for Marylin Poston, Saturday, January 29, 2022


1 Corinthians 15:22
    “For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive.”  

Two things in this verse:

·       First, as sons and daughters of Adam, we are reminded that we all die.  We hardly need reminding of this, do we.  We are destined to live 3 score and 10, as Psalm 90 puts it, only to return to the dust from which we came, as it says in Genesis 3.

·       Secondly, this passage tells us that for all who are “in Christ,” (St Paul’s favorite phrase) we are all made alive.  What does St. Paul mean? He goes on to tell us. He says that “in Christ,” the perishable (that is, we mortal humans), put on the imperishable (immortality).  Paul tells us, for those who are in a saving relationship with Christ, death no longer has its sting; that is, the curse of Genesis 3 (which is the story of humankind’s rebellion against God) is broken and replaced with the eternal blessing of fellowship with God forever.    

This is amazingly good news to a world that is perishing, and it is well hidden from many but revealed to all who are in Christ.  This "Good News" is not only revealed to us who are in a relationship with Christ but also actualized and made possible through our relationship with Christ.

This service this afternoon celebrates this great Truth in the context of the life of our dear Marylin.  Of course, we grieve her loss to us and will miss her.  To all the family, know that those of us gathered here grieve with you, but we also celebrate with you.  God has gathered Mimi to Himself forever.  Using the beautiful words from the Old Testament prophet Isaiah from whom we just read, Christ brings to us “the oil of gladness instead of mourning, a garment of praise instead of a faint spirit.”  God has done this for Marylin; God has done this for us.

So, we celebrate:  We celebrate Marylin; we celebrate God who gave Marylin life and gave her to us; we celebrate that God has now granted Marylin an eternal place at His great banquet table in Heaven, the marriage feast of the Lamb to His bride, the Church; and finally, we celebrate the great reality that, through Marylin’s relationship with God in Christ, death does not have the last word in Marylin’s life, God does.

Our relationship with God, therefore, is very important, life and death important.  In God’s grand scheme of things, all relationships are important.  At times like this, we should think about our relationships, such as the relationship we had with Marylin and our ongoing relationships with each other.  Most of all, we should think about our relationship with God.   

Some think that Christianity, particularly when viewed from the outside, is about following rules when it is really about relationships.  Breaking God’s rules can be forgiven, and God is quick to do that, but relationships, especially our relationship with God, can either be made or lost forever.  It is true that we Christians seek to follow God’s rules and the boundaries He has placed around our lives, but we do so simply because it is an expression of our relationship with Him.  Relationships not rules are what we find at the heart of Christianity.

From God's perspective, to be in a relationship with Him is the reason He created us.  Christ came to be our way back to a relationship with the Father unfettered by our sin and rebellion.   Jesus says in John 14:6, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me."  Through Jesus, Heaven’s gates are opened wide to a forever and perfected love-relationship with God.  On this side of the grave, we struggle to understand what such a forever relationship with God looks like, but Marylin knows what it looks like; she is now liveing it.

If we are paying attention, God’s purposes for our lives should become clear  in times like today, and it involves our relationship with Him and with each other.  The full, unfettered, and forever relationship with God we call Heaven.  The full, unfettered, and forever relationship with one another we call the Communion of Saints in Heaven.  Through Christ, we will someday take our place in Heaven alongside Marylin and all the saints.  “Thanks be to God!”

Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Science and Religion

As a young man about to go off to college, I felt the tug to do one of two things with my life- become a priest in God's Church or explore the world of science.  Amazingly, God opened doors in my life that allowed me to do both.  I spent 31years enjoying science, math as the language of science, and a career in electrical engineering (the application of science).  

Retiring from that career, I am now a priest who is further exploring God's creation and my relationship with our Creator.  Hopefully, as a priest and pastor, I am helping others do the same.

I never have considered faith and science as mutually exclusive or involving incompatible worldviews.   My Trinitarian Christian Faith has revealed to me the "why" of my existence, and science continues to open ever-widening vistas as to the "how" I have come to be part of this amazing world in which we live.  It has been an incredible ride!

Monday, January 10, 2022

Relationships, Not Rules

God-intended human life involves relationships.  Without relationships, life is an incomplete and faded image of what God intends it to be.  Jesus said that our first and greatest relationship is with the God who created us- He says in Mark 12:30-31, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.” The next greatest relationships are with one another- “Love your neighbor as yourself.” 

Therefore, Christianity is first and foremost about relationships.  Some think Christianity, particularly Christianity viewed from the outside, is all about following rules and loosing autonomy to a distant God.  But in God’s great economy of things, breaking God’s rules can be forgiven, which God is very quick to do.  We follow God's rules and acknowledge His boundaries simply because we love God.  God placed these rules and boundaries in our lives simply because He loves us.  Following God's commandments is surely an expression of our relationship with God.

From God's perspective, being in a relationship with Him based on love is our purpose for being and  why God created us.  God came to us in our fallen humanity in the person of Jesus to be the way back to an unfettered love-relationship with Him.  Jesus says in John 14:6, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me."  Through Jesus, heaven’s gates are opened wide for us to enjoy a full and forever relationship with our Heavenly Father.

God’s purposes become clear to us when we realize that God did not create any of us just to live "three score and ten years," as Psalm 90 puts it, and then pass into oblivion (or worse), but He created us to be in a love-relationship with Him and, by extension, with one another.  This full, unfettered, and forever relationship with God is called Heaven.  This full, unfettered, and forever relationship with one another is called the Communion of Saints in Heaven.  In Christ and through Christ, someday we will take our place in the full presence of God among the saints in Heaven. Alleluia!

Rob Hartley 01-07-22

Sunday, January 2, 2022

Sermon for the 2nd Sunday after Christmas, year C, 2022- "What is Truth?"

The Christmas season, as you know, is 12 days long, beginning with the celebration of The Feast of the Incarnation on December 25 and ending with The Feast of Epiphany of January 6, but not all Christians celebrate the Feast of the Incarnation on December 25.  Churches such as the Eastern Orthodox, churches in Russia, Greece, and the Middle East, celebrate Christmas on January 6

This amazingly allowed Nancy and me to celebrate Christmas twice one year.  We attended Christmas Eve midnight mass here at home and then flew to Egypt on a study tour of Coptic Christianity with a group from my seminary.  We again attended a Christmas Eve midnight mass with our Coptic brothers and sisters in Cairo 12 days later. 

Sadly, the very next year this Coptic Christmas Eve service was attacked by Islamic radicals, and many people were killed and injured. This act of hatred and violence could not be further from the great Truth that was being celebrated that night in Cairo.  They were celebrating what St. John writes about in the prologue to his Gospel, “…the Word became flesh and dwelt among us…full of grace and truth.” That night, Truth and the lies of this world came face-to-face.  Jesus says, “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life (John 14:6).  Jesus came into the world embodying Truth, the truth about us, about God, and about this crazy world in which we live.

 Years ago, a noted Psychiatrist, Dr. Scott Peck, wrote a book titled People of the Lie.  Dr. Peck makes the all-too-real connection between untruth and human evil.  Living the lies of this world, simply stated, is the source of evil; after all, Satan, who roams this world, is the Prince of Lies.

 So, knowing Truth is important.  St. Paul in our Epistle reading today writes about Jesus coming to us bringing wisdom and insight, making known to us the mystery of God’s will, he writes.  Paul celebrates that Jesus not only brings salvation, He also brings truth, truth about what this life is really all about.

To us fallen and sinful humans, Truth is an elusive commodity.  Our culture even denies that there is such a thing as transcendent Truth.  We thus leave it to the individual to construct his or her own truth.  Of course, we followers of Christ find all this modernist talk about there being no transcendent truth quite absurd.  We know that ultimate Truth about life and about God is not a product of the human mind; rather, it has its source in the mind of God, which is why we Christians strive to continually grow in our knowledge of God. 

Barney Lamar whom many of you know from the men’s Saturday morning fellowship, sent me a link to an article on this topic written by Anthony Deblasi (Dec 19, 2021).   Deblasi points out that, if what we think or believe is not the truth, then it is not knowledge; in fact, it is the opposite knowledge, it is a lie.  This is important because it is true knowledge that guides us to a fulfilled life.  Jesus told us that He came that we might have life to the fullest.

Simeon and Anna in our Gospel today give us a picture of what it looks like to live into what is true. Truth had been revealed to Simeon and Anna through God’s Word, the Law and the Prophets, and they were now seeing its consummation in the presentation of the Christ Child in the Temple.  Simeon exclaims, “Lord, now you have set your servant free to go in peace, according to your word; for my eyes have seen your salvation that you have prepared in the presence of all peoples, a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and for glory to your people Israel.” We hear in these words the Christmas and Epiphany theme of light as a metaphor of truth and knowledge breaking into this world just as St. John writes about in His Prologue, “The true light, which gives light to everyone, was coming into the world.”

So, “What is Truth?”  I’m sure you recognize this as Pilot’s insightful question to Jesus at Jesus’ trial.  Jesus had told Pilot that He came to bear witness to the truth.  As Christ’s followers, therefore, are not we also to bear witness to the truth?  That is a rhetorical question… of course we are?

 In closing, let me mention a few truths to which we are to bear witness:

 ·       We are to bear witness that we are creatures made in His image of our loving Creator, that God created us out of love, to be the objects of His love, with the ability to love Him in return. 

 ·       We are to bear witness to God’s invitation to be in union with Him, something made possible through Christ who rescues us from our fallen human nature and invites us to new life in Him. 

 ·       We are to bear witness that, by the sanctifying power and presence of God’s Holy Spirit in our lives, new life begins now, today, right here among the lies and deceits of this present world, by letting light break into the dark world through us. 

 ·       We are to bear witness that the chief purpose of man is to live a life that glorifies and honors God.  This requires repentance, submission and obedience to God’s good and perfect will for our lives.  

 ·       Finally, since the big, in-your-face untruth of our time is about human sexuality, we are to bear witness that God did indeed has placed boundaries around human sexuality for the healthy ordering of our lives and our society.  Against this great truth, our culture is in open rebellion. 

 You and I know the answer to Pilot's question, “What is truth.” We know the answer because we know Jesus. 

The Rev. Rob Hartley, Christmas II, 2022