Sermon for May 12, 2024
Celebrating the Feast of the Ascension, transferred
Walking the Way of Love preaching series, week 6
Jordan and Finn, thank you so much for
those reflections. Yours is a tough act
to follow. But in the spirit of marking
Senior Sunday and celebrating our graduates’ next steps on their journeys, I
thought I’d frame the sermon this morning as a commencement address. So it’s really for the nine of you, but the
rest of the folks might get something out of it, too.
Doing something a little different with
the sermon seems right especially today, given this is one of those preaching
moments nobody would sign up for. Here’s
your task, Fr. John: Combine Senior Sunday, Mother’s Day, the Feast of the
Ascension, and the spiritual practice of prayer, which is this morning’s
installment of our preaching series on Walking the Way of Love. Making sense of all that sounds like a job
for … the Sermonizer – computer-generated sermons with the press of a button!
Wouldn’t that be great? Well, it turns out, of course, the Sermonizer
already exists. It’s called ChatGPT, our
instant access to artificial intelligence.
I’m probably the last person on the planet to try ChatGPT, and certainly
our seniors are well aware of both its blessings and its temptations. Like most innovations, AI is neither good nor
bad. It’s simply a power that’s been set
loose; and like any other genie, this one won’t go back in its bottle. It’s part of the world you seniors are
inheriting, and part of the world oldsters like me are beginning to
understand. I can tell you this
much: If you ask ChatGPT to write a sermon that includes the feast of the Ascension, Mother's Day, the
spiritual practice of prayer, and graduating seniors, ChatGPT will do it. Five
hundred sixty words and a few seconds later, you have something that would earn
a C-minus for a first-year seminarian.
So, the Sermonizer lives … or, more accurately, the Plagiarizer
lives.
OK, this is
not a diatribe against technology.
Instead, this is an old-fashioned, non-Sermonizer sermon
encouraging you to ask yourselves a deep question: Where can I put my trust?
One place I’d encourage you to look is to
the other people we’re remembering in our worship today: mothers. Now, as we’ll pray in a few minutes, that
group of our original influencers isn’t limited to our biological moms. But in whoever plays that role for us, one of
the marks of a good mom is that you can trust her with everything you’ve
got. I’ve been blessed to know that
reality first-hand, and here’s a quick example – although it’s definitely not
a typical warm and fuzzy Mother’s Day memory.
While I was on sabbatical last summer, I wrote a journal article about
the 1906 lynching in my hometown, Springfield, Missouri. The article told the story of three Black men
strung up on the public square, and it described how our diocese is remembering
the 25 lynchings that took place in western Missouri across the decades.1 Well, that article begins not with facts and
figures about racialized violence but with the memory of my mother and me
shopping for school clothes on Springfield’s public square. As we hunted for jeans and shirts, my mother
took the trouble to tell me the story of the lynchings – something I certainly
never heard about in school in Springfield. I could trust my mother to set me on a course
that valued respecting the dignity of every human being; and years later, I can
still trust the ethical wiring she helped to set.
Guidance you can trust is a precious
commodity these days; and, of course, even the best mothers aren’t with us
forever. Soon, you seniors will be
heading off to whatever’s next after high school; and eventually, you’ll be
like my daughter, turning 30 and buying your own house and making your parents
feel really old. And then, someday,
you’ll be the ones making care-planning decisions for your mother, which is
what my sisters and I were doing just a couple of days ago. So, in the journey ahead of you, where else
can you look, beyond your mothers, for guidance you can trust as you navigate so
many unfamiliar waters?
You can look to Jesus. OK, it’s not really a surprise that I’d say
that, but the answer stands. And it
stands especially today, as we celebrate what’s maybe the least understood of
the principal feasts on the Church calendar – the feast of the Ascension, which
was this past Thursday.
As we heard in two of the readings this
morning, after forty days of hanging out with the disciples after Easter
morning, Jesus returned to the heavens from which he’d come, taking his place
of power and authority with the Father and the Holy Spirit. Now, if you find it a little hard to wrap
your head around that this morning, you’re in good company. For centuries, Christians have been trying to
make sense of a deep paradox about the Ascension. At the end of our reading from Acts, the
story says the disciples looked on as a cloud “took [Jesus] out of their sight”
(1:9), and two angels comforted his friends by saying he’ll come back
eventually “in the same way as you saw him go” (1:11). And the Gospel reading today – like Acts,
also written by Luke – tells the story similarly, with Jesus being “carried up
into heaven” (24:51) after he commissions the disciples to go out to “all
nations” as his “witnesses” (24:47,48). OK. But if you read the ending of Matthew’s
Gospel, you find no Ascension. Instead,
as Jesus commissions his friends to share the good news, he says, “Remember, I
am with you always, to the end of the age” (28:20).
So, which is it? Did he stay or did he go? Is Jesus still close by, or is he sitting on
a heavenly throne?
You know what’s coming, right? The answer is, “Yes.” And how can that be? Well, like so much of this Way of Love that
God asks us to follow, the answer is both deeply mysterious and something our
hearts already understand.
The theologians will tell you the point of
the Ascension is not that Jesus has checked out. Just the opposite. The point of the Ascension is that Jesus is
in charge, the universe’s CEO. As the
first one to rise from the dead, Jesus has received “all authority in heaven
and on earth,” as Matthew’s Gospel says.
Because God raised him to new life, Jesus has power that beats any other
power you can name, even the power of death itself. He may not be leading crowds into Jerusalem
anymore, but the authority he wields is so much greater even than what the
Romans feared he’d do on earth. Like a
CEO in the corner office, Jesus is in charge even if he isn’t micromanaging
every moment of every day.
And yet … he’s with you anyway. How can that be? How can Jesus have ascended into heaven as
the cosmic ruler and still be accessible to you, and to each of us?
Here’s a simple answer – and it’s the
theme of this week’s stop on the Way of Love in our sermon series. We’ve been preaching since Easter on seven
ways you can connect with God in your day-to-day life. We’ve talked about turning – making the
effort to pause, listen, and choose to follow Jesus. We’ve talked about resting – letting our hearts
be restored with God’s love and peace.
We’ve talked about blessing – showing God’s love through our words and
actions. We’ve talked about learning –
reading the Bible and letting those words of hope soak in. Last week, we talked about worshiping –
gathering with other pilgrims to thank God for the blessings of our lives. And today, our stop on the Way of Love is to
pray – to dwell with God intentionally; to make time to reach out in the
assurance that, believe it or not, reaching out is the one thing God wants most
from us. If we make the effort, God
will show up, too. Sometimes the message
we get may be clear and direct; sometimes it may be “just” a greater sense of
peace – but I’ll take that any day.
Prayer, in any form, is your direct line to the CEO. How can that be possible? I mean, we’d assume Jesus has a lot on his
plate, running the universe. So, how can
someone who’s crazy busy make time to come alongside you and listen, no matter
what? Well, ask your mom. It’s what love does.
So, seniors, you’re about to head out into a world where trust is in pretty short supply. The research would say that you all don’t trust institutions; you don’t trust the media; you don’t trust the structures of government; you don’t trust authority figures. Honestly, most of the time, neither do I. Original sin is a thing, and you don’t have to look hard to find it. But when you find it, don’t stop looking for something you can trust just because the institutions around us let us down. Take your spiritual phone, so to speak; and open up the God app; and see what this feed called prayer will bring you. Like a parent who always picks up when you need to talk, Jesus will be “with you always, to the end of the age.”
- Spicer, John. “Bringing Us to Our
Knees: The 1906 Springfield, Missouri, Lynching.” Anglican and
Episcopal History, vol. 93, no. 1, 2024, pp. 182–94. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/27290761.
Accessed 8 May 2024.
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