Bishop's Blog

Bishop Scarfe shares his experiences, reflections, and sermons.







Tuesday, January 31, 2017

From the Bishop


“It has been a crazy week in politics. And you were probably hoping for, or even expecting, an article here that would finally be a break from all the political talk.” This is a statement to members of the United Church of Christ from their Iowa judicatory office and you know that after this opening there comes a huge “nevertheless…” “The Gospel,” the letter goes on to say,  “is political.”

I would add that it becomes even more so when it is the treatment of people that is at stake –  for who they are rather than for what they have done. As our lectionary begins to sweep us deep into the heart of Jesus’ understanding of God and God’s people, and how we are to be together – in the Beatitudes and the Sermon on the Mount –  I urge you to resist the temptation to separate your experience in worship from the images being provoked by the stage being set by the new political agenda. Think through the implication of Jesus’ words about treatment of the ‘other,’ especially those considered to be enemy. Realize that he took the concept and made it the theme of his own Inaugural address. The congregation in Nazareth spoken of in Luke chapter 4, were riled by Jesus’ implying that Gentiles were also agents of divine blessing –  that “the other” was as much at the center of God’s loving vision as God’s own chosen.

We are in the end chosen or blessed to be a blessing as the song goes. We are chosen to share the honor with all made in the image of God. And that has profound impact on the shaping of how our nations live in the family of nations.

I still remember the amazing celebration of the turn of the Millennium as captured on TV, beginning with the quiet pushing of a boat carrying a father and his child symbolizing the ongoing future of humanity off a small South Pacific island. It was a simple ceremony. It was followed by the fireworks and exuberance of larger cities like Sydney, Moscow, Cape Town, Paris, London. By the time we reached the United States we had pretty well covered the range of human racial and ethnic expression. And there – in the diversity of our population – all peoples, tribes and nations were celebrating together in a kind of “reprise” of what we had just seen. This is our gift, and it is our joy. It has been built out of human actions both cruelly dark and courageously good.

At the recent inauguration, God was cited upfront and central, as a chief endorser of America First. And who has the ear of God? And represents God’s voice? Jesus, the Incarnate Word, appeared before the disciples in the upper room. He paid the ultimate price of proclaiming a Kingdom bigger than his contemporary society could stomach; and he overcame death at its own game. Having paid the ultimate price what else could anyone or thing throw at Him? And so the road of a new, fuller humanity, later signified in the outpouring of the Spirit who gave tongues for all nations to understand the Gospel, lay open before us. Just before that day of the Spirit’s coming, John wrote:  “Jesus (The Risen Lord) breathed upon them (in that upper room) and said: ’receive the Spirit. Whosoever’s sins you remit (release, forgive), remit, and whosever’s sins you retain, retain’.”

It’s not usual that we consider what it means to be “retaining sins,” but we may well be moving into such an era. “The Gospel is political.” Jesus breathes His power upon us and in so doing passes on responsibility to love God with all your heart, mind and soul and to love your neighbor as yourself. This is the Church’s task and executive order. In John’s Gospel chapter 12, verses 27, Jesus says “Now my soul is troubled. And what shall I say – “Father, save me from this hour?” No, it is for this reason I have come to this hour. Father glorify your name.”


As the people of St Luke’s Cedar Falls are reminded and asked each Sunday: “where, this week, did you act in love; where did you show courage and where did you encounter Jesus unexpectedly?”

In the peace and love of Christ,

+Alan

The Rt. Rev. Alan Scarfe, Bishop of Iowa