The Good News!

Welcome! I am the Rev. Ken Saunders. I serve as the rector of St. James Episcopal Church in Greeneville, Tennessee (since May 2018). These sermons here were delivered in the context of worship at the various places I have served.

[NOTE: Sermons (or Homilies) are commentaries that follow the scripture lessons, and are specifically designed to be heard. They are "written for the ear" and may contain sentence fragments and be difficult to read. They are NOT intended to be academic papers.]

Sunday, May 12, 2013

RCL Year C - Easter 7 - May 12, 2013


RCL Year C - Easter 7
The Rev. Kenneth H. Saunders III
Trinity Episcopal Church
Towson, MD
May 12, 2013


What does it mean to live in one-ness?  How do we define unity?  Does it mean that we are all like-minded?  Or is it that we all have the same goals and aspirations in life?  Or is it even that we all believe the same thing?  I don’t think so.

I would suggest that if we were all like-minded, and we had all the same goals and believed all the same thing, we would be no more than starving brain seeking zombies with no intellect, no soul, and no future.  Life would be pretty boring - and we would drone on mindlessly, continuing to seek-out something because it feels good.

So, if that’s not it, what is unity?  What is oneness?

Today we find ourselves in the middle, as we so often do, in church…  as we celebrate the life and ministry of Jesus today, we find ourselves in the place between his ascension into heaven (which we celebrated on Thursday) and the coming of the promised Paraclete (the helper or supporter), the holy spirit that will continue to help and guide us; help us remember Jesus’ teachings, and comfort us with the promises of salvation and everlasting life.

In our celebration today, we are found right here in the middle of those two significant events in the church calendar, but the scriptures appointed for today take us back…  They chronologically takes us back to a time when Jesus prayed for unity for his followers that they might be one, as he and the father are one.

The seen we have from today’s gospel reading from John is familiar.  Jesus and his disciples are gathered in the garden of Gethsemane and Jesus has gone off by himself to pray.  He knows that the end is near, and soon Judas and a caravan of Roman soldiers will come trampling up the path to arrest him.

He is stressed and worried.  So, Jesus then begins to pray for his followers and everything that he has been trying to teach them.  He prays that they understand, and that they will continue to be and act together and “be one” with each other in community.  Jesus prays that they “ALL may be one.”  And he prays this so hard that his sweat was like drops of blood! – as Luke’s gospel tells us.

To be a follower of Jesus IS to be a part of a greater whole.  Part of a community…  Because he knew, united they would stand and divided they would fall.

According to Jesus, there’s not supposed to be any solitary Christians out there or spiritual Lone Rangers.  Does this mean they have to get along all the time?  No!  Does this mean they have to agree all the time?  No!  If we think primarily that this is some sort of functional or political statement, then it would seem to call us to constant agreement and like minded consensus.

But if we think on more along ontological terms (as it relates to our general nature of being) then it becomes more of who we are.  We are one in Christ whether we agree with each other or not. And, we are one in Christ whether we like one another or not.  To become a part of Christ is to become a part of the community; to be a part of the one.

It’s one of the most difficult things that we can learn to do.  And yes, I believe that it’s a learned and practiced trait and I use the word practice, because we haven’t perfected it.

The world and even the church (the followers of Jesus) have not shown us good examples of this unity that Jesus prays for.  The violence and destruction modeled by governments and social systems only adds to the division and exclusion…  He or she is not one with us because he or she…  (you can fill in the blank) 

                        Has a different color skin…
                        Speaks a different language…
                        Lives in a different part of the world…
                        Doesn’t make enough money…
                        Makes too much money…
                        Doesn’t have the right job…
                        Is disabled or handicap or has a learning disability…
                        (and the list is infinite!)

And the church is just as bad (mia culpa).  He or she is not one with us because (fill in the blank)

                        We don’t worship the same way…
                        You ordain women / homosexuals…
                        You don’t use the right prayerbook…
                        You say odd prayers that include the Virgin Mary…
                        You think that organized religion is stuffy and has no value…
                        You don’t celebrate communion every Sunday…
                        You practice private confession…
                        You pray extemporaneously…
                        You don’t kneel or you don’t stand or you don’t genuflect…
                        You don’t know Jesus like I know Jesus…
                        You don’t pray the right prayers…
                        (again the list goes on and on and on…)
                       
Yet Jesus’ most stressed and personal heart wrenching prayer was for his disciples to be one, and for them to continue practice community…  and for them to love and live into their diversity…

This oneness doesn’t rear it’s head and say, “I have no need of you.”  It says, “come my brother or sister, sit and eat, feast at the table and be refreshed and renewed.” 

It doesn’t say, “I’m upset because you don’t play my way, so I am going to take my toys and go home.  That it’s my way or the highway.”  It says, “I’ll walk with you, learn from me, and give me your burdens, because my yoke is easy and my burden is light.  Together we can share the journey and the load.”

Jesus’ prayer for unity reminds us that our unity, our oneness with each other, is to be an outward sign to the world of God’s love for us in Christ Jesus.  We understand from his prayer that oneness and unity is about love.  It embodies the trust and allegiance.  That Beverly talked about last week.

And if you have been a part of a family, or a member of a church, or a community, you know that within that love that it can get messy sometimes…  there are always disagreements and squabbling.  Because we are all human, made by the one creator, God.  But the mystery of the incarnation (God coming into this world, embodied in the person of Jesus the Christ) is that God desired unity with us so much; God became one of us.  And at that moment we were invited into the oneness of God, in unity with the Father, the Son, and the Spirit.  It is only with God’s help that we are able to continue to live into that oneness.

Like the disciples, who were in the middle, in a time without Jesus between the Ascension and the gift of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost.  We are in that time between the first coming of Jesus Christ and his coming again.  May we rejoice in the promise that Jesus the Christ continues to be one with us in our diversity, as we continue to pray for our oneness, and for the unity of humanity as community.

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