10/26
Reformation Sunday. We begin with the classic Luther Reformation
Hymn, A Mighty Fortress is Our God. After Psalm 90, we read Matthew 23: 34-46, where Jesus is asked which is the greatest
commandment? And his answer?
You shall
love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with
all your mind.’ 38 This is
the greatest and first commandment. 39 And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your
neighbor as yourself.’ 40 On these
two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.
Our reflection begins with history.
October 31st, 1517 at
Wittenberg Cathedral . A day that changed the world. Martin Luther nailed his 95
Theses to the cathedral door. Why?
To protest the sale of indulgences to
pay for the construction of St. Peter’s
Basilica in Rome. (Not a bad fundraising
scheme.) You could get years off in
purgatory for you or deceased relatives inn exchange for cash donations. Luther
objected. It didn’t make sense to him.
As it always does, if you ask one question, it leads to many.
For Luther this led to the conviction that there
was no purgatory. And that no mediator is needed between any believer and
God. And that we, in fact, constitute a priesthood
of all believers. And that
Salvation comes only through grace. His
own marriage opened the door for
ministers to marry.
He did not start out to create a new religion, or split the
church, or create a new denomination. He rejected the use of the word Lutheran
for his church. The only acceptable name
for believers was Christian only.
This says something about us. Who we are as a Presbyterian
church. We are a priesthood of all
believers. We honor the equity of
ordinations. There are Teaching elders(like me), Ruling elders (our
session), the ministry of service and compassion (deacons). And the ministry of all. The ministry we have
all received at our baptism.
Today we hear the call for radical discipleship. Jesus is clear … You
shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and
with all your mind.’ 38This
is the greatest and first commandment. 39and
a second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ 40On these two commandments
hang all the law and the prophets.
Let’s think about that. There are three points:
1.
We love the Lord our God with heart…soul…and MIND…That’s the one
that is most often forgotten …or feared.
It was very important for our spiritual ancestor John Calvin. That’s why
we have always been involved in
ministries of education. It’s what frees
us to question. To challenge.
2.
You cannot love God without loving neighbor. Period.
3.
The Hebrew Bible included LAW, the first five books of the
Bible, and Prophets. Read every week in
Jewish worship. Like we are required to read from both the Old and New Testaments
every week. Law and gospel, as Luther
said. Law and love.
And we must read every
verse of the Bible through the bottom line lens Jesus has given us here.
I share the theses we wrote…and
nailed to our door, in 2010, wile we
were not yet back and iron gates were in front of our doors. They reflect a moment in time.
10/31/10
- The church is
the community of God’s children acting together as the Body of the Risen
Christ
- The church is
the people of God, not the building
- The building has
been given to the church for the extension of mission and ministry
- We are called to
witness where we are...this corner in thisneighborhood:
this means engaging our neighbors
- The church is
not for sale
- The building is
not for sale
- Our souls are
not for sale
- We left our
building voluntarily as a step towards rebuilding and renewing
- Bureaucrats and
zealots kept us out
- We return here
because we choose to
- We will reclaim,
renew and restore this building as we reclaim, renew and restore our
mission, our ministry, our witness...and ourselves.
- Our obedience is
first and foremost to the God who created us
- God has already
given us all that is necessary to do the mission God has called us to
- Neither
government nor church council (Presbytery) can take that mission and
ministry from us against our will
- We invite any
and all who would be partners to join us now.
We are West-Park.
Here we stand. We can do no other.
And then one year later. 2011. The
struggles of that year are very clear:
- The quality of a
church is not defined by its number of members or financial status but by
its faithfulness.
- We are called to
have faith and grant ultimate authority to Jesus Christ, and no other
power, civil or ecclesiastical, church or state.
- Our obedience is
to the God who created us.
- We have a
specific call to live out in this specific place: our location,our context is
a call, not a circumstance.
- We have been
given all that is necessary to live out our call.
- Our building is
a means to the end of mission, not an end unto itself.
- We are committed
to reclaim, renew and restore this building as we renew and restore
our mission, our ministry, our witness...and ourselves.
- The church has
too often been silent as economic systems and theories have been accepted
as if they were divinely created, God determined and worthy of worship. We
have accepted our systems as the way things are and will
be without asking with God’s help, what could be?
- As the greatest
commandment is to love our neighbor as ourselves, we must live that out in
our personal, church and political life. We cannot leave our children a
future without hope.
- The doors of
this church are and always will be open and be a place of welcome to
people of every ethnic, cultural, and national origin, those who are and
are not citizens, people of different economic circumstances and sexual
orientations, differing abilities. All who would be partners are
welcome.
- At this church,
love is love and marriage is marriage.
We are West-Park. Here we stand. We can do no
other.
So the challenge is, this year, 2014, What would we write? What do you most need/want in a church?
A sampling of
answers is interesting:
Theses 10/26/14
1. 2014; The Church must
be the place where the Love that Jesus talked about is both lived and fought
for, in our lives, our community and our culture.
10/26/2014
2. We should cater to God, God should not cater to us.
2. This church has remained standing both structurally and
in the hearts to fits congregants through good times and bad. That is because
the church has provided what we need to face our very ordinary, very perilous,
very far from perfect lives with dignity and love in our hearts. We have been
without music, without heat, without money but we have never lacked hope,
strength and love. We will remain strong and will continue to share our gifts
with others as long as out church continues to enfold us.
3.
Walk in the shoes of your enemy.
4.
Through our ups and downs heartbreaks and
sorrows we stand as through our struggles. Nor fitter or fall as stand as one
in the Name of Our Lord. We are Strong. I lift you up as you would me let’s be
one and pray for Peace.
5.. Gun violence is a sin and this church will work and do
all we can to prevent /end such including work to end the conditions of
ignorance and inequality that make gun violence seem a viable option for anyone
anywhere. Promoting Peace and nonviolence is our remedy.
6.-- God’s Love motto
--The <3 id the
best place to start & in reclaiming, renewing & restoring this site
symbolically we are also work in progress.
-- Martin Luther said you cannot fight fire with fire
-- Martin Luther said you cannot fight fire with fire
And dance darkness with darkness. We need to shine light to
destroy the darkness.
Bob Marley says “Emancipate your mind”
Romans 12:2
1. 7. There
must be more money for more light in the Sanctuary.
These are collected a part of our offering. An offering of
ourselves. We conclude with another classic, Our God our Help in Ages Past…
Then it’s time to head to Mim’s for a Center brunch to honor
Danielle.
Then to the 96th Street Community Space (a former
MTA restroom!) for Berik and Leila’s art show.
10/27
Late in the day. Leila and I alone in the church. I turn around and my friend Arjan is there.
Former Dutch Ambassador for Human Rights. Formerly at the United Nations. Most
recently ambassador to Peru. In town for one of his periodic visits. We were
soccer parents together. And now Harlem neighbors.
He smiles. From his bag he brings out an ice cold bottle of
Dutch genever. Their version of gin.
From the juniper berry. We need glasses. We settle for plastic cups. And drink
a toast to friendship. And shared time together over the years. Tomorrow, he’s
back to Holland.
I remember freezing cold nights in Amsterdam. Ice cold genever and bartenders whisking razors through
the foam on draught pints. Outdoor tables and conversations around the plaza in brisk January nights. He won’t be
back until spring. We share a hug. The taste of juniper remains.