CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, SHAKER HEIGHTS
  • Home
    • About
    • Leadership
  • Livestream
  • Giving
  • Worship Opportunities
    • Sermons
  • Music
  • Christian Formation
    • Nursery
    • Preschool through Seventh Grade
    • 8th through 12th Grades
  • Outreach
  • Fellowship & Service
    • Altar Guild
    • Brotherhood of St. Andrew
    • Daughters of the King
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Contact

Links to Sermons

Love Wins

11/6/2016

 
Picture
All Saints Sunday
Daniel 7:1-3,15-18; Luke 6:20-31
​Rev. Peter Faass

​In your experience, how many of you believe that the forces between good and evil, love and hatred, and justice and injustice, have never been so clearly and intransigently lined up as in the past few years?
 
Yeah, me too!
 
I will tell you, some of the events we have experienced in our society recently have set my teeth on edge, raised the short hairs on the back of neck and caused me to have some thoughts that, as Robert Louis Stevenson once allegedly stated “would shame hell.”
 
I fear that this state of affairs isn’t about to change any time soon.
 
In the Book of Daniel, we hear of a vision Daniel has of “four great beasts [that] came up out of the sea” and turn into kings. These creatures represent the four great empires – Babylon, Assyria, Persia and finally, the Seleucids, who occupied and degraded the Hebrew people; the worst being the Seleucid King Antiochus Epiphanes, who hated the Jews so much that he sacrificed a pig on the Temple altar, set a statue of himself upon it and tortured and murdered Jews who would not convert to his religion, his way of life.       
 
As I said in my Evensong sermon this past Thursday, an ugly, ferocious monster – a beast, if you will – that incarnates this kind of abject hatred for those who are different has been uncovered and unleashed in our nation.  We have every reason to be alarmed.   The existence of so much evil and hatred in such a large percentage of our population threatens our bodies and souls no less than those four empires did to Israel.
 
And then comes Jesus preaching today’s Sermon on the Plain.
"But I say to you that listen, Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you . . . Do to others as you would have them do to you."
 
Oy Vey!  Seriously Jesus? You want me to love my enemies? To do good to those who hate me?  Like those White Supremacists, neo-Nazis and KKK folks? Or those racists, who firebomb churches or attend a Bible Study, pull out a gun and murder all those in attendance? How about those folks who mock and bully the weak and vulnerable? Or those avaricious money grabbers who rip the sick, the elderly, orphans and widows. You want me to love those people? And as if that’s not enough to ask, you throw in the command to do to others as I would want done to me. I know on this celebration of All Saints we are reminded of our own saintliness, but under the circumstances I’m not sure I can polish my halo to that degree.
 
Truth be told, I don’t want to do those things. I’d rather see things done to them as they have done to others. You know, that eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth law.  Now that’s the ticket. That’s what feels good.
 
But no Jesus, you need to lob these Kingdom of God rhetorical bombshells into our lives.  You have to go and challenge us to examine the values of the world, versus the values of God.  I guess you must have read my mind and seen those thoughts that would shame hell.
 
There is no commandment of Jesus, which has caused so much discussion and debate, nor evoked so much adverse resistance than the call to love our enemies and to be good to those who hate us.
What does it entail to love like that?
Well, for certain Jesus does not mean eros, or erotic, passionate love between two people. And he also doesn’t mean philo, or brotherly/sisterly love that we have for our nearest and dearest friends. What Jesus is speaking of here is agape love. Agape love is a love that sees every person as being created in the image of a loving God, despite how much evil has infected their lives and made them behave in a hateful manner. It is a love that is benevolent: a love that is intentional and causes us to be deliberate in going out of our way to be kind to those who hate us. It is not a love that comes from the heart, but rather a love that is of the will. It is a love that we can only do by the grace of Christ, which empowers us to offer it. But why do it? Why will it in our selves?
 
In my senior year of seminary I was required to take Canonical Exams so that my Bishop and the Council of Examining Chaplains in the Diocese of Connecticut could determine if I had been adequately prepared in the six major disciplines of theological education. Passing grades were required before I could be approved for ordination. Canonicals were ten straight days of writing and research from 6:00 in the morning until late at night. Section III, Theology Question B. 3.  asked this: “If ‘rain falls on the just and unjust alike,’ what necessity is there for being obedient to God?”  This scriptural quote finds it origins in Jesus saying that “[God] causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous.”
 
I responded by referring to the Genesis story of creation where on the sixth day, “God declares everything that [God] had made . . . to very good.”  So from the very beginning all things God made were declared good. Therefore goodness is the natural state of the creation and it is God’s desire to restore all creation to that original state. Our tradition tells us that evil came into being through human disobedience toward God. But regardless of its origins, evil exists and can be best understood as a disorder and imbalance of human existence (and thereby creation) causing alienation from God.  
 
In order for us to restore the balance and right order of human existence we must respond to God’s deepest desire to renew the original goodness of Creation. And we do this by being obedient and faithful to God’s desires for us, which is why Jesus commands us to love our enemies and to do to others, as we desire to have done to us. These are part and parcel of restoring the good creation.  
 
My sisters and brothers, these commands are the hard work of obedience and being faithful. No one ever said being a follower of Jesus was easy.  But we do it because these commands are compelling reasons to turn all creation away from evil and sinful behaviors. We do it because they are the only way to break the bonds of evil that desires to shackle us and keep the world from God’s intended state.  That is why we offer agape love to the most vile of people.  The good and the just see that the rain falls upon them and know from whence it comes, and they are nourished by it to continue forward on the road to restoration of God’s good creation. And they pray that in so doing the evil and the unjust will turn toward the good as well.
 
Ultimately we cannot move toward the fulfillment of justice and righteousness without being obedient to God’s commands. 
 
After Daniel’s horrific visions of the brutality wrought by those four kings upon his people, God reveals to him that the evil times will not endure. “But the holy ones of the Most High shall receive the kingdom and possess the kingdom forever – forever and ever,” he is told. (Dan. 7:18) In other words God encourages Daniel and the Jewish people to persevere, assuring them that all will – in God’s time - be well. God does the same for us today. God in Jesus assures us that even in the darkest times, light and love will prevail. Evil can never, ever trump God’s desire for the righteous and all of creation.
 
In a few moments we will baptize Cecelia Jo, our newest saint in the church.  In the Baptismal Covenant her parents and godparents will be asked if they will “renounce the evil powers of this world which corrupt and destroy the creatures of God?” And they will reply – hopefully! – “I will, with God’s help.” We should hear that question being asked of all of us.
 
What is critical to remember as we respond in the affirmative is that we renounce those evil powers by loving them, loving them as we want to be loved, loving them as Jesus loves us. In so doing evil is diminished and transformed; and as that happens we draw closer to that time when the rain and the sun fall only on the good and the righteous, because the Creation has been restored to its original goodness.  And love wins.
 
Amen.


Comments are closed.
    Picture

    The Reverend Peter Faass

    The Reverend Peter Faass was born in Delft, Netherlands. He is a graduate of the General Theological Seminary in New York City and has been at Christ Church since 2006.

    Our guest homilists come from the Episcopal Church and neighboring congregations in Shaker Heights.

    Archives

    July 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    December 2017
    October 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015

    Categories

    All
    Acts
    Advent
    All Saints Day
    Amos
    Betty Kondrich
    Christmas
    Christmas Eve
    Dr. Carol S. Franklin
    Easter
    Easter Vigil
    Ephesians
    Epiphany
    Evensong
    Good Friday
    Holy Saturday
    Independence Day
    Isaiah
    Jack Shelley
    James
    Job
    John
    Katie Ong-Landini
    Lent
    Luke
    Mark
    Martin Luther King Jr.
    Mary
    Matthew
    Nativity
    Rev. K. Dean Myers
    Rev. Peter Faass
    Rev. Rachel G. Hackenberg
    Rev. Roger Osgood
    Song Of Solomon
    Song Of Songs
    State Of The Parish Address
    Stewardship
    St. Francis

    RSS Feed

CONTACT US

PHONE: 216-991-3432
EMAIL: 
parishadm@cometochristchurch.org

​Parish Office Hours
Tuesday through Friday, 9am -1pm, 2pm -5pm
Picture

OUR LOCATION

  • Home
    • About
    • Leadership
  • Livestream
  • Giving
  • Worship Opportunities
    • Sermons
  • Music
  • Christian Formation
    • Nursery
    • Preschool through Seventh Grade
    • 8th through 12th Grades
  • Outreach
  • Fellowship & Service
    • Altar Guild
    • Brotherhood of St. Andrew
    • Daughters of the King
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Contact