Sunday, January 12, 2025

Fire and the Waters of Baptism

First Sunday after the Epiphany – Baptism of Our Lord 

(Year C)

Isaiah 43.1-7; Luke 3.15-17, 21-22

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 19:35)

 

Thus says the Lord,
he who created you, O Jacob,

he who formed you, O Israel:

Do not fear, for I have redeemed you;
I have called you by name, you are mine.

When you pass through the waters, I will be with you;

      and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you;

when you walk through fire you shall not be burned,
and the flame shall not consume you.

 

These words from our Old Testament reading from the Prophet Isaiah, first spoken in the mid sixth century BC, transcend time: extending from long before they were spoken, back to the time of the Exodus, forward to the Babylonian Exile, to the time of Jesus, to where we find ourselves today. They similarly transcend space, extending from Egypt and the crossing of the Red Sea, to the Promised Land, to Babylon, to the Jordan River, to Southern California. They encompass a multitude of peoples from the Hebrews seeking liberation from slavery, to Jews both in exile in Babylon and those remaining in Israel, to those coming to the wilderness to be baptized in the Jordan River, to the people of a variety of faith traditions who call Los Angeles home. Speaking words of comfort and assurance, of hope and promise, to Jews and Christians alike, and even to those who believe in other deities or no deity at all.

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Sunday, January 05, 2025

Guide Us to Thy Perfect Light

Epiphany

Matthew 2.1-12

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 25:00)

 

Today we celebrate the Feast of the Epiphany. “Epiphany” meaning “showing forth,” “revealing,” “manifestation.” This feast day is dedicated to celebrating the revealing or manifestation of Jesus Christ to the Gentiles—to non-Jews, to all of us. While we commonly think of Epiphany as the arrival of the Magi following Jesus’ birth at Bethlehem, it is technically a commemoration of three different ways in which Jesus is revealed to the Gentiles: the coming of the Magi, Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan River, and Jesus performing his first miracle of changing water into wine at the wedding at Cana. In our liturgical readings, we don’t always hear all three of these “epiphanies.” But this is one of those years when, over the next few weeks, we do hear all three of these stories.

 

While those other “epiphanies” are important to the overall revelation of Christ to the Gentiles, we do routinely emphasize the coming of the Magi this time of year, either at the tail end of the Christmas season or in a separate celebration of Epiphany, such as we are doing today. Likely because its theme connects so closely with the birth of Jesus we have just celebrated at Christmas. To the point that the Wise Men are commonly incorporated into the birth narrative, at least in Christmas Eve pageants and images on Christmas cards and the like. But the arrival of the Magi is not a Christmas story. It is its own thing, with its own special meaning.

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Sunday, December 29, 2024

Images of Christmas

First Sunday after Christmas

Galatians 3.23-24, 4.4-7; John 1.1-18

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 18:20)

 

If you were to ask people what the definitive image of Christmas is, it might be a toss up between Santa Claus and the baby Jesus in a manger. Asked within a church setting, the vast majority would likely—would hopefully—not answer Santa Claus but would say it is the baby Jesus. Very few—outside of some theology geeks—would likely say the quintessential image of Christmas is the Word made flesh. The image we hear not just once, but twice, during the Christmas season. First on Christmas Day and again on the First Sunday after Christmas. Having this reading presented twice in a twelve-day season says something about the importance, the centrality, of the Word made flesh as an image for Christmas.

 

Of course, we cannot, nor should we, brush aside the images associated with the Nativity that we heard on Christmas Eve. Where we stand at the manger, witnessing the birth of Jesus, the Son of God. The One who is destined to be the savior of the world. Such a warm and lovely scene, with Mary and Joseph watching the baby Jesus in adoration. Hearing the shepherds who have also come to witness this earth-shattering event. Telling of how they came to know of this joyous event through the appearance of an angel proclaiming, “I am bringing good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.” Followed by a multitude of the heavenly host appearing and praising God: “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors!” The whole story warming our hearts and filling us with joy.

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Wednesday, December 25, 2024

The Real Work of Christmas

Christmas Day

John 1.1-14

The Rev. Michael K. Fincher

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 20:45)

 

On Christmas Eve, we stand at the manger, witnessing the birth of Jesus, the Son of God. The One who is destined to be the savior of the world. Such a warm and lovely scene, with Mary and Joseph watching the baby Jesus in adoration. Hearing the shepherds who have also come to witness this earth-shattering event. Telling of how they came to know of this joyous event through the appearance of an angel proclaiming, “I am bringing good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.” Followed by a multitude of the heavenly host appearing and praising God: “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors!” The whole story warming our hearts and filling us with joy.

 

Then, mere hours later, we hear the Prologue to John’s Gospel: “In the beginning was the Word, and Word was with God, and the Word was God.” Ending with “And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.” Certainly poetic words, but hardly pulling at the heartstrings the way the image of a baby Jesus in a manger does. Compared to the birth narrative, John’s Prologue is more esoteric, more theological. Can’t we just stay at the manger a little longer? Why do we have to move on so quickly? Can’t we just say stay with the warm and fuzzy and dispense with the theological? Or at least put it off for a little while longer?

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Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Breaking News

Christmas Eve

Luke 2.1-20

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 1:10:45)

 

I really enjoy musical theater. For nearly as long as I can remember, one of my favorite musicals has been “Jesus Christ Superstar,” which first came out when I was about ten. I have a number of favorite songs from the musical. But there is one that, while among my favorites, asks a question that has stayed with me all these years. Near the end, after he commits suicide, the spirit of Judas Iscariot sings the title song for the rock opera: “Superstar.” The song begins with the words:

 

Every time I look at you

I don't understand

Why you let the things you did

Get so out of hand

You'd have managed better

If you'd had it planned

Now why'd you choose such a backward time

And such a strange land?

 

If you'd come today

You could have reached a whole nation

Israel in 4 BC

Had no mass communication

 

Yes, why did God choose Israel in 4 BC as the place and time for the birth of his Son? Israel, little more than a backwater province of the mighty Roman Empire. Bethlehem itself being a relatively insignificant village in this backwater province. And a time that is similarly backwards in many ways. Not least of which, as Judas notes, was the existence of a communications system that was absolutely primitive by our modern standards. If God wanted to get the word out about the greatest event to occur in the history of humanity—the birth of the Messiah, the coming of God in the flesh—surely there were better times and places to make it happen. There are more effective ways to spread your message than by preaching to a crowd here and a crowd there; than relying on a ragtag band of disciples to spread the word after your death; than relying on some stories written by a group of men who never even met Jesus in the flesh. From a public relations perspective, the plan for spreading the word about Jesus and his ministry left a little to be desired.

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Sunday, December 22, 2024

Reunions

Fourth Sunday of Advent (Year C)

Luke 1.39-55

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 18:25)

 

Today we come to the end of our Advent journey. Well, not quite the end. That really happens with Jesus’ birth on Christmas. But the end of the readings outlining the various manifestations of Advent, the various nuances of what the Advent journey means for us as God’s beloved children. In this journey, we started off talking about Christ’s second Advent at the end of the ages—his role at the Second Coming. Since then, we have been working our way backward, approaching the time of the first Advent: Jesus’ birth. On the second Sunday of Advent we were introduced to John the Baptist, foretold in ancient prophecies as the one who is a voice crying in the wilderness, “prepare the way of the Lord.” Although we don’t actually get the follow-up in our Advent cycle of readings: the meeting between John and Jesus, when Jesus comes to be baptized. The event that launches Jesus on his public ministry and into his role as Messiah. Effectively, fulfilling John’s role as the one who proclaims the Lord’s coming through his words, as well as through the sacramental act in which God himself proclaims Jesus as his beloved Son.

 

If you look at most of the accounts of Jesus’ baptism, it could be easy to walk away with the idea that this was the first time Jesus and John had met. For the most part, we don’t have any indication that they actually knew each other before that day. Although, there is one story that indicates otherwise. Today’s Gospel account of what is referred to as the Visitation. As we heard, Mary, pregnant with Jesus, goes to visit Elizabeth. What we learn in the text of the Annunciation, which we heard last week, is that Elizabeth is Mary’s relative—often presumed to be a cousin of some sort—and that Elizabeth is herself pregnant; about six months along. And as is revealed earlier in Luke’s Gospel—although we did not hear that full story, only Zechariah’s prophecy about his son—the child Elizabeth carries in her womb is none other than John the Baptist. So, Jesus and John are relatives.

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Sunday, December 15, 2024

Undergirding Salvation History

Third Sunday of Advent

Advent Lessons & Carols

St. Gregory's, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 47:45)

 

Thus far in this Advent season, we have taken a deep dive into the unique nature of this four-week period. A liturgical season not quite like any other, with its multiple layers of meaning. We have looked at the various Advents—the various comings or arrivals—of Jesus into our midst. His Advent at his birth on Christmas. His Advent at the end of the ages at the Second Coming. And, between these two, his Advent in our day-to-day lives. All the while, watching and waiting, preparing for his arrival in all its manifestations.

 

These Advents span a period of time from 2,000 years ago to an as yet unknown point in the future at the end of the ages. Although, in many ways, the story of Advent spans the entirety of history—from the very first humans, represented by Adam and Eve in the story of Creation, to the culmination of salvation history with the ultimate fulfillment and realization of the Kingdom of God. The meaning of Advent undergirds, provides the foundational structure for, the arc of human history. For the arc of our relationship with God in what we refer to as salvation history. Salvation history being the “personal redemptive activity of God within human history in order to effect his eternal saving intentions.”[1] In other words, God’s ongoing actions to provide for our salvation.

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Sunday, December 08, 2024

Preparing the Way of the Lord

Second Sunday of Advent (Year C)

Malachi 3.1-6; Luke 1.68-79; Luke 3.1-6

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 19:30)

 

Last week we explored a little of how during this season of Advent we move back and forth through a variety of time periods, just like time travelers in a sci-fi story might jump around exploring various points in time. A season in which we move back and forth through the timeline that comprises salvation history. In this season, we explore ancient prophecies about the coming of the Messiah and then witness how those prophecies are realized through the birth of that Messiah, through his life and ministry, through the prophecies he himself makes, and through his role in the fulfillment of salvation history. This season being a time of focusing on the various Advents, the various comings or arrivals, of Jesus into our midst. His Advent at his birth on Christmas. His Advent at the end of the ages, in what is commonly referred to as the Second Coming. And, between these two, his Advent in our day-to-day lives. All the while, watching and waiting, preparing for his arrival in all its manifestations.

 

The Gospel for last week focused on Jesus delivering a prophetic warning regarding the end times and instructions to his followers on how they are to respond: that they are to be attentive, to be alert. Particularly with respect to his coming at the end of the ages. Today, our Gospel takes us back in time from what we witnessed last week, to the time just before Jesus begins his public ministry. To another Advent prophecy involving the coming of the Messiah. To the fulfillment of that prophecy. Yet, in this fulfillment of prophecy, the Messiah does not actually make an appearance but is merely referenced. Rather, the primary focus today is on John the Baptist as the one who fulfills prophecy by pointing to the One who is to come. And, of course, as is emblematic of the season, there is a prophetic foretelling of John the Baptist’s role in salvation history.

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Monday, December 02, 2024

Expressions of Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving (Year B)

Joel 2.21-27; 1Timothy 2.1-7; John 18.33-37

St. Thomas of Canterbury, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 15:35)

 

Most of us grew up with the image of Thanksgiving first being celebrated by the Pilgrims after their landing at Plymouth Rock in Massachusetts. A feast celebrated in 1621 after the first harvest of crops in this new land. A feast celebrated with the local Natives who helped the Pilgrims get established in their new homeland. A feast celebrating the friendship between two very different peoples now sharing the same land. Such was the first Thanksgiving. Wrong!

 

Not that any of those facts are, strictly speaking, wrong. As my New Testament professor in seminary was fond of saying about virtually everything, “it’s more complicated than that.” A thanksgiving feast was indeed held in 1621 as a celebration of the first harvest in the Pilgrim’s new homeland, and local Natives were the honored guests. But the first? No. There were other thanksgiving celebrations on what is now American soil prior to the Pilgrims. In 1619, the colonists who landed in what is now Virginia held a celebration of thanksgiving for their safe arrival to their new home. But that was not even the first. When the Spanish arrived in what is now Texas in 1598, they held a celebration of thanksgiving for their safe arrival. But even that was not the first. Over three decades earlier, in 1565, the Spanish who arrived in what is now Florida held a celebration of thanksgiving for their safe arrival. Which does appear to be the first thanksgiving celebration on what is now American soil.

 

So, while the Pilgrims may not have been the first to celebrate Thanksgiving, they are the more well-known. Becoming the quintessential image of Thanksgiving. Perhaps because theirs was more elaborate, incorporating feasting and celebration with friends, whereas the others were more akin to worship services. Nonetheless, all were celebrations of gratitude for God’s providence: in being delivered safely to a new land, or in the case of the Pilgrims, gratitude for making it safely through the first winter in a foreign land, thanks to their new neighbors. Although all thanksgiving celebrations in our history have not been for such righteous or joyous purposes. A mere 16 years after the first Pilgrim thanksgiving, the governor of Plymouth Colony called for another thanksgiving. This time to celebrate the bloody victory over the massacre of Native Americans in the Pequot War.

 

Despite the complex, and at times, morally questionable justifications for celebration, offering thanks to God is part of our national history. Prior to the founding of our nation, celebrations of thanksgiving were more localized. The first national Thanksgiving Day celebration was called by George Washington. Held on November 26, 1789 this was “a day of public thanksgiving and prayer, to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many and signal favours of Almighty God,” and calling on Americans to “unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations and beseech him to pardon our national and other transgressions.”[1] It was not until 1863 when Abraham Lincoln formally established Thanksgiving Day as an annual national holiday. Although, even then, the intent was to explicitly give thanks for the Union’s military efforts in the Civil War.

 

Regardless of why thanks were being offered, be it for safe arrivals, for successful harvests, for a new nation, for military efforts in times of war, or even for a morally questionable victory, the heart of our Thanksgiving celebrations has always been the belief that God is the one who provides for all our needs. This most certainly reflects the Christian beliefs of early colonists who were instrumental in the formation of who we are as a nation. As such, we faithfully take time each year to offer our thanks to God for the blessings of the year.

 

Scripture demonstrates that offering thanks to God is a fundamental part of who we are as the People of God. Not just for us Christians but beginning with our Jewish forefathers and foremothers. The Old Testament is filled with stories of the people offering public thanksgiving to God for what he has done. One example is in our first reading from the prophet Joel. Here, the prophet announces deliverance from a plague of locusts, aggravated by a severe drought, which brought great destruction and loss of life to humans and animals alike. God has brought the people through this calamity and promises to compensate for the previous tragedy with great bounty from the land. Promising an abundance of rain, threshing floors full of grain, and vats overflowing with wine and oil. Because of this bounty, God declares, “You shall know that I am in the midst of Israel, and I, the Lord, am your God and there is no other.” While not explicitly stated, the implication being that the people are to offer thanksgiving in response.

 

The harvest bounty provided by God has and continues to be one of the most common symbols of any celebration of thanksgiving. Perhaps because it is most tangible: rejoicing and giving thanks for what we can see and touch, what we can smell and taste. The bounty from God’s creation which provides for our physical wellbeing. The same theme we see reflected in our Gospel reading from Matthew.  A reminder that God provides us with life and all that we need to sustain it. What we eat, what we drink, what we wear. As Matthew assures us, “indeed your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things.” Again, invoking our thanksgiving in response.

 

It is in our Epistle reading where we see an explicit injunction to express our thanksgiving in a formal way. In his First Letter to Timothy, Paul is counseling and encouraging his protégé Timothy as to orthodox teachings and appropriate practices for the community Timothy is leading. The words we hear today are instructions regarding prayer in communal worship. As we heard, one of the primary forms Paul identified as central to worship are prayers of thanksgiving. Emphasizing the centrality of thanksgiving in our worship and our lives of faith.

 

While not part of this letter, it is worth remembering that our primary worship services are inherently centered around a particular form of thanksgiving: the Eucharist. The word “Eucharist” literally means “thanksgiving.” Eucharist being a sacrament in which we express thanksgiving for God’s grace in all that has been provided for us. Particularly for the greatest gift: the gift of God’s Son come among us in the flesh. The means by which we have received and are assured of our salvation: the forgiveness of our sins and the promise of eternal life. Symbolized by elements from the bounty of nature: bread and wine. Which become Christ’s body and blood, given for us. The bread and wine that provide for our physical and spiritual nourishment. A foretaste of the heavenly banquet which we will all one day share.

 

Thus far, we have been focusing on the communal aspect of thanksgiving. On the annual feast that we will celebrate tomorrow. On the religious and liturgical aspects and expressions through our acts of public worship: this night and every time we gather as the Body of Christ. All of which are important, to be sure. All focused on the central act of offering our thanks to God for what we have received.

 

As we gather together this night, as we prepare to gather together around dinner tables tomorrow, we are reminded that thanksgiving is about more than just the physical “stuff” we receive from God. It is also about the relationships that nourish us in our day-to-day lives. While I am always grateful to and for the people in my life, and regularly offer prayers of gratitude for them, I am also aware that I do not always express that directly. Perhaps you find yourself in the same boat. Our celebration of Thanksgiving is an opportunity, a reminder, of the need to express gratitude for those in our lives.

 

In a recent reflection, Scott Stoner, an Episcopal priest, and his wife Holly Hughes Stoner, both licensed marriage and family therapists, provided a simple framework for reflecting on gratitude for the people in our lives. Not just at this time of year, but throughout our lives. A framework based on three words: find, remind, and bind. I found this framework to be a helpful reminder and offer it to you as a Thanksgiving gift. I now quote from their reflection:

 

Find: Seek out fresh reasons to be grateful for the people in your life—family, friends, colleagues, and even those fleeting encounters with strangers. There’s always something new to discover when we open our hearts to appreciation.

 

Remind: Once you uncover those moments of gratitude, don’t let them go unspoken. As William Arthur Ward wisely said, “Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it.” Remind others of how much they mean to you—not just for what they do, but for who they are. A kind word, a heartfelt note, or even a simple smile can make all the difference.

 

Bind: Gratitude isn’t just a feeling; it’s a force that strengthens the bonds between us. In a world woven together by interdependence, every act of appreciation reinforces the connections that hold us together.

 

So, as you navigate this season of thanks, keep these three words close to your heart: Find. Remind. Bind. They’re a gentle reminder that gratitude, when shared, has the power to uplift us all.[2]

 

Gratitude and thanksgiving are a central part of who we are as people of faith. In our crazy and hectic world, it is sometimes easy to forget that. It is easy to let life slip by without offering a word of gratitude, be it to God or to a fellow pilgrim on life’s journey. May our annual celebration of Thanksgiving be a reset, as it were, giving us the opportunity to recall who we are as people of thanksgiving, and to make the expression of our gratitude an ongoing part of who we are.

 

I offer my gratitude for each and every one of you and for all you do as members of the Body of Christ, and in your ministries at St. Thomas of Canterbury and at St. Gregory’s.

 

Happy Thanksgiving!

 

 



[1] “Thanksgiving,” Wikipedia, November 22, 2024. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanksgiving.

[2] Holly Hughes Stoner and Scott Stoner, “Find, Remind, and Bind,” November 22, 2024, The Wellness Compass Initiative, November 21, 2024. https://www.wellnesscompass.org/column.

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Sunday, December 01, 2024

Advent Time Travel

First Sunday of Advent (Year C)

Jeremiah 33.14-16; Luke 21.25-36

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

Live Streamed on Parish Facebook page (beginning at 1:35)

 

I am intrigued by the concept of time travel. Particularly the subtle nuances that could theoretically affect time. There are a variety of factors or potential paradoxes that are often explored in theoretical and science fiction writings about time travel. Perhaps the best known of these is the “grandfather paradox.” The concept that if someone were to travel back in time, they could do something, even inadvertently, that would change the timeline. The name derives from the concept that if someone were to go back in time and kill their own grandfather before he had any children, it would not be possible for that person to have been born. In which case, how could he have gone back in time in the first place. Thereby creating a mind-bending paradox.

 

As time goes on—pun intended—such concepts and nuances of time travel have been explored and expanded, both in theoretical physics, as well as the science fiction genre. And certainly, in the latter, resulting in increasingly clever explanations, variations, and even workarounds to time travel paradoxes. In all cases, proving to be mind-bending, if not mind-numbing, as one attempts to follow the twists and turns in logic needed to explain some of these ideas.

 

In many ways, the season of Advent we begin today has some similar qualities. A journey through time—past, present, and future—in ways we do not experience in other seasons of the Church year. The time we anticipate the first Advent of Jesus at his birth in Bethlehem. While, at the same time, anticipating the second Advent of Christ at the end of the ages—what we commonly refer to as the Second Coming. In one season, anticipating what has already occurred in the past and anticipating what is to come. The coming together of past and future.

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