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long december

The magi came a week early at our church so we could look at the second half of the story (what happened after they left) sequentially, which means we get a clear look at the way Matthew framed the birth of Jesus–and it’s a tough picture. On our calendar, the travelers always arrive at the turn of the year, which is a connection that has its own energy. Here’s this week’s sermon.

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In late 1996, the band Counting Crows released a song called “Long December.” Why that matters is that for almost thirty years the opening lines have brought me some consolation. They say,

long December and
there’s reason to believe
maybe this year will be
better than the last

When I look back, I don’t recall a year when those words didn’t feel true to me. I don’t mean that as a pessimistic statement, just that most every year has ended with the hope that the one to come will somehow be less weighty.

About twenty years later, in 2017, Jason Isbell released a song called “Hope the High Road” that I added to my December playlist because of the lyrics in the chorus:

I know you’re tired 
and you ain’t sleeping well
uninspired and likely mad as hell
but wherever you are 

I hope the high road leads you home again
to a world you want to live in
 
As I said, these songs are a regular part of my end-of-year reflecting, but I find they make a pretty good soundtrack for the magi, the mysterious, foreign, astrologers who traveled miles and miles in search of a hope they did not comprehend and also provided one of the best bad jokes of the season:

The brought gifts: gold, frankincense, and wait, there’s myrrh!

(I’ll be here all week.)

When we stop reading with the travelers going home by another way to avoid Herod, as we did this morning, the scene closes in a quiet way, but the reality was harsher. When King Herod realized his ploy to find the child had not worked, he commanded that every boy under the age of two be executed. Mary and Joseph grabbed their little one and fled to Egypt, but not everyone had an angel to warn them. The chapter ends with Mary and Joseph moving back to Nazareth after Herod died.

It’s not the Christmas story that we are used to hearing and singing about, but it may be the one we most need to hear when we compare it to the world we live in, where we face another long December.

Matthew ties the slaughter of children to the deep pain the Hebrew people had known in their past: Rachel weeping unconsolably for her children. What was happening was not new, it was just happening to them in real life.

Professor Esau McCaulley asks,

But how can such a bloody and sad tale do anything other than add to our despair? The Christmas story must be told in the context of suffering and death because that’s the only way the story makes any sense. Where else can one speak about Christmas other than in a world in which racism, sexism, classism, materialism and the devaluation of human life are commonplace? People are hurting, and the epicenter of that hurt remains the focus of God’s concern.

Which takes us back to the angel telling Joseph to name the child Emmanuel—God is with us, or as we said last Sunday, God is really with us.

There are those who look at the world, particularly in statistical terms, and couch their hope in statements about ways in which the world is getting better. Historically, for example, almost half of humanity died during childhood. Now that figure is stands at only four percent. As many wars as there are in the world right now, we live in one of the least violent times in history, or so I’m told.

Life is not all long and hard. The tree is still up. The lights are still twinkling. And it is another long December.

I am grateful that things are improving, and I think it matters greatly that we work to eradicate poverty and dismantle racism and sexism and homophobia and learning to care for creation in a way that sustains life for us all. All of those are hopeful actions. But progress isn’t what creates hope. Progress will not make us feel less alone—that’s why I think Matthew tells this story.

If our hope depends on things getting better, what happens when they don’t and we face another long December? How do we keep going?

Nothing the angel said to either Joseph or Mary about God being with us improved any of the circumstances of their lives. None of their difficulties went away, yet they were able to move beyond their fear did because they were willing to trust that God was really with them no matter what the circumstances. It mattered that they were not alone.

It matters that we are not alone.

That trust took them to Bethlehem where the baby was born. The magi came and brought gifts, and they also brought Herod’s wrath without realizing what they were doing. Mary and Joseph and Jesus became refugees in Egypt, fleeing the violence of their home country and trusting, once again, that God was really with them, as their ancestors had done when they fled their captivity in Egypt generations before.

Herod died, as all despots do. Evil is not eternal. Mary, Joseph, and Jesus moved back to Nazareth. Jesus grew up and began to preach and teach and heal and then he was arrested and executed by another Herod. As we know, that is also not the end of the story. The story of God being really with us has continued from December to December, from disappointment to disappointment, from triumph to triumph, from birth to birth and death to death, and our hope survives in the midst of all those things as we trust that God is really with us and God’s love endures through it all, so that we can also.

It is a difficult truth that life is often filled with unjust rulers and violence and private grief and personal pain and all the rest that leaves us wishing most every year that the next one will be better than the last. That’s why the tree is still up, the lights are twinkling, and we continue to tell this story.

The story of the birth of Christ matters because it tells the accompanying truth that God does not deal with us from a distance, that Jesus was flesh and blood proof that God is really with us—even now, even here—that we may not just endure but flourish, that we may find true joy and courage in our daily lives, and that our hope may deepen, whatever the circumstances—a hope that comes from knowing God is with us and, therefore, anything can happen.

Yes, they are all long Decembers, and they are good Decembers, because we remember that the child out-lived the king and grew into the man we know as Jesus, who was killed by another evil ruler and then rose again that we might face this particular December with courage and hope because we trust God is with us. Amen.

Peace,
MIlton

advent journal: messengers of God

This last Sunday of Advent leans into Christmas at our church since many folks will not be around Christmas Eve. This morning we looked at Matthew’s telling of Joseph’s side of the experience, brief as it is. I closed our service with my last Advent carol, “Knock Again.”

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When I read the brevity of Matthew’s account of Jesus’ birth, it makes me think of an old Peanuts cartoon where Linus hands a book to Lucy and asks her to read him a story.

“A man was born, he lived, and he died,” she says before tossing the book aside. Linus then comments, “Kind of makes you wish you knew him better.”

I feel a bit like Linus when I read what Matthew says,

This is how the birth of Jesus Christ took place. When Mary his mother was engaged to Joseph, before they were married, she became pregnant by the Holy Spirit.

It, too, kind of makes me wish I knew them better. Then again, perhaps we know them better than we think we do, or at least we have more connections than we realize when we are looking at the traditional images of Mary and Joseph we see in manger scenes or hear in carols. Even to reread the two sentences I read a moment ago is to realize the birth of Christ begins with a good deal of heartache, which is to say Mary and Joseph were real people, not rosy-cheeked folks sitting for portraits to be hung in churches.

Mary and Joseph were engaged by not living together. When he found out she was pregnant, he had little choice to conclude that she had been unfaithful. He could have chosen to make a legal issue of out it, which meant Mary would have been stoned. Instead, Matthew says Joseph was going to dissolve the engagement quietly.

Though Matthew doesn’t mention her, we must remember that Joseph wasn’t the only one dealing with heartache or difficulty. Mary was a pregnant teenaged girl who could see the pain her fiancée was probably feeling and probably felt disheartened herself that he would question her love and loyalty even as she was growing more conspicuous and unexplainable to most everyone around them. We can fairly assume that she understood her future depended on Joseph’s choice.

Even if we skip ahead to the end of our passage to see that Joseph chose to go through with the wedding after the angel visited. I mean who wouldn’t? But that didn’t wipe away all of the difficulty. Their family was no more holy than any one of ours.

What Matthew describes tells us about the complexity, the confusion, and the frailty that attended this family, just like every other family. Indeed, there is nothing exceptional about Mary and Joseph, or even Jesus’ birth except that God comes through ordinary, mixed-up people in order to save ordinary, mixed-up people, and that God comes through a birth like all the billions of other births in the world to promise us peace and hope and joy and love as the children of God that we all are.

The birth of Jesus took place in the middle of a mess because that is how love works. Love, if it matters, has a face. It has a name. It has eyes and ears and fingers and toes. Love that is real has skin on it. And I mean actual skin. Love is not an idea or a concept. It is action. In the flesh word and deed.

In the middle of situations we don’t understand, griefs that feel too heavy to bear, problems that feel unsolvable, the message is in the name of the child: “God is with us.” Or, we might want to say, “God is really with us.” God is with us as we are, not as we know we should be, or we are trying to be, or we have promised to be, or we will be some day, but with us as we are now—today—in this moment.

In the gospels it took an angel—a messenger—to drive the point home. An angel told Mary what was happening to her and also woke Joseph up to help him see that God was in the middle of it all, which takes me back to Meister Eckhardt’s words about Christ needing to be born in our time and in our culture if the story is going to continue to matter.

Eckhardt finished his words by saying, “We are all mothers of God.” Matthew’s version prompts me to offer a paraphrase, or perhaps a companion thought: We are all messengers of God. We are all people capable of offering the word that God is really with us to one another in what we do and say. We are also capable of choosing not to do that. Whether Christ is born again in our time, in our moment, depends a good deal on how we choose to live. If we are willing to incarnate love, if we are willing to let God be near through, then love can be born again into our particular mess. Or not.

What a different story it would be if Joseph had awakened from his dream and decided it was not worth the risk or the trouble to go through with the engagement. What if Mary had told the messenger it was more than she could take? It’s safe to say we would not be sitting here because the story that connects us would have never been told.

The story of God—the story of love—continues because real people choose to let love be born in the middle of all of the mess, just like Mary and Joseph did. Those of you who are parents know that’s a choice they had to keep making, just as we have to keep making it in the middle of the mess we live in.

Our lives add up to more than being born, living, and dying when we choose to be messengers of God’s love in our words and actions. That is what it takes to make the Christmas story more than a memory. That is what it means for us to be mothers of God—and messengers of God.

May we live into our calling as we celebrate Jesus’ birth once again. Amen.

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: quenched disorder

quenched disorder

I’d never seen those words
beside each other until
I read the phrase
and the definition

“the right level of
randomness to explore
the adjacent possible”

let’s go back to quenching
and the randomness
I keep seeing little fires
having to be put out

and those little fires
keep us paying attention
the price of being alive

unquenchable disorder
is just another name for chaos
or perhaps last Tuesday
no one can live there long

but a little fire now
and then keeps us warm
sparks new ideas

I’m better at disorder
than at quenching
but I’ll take my turn
it that’s what it takes

to see beyond
this burning urgency
into what we could be

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: practicing joy

Our in-person worship got snowed out today, but I was able to record from home, so this sermon got to be more than just a manuscript. Joy is the theme of the third Sunday in Advent, and the scripture was Mary’s response to her surprising circumstance. Here’s where it took me.

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Of all the things that have been written about the Bible, we don’t find a lot that talks about humor in scripture. For one thing, the books of the Bible are not that humorous, though some of that is due to the fact that we are reading translations of ancient manuscripts that distance us from the original word choice and word play and timing that are essential to a good joke.

When I taught high school English, I loved reading Shakespeare with students, but the part that was the most difficult for them to understand was the humor. Jokes don’t travel well over centuries. It’s hard to keep up with the way language changes from generation to generation, much less from century to century.

Tragedy travels better because it is grounded in events, in circumstance. The death of a parent, for example, is something we can understand across great spans of time because experience doesn’t need a translator. Tragic things just happen. Humor is an art, something that has to be crafted in the moment—and when I say humor, I mean more than a setup and a punchline. I’m talking about a way of looking at the world that helps us not take ourselves so seriously, that creates room for laughter and connection, that makes the tragedy bearable. That kind of humor is a learnable and practicable skill.

Translator Sarah Ruden says Biblical humor is a manifestation of the Bible’s joy. What I read in her words is that joy is also a skill, an art, that we can learn and practice, and the words Mary spoke after she found out she was pregnant give us a good picture of what the skill of joy looks like in practice.

The hard part for us is we have to break some stained glass to really hear what Mary is saying. Over centuries, her words have been as “The Magnificat” and then turned into any number of classical music pieces. Two of our hymns this morning are adaptations of what we often call her song, even though there’s not really indication in the text that she was singing.

Though much of the music is beautiful, it binds Mary up rather than setting her free or setting us free to see her joy at work. Sometimes that happens in the way we sing it. Our first hymn, “The Canticle of Turning,” sets the text to an old Irish folk tune, “The Star of County Down.” It was written to be accompanied energetically by guitars and fiddles and even a bodhran (an Irish hand drum) rather than by an organ and sung in a tavern as much as a sanctuary.

Under all of those layers, Mary was probably about fourteen when God’s messenger told her she was pregnant, and not much older when she went to visit her cousin Elizabeth, who was a good deal older. Mary was in the middle of a tragedy, as far as circumstances were concerned. The life she thought was about to unfold had exploded with the news of her pregnancy. Instead of getting married, Mary was going to be ostracized. Nevertheless, she told the messenger, “Let it happen just like you said,” which was her first step toward joy.

The other steps followed in the words we read this morning, which move from gratitude for God choosing her to talking about how the child she was carrying would upend the world and offer hope to those who lived outside of the realms of power and wealth—those deeply acquainted with tragedy. Those who were rich and powerful were not always going to be so. That’s the way the humor of God worked, and she was grateful to be a part of it.

Mary wasn’t acting like the tragedy wasn’t real, she was choosing to craft space for joy to live. She was choosing to see more than the tragedy, to see the uncertainty that was in front of her as room for hope to grow.

That is difficult and important work, and it is the work to which we are called as well. It’s important because tragedy, in whatever form it takes, is about separation and loss. The craft of joy is reconciling work, connecting work. It’s the idea in the carol, “Do you hear what I hear?” That’s an invitation to share in the joy that is going on around us no matter what the tragedy.

The stars keep coming out. The birds keep singing—even in the winter. The sun comes up every morning. Little babies stare at us and smile in supermarket lines. We sit in coffee hour and tell stories and laugh together. Whether big or small, the song of joy plays all around us. The question is are we willing to practice the skill to hear it?

We started by saying that scripture is hard for us to get sometimes because of the layers of translation and history that lie between us and the original versions. Still, we trust there is a reason to keep telling the stories and to keep trying to come to a deeper understanding of them, even as we continue to work to not get so attached to our version of the stories that we can’t be caught by surprise by new way of looking at them.

That same approach is what leads us to a life of faith. It is hard to make meaning out of all that happens to us. We face tragedy and difficulty, and we don’t always have a good reason for why things happen. Yet, we don’t give up. We choose not to take a fatalistic view of things, but we keep telling the stories of joy and hope, the stories of the ways God’s love and mercy finds us and saves us, and we keep working to not get so attached to our way of looking at the world that we can’t be caught by surprise.

And at the heart of the story of Jesus’ birth that we tell every year is the reminder the messenger gave to Joseph, who was reeling in the face of tragedy he didn’t understand: “Name the child Emmanuel, which means “God is with us.” Down all of the years, all of the tragedies, that is still the heart of our story: God is with us, no matter what other circumstances are our reality. God is with us, calling us to practice the art of joy. May we answer with Mary’s enthusiasm. Amen.

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: ice

ice

the rain came late
this afternoon
actually more of
a drizzle or mist
just enough
to coat the streets
before the temperature
drops below freezing

which means
we will wake to
a coating of ice
that will impair
our travel and leave
some of us stranded
or feeling fearful

I wonder
if it was a night
like this when those
who do such things
decided ICE
would be a good
acronym to
name themselves

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: aging

Tonight’s post is a video, since I have spent a good part of the afternoon and evening working on a music video which will be released on the streaming services on my birthday, Friday, December 12. I am posting here for you, and you can also find in on YouTube, if you would like to share it. You can also purchase the single on my Bandcamp page, along with a couple of other goodies. The lyric is below the video.

aging

the sunshine paints the steeple
at the dimming of the day
the light falls long and rich
and then it’s gone
it’s just another tuesday
another ordinary blues day
that feels like a lifetime
but doesn’t last for long

my joints play the percussion
orchestrating a discussion
of what it means to weather
all these years
there’s more to growing older
than bending down and getting colder
under the weight of a lifetime
with far too many tears

I’m aging
I’m stumbling through the mystery
I’m a walking breathing history
that’s sneaking up on seventy
i’m aging
my life is not diminishing
though I’m closer to the finishing
it’s the richness I’m relishing
I’m aging

the sun drops down the steeple
to welcome in the evening
the friendship of the shadows
brings me home
the distance of my youth
has grown into a nearer truth
I’m in love with a lifetime
that doesn’t last for long

I’m aging
I’m stumbling through the mystery
I’m a walking breathing history
that’s sneaking up on seventy
i’m engaging
my life is not diminishing
though I’m closer to the finishing
it’s the richness I’m relishing
I’m aging

life is holy and life is quick
the candle burns at both ends of the wick
years fly by at the speed of days
yet there’s still so far to go

I’m aging
I’m stumbling through the mystery
I’m a walking breathing history
that’s sneaking up on seventy
i’m engaging
my life is not diminishing
though I’m closer to the finishing
it’s the richness I’m relishing
I’m aging
oh, yes, I’m aging
gratefully aging

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: brain freeze

brain freeze

I have spent all day
trying to get warm

it has felt as though
the freeze was coming

from inside my bones
and working its way

through my skin
to join the frigid air

that has surrounded me
like a custom suit

no snow or ice
just freezing cold

there is probably
something else to say

but those thoughts
have yet to defrost

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: exact change

This week’s sermon is built around Matthew’s description of John the Baptist, but I wandered a bit through the Christmas story to get to him and ended up thinking about what it takes to exact significant change in our lives.

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When we read Matthew’s description of John the Baptist and the things he said to the people who came to be baptized in the Jordan River, where they were all gathered out in the middle of the wilderness, it’s a fair to ask, why are we focusing on him as we mark this Advent Sunday dedicated to hope?

For that matter, Advent is a season of anticipation for the birth of Jesus and our reading is the account of the one announcing the beginning of Jesus’ ministry as a thirty-year-old man. Why are we telling this story now?

For one thing, Matthew doesn’t spend that much time telling us about Jesus’ birth or infancy or childhood. He commits all of seven verses to what we know as the Christmas story, and most of those are about how Joseph reacted to the news that Mary was pregnant. Then Matthew spends a whole chapter talking about the Magi and the things their visit set in motion. (We will look at those stories at Epiphany.) Then he moves directly to John and the things Jesus said and did as an adult.

With that in mind, before we talk about John let’s back up to Matthew’s account of the birth because we can make an important connection there. (Matthew’s primary focus is Joseph; we will hear from Mary next week.)

This is Matthew 1:18-23.

This is how the birth of Jesus Christ took place. When Mary his mother had been betrothed to Joseph, but before they were married, she was found to have a child in her womb through the Holy Spirit. Joseph, her husband-to-be, being a decent man and not wanting to publicly humiliate her, planned to call off their betrothal quietly. But when he thought carefully about these things, an messenger from God appeared to him in a dream and said, “Joseph son of David, don’t be afraid to take Mary as your wife, because the child she carries is from the Holy Spirit. She will give birth to a son, and you will call him Jesus, because he will rescue the people from their offences.” Now all of this took place to fulfill what God had spoken through the prophet: Look! A young girl will become pregnant and give birth to a son, and they will call him by the name Emmanuel, the translation of which means, “God is with us.”

God is with us. As we engage this story in our time and in our culture, it helps to remember that the basic understanding of history in the Hebrew Bible is that the people strayed from God and then God rescued or redeemed them. The name Jesus, in fact, is from the root of the word for rescue or salvation. Whatever happened, they trusted that God was with them.

Joseph (and perhaps Mary) needed to be reminded of that by the messenger because all he could see was dead-end circumstance. The woman he wanted to marry was pregnant. The life they had anticipated—whatever that was—was not going to happen. The angel didn’t tell him any differently, other than to say for him to not break the betrothal. Stay for the birth and name the boy “God is with us,” then stay for the marriage and trust that the name will hold up.

That sense of God’s presence matters when we take a larger view of Hebrew history. It helps to keep in mind is that the Hebrew people lived through a number of exiles and oppressions over many centuries, facing circumstances where the life they had anticipated didn’t happen. A good deal of their story as it is told in the Hebrew Bible centers around those experiences. Often, the way the people understood their difficulties was that they had done something wrong to cause their exile. That’s not necessarily what God said to them, but it was often what they heard. In most every case, the main message that God continued to send was one of redemption, offering the people a chance to repent and start over.

Which brings us to John the Baptist.

The historical moment into which he stepped when he started calling people to repentance and baptism was another moment of oppression and struggle. The Romans were brutal rulers, as we will see when come back to the story of the Magi. John’s invitation for them to make changes sounded like the prophets they had heard about in Bible stories who gave people hope beyond feeling like life was difficult because they had sinned. They could make changes that mattered if they were willing to trust God was with them and see what would happen next.

He was calling them to hope, to trust that the choices they made mattered, even if they couldn’t see how that would all work out. He called them to change their purpose, to change their hearts and lives, to start anew with what they thought God could do through them.

In the centuries since John walked in the wilderness, that sense of that kind of hope hasn’t changed. None of us knows for sure what is going to happen, or how things will work out. What we can do to affect whatever is coming is to make thoughtful, dare I say prayerful choices about what we say, do, and feel; about how we treat other people; about how we spend our time and our money; about how we live out our trust that God is with us.

How, then, can we change our purpose, change our hearts, so that Christ can be born anew in our time?

That’s a big question that doesn’t necessarily require a global answer. I’m not asking how we change the world as much as how we change ourselves because that is how the world actually gets changed. Hope requires specificity, so here are three specific things to consider.

First, I invite you to daydream about who God wants you to be and what God wants you to do within your spheres of influences. Are you doing the work you feel that is most true to yourself? How can you affect the primary relationships in your life? Who do you feel call to become?

As you hold that question, I ask you to think of one specific element of your life that you would like to change, that you would like to repent. Let me offer an example. Most every fall is difficult for me because the shrinking daylight is like rocket fuel for my depression. I spend most of November and December feeling crushed by the weight of it all and doing what I can to hold on till the Solstice and the promise of longer days.

Thanks to some suggestion I read or heard somewhere, I decided to commit to getting up morning at around five so that I was awake for the sunrise. I make the coffee and I sit at my desk, which is in front of a window, and I watch the dawn break as I do the crossword and then read. Somehow that change has given me new life. I have had a burst of creative energy rather than feeling like I was falling into a hole.

Let me be clear: depression is not a sin. It has been something in my life that has kept me from being my full self, from being able to see that I am wonderfully and uniquely created in the image of God and worthy to be loved. The change I have made—my repentance, if you will—has not been because I did something wrong as much as I changed a behavior to make me more available to the world and to God.

Repentance can have a number of faces, so let me ask the question again. What one specific element of your life would you like to change?

The last question requires us to think about our lives together. What change do you think needs to happen in one element of your communal life—here in this church, in your neighborhood, in Hamden, at work—that you can contribute to with a change in what you say and do, or how you spend your time and resources?

We will go from this service to share a meal and talk about our budget for the coming year, which is actually a discussion about who we are as a congregation and who we think God is calling us to be. Do we have ways in which we need to change our purpose or change our hearts?

The hope that underlies repentance is that when we change ourselves we change the world. May we live boldly into that kind of hope. Amen.

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: preparing

preparing

today has been
a day of preparation

baking cookies for
a coffee house concert
tomorrow night

a breakfast casserole
for the church brunch
after our budget meeting
also tomorrow

a third and fourth
revision of my sermon

and practicing
my new advent carol
as much as my hands
would let me after
all the cooking

not everything was
for other days

I should have said
my first move
was to make
some clam chowder
that simmered through
most of the morning

and after tomorrow
was taken care of

it was ready
to feed us as
we called it a day

Peace,
Milton

advent journal: first friday

first friday

it’s the first Friday
in December
and in our little
snow globe town
which means we light
the evergreen tree
on the Town Green

crowds gather
and the traffic jams
for no other reason
than we have
decided it matters
to all be together
to flip the switch

the evening is
electric because
of what gets
handed down
and all that is
connected to the
lights on the tree

otherwise the
stories would fall
away like most of
the other leaves and
our hearts would
be bare like branches
for the winter

Peace,
Milton