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, January 30, 2022

Year C - Epiphany 4 - January 30, 2022

The Rev. Dr. Ken Saunders
St. James Episcopal Church
Greeneville, TN

Year C - Epiphany 4 - January 30, 2022
There are a few things for us to remember in this Christian life. The first is that God loves you. That’s right, God loves you! No exceptions, no pre-qualifications, no prescriptions... just pure, all encompassing, all surrounding, unconditional love…

The second thing that we need to remember and understand is that God loves all of creation just as much as God loves you. That’s right, even those that you don’t love. God is right there loving them, too. God loves you and me, God loves the outcast and the stranger. God love those that don’t look like you, and don’t act like you. God loves those that don’t dress like you, and don’t make as much money as you, or even those who worship in a different way than you. (Lord have mercy)

The third thing and probably one of the most important - Through our professed faith, God has chosen us for a very important task. God has chosen you and I to show God’s love to the world... Through our every day actions… Through the people we meet, through the way we live. We all are to represent the love of God, who first loved us.

That may be a surprising thing for you to hear this morning. But it shouldn’t have been the first time you’ve ever heard it. n my study, I found some interesting surprises in today’s readings.  

The first, from our old testament reading. Do you remember some months ago, when I said that whenever you read in scripture that “the word of God came” to someone, it means "it happened." Well, the word of God happened to Jeremiah. And Jeremiah is surprised that God knows him, and loves him, and has chosen him to do important work. (Surprise! God happens! And God chooses YOU!)  

Like Jeremiah, we shouldn’t be surprised that God has found us worthy and capable to do the important work that God has given us to do. God calls Jeremiah, who at the time was just a teenager. And even though God tells Jeremiah that he knows him, and has prepared him to bring a great message to the people of Israel, Jeremiah feels inadequate.  

Jeremiah exclaim, "I’m just a boy." But God empowers Jeremiah and guides him and empowers him to to do the work he needs to do to guide the people Israel and orient them back - back toward a right relationship with God and God's love.
God gives us everything we need to accomplish that which we are given to do. Everything that is needed to reconcile the world to God, we have already been given. All we need to do is look deep within ourselves and recognized where God is happening.

The second surprise for us this morning is in the Gospel reading. We pick up where we left off last week. Jesus has returned to his hometown... He returned to Nazareth, a small town in Galilee and he is teaching in the synagogue. He is handed the scroll of Isaiah. When he reads from the scroll of Isaiah, he says "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor."

When he hands the scroll back, Jesus makes the bold statement and says that “today the scripture 
has been fulfilled in your hearing.” All the people were confused and amazed at his words. Some said, who does this guy think he is? Isn’t he Joseph’s son? And then the crowd wanted to see some sort of sign of who he was. They wanted him to prove that he was indeed a great prophet.

Jesus basically tells them that he’s not going to waste his time proving anything to them. Prophets aren’t heard and respected in their hometown. He tells them that other folks had faith, the folks not like them. Those folks were able to recognize God’s presence among them and God’s miraculous acts. They were able to see God’s provision through things like the sharing of widow in Zarephath and her care for the prophet Elijah. They were able to recognize God’s presence in the healing of Naaman through the prophet Elisha.

This really stirred up the crowd. The people gathered there in Nazareth who were listening to Jesus were surprised! Surprised to learn that God loves the people they don’t. Surprised to learn that God loves the widows and the lepers. Surprised that God’s Love is bigger than theirs! (Surprise! God’s love is bigger than yours!)

This made them feel so angry and frustrated that they drove Jesus out of the Synagogue out to the edge of town, to the edge of a cliff and attempted to throw him off. But Jesus surprised them again and passed through the middle of them and went on his way. 

Paul surprises the Christians in Corinth by telling them that love is more important than anything else they could imagine. That you can have as much faith and hope as you want... You can be intelligent, and think you have all the answers... You can be humble and charitable… But if you don’t have love, you’re just making a lot of noise.

Paul qualifies this love and describes it as patient, kind, joyful and unending. Much how we know and understand the love of God to be. Paul basically tells them that above all, love wins, and it is the only thing that wins.

These readings during the Season after the Epiphany show us everything we need to know to be a true disciple; a true student of Jesus:

We need to know and understand that God loves us beyond anything that we can ask or imagine. God loves us. And we have seen that love poured out for us over and over, time and time again.

Being a follower of Jesus means we’ve been given a mission to reciprocate God’s love to the world. Like Jesus explains, we need to remind those who think or feel that they are unloved... that they are loved. And in reminding them of God’s love, we need to remind ourselves that God loves them, even if we think they don’t deserve it.

In showing others God’s love, we may make others angry. Especially the others who like to judge folks and think that because of this or that, they are somehow don't belong or are unworthy. When people get angry at us because we are loving someone who they don’t think is worthy, and when we are ridiculed and pushed to the edge, we need to follow Jesus’ lead,  and pass on through and be about our business of loving.

Discipleship is costly, is stretches our boundaries. God’s love is all inclusive and abundant and there are no pre-qualifications are restrictions. In order to be a disciple – in order to be a follower of the way of Jesus it means that we must be part of that great source that conveys God’s love to the world.
If we hate, or judge, or exclude, or we insist on our own way, or we try to make up a list of rules of who’s in our who’s out. Then we aren’t doing it right.

So we need to be bold and courageous disciples, loving God, loving each other, and building up God's kingdom, because if we’re not loving like God loves, we’re just making a lot of noise. 
 

Sunday, January 2, 2022

Year C - 2 Christmas 2022

The Rev. Dr. Ken Saunders
Greeneville, TN


Here we are, it’s the 9th day of Christmas and we pick up the story of the nativity of Jesus this morning with a visit from eastern strangers. The reading calls them “wise men.” Some translations call them Magi – from which we get the word Magic. They are speculated to be from as far east - as far as the orient, or from as near east as near as Persia (which is modern day Iran).

We don’t exactly know how wise they were, but we do know that they knew something that the rest of the world hadn’t figured out yet. They were astrologers who studied the stars in the western sky and decided to take a chance that one particular star they saw might lead them to something significant.

The Jewish world at the time was looking for and waiting for a messiah (a savior). The special “anointed one” of God that was promised by the prophets to come and heal and restore Israel... Promises made by God, much like the ones we heard from Jeremiah, about a scattered and forgotten people being gathered back together – Gathered together to wholeness the blind and lame being healed and led back to right relationship with God. Led back to a rejoicing community that will sing praises of joy and gladness because they were redeemed and delivered from the hands of their oppressors.

The people of Israel knew what they were looking for, they knew what they were praying for and they got it, but they didn’t even realize it. What is significant to the story is that these are different people that came from a different land…  A foreign land, and even though they were not Jews, they knew who this special child was and they came to pay their respects and worship him.

When Herod the Great heard about these strangers and what they were doing, he was terrified –  afraid that his political life was over, and afraid that he and the Herodian Kingdom would be overthrown. Afraid that somehow the Davidic Kingdom was being restored. As was promised in scripture… We know that Herod didn’t want to worship Jesus. Herod wanted to kill him and selfishly protect his own power. 

We can only imagine how everyone in the house felt when those eastern strangers showed up knocking on doors. Strangers asking questions, wondering where the baby was who was born to be “King of the Jews.” They finally find Jesus in a house in Bethlehem, and they knelt down and worshipped him. These strangers from a strange land. 

And these wise eastern strangers, these men brought with them gifts to present to the child… Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh. There’s an old joke going around, we know that these were wise MEN, because if they were wise WOMEN, they would have brought more practical gifts. 

However, there are some interesting things about this story that we probably need to pay some closer attention to… The first thing is not readily noticed. Probably because the song has more lore in it than scriptural fact. It is the number of these strangers. The scripture doesn’t say how many there were. We know that there was more than one, and that in itself is significant. This wasn’t a random act of one confused traveler. This was an intentional journey. For these strangers, this journey was a pilgrimage of discovery and hope. Not only a hope a restored Israel with a righteous King, and hope in a renewed and restored world. 

We do know that these strangers brought 3 gifts with them. Maybe that’s where they got the three from. Because we all know it wouldn’t be hospitable to show up empty handed.

Over the years, theologians and scholars have thought that these gifts were significant to who these eastern strangers thought that Jesus was. They say that Gold is important because it was associated with Kings. Herod certainly had his share of Gold.  It would be only natural for someone regarded as a king to be presented with Gold.

Frankincense is the type of incense used in worship. It’s the type of incense that is still used in worship. Originally, we can imagine it was used to ward off the stench of the carcasses of the dead animals that were sacrificed and possibly the bodily odors of others. But it’s so much more than that. Burning incense symbolizes our prayers and offerings as the smoke rises to the heavens… Incense reminds us that God is there to hear us and receive our prayers and show us grace and favor. So it would be natural to give incense to someone who was thought to be righteous and faithful. 

Myrrh is a precious perfumed oil that is used to anoint a body to prepare it for burial. Care for the deceased is a sacred act in most every culture. Scholars speculate that the gift of Myrrh is a foreshadowing of Jesus’ tragic death. 

We don’t know what the reason for the gifts, we just know what they are. We can only speculate why these eastern strangers brought them and presented them to Jesus. These eastern strangers…  the magi… the wise men, who may have more wisdom than we realize. 

They were wise enough to look for God and follow the signs that they recognized in order to find the perfect manifestation of God’s self the person of Jesus the Anointed one – the Christ. Wise enough to seek God out amid struggles and stresses of the journey of life. 

They didn’t come because it was convenient. They came a far away land and made a difficult long journey just to have an opportunity to kneel for a minute and worship a righteous newborn they thought was a King.

Wise enough to honor God with gifts of wealth and symbols of worship and honor and respect... Representations of human livelihood and vitality.

We don’t know who these Eastern Strangers were. The scriptures leave it very vague. Their only appearance is in the Gospel according to Matthew, and it remains still somewhat a mystery. A mystery which shows us that the reign of the living God is much bigger than just the nation of Israel… A mystery that shows us that strangers… those that don’t look like us or act like us, sometimes know more about what’s going on than we do…

A mystery which directs us toward hope, so that we can have hope and rejoice in the possibility of a renewed and restored world.

It’s amazing how a simple story of 12 sentences can reveal to us a God who not only loves us but will make everything right that we have made wrong. 

It’s the part of the Christmas story that the modern church tends to lump in with the Shepherds and the stable, instead of it having its own respected place as it relates to the mystery of the incarnation. 

I have a friend from seminary that is on social media. I remember her as super creative, and I loved what she did with her posts a few years ago, so I thought I would share it with you. She calls it “magi on the move.” Since Christmas, she had been posting a group of figurines representing the magi, much like the figures we have here in our crèche.

The fun part is that there isn’t just 3 of them nor are any of them the same. In one picture there’s got to be at least 10 or 12 In all sizes and shapes big and tall, short and small. 

These magi figures can be seen at different places on their journey… even at a visitor’s center asking for directions…  searching for the one who was to be the ruler and shepherd of God’s people. Probably much like we know that those wise men did so long ago in search of a child that they knew would deliver Israel and restore the world.

My friend and colleague was pretty wise herself. And, in this fun expressive way, she came up with a method to remind us what we all seem to have forgotten. That like those eastern strangers of old, we need to be wise again. Because we have forgotten how to search for God. We need to be wise enough to keep seeking and searching. And then we need to let God show up in unexpected places.

We need to wise enough let God into this dysfunctional world and let God restore it with equity, truth, and peace. We need to be wise enough to give of our resources in order to help continue the mission of restoration, so that not only us, but future generations will benefit from knowing God’s love.

We are called to be wise ambassadors for the Kingdom of God, bringing about restoration in our own lives… but not just our own lives, we need to be about the loving work God has given us to do and help restore the lives of others. So that the WHOLE human race will be restored and will know the love of God through Jesus Christ our Lord.