Pastor Tony's Sermon May 21, 2017

Isaiah 58: 5-10   Matthew 25: 31-46            5-21-17        Rev. Tony Clark            ACCUCC

Is not this the fast that I choose:
   to loose the bonds of injustice,
   to undo the thongs of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
   and to break every yoke?

Is it not to share your bread with the hungry,
   and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked, to cover them,
   and not to hide yourself from your own kin? …

…“Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.”…

Today, in our series on “Who is Jesus to Me Now That He is Dead?” we turn away from our personal relationship with Jesus to think about our relationship to Jesus as part of a community. Although we come to Jesus with individual needs, we also come to Jesus like a classroom of chided children. We ask in a chorus of voices, “Master, when did we see You hungry and thirsty? When did we see You friendless or homeless or excluded? When did we see You without clothes? When did we see You sick or in jail? When did we see You in distress and fail to respond?” We ask these questions knowing that we will be judged not merely on the merits of our own hearts but on our corporate ability to seek justice for our neighbors.

Here at Arlington Community Church, one of our core values is justice. We sing about doing justice every week, and I preach often on it. Justice appeared as a priority out of our New Beginnings conversations, and justice is imbedded in our newly drafted vision statement, “we join together to build a just society based on the inspiration of our faith.”

However, I don’t think we all have the same understanding of justice. Some of us talk about justice in terms of the legal system, laws and judges, and courts and prison. Biblical justice is more than a system of laws and punishment; Biblical justice is about creating equal access to the basic needs of being human. Justice would remove all the little oppressions that add up, and add up, and add up over time to yoke people from having access to an abundant life. Justice would remove the pressures of hunger and housing and illness and imprisonment so that when life gives you lemons like cancer or sudden death of a loved one or mental illness you have the energy to make lemonade.

Is this not the fast that I choose: to loose the bonds of injustice; to undo the thongs of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke? When the Prophet Isaiah spoke these words “to break every yoke” some 2500 years ago, he wasn’t talking about making scrambled eggs, breaking yolks and whites. He was talking about the yokes that oxen are harnessed in, hooked together as a team that cannot separate and be free.

Isaiah said that injustice is a yoke that keeps people tied and bound in oppression, unable to experience an abundant life in God. Isaiah’s yokes of oppression were hunger, homelessness, lack of clothing. Later Jesus added to the list thirst and illness and imprisonment. These yokes of oppression, these forces of injustice are still present today, taking up time in our national debate on Food Stamps, healthcare, housing and our prison system.  

The yokes of oppression add to the already difficult things of life like death, grief, mental illness, chronic pain. The yokes of injustice-- Hunger, poverty, homelessness, lack of clothing, lack of water, illness and imprisonment, and systemic racism make those other life things harder to bear. Think about how hard it is to handle something like mental illness when compounded by hunger, poverty, or racism.  

I’d like to point out the differences between living without yokes and living under the yokes of oppression by comparing two small unincorporated villages: Kensington and North Richmond.

Kensington is bounded on the east by green space that runs much of the length of the East Bay. North Richmond is bounded on the west by the Richmond trash dump. Kensington has a bank, a grocery store, cafes, and a pub. North Richmond folks have to leave to shop, go to the bank, or get a cup of coffee. Kensington has autonomy over its fire and police services; North Richmond is under the county sheriff. In Kensington, more than 87% of houses are owner occupied, in North Richmond, 54% of the housing is rentals. Kensington has multiple streets connecting to neighboring towns; North Richmond has only a few roads in or out. Driving around North Richmond, you notice right away that the streets off the two main streets run a few blocks and then dead-end at fences or walls that cut off neighborhoods from heavy industry. North Richmond is an island cut off from surrounding Richmond by railroad tracks, fences, and the Richmond Parkway. North Richmond has much vacant land where people toss trash—couches, tires, old boats, cement chunks. There are two housing projects there with 220 units yet about half of them are vacant. In North Richmond, 32% live below the poverty line; while in Kensington it is about 3%, a magnitude of ten.

This week I ventured into North Richmond. I stopped and talked to people at Annie’s Annuals, Shields-Reid Rec Center, the North Richmond Urban Farm, and then at the North Richmond Neighborhood House, with which we have a long relationship. I talked with staff from County Supervisor John Gioia’s office. I asked “What is the difference between Kensington and North Richmond?” “What issues are you working with?” and what would they like me to tell you.

At the Rec Center, I met Aaron, who serves on the North Richmond Municipal Advisory Council, and Troy, the manager of the Rec Center. Aaron said that the biggest problem he sees is poor education. The kids are, on average, two years behind grade level, and lose more than three months’ ability during summer. In the summer, Aaron and Troy run a day camp program that partners with schools to provide swimming, playing sports, and going on field trips, as well as education so they don’t slip so far behind. Troy and Aaron proudly showed me a newly painted mural that an artist designed with the kids, and they talked about the fresh produce program run by the Food Bank, which we support. They also told me about an incident three years ago in which 100 cops blocked all the streets in and out of North Richmond and did a gang and drug raid. While kids were playing in the Rec Center field, the cops shot tear gas canisters into the house across the street, and then the gun shots began; they rushed the kids inside. That, I commented, is one thing that is very different from Kensington.

My next stop was at North Richmond Urban Farm. It is a few years into developing empty county land that was an informal dump site. The layout for urban farming includes orchards, vegetable plots, a farm stand, a café and a kitchen to cook and serve foods they grow. They have spent the last few years clearing the trash and turning the ground into useable soil.

Doria, the director of the site, told me that she believes that everywhere there are people who have struggles and problems. All of us got something, don’t we? Pain, grief, mental illness, low self-esteem, diabetes, hearing loss, stroke, heart disease, cancer, in-grown toenails. However, said Doria, when there are also the pressures of poverty and hunger, it makes people more of who they are. Someone in chronic pain or grief when compounded by hunger or poverty become grumpy, angry, exhausted. Poverty, hunger, high incarceration rates and lack of access to health care in themselves are products of years of racism, segregated housing, and poor education. Doria said that some in those situations seek solace from the pressures in drugs and alcohol, which then add their own pressures.

Doria’s words were the best description of the yokes of oppression that I had ever heard. The yokes of oppression are the pressures that make the struggles with mental illness, grief, pain, physical disease more pronounced.  On the flip side, a great definition of privilege is to have the access to systems that makes those life things easier to handle.

Doria also commented that affluence is its own yoke; by holding onto a view that people who live in poverty are lazy, stupid, or lacking in motivation is something of a yoke of judgement that does not free us to see the beauty and resilience of human life within those places. We are yoked into believing that if they only worked as hard as we did they could climb out of their situation, without recognizing that we are as yoked into our systems of oppression as they are.

The yokes of injustice tie people together like yokes tie a team of oxen together. As well, doing justice is also a team effort.  Justice is a societal moral value; making sure there is equal access to services in order to reduce the overall pressure or oppressions is not something that any of us can do alone.

Doing this kind of justice is not simple. The yokes of oppression in North Richmond were forged by a history of racism that enshrined policies of segregation, concentrated housing in an undesirable flood plain near heavy industry and traffic, limited access in and out of the area, and offered poor education to a population of migrants fleeing the Jim Crow south. North Richmond became an island, a desert island with few internal resources, locked in a vicious cycle of violence that kept people in and encouragedothers to stay out.

What would it take to equalize their access to food, housing, education, jobs, and a way out of poverty? What would reduce the rate of incarceration, the desperate need for escape through drugs and alcohol, and the lack of educational achievement? Whatever it would take to break their yokes of oppression, that is doing justice.

Yet, as Troy, at the Rec Center reminded me, we could do much work there. He said that our affluence is not something to be ashamed of; it is a blessing, a blessing from God. It is something that can be used to bring so much good to areas like North Richmond in breaking the yokes of oppression.

Jesus said that when we come into God’s kingdom, when we are judged us as a community of faith, we will be surprised that we found Jesus wherever we broke the yokes of oppression.  As we join with others to build a just society based on the inspiration of our faith, may we use our access and privilege to break the cycles of hunger, poverty, racism, segregated housing, lack of health care and poor education that keep people from experiencing God’s abundant life. Amen.    

Faith is a Verb… Musings by Pastor Tony May 12, 2017

Taking photos in church? Yes, please!!!!!

In some churches, it is common to have technology Sundays, where everyone is encouraged to bring their phones and tablets, maybe even laptops, and to take pictures, Tweet, go on Facebook. For some churches, every Sunday is this, where people are Tweeting things the pastor says or words to a song that move them and posting pictures of the happenings on Instagram. For some of us of a different generation, these might seem distracting or disrespectful. However, for younger people, it feels normal for them to do this, since they do it everywhere else in their lives; in fact, one of our members regularly “checks-in” to worship on our Facebook page as a reminder to others that we are still worshiping. 

The Church can be a model for when it is appropriate to use phones and tablets, and when it is appropriate to put them away and be centered on and aware of the spirit. For most of us, worship is a time to put away the blinking, buzzing, bothersome tech toys and be with the people around us.

For a moment, though, I’m going to argue that we could use a bit more phones and tablets in our worship and in our social gatherings.

One of the things that Jacob and I run into as we try to make our online presence attractive is that we have only a few great photos of our congregational life together. When I remember to ask someone to take photos of a specific event, we get some great pictures of people. And then there are the times I forget, which is most of the time. We could use your pictures! Take out your camera-phones and start snapping! forward them to Jacob via e-mail or upload them to Facebook (we can download them from there).

While we’re on the subject of Facebook, if you are on Facebook, make sure you like the Arlington Community Church page. We are posting events, sermons, the Parishscope, and words of encouragement from our denominational contacts. When something gets posted there, it is great when you like it; it is even better if you share it to your page because that gets more exposure for the content. In effect your Facebook posts are public reminders of what you like, and I hope you like Arlington Community Church!!!


Peace,

Pastor Tony

Pastor Tony's Sermon May 14, 2017

Listen to this week's sermon by clicking here.

John 14: 1-14           May 14, 2017                      ACCUCC                     Rev. Tony Clark

“Do not let your hearts be troubled. Believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father’s house there are many dwelling places. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, so that where I am, there you may be also.

And you know the way to the place where I am going.” Thomas said to him, “Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?” Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. If you know me, you will know my Father also. From now on you do know him and have seen him.” Philip said to him, “Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied.” Jesus said to him, “Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me? Whoever has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’? Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on my own; but the Father who dwells in me does his works. Believe me that I am in the Father and the Father is in me; but if you do not, then believe me because of the works themselves.

Very truly, I tell you, the one who believes in me will also do the works that I do and, in fact, will do greater works than these, because I am going to the Father. I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If in my name you ask me for anything, I will do it.

 

A year ago, as I was preparing to return from my sabbatical renewal time, you were finishing up the small group sessions developed for the congregation’s renewal time. Those experiences led us into the New Beginnings small groups when we talked about our values and priorities, which culminated in a half-day workshop in October, when we named the next steps of putting our passion to plan. Two small groups have been meeting in the last several months to do just that, coalesce our passions into a plan for acting out our vision and mission.

Those groups will unveil their work this morning, right after worship.

This will not be the last time we talk about these ideas; we know it’s Mother’s Day, and you may have other plans today. I hope, though, you will engage this vision over the next few months as we discuss it and decide if we can implement it.

Putting our Passion to Plan is a way to name who we are, and then to call ourselves into being more than that. We are people of faith, disciples of Jesus, people who value justice, people who nurture and care for each other, and people who care for the creation around us. As we name these as our foundational passions we are being called into becoming more of who we already know ourselves to be.

Abiding and faithful God, we come to this place not knowing what to trust in our world today. The News is disturbing, disruptive, disorienting. So we ask your abiding presence, the peace that passes all understanding into our hearts today. May the words of my mouth….

In today’s scripture reading, Jesus told those first disciples that by knowing him they know God. As he prepared them for the likelihood that he would die, sooner rather than later, he told them not to despair, that a place was being made ready for them where they would join him for eternity.

These assuring words of a place in God’s glory even after death are often read at funerals. We hear the passage as a prediction of a glory-filled afterlife, where we will live in a palace in which God is the king and Jesus is God’s Prince. It is a magnificent place prepared by Jesus for those who follow him.

However, Jesus wasn’t talking about a literal place; he was talking about abiding in a spiritual life lived in and with God. He wasn’t so much describing a dwelling place in which to live; rather he described an abiding presence at the feet of God. Here’s an example out of my own life: it’s not the home I invited my mother into as she was nearing the death—that was a dwelling place prepared for comfort and care. I readied that house so that I could sit with her, read to her, help her eat, bathe her, hold her hand when there was nothing left to say; that was an abiding place.

Jesus wasn’t so much saying that he was preparing a physical dwelling place but a spiritual presence that would abide with the disciples and anyone who called on him. Jesus said that his body would die, yet his spirit would remain with them, as long as they had faith. Remember, faith is a verb, faith is active, faith calls us to reach out to others, faith desires a deepening of our relationships with one another and with God.

Jesus taught this, but his students, the disciples, were like Freshmen of the Faith. They were eager and excited to understand, yet their understanding was not yet mature. They did not have the vocabulary that comes after deep, persevering study of a subject. The disciples were easily confused by their professor’s teaching.

I remember being in veterinary school, and later in seminary, when the first year or two felt like I had to learn a whole new language. It seemed like I had to look up every other word in a professional dictionary. I look at my notes from those years; words are misspelled as I tried to phonetically spell words in a language that was not yet mine, and concepts are mysteriously linked because I did not understand the trajectory of my professors’ teachings.  And then there came this time, around the end of my second year, when I realized I wasn’t looking up so many words, and I began to understand how the concepts in my new profession linked together.

The disciples were someplace in those first few years of study, not yet able to link the concepts and spell the vocabulary of the faith, yet they were eager to learn and try. Like good freshmen of the faith, they asked simple questions that showed their desire to learn while also revealing their limited knowledge of the subject. They naively asked Jesus to show them the way, and to show them God.  Jesus patiently--or maybe not so patiently—reminded them that they had spent time observing him, assisting him, learning from him, and all of his actions, all of his being, pointed to God. He said to Thomas, “I am the way.” He said to Phillip, “Whoever has seen me has seen God.” In other words, by walking with me, you have already been on the way to God. Yet it is not the only way to God—there are many room in God’s house, after all.

Jesus then told them that their abiding faith in God—the faith that is a verb—will allow them to do more than what he did. He wasn’t talking about healings and miracles; those are merely signs pointing to Jesus’ abiding place with and in God. Jesus said that his disciples—including us who walk on the way with Jesus--will do more than he did. He reminded the disciples of who they already were, people of faith who abide with and in God. They, and we, could trust this abiding faith to multiply exponentially as we join together in ministry. Living in relationship with God forms the basis of relationships with others. Living in faith with God brings justice, peace, love. Abiding with and in Jesus, who abides with and in God, can be the catalyst to build relationships with others who will then learn to abide with and in Jesus.

In this Easter season, we are asking the question that the disciples and the early church had to wrestle with, “Who is Jesus to me, now that he is dead?” In asking that question we are also asking the question, “Who am I to Jesus?” Jesus answered that question by saying, “You are my beloved; I love you so much that I am inviting you to abide with me in the nurturing presence of God.”

Yet this abiding relationship is not merely a personal one. Our relationship with God only means something in relationship to everyone else. Our abiding faith is not an individual personal faith.  

In this place, there is a deep abiding faith in God. Even as we are on the way to God, we are also on the way with God. We will do more together than Jesus could because our faith is multiplied exponentially as we join together to abide with and in God. We abide in God, and we are called to live our faith in public and outward ways, trusting in the greatness of God, and relying on this greatness as we express our faith.

 We are people of faith, abiding with and in God. As Jesus told the disciples, do not doubt this abiding faith; just do your faith-- do justice, love kindness, walk humbly with God. We have already been doing justice based on our abiding faith, and the report we begin to look at today recognizes that. We have done justice by caring for the least of our members, by caring for the lonely in our congregation, by abiding with God and abiding with those who might otherwise be forgotten. We have been doing justice that is based in our abiding faith by going solar, by focusing on recycling, by changing lightbulbs to LED, by abiding with the Earth and with God.

This is the Jesus message, that abiding with God invites us into relationship with each other and with Creation. This is the vision of our mission, to be more than we are right now.

Holy One, today, even as our world turns upside down, we name that our abiding faith is with and in you; we no longer need to question our way; we have done our faith by caring for each other and caring for our planet; now as we continue to abide with and in you, we step out in faith, trusting that abiding in you will lead us into new and greater works. Holy One, abide with us, even as we abide with you. As we join Together with others to build a Just Society based on the inspiration of our faith. May we do works greater even than Jesus could imagine. Amen.

Faith is Verb… Musings by Pastor Tony April 14, 2017

I listen to a podcast called On Being, in which the host, Krista Tippett, interviews people representing varieties of faith and spiritual issues. This week’s episode was with Fr. Richard Rohr, the author of Falling Upward: A Spirituality for the Two Halves of Life, which many of us read a few years ago. He is a Franciscan friar who leads retreats and teaches contemplative practices to deepen spirituality.

One of his comments about our faith journeys caught my attention, particularly in this Holy Week, when we remember Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. Fr. Rohr said that our faith journeys start with order, then we go through a period of disorder, and then we reorder our lives. Where we think we have power gets disordered as we become powerless and learn how to be in the world differently. Our faith journey cannot be complete without this disordering, when we face our vulnerability and know that something else, God, is in control.

Broadening this spiritual sense to our American society, we went through a time of order in the 1950s and 60s, and we have been in a time of disorder for several decades. Now we await a reordering of our world, which may be happening in fits and starts these days. Of course, when there is order things are stable; yet the order comes at the cost of some people having to live within a defined role that doesn’t allow their unique beauty to shine. Disorder calls our attention to those people, who in the reordering, gain justice to be recognized for their beauty. The reordering time is a time to makes sense of the disordering.

As I listened to this podcast in this Holy Week, I was reminded about how disordering Jesus’ death was, and how his resurrection was the start to a re-ordering of society. The reordering spanned more than 3 decades, through the Jewish peasant revolt and the Roman retaliation with the destruction of the Temple in the year 70. There was an order to Jerusalem and Rome before Jesus died, and before the Temple fell, and those events disordered Jewish society and began reordering the world, which we remember this Holy Week. God stepped in and changed the status quo, and the journey required the powerlessness, vulnerability of the cross. And we claim that God can do this again. That is the beauty of Easter.

On this Good Friday, may you remember God’s disruptive, disordering power, that calls us into a newer reordering of justice and peace.

Blessings, Pastor Tony

If you’d like to listen to the podcast, here is direct link https://onbeing.org/programs/richard-rohr-living-in-deep-time/