Monday, November 28, 2016
Sunday, November 27, 2016
Advent Week 1- Global Advent Calendar
With
the commercial holiday season starting in October, you likely don’t need
an Advent calendar to remember that Christmas is coming. But since the 19th century,
Christians have been finding different ways to embrace the coming of Christ.
Advent calendars may now take on different meanings than they used to, but
their simple roots and history make for an excellent reminder of why Christians
used them in the first place: to celebrate the coming of Jesus.
Advent
is the four-week period before Christmas, beginning on the Sunday closest to
the Feast day of St. Andrew (nearest November 30) and ending on Christmas Eve.
The word Advent means “coming” or “arrival” and it is during this season that
the Christian church prepares for the birth of Jesus. As it is a four-week
“waiting” period, Advent symbolizes the spiritual journey of waiting that many
individuals, families, and congregations experience.
From
traditional candle and wreath calendars to Lego or chocolate calendars, there
is no shortage of ways to symbolize the coming of Jesus. The first Advent
calendar can be traced back to the 19thcentury; Lutherans in Germany
used to mark the days leading up to Christmas with chalk tally marks or even
light a candle each day. Some were known to hang up a new religious image each
day as well. Though there is dispute on when the first printed Advent
calendar was made, it is agreed upon that it is also a German tradition.
Most
modern Advent calendars usually begin on December 1 and end on December 24,
making it a Christmas countdown. And though many argue that modern Advent
calendars such as this Lego City one
lack any sort of religious connotation, there are plenty of ways that you can
celebrate Advent in a spiritual way and still have fun.
This
Advent season, sign up for Anglican Communion’s Global Advent Calendar and join millions across the
globe celebrating Advent. It's an excellent way to engage with people all
over the world as you wait with joy and love in your heart for the coming of
Christ.
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
Happy Thanksgiving
A thanksgiving message about laughter, stories, grace at meals, and the gratitude that shapes and transforms life. Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours.
Monday, November 21, 2016
Monday, November 14, 2016
God's Mission of Reconciliation
“Even as our attention is captured by the present, we know how to take a longer view.” – the Institute for the Future
Red or blue state, winner
or loser, many woke up last week wondering what the outcome of the presidential
election means for them, their community and for America as a nation. Analysts and
commentators didn’t miss a beat in the wee hours of Wednesday morning as they began
to offer their ideas and translations of the events that transpired less than
twenty-four hours before. I, too, woke up curious about the future. I found
myself listening to God and praying throughout the day.
Though there is still
much to process, what I am clear about is that despite the chaotic reaction to
the election, God’s kingdom is not of this world (see John 18:36). The work of the gospel was not changed on
Election Day, nor will it change in the coming weeks or months. Despite the
turmoil, the Episcopal Church will remain a Christian community committed to
spreading the gospel of Good News to all people.
We will continue to
proclaim that God has a mission of reconciliation with the world. This mission of
reconciliation is a gift to all people, and the Episcopal Church is part of
that mission. This is our work and it remains unchanged. We believe that God’s
mission is undertaken in collaboration with service and evangelism.
We believe a church reconciling
the world with the Gospel is made of both large and small Christian comminutes that
are supportive and willing to seek out partners and neighbors. This means that
we must begin to build collaborative partnerships to work on sustainability, and
we must seek to improve the intrinsic value of the lives of those who dwell in
our cities and in our country. People’s lives must be better tomorrow because
we are here serving as the Episcopal Church today. This grace-filled service is
meant for all people, without regard to societal designations of who is “in”
and who is “out”. Jesus pushed the boundaries by eating and drinking with
people that religion and society thought were unacceptable; the church must learn
to do the same.
We also believe that an ever
expanding and growing web of Christian communities of every size is essential
to the work of reconciliation and service. To be a part of what God is doing, we
must grow our communities within the contexts that surround us. We must seek to
sow, plant, reap and harvest communities of every kind so that there are new and
multiplying opportunities in which people may come together to share and
participate in the love of God. In a world where people are only recognized and
accepted for what they can contribute, our Episcopal communities must be places
where all people are welcome and recognized as made in the image of God.
All of this will be supported
by our commitment to the work of God; the physical giving of ourselves over to
God’s mission in body, mind and soul. There are not half measures and there is no
passive citizenship among the baptized. We look for ways we can use our God-given
gifts for the work of ministry. We pray and discern how best to give our time
and energy to the work that is before us. We support the work by making
financial commitments based on the blessings that we have received.
We must continuously
remind ourselves that God’s kingdom, God’s reign and God’s power are not of
this world. Where the voices of the establishment tell you that you must earn
God’s love and God’s generosity, the Christian community proclaims a Gospel
that says categorically, “NO.” God’s grace is free and cannot be purchased by the
individual’s goodness, devotion, loyalty or hard work. Grace is always freely given
as a gift.
In every season, the
church’s mission continues as it has from the time that God’s winds moved over
the waters of creation. From the beginning of time, God’s people have been
called to work on behalf of a God who led the people out of Egypt. God is a god
of our forefathers, who brings release to the captives, who journeys with
people in their wilderness leading them to green pastures. This mission will
always be supported by those who believe that God came into the world in order
that the world might be saved. “For God did not send his Son into the
world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him” (John 3:17). God invites us to love each other as family and to
serve hand-in-hand, giving of ourselves and in response to God’s love, mercy
and forgiveness.
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Thoughts on the 2016 Presidential Election
Bishop Doyle's Thoughts on Election Day from The Episcopal Diocese of Texas on Vimeo.
“If we
who are Christians participate in the political process and in the public
discourse as we are called to do — the New Testament tells us that we are to
participate in the life of the polis, in the life of our society — the
principle on which Christians must vote is the principle, Does this look like
love of neighbor?" – Presiding Bishop Michael Curry, March 2016
Today we elect the 45th president of the United States. After a long and grueling campaign, many of us are eager for this election to be over. The past few months have been filled with anger, blame, and fear, not to mention a fair amount of hostility. Many say that this particular election has divided us more than any election in recent United States history. I suspect this interpretation of the current state of our union has things backwards. My sense is that this election has not created division. It has revealed deep divisions that have lain dormant beneath the surface of American life.
Today we elect the 45th president of the United States. After a long and grueling campaign, many of us are eager for this election to be over. The past few months have been filled with anger, blame, and fear, not to mention a fair amount of hostility. Many say that this particular election has divided us more than any election in recent United States history. I suspect this interpretation of the current state of our union has things backwards. My sense is that this election has not created division. It has revealed deep divisions that have lain dormant beneath the surface of American life.
When
an 18-wheeler passes over a bridge and leaves cracks in its wake, we don’t
blame the truck. The truck reveals a structural unsoundness already present in
the bridge. The current presidential election has been an 18-wheeler driven
over the bridge of American social and political life. It has revealed deep
cracks in our community, and it has exposed our deep need for healing and
reconciliation at the social and political level.
As
a Bishop in the church, I can only make sense of this election in light of the
doctrine of reconciliation. As Christians, we believe that God has already
reconciled all people, parties, and potential presidents to Himself in Jesus
Christ. We understand reconciliation as a past tense event that informs present
tense action as we embody a future tense hope. When viewed from eternity, “It
is finished” (Jn 19:30).
Yet
as we look upon the newly obvious cracks in our social and political life, we
know that even as God’s work is finished that our work is not. In other words, we cannot simply talk about
reconciliation. God invites us to embody now what will be in God’s Future
Kingdom as we work for the common good and strive to seek and serve Christ in
all persons.
Reconciliation
is not just an idea or an important theological doctrine. It is something that
God wants to be a felt reality on earth. This means that real racial, social,
and economic reform is needed. If this election tells us anything, it is that
many people feel disenfranchised, forgotten, lied to, and left behind. An “us
versus them” mentality infuses our political speech and our actions. We are a
polarized nation, and our desire to win is often exceeded only by a much
stronger desire to see our enemies lose. We may narrate the current social
divide a bit differently, but few deny that such a divide exists. In a recent
op-ed piece, David Brooks puts it like this:
The
crucial social divide today is between those who feel the core trends of the
global, information-age economy as tailwinds at their backs and those who feel
them as headwinds in their face. That is to say, the most important social
divide today is between a well-educated America that is marked by economic
openness, traditional family structures, high social capital and high trust in
institutions, and a less-educated America that is marked by economic
insecurity, anarchic family structures, fraying community bonds and a pervasive
sense of betrayal and distrust. These two groups live in entirely different
universes. [1]
The work of reconciliation always begins
with a commitment to the truth, and the truth is that many of us are living in
entirely different universes. We are not listening to one another or giving
people the benefit of the doubt, nor do we feel compassion for the deep pain
and grief that always gives rise to people’s anger.
We may not know who will be elected
president today, but we sense that a time of healing and reconciliation will be
necessary regardless of the results of this election. If healing is to happen,
God’s people must be committed to the work of making peace. “Blessed are the
peacemakers,” Jesus said, “for they shall be called children of God” (Matt
5:9). Our commitment to peace must rest on the deep Biblical truth of our
interconnectedness and our interdependence as we acknowledge that our common
good is bound up together. To win at the expense of another is always to lose,
for “when one part suffers, every part suffers with it” (1 Cor 12:26).
As Christians, we believe in a God who
has emptied himself in sacrificial love so “that he might create in himself one
new humanity in place of the two, thus making peace, and might reconcile both
groups to God in one body through the cross, thus putting to death that
hostility through it” (Eph 2: 15-16).
My deep prayer is that the people of God act
as agents of God’s reconciling peace-making in the aftermath of this election.
I pray that we work for racial, social, and economic reform in such a way that
engages our political process with integrity, but also in such a way that we do
not rely on that same process to heal our deep wounds.
I
understand that many of us are deeply invested in the results of this election.
We feel that much is at stake, and if we are honest we want “our side” to win.
In light of this very human desire to win, I am humbled and challenged by a
Lord who talked so much about losing. I hear Jesus asking me to lose my
attachments, my petty desires, my simplistic solutions, my political identity,
and my very life to make peace and love my neighbor. I hear Jesus reminding me
that the neighbor I am invited to love is often one I too quickly call an enemy
and that the Samaritan is actually my brother. Above all, I hear Jesus remind
me that reconciliation is an accomplished fact where all sides have come
together under His Lordship, and I hear Him pleading with me to embody and
share that same message with others.
My
prayers are with you on this Election Day, and on the day after, and they are
with our nation. Cast your vote with hope and integrity and humility. Above all
else remember that today marks not the end of our work as a nation and a
church, but the only beginning. Let us pray:
Almighty God, to whom we must account for all our powers and privileges: Guide
the people of the United States (or of this community) in the election of officials and representatives;
that, by faithful administration and wise laws,
the rights of all may be protected and
our nation be enabled to fulfill your purposes;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(Book
of Common Prayer, Page 822)