{"id":2285,"date":"2022-01-31T14:40:41","date_gmt":"2022-01-31T20:40:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/?p=2285"},"modified":"2022-01-31T15:27:50","modified_gmt":"2022-01-31T21:27:50","slug":"sermon-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/?p=2285","title":{"rendered":"Sermon"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Ryan Williams<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>1.23.22<br>Third Sunday After Epiphany-Year C<br>Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10<br>Psalm 19<br>1 Corinthians 12:12-31a<br>Luke 4:14-21<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It\u2019s an understatement to say that the Corinthian church had some problems in Paul&#8217;s<br>day. They were a very dysfunctional family filled with, infighting , controversies,<br>embarrassing scandals \u2013<br>And it appears they found themselves often in heated disputes over issues that<br>ultimately had more to do with power and prestige than the Gospel itself.<br>Sound familiar?<br>Sadly it feels all too relevant, doesn\u2019t it? Especially in our hyper charged scandal-of the-day climate<br>Disfunction? Infighting? Embarrassing scandals? Constant adventures in missing the<br>point\u2026 Unfortunately, the church today may be more acquainted with these same<br>practices and postures than we&#8217;d like to admit.<br>For Paul, though, there was one issue at the root of all of these problems, poisoning<br>the well, so to speak.<br>And today\u2019s passage picks up right in the middle of Paul\u2019s argument concerning this<br>issue.<br>So, what was the root of the issue for Paul and for the Corinthian church? What was<br>the great danger that Paul claimed was destroying the Corinthian church?<br>To put it in a word \u2013 Inequality.<br>Inequality and it\u2019s many reverberations was the poison that was spoiling the church<br>community and its greater mission<br><br>There was spiritual inequality as well as material inequality. Some (as we heard last<br>week) thought they were more righteous because they belonged in the camp of Peter<br>or Paul or Christ, and this was creating division and dissension in the church<br>As for material inequality \u2013 there was a great division between the wealthiest and<br>poorest in the community.<br>The Corinthian church was quite wealthy, for there was a lot of wealth to be had in<br>Corinth in this time.<br>But with this wealth, there was also great disparity between the richest members of<br>the community and the poorest. And the wealthiest members of the community had<br>mistaken their great sums of wealth for importance,<br>and they thought that just because they were rich that made them fit to serve as<br>leaders in the church.<br>Not only that, they thought that their wealth gave them greater access to God and to<br>the blessings therein<br>This manifested itself in the weekly Eucharistic feasts during worship.<br>The prominent and wealthy would sit in prominent seats when they would gather for<br>worship, and the wealthy had first pick of whatever was offered for the Eucharist<br>meal.<br>These wealthy members were so into the fiction that they were somehow more<br>important to God and to the Church that they thought it fine to take the lion&#8217;s share<br>of the Eucharist meal, leaving little to nothing behind for the poorest members of the<br>church community.<br>So that often when it came time for the poorest members of the community to take<br>part in the bread and wine, the body and blood of Christ, there was no bread or wine<br>left for them,<br>they were literally left with no bread or wine to consume because the wealthy among<br>them had so thoroughly gorged themselves on the body and blood of Christ,<br>The very body and blood broken and given to all\u2026 But in this community there was<br>not enough to go around.<br><br>Actually, there was more than enough to around, it&#8217;s just that the appetites of the<br>wealthy prevented this from occurring. And this was the great sin at the heart of the<br>Corinthian church.<br>This inequality that led to entitlement \u2013 and Paul notes this entitlement bled into the<br>other areas of the life of the church.<br>The rich feasted while the poor starved in worship, and resulted in the very real<br>consequences of starvation, disease and death. And Paul firmly states this is<br>unacceptable.<br>But you can imagine the response of these wealthy members of the church in Corinth,<br>can&#8217;t you?<br>&#8220;Well why shouldn&#8217;t we take the lion&#8217;s share? We provide the lion&#8217;s share of the work<br>and resources for this church anyway, so why shouldn&#8217;t we get to celebrate in this<br>manner eating and drinking our fill of what we have provided to the community.&#8221;<br>&#8220;We don&#8217;t want to encourage hangers-on. We don&#8217;t what these poorsies to get it in<br>their head that they can just come here and take, take, take from the church without<br>first putting something in. They need to learn how to contribute to society and this<br>church, and then they can take part. We can&#8217;t just offer handouts to anyone and<br>everyone who comes along.&#8221;<br>Sound familiar? Sound like anything we often hear today? This isn&#8217;t a new problem<br>for the world or for the Church. This is the logic of a world where resources often<br>appear scarce or limited at face value<br>This is the kind of logic that keeps afloat many of the institutions of our nation and of<br>the ideologies imbedded in the psyche of our nation \u2013<br>There is not enough to go around, so take what you can and enjoy it, because you<br>earned it. And don&#8217;t feel bad \u2013 your conspicuous consumption is something to be<br>desired and coveted.<br>It is an aspiration for the poor masses to strive for and fight for no matter the cost. It<br>is dog-eat-dog out there, so get what you can, when you can, and by God, enjoy it<br>once you&#8217;ve gotten it.<br>This was the logic running beneath the surface of the Church in Corinth, and it was<br>poisoning the roots of the tree that was the Church<br><br>People were being excluded and were dying because of this logic.<br>So, in today&#8217;s passage from I Corinthians Paul offers a reminder to the church of the<br>actual reality of things. That this inequality isn\u2019t just affecting individuals, but the<br>whole of the church touching each and every member of the community.<br>This physical arrangement of wealth inequality duped the wealthy into seeing the<br>world incompletely and incorrectly. Their wealth had insulated them from the deeper<br>realities of the church and creation.<br>Their wealth and comfort tricked them into thinking that they were somehow,<br>separated from and different than the rest of the church.<br>That they were somehow better, and that the well-being of others in the church had<br>no bearing on their own spiritual health or intimacy with God.<br>That the condition of the church as a whole had no bearing on their own vitality and<br>influence in the Kingdom of God and the world at large,<br>But in chapter 12 of Corinthians Paul firmly states that these wealthy individuals<br>couldn&#8217;t be more wrong.<br>Rather than solitary individuals with their wealth standing before God on their own,<br>they were just a part of the greater whole<br>members of a larger body &#8212;<br>They can be no more separated from the body and they are no more or less vital to<br>this body than any other member, no matter the size of their bank accounts or the<br>valuation of their stock portfolios.<br>Or the prominence they hold in the wider community.<br>Their spiritual health is intimately connected with the health of the rest of the<br>community, and visa versa.<br>The well-being of the most fragile member of the community is tied directly to their<br>own spiritual health.<br><br>In the same way that the health of one&#8217;s eye&#8217;s or heart set the horizons of what is<br>possible in an individual body.<br>So the actions of the wealthy do not occur in a vacuum, but have ramifications across<br>the entire church.<br>And what&#8217;s more important in this body no member is more valuable nor no closer<br>to God than another member.<br>Each and every individual stands on equal footing before God, and that each membe<br>of this body is loved<br>and cherished<br>and valued just as much as the other.<br>No one has greater access to the divine than any other, and they certainly don&#8217;t<br>because of something so shallow as the size of their wealth or their respect and<br>influence in polite society.<br>And here\u2019s the greatest scandal here \u2013<br>If it\u2019s true that we are all members of the same body and our actions affect the health<br>of this entire body, and we can&#8217;t function in this life alone\u2026<br>Then that means we (the wealthy Corinthians) \u201crichies\u201d might actually need the<br>\u201cpoorsies\u201d over there. Their health and their flourishing is not only tied up in my<br>health and flourishing, but the wealthy and the prominent members of the church<br>actually need the poor and forgotten in order to fully live into the reality of Christ.<br>We can&#8217;t live the life of faith alone. We cannot access true eternal life by ourselves.<br>We need one another for the journey.<br>The scandal of the Gospel is that those in society who are forgotten and tossed aside<br>because of the various ways we can label people as unnecessary or inconvenient &#8212;<br>These are actually the people who in God&#8217;s Kingdom and Christ&#8217;s Body are most vital<br>for life and flourishing.<br><br>This is not a new concept. This is a theme that we can trace through the entire<br>Scriptural witness. Time and again in the Old Testament God judges the Kingdom of<br>Israel for how they treat the poorest and most forgotten among them.<br>It&#8217;s almost as if God actually cares for the poor. Almost as if the health of a society<br>can be measured by how the most fragile among them are cared for a treated.<br>And it&#8217;s simply because of the reality that we are all connected. That we need each<br>other to fully know and experience abundant life.<br>The state of my soul is tied up with the state of yours. Our capacity for life and love<br>is multiplied when we are connected with one another in community \u2013<br>When everyone is accounted for cared for and valued.<br>We cannot walk this life of faith alone. We need each other for the journey. Plain<br>and simple &#8212; We need each other.<br>Now, it&#8217;s no accident that Paul uses the language of the body in this chapter. This is no simple metaphor or illustration.<br>Paul is trying to reveal to us the entanglements that are very real in the life of Christ.<br>And quite possibly he is trying to tie up the life and mission of the church with the<br>greater vision and mission God had for humanity hearkening all the way back to the<br>beginning in Genesis with Adam and Eve<br>Way back in the beginning God gives these first humans dominion over the entire<br>earth to care for it, watch it, guide it and direct so that this creation might reach its<br>potential with our guidance.<br>In Christ, the new man &#8211; the new Adam &#8212; this vision is fulfilled and re-doubled. As<br>the church, as the Body of Christ, the Messiah<br>We participate in this life-giving work of care for creation and the various lives found<br>in it, and the many entanglements found in the very fabric of Creation.<br>We now have the great blessing and responsibility of participating with God in<br>creation to care for this world and see it reach it&#8217;s fulfillment in history as a place ever<br>growing in goodness, grace and love\u2026<br><br>But this work cannot be done in isolation or by ourselves. We need each other to<br>participate in this holy work. This work sacred. It is good. And it invades all places<br>in reality and society <br>But it also invades to the deepest places in our hearts &#8212; eradicating all that is dark and<br>evil and selfish\u2026<br>These realities are things we need to be reminded of all the more today<br>These twin realities &#8212; the fact of our contingency in the world and our membership in<br>the Body of Christ<br>and the second \u2013 our work and mission in the world as a healing force for good.<br>Because I think the past two years of the pandemic have, at least for me, caused me to<br>forget these deeper truths and their power for transformation.<br>I think the last two years have brought into greater focus some of the less than<br>desirable aspects of the Church. The warts and boils of the Church have come into<br>greater focus,<br>just as the many weaknesses and ugly features of the systems and structures of the<br>wider world have been highlighted.<br>Things that could have been previously forgotten, or overlooked, or swept under the<br>rug have come right into focus.<br>and many people, both on the inside and outside of the church have taken a look at<br>what Christianity has to offer in the late first quarter of the 21st Century and they<br>have NOT liked what they&#8217;ve seen.<br>And sadly\u2026 many people have walked away from the church because of it. Sadder<br>still, I think many of the folks walking away from the church today, were once deeply<br>committed members of the Body of Christ\u2026<br>The people who served on committees, cooked food, served the poor, taught the<br>young, served in the various ministries of the church. For a whole variety of reasons<br>people have found themselves disillusioned, burned out, and unsettled by what the<br>church has to offer our present world, and whether or not it is effective at offering<br>something good or better.<br><br>For a lot of organizations and traditions, the past two years the pandemic has acted as<br>a sort of pressure cooker pushing all of latent issues and weaknesses in society to the<br>center, and we as a nation and world have been forced to re-asses the status quo and<br>decided if it still works or not.<br>Things that were assumed as de facto or just the way it is, have now been re-assessed<br>in light of the pressures and stressors of a world changed by COVID-19, and many of<br>these structures and organizations have been found wanting.<br>Many people especially of my generation and younger are wondering if maybe they are<br>better off without the commitments and entanglements of the church. Maybe life is<br>simpler and easier without all of the ties that bind us to the church.<br>It might be simpler. It might even be easier, but it&#8217;s not better. It&#8217;s not truer. And it<br>does not result in greater and truer and more fulfilling life.<br>At best, trying to strike out on our own in the religious life creates in us a disillusionment of ascendency, that we have somehow risen above our need for the<br>church.<br>All this results in is a kind of navel-gazing arrogance (not unlike the arrogance that<br>Paul accuses the Corinthians of in chapter 5)<br>And this arrogance only leaves us smaller, shallower, and more selfish and self centered than before.<br>It might be easier to leave the church behind and try to strike out on our own, but it<br>isn&#8217;t better. It just leaves us divided, disempowered and frustrated.<br>And what is relevant for us today \u2013 To walk away from the church is really a kind of<br>privilege that marks us not so very different from the wealthy in Corinth.<br>For one to say I don&#8217;t need the church. I am better off doing this life on my own is to<br>believe the very same lie that the wealthy in Corinth did &#8212; that we don&#8217;t need one<br>another to flourish, that our actions occur in a vacuum and have no bearing on the<br>rest of the community or the world at large.<br>And this kind of disillusioned thinking &#8212; that we can walk this road alone can only<br>occur in a world where everyone lives at a certain income level with the certain<br>modern conveniences at their disposal. It is to walk in a kind of disillusioned<br>arrogance that Paul warns against in his letters to the Corinthians.<br><br>But the truth of the matter is far more humbling and life-giving.<br>We need each other. We are only whole when the other members of our community<br>are whole. We flourish when everyone flourishes. We all have a part to play, and we<br>are all necessary to the story that God is telling in this world today in our very midst.<br>So let&#8217;s lean in\u2026 Let&#8217;s find the part we are to play, and let&#8217;s unmask the lies we tell<br>ourselves about our own independence and individual capability.<br>May we find ourselves resting in the truth that we don&#8217;t have to do this all on our<br>own, that we can rely on each other , and in the rest that comes from this truth there<br>is enough grace and mercy and goodness to go around.<br>Amen.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ryan Williams 1.23.22Third Sunday After Epiphany-Year CNehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10Psalm 191 Corinthians 12:12-31aLuke 4:14-21 It\u2019s an understatement to say that the Corinthian church had some problems in Paul&#8217;sday. They were a very dysfunctional family filled with, infighting , controversies,embarrassing scandals \u2013And it appears they found themselves often in heated disputes over issues thatultimately had more [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":2289,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[6],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2285","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-sermons"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2285","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=2285"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2285\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2287,"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2285\/revisions\/2287"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/2289"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=2285"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=2285"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stalbansbolivar.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=2285"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}