Sunday, January 12, 2014

A New Beginning

The Baptism of Our Lord, Year A
January 12, 2014
The Rev. Christopher L. Caddell

A new beginning….


This week ten of your fellow parishioners made a New Year’s resolution, of sorts.  Like the group last year, this group has committed itself to taking the Bible Challenge – to read the bible in its entirety in one year. That’s no small task, and yet, encouraged by those who came before, they have made the commitment and on Monday these 10 people jumped in with both feet. 

In the introduction to the book that that group is using, the editor suggests that we should, “Read the bible slowly and meditatively, as if it were a love letter written by God especially to you.”

On day one that wasn’t too hard.

We began from the very beginning.  The story of creation.  The story of a loving, powerful God who spoke everything into being – the heavens and the earth, the sea and all the creatures that live in it, the birds of the air and beasts of the field, and every living creature that has breath – God created them, and God said it was good.

Still, God’s creation is not finished.  It is not complete without humankind.  And so, God creates Adam and Eve, creatures in God’s own image, a son and daughter of the Creator himself.  And God said it was very good.

And yet very soon, the wheels begin to fall off, and before too long, things have turned downright bleak.

The good creation that God had made is so corrupt, so far from his plan that God sees no other option but to destroy all living creatures, save Noah and the things he brings on the ark, and start anew. 

As bleak as that story is, it points to a God who is actively engaged in restoring his creation.  Through Noah and his descendants, life as God intended is given a new chance.

Yet things turn as quickly after Noah as they had before, and the rest of this story will be God moving through people, places, and events, looking to restore the goodness, the righteousness of his creation.

There will be Abraham, the father of many nations, through whom the entire world will be blessed.

Then Moses who, by God’s power, will lead a people out of slavery into freedom.

That people will make a covenant with God so that they might be a beacon of light to all. Through them all nations would be able to see God’s goodness and choose to live as God intended.

There will be Judges, Kings, and Prophets, all of whom, when they are at their best, seek to point God’s people toward living into the covenant that was made.

There will be exile and return, again providing a fresh slate though which that light might be rekindled and burn brightly.

And, of course, in time comes Jesus.  The one through whom we know God’s plans would finally be fulfilled.


And yet that story starts quite oddly.


Jesus travels from his home in Galilee to the Jordan where John is baptizing.  After some initial hesitation, John consents to baptizing Jesus.  The heavens are opened, God’s Spirit descends, and a voice from heaven declares, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”

It is a scene that has caused much confusion and even some embarrassment for Christians over the centuries.  Why, after all, would Jesus need to be baptized?

And then we are reminded of where we are in the story. Jesus’ baptism is the first recorded act of Jesus’ adult life and ministry.  This is the beginning of the Christian story.  All that flows from here – the teaching, the healing, the calling of disciples, the selfless act of laying down his life for the sake of others – all of that began in the river Jordan.

And while we might hear pieces of our Trinitarian theology in the voice that comes from heaven, the first Christians would have heard son of God as a royal title.  It was an anointing, a commissioning, a public act that identifies Jesus as the Messiah.  This is the new king; this is the one who is to bring in God’s reign, this is God acting in the world to set things right.

It is a fresh start.  A new Moses. A new Adam.  And from here, all righteousness will finally be fulfilled.


The interesting thing about the arc of scripture is that the story doesn’t end when we come to the end of the book.   That sweeping story that begins with Genesis and moves through Revelation does not complete the story.  God’s active work in healing the world did not end with Noah, or Abraham, or Moses, or the people of Israel, or even with Jesus and his disciples.

We are deeply intertwined in God’s plan for restoring the creation to wholeness.


We are anointed in our baptism.  With that we say, “You are sealed by the Holy Spirit in baptism and marked as Christ’s own forever.”  It is not something we simply do or say, but symbolizes the reality of what is taking place.  We are anointed, marked, and forever changed to be – in Christ and through Christ – the very agents of God’s healing of the world.  In short, we carry on the work begun by Jesus – loving, forgiving, healing, caring for others, and putting the needs of others before our own.


It is that time of year when some are naturally inclined to step back and take a look at their lives.  With the best of intentions, we seek to make changes.  We look for ways to better ourselves, our habits, our health, our relationships.

And while all of that is good, I want to suggest to you that you take a moment to listen to the words that are spoken in our baptism and take them into yourself –
“You are sealed by the Holy Spirit, and marked as Christ’s own forever.”

Hear in them the words of God who is deeply committed to setting the world right.  A God who loves His creation so much that He will not stop until all things in heaven and on earth are the way that they are intended to be.  A God who sees in you and in me the continuation of his love story with all that he has made.


Our whole story and life begins here.  It’s a clean slate.  A new beginning.  And a chance to live life as it was intended, as sons and daughters of God, made in his image.  Amen.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

A Christmas to Remember

The Second Sunday after Christmas – Year A
January 5, 2014
The Rev. Christopher L. Caddell

Merry Christmas!

Yes, I’ll admit to it.  I’m enough of a church geek that it is still Christmas to me - at least for a few more hours.

Last week while my family and I were travelling, I went to the post office to mail something.  Only a few days after Christmas day, I wished the clerk a Merry Christmas, and you would have thought I said something in another language.

After stammering and looking at me cross-eyed, she was able to squeak out, “Happy New Year.”

I just smiled and went on my way, but honestly it was closer to Christmas than to January 1. 

As I left, I’m sure she thought I was the one who had a mental lapse.

Nevertheless, consider this your friendly public service announcement that “The Twelve Days of Christmas” is not just a Christmas song, that Christmas is a season that begins on December 25th, and that there really are 12 days of Christmas!

And if that leaves you counting in your head, today is the twelfth day and marks the end of the Christmas Season.

We still have Christmas hymns, Christmas vestments and decorations, and though it may not seem like it, a Christmas gospel.


Matthew’s Christmas story does not end on a happy note.  The serene scene that we get from Luke of shepherds and animals surrounding the Holy family in a stable does not appear in Matthew.  The angels do not join in the heavenly host singing praises to God.  Instead, Matthew’s story revolves on two royal responses to the news of a new king – Herod and the Magi.  One comes to pay homage and offer gifts; the other seeks to destroy the newborn child.

Instead of ending this season with the peace-filled scene of angels and shepherds, the Incarnation is interrupted by panic and a rapid departure to a foreign land. Herod has heard of this new king’s birth, and he is not about to be challenged – him or his lineage. 

It is not a part of the Christmas story that we like to remember.  I doubt you’ve ever received a Christmas card that depicts it. 


However you imagine the message shared with Joseph in his dreams, what is clear is that God moves Joseph to take some fairly drastic actions.  When you think about it, all of what we know of Mary and Joseph has them responding to God in ways that probably never crossed their mind.

Mary is asked to bear a child that will put not only her reputation – in a world where reputation is everything – but also her life in a very perilous situation.  Joseph is asked to go through with a marriage that also puts his reputation on the line.  Then they are both uprooted, first with the flight to Egypt, then the hope to return home to Israel, and finally the eventual settlement in Galilee. 

No matter how you look at it, the Christmas story, for all that we like to romanticize about it, is a story about real life, real hardship, real ministry in the name of Christ. Joseph and Mary, as the very first who were tasked with bearing Christ did not find an easy journey ahead of them.


I will confess that sometimes I don’t take this seriously enough.  It is, after all, not where I want to go after experiencing the joy of Christmas.  Sometimes I choose to hear it as simply an historical account of the hardships faced early in the life of Jesus.  Other times I choose to write it off as a rhetorical device used by Matthew to used to identify Jesus with Moses and the Exodus.

And while one or both of those may be true, neither view challenges me to weave this story into my own story.  Neither stance moves me to consider how God may be calling me to bear Christ in the world.  And yet, if we allow it, it is what this story does so very well.  If we allow it, this story to goes well beyond “just being about Joseph and Mary,” or a literary allusion to the Old Testament.  If we allow it, we just might find in this story a piece of our own life and calling as Christians.


The Church teaches that its ministers are lay persons, bishops, priests, and deacons (BCP 855).  And though it is lived out differently, each of these orders are tasked with the same ministry – “to represent Christ and his Church”

In other words, much as Joseph and Mary did, The Church exists as the bearers of the Incarnation today.  We represent Him, bear Him, and carry Him with us wherever we go.
How we do that will differ from person to person, but when we are living into it fully, it will include:
  • ·      Bearing witness to Him through our words and actions
  • ·      Carrying on the work of Christ in the world
  • ·      And participating in the life, worship and work of the Church


Ending the season on this note reminds us that Christmas and the Incarnation are not meant to draw us to the manger so that we can stay there and bask in the glory of a newborn child.  Christmas is not simply about the receiving of a gift. The shepherds don’t do it.  The wise men won’t do it.  Even Joseph and Mary don’t have the luxury of staying in place to enjoy this gift.

Christmas draws us in so that we can witness the birth of the Messiah but then pushes us out so that we can take our place in the work of carrying that child with us.  And though that may seem a difficult task, God equips us with both the message and the individual gifts to the work in ways that often seem impossible and take more effort or skill than we think we have.


As Christmas comes to a close, I invite you to listen to how is God calling you to bear Christ in the world and in His Church. Recognize it or not, respond to it or not, the call is there for each and every one of us.  

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

A Light Has Shined

Eve of the Nativity of Our Lord, Year A
December 24, 2013
The Rev. Christopher L. Caddell

“The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who lived in a land of deep darkness – on them light has shined” (Isaiah 9:2).
These days we no longer live in a world where one can experience the complete and absolute absence of light very easily.  Artificial light rules our nights as well as our days.  As soon as the sun goes down the streetlights come on drowning out the darkness and the night sky, and the glow of the city lights can be seen from miles away.  We would need to travel a long way if we ever wanted to experience what true darkness looks like.
Or perhaps not –
When I was a sophomore at Texas A&M, I registered for a class that had the amazingly original course description of “Geology for Civil Engineers.”  Despite its mundane sounding title, it turns out that it happed to be my favorite class and one that left a lasting impression on me. 
The class was taught by Professor Christopher Mathewson – a man who was, we all agreed, older than many of the rocks that we studied.  As long as anyone could remember Professor Mathewson had been teaching this class.  And as long as anyone could remember, Professor Mathewson had been taking his class on an extended field trip.
For three days we traveled around central Texas looking at different rock and soil formations.  We spent time at the Highland Lakes and Barton Springs.  We went to Enchanted Rock and ended our trip on the River Walk in San Antonio.  Yet, the most memorable part of that trip for me was our stop at Longhorn Caverns. 
We had a private tour that day, and as we descended deeper and deeper into the caverns, we learned what most people learn when visiting the caverns.  We heard about the different formations, about when the caverns were formed, and how they were discovered.  But as our group arrived in one of the larger chambers, Professor Mathewson confessed that he had something up his sleeve.
He pulled out a large heavy sack and asked us to place anything and everything that we had that might give off light – flashlights, cell phones, even watches with glow in the dark hands.  All of this was placed in the sack, and then he told us that the lights were going out.
A few seconds later our entire class was sitting in complete and total darkness.  It is an experience that I will never forget.  We sat there for a long while.
As Professor Mathewson continued to talk, our eyes continued to adjust.  After what must have been a good fifteen minutes we began to think we actually could see – that was until we reached out to touch our neighbor or the wall, only to find that what we thought was there, was not, and our eyes were playing tricks on us.
We were in complete and utter darkness.  It is not something I can say I have ever experienced before or since.
And just as this whole scenario started to become really uncomfortable, Professor Mathewson did something that surprised us all.  He struck a match, and an amazing thing happened.  From that small tiny flame we could see everything – the walls, the floor, the ceiling, the faces of those around us. 
The light emanating from this single, small flame was enough to overcome a vast cavern filled with darkness.
Even in a world filled with artificial light, we still experience darkness and shadow.  The realities of our own lives and the world around us do not always match up to what we hope they would be.  
Things get broken. 
We get hurt. 
We hurt other people. 
We may even hurt ourselves.
The gap between what is and what ought to be sometimes seems to be widening, rather than coming closer together.
Then again, Christmas reminds us of a different reality.
At face value it is an ordinary story. Mary and Joseph were nothing compared to Caesar Augustus, the ruler of the known world.  Bethlehem was dump in the shadow of cities like Jerusalem, Caesarea Philippi, and certainly Rome.   And a baby being born was nothing more than a common occurrence – another peasant in a vast empire of people.  An ordinary Jewish family, traveling to a very ordinary outpost of the Roman Empire, going through the very ordinary process of having a baby.
Nothing about this story should have captured the hearts and imagination of the world. Nothing so insignificant should have ever made a difference then, much less make a difference in the vastness of space and time that separates this night from that.
And yet, it does.  The seemingly ordinary story of the birth of a small child has endured because from it shines forth light.  It is the light of God’s promises being fulfilled, the light of a Savior being born, the light of Emmanuel, the light of God dwelling with us.
We come back to this story again and again, year after year because in it we see the beginning of our salvation.  It is not just an historical event that occurred in Bethlehem, but one that reminds us of how God works in our life now, tonight, in this very place.
God is not forceful or imposing.  God does not overpower the creation or us.
Instead, God quietly shines light into the shadows and darkness, and invites us to look if we want to see it.
This is how God works, then and now. 
To the world it may seem insignificant.  It may even look to others as if we are naïve. Yet it is there if we only care to look.
I’m not sure how much geology I learned down in the bottom of Longhorn Caverns, but what I did learn left a lasting impression.  Contrary to how we might think of it, light and darkness are not equal and opposite realities.  Light holds far more power than we tend to think.  Just the smallest, seemingly most insignificant amount of light – whether it is the strike of a match or the birth of one small child – holds the power to destroy darkness.
The candles that we will light later tonight are symbols of that reality.  They remind us that God is breaking though the darkness even if it seems to be in insignificant ways.  No matter how vast the darkness seems it only takes a small glimmer of God to begin to dispel the darkness.
Merry Christmas!
May you leave here knowing the true gift of Christmas –  
That hope is eternal,
That light will always overcome the dark,

And that in Christ we see true Light that has come down to shine in our hearts.  Amen.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Could It Be I Was Wrong?


Matthew 11:2-11

When John heard in prison what the Messiah was doing, he sent word by his disciples and said to him, "Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?" Jesus answered them, "Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them. And blessed is anyone who takes no offense at me."
As they went away, Jesus began to speak to the crowds about John: "What did you go out into the wilderness to look at? A reed shaken by the wind? What then did you go out to see? Someone dressed in soft robes? Look, those who wear soft robes are in royal palaces. What then did you go out to see? A prophet? Yes, I tell you, and more than a prophet. This is the one about whom it is written,
`See, I am sending my messenger ahead of you,
who will prepare your way before you.'
Truly I tell you, among those born of women no one has arisen greater than John the Baptist; yet the least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he."