Dean Brian Baker's Blog » Archive of 'Jan, 2010'

Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing

I am way behind in blogging.  Time for a little catch-up.

Last week, Kirstin Paisley, a member of Trinity who works with our homeless ministry was in our Thursday night Catechumenate class, where they study the upcoming Gospel reading.  They looked at the text from Luke’s 4th chapter, where Jesus goes into the synagogue, opens the scroll from Isaiah and reads, ‘The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”   Jesus then rolls up the scroll and says, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”

Friday night Kirstin welcomed 120 homeless people into the Great Hall, helped feed them dinner and gave them a warm, safe place to sleep.  Throughout the night, that last sentence from Jesus kept resonating for her.   As she was eating and resting in safe community she realized that it indeed is being fulfilled.  She wrote a beautiful reflection that’s posted on Trinity’s Crosstalk Blog.  I commend the entire piece.  Here’s an excerpt:

This is easy.  It’s joyful and loving and wonderful.  This is just fun.  And sometimes it breaks my heart.

Wednesday at breakfast, I was passing out napkins at the front of the line.  I wasn’t even fully awake yet.  I was rolling spoons inside of napkins, offering them, and saying hi, or asking how someone slept; that sort of thing.  Without the slightest bit of consciousness of how my behavior might affect anybody.

I gave someone a spoon and a napkin.  I have no idea what I said to him.  He asked me, “Why are you always so nice to us?”

I answered with the first thing that came to my head:  “Because we’re all human beings.  And because you guys deserve it.”  I was thinking, “My God, what did you expect me to be?”

That’s what it does to someone’s soul when everywhere they go, they’re trespassing.

The homeless people that we host come here because they know that they can.  They know that we will welcome them.  We offer them food, company, community.  We invite them into church—we explicitly do not compel them.  They are free to be themselves here.  We laugh with them.  We listen to them.  We love them.  And they love us.

“Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”

On these cold, wet nights, “inbreaking” is too weak a word.  Time and time and time again, we witness the reign of God crashing into the space we walk around in.  There is so much love here.

Sacramento Bee Article on Trinity’s Homeless Ministry

Jennifer Garza visited our new homeless ministry on Monday night.  We have started feeding and housing up to 120 (so far) homeless people when it gets wet or cold.  There are lots of people with no place to go, and when it is raining or cold, it is not only uncomfortable, it is dangerous.  A group of Trinity folks decided to partner with the “safe ground” movement and open our parish hall.  We don’t have any authorization to be a “shelter” and we don’t want to adversely impact our neighbors, so we don’t do this more than two nights in a row.  We are working on getting other churches to partner with us so there is a place for people to go on other nights.  I’ve posted the first paragraphs of Jennifer’s article.  The full article is HERE.

The homeless people who walk through the doors of Trinity Cathedral in midtownSacramento have faith in the church, the only one in the area to offer them a hot meal and a roof over their heads.

Since mid-December, the homeless have escaped the wet and cold for a warm sleeping bag on the floor of the church hall twice a week. A slice of heaven on earth, said one.

“You have no idea how much that means,” saidRonnie Holiday, who has been on the streets for years. “They’re going to be blessed for doing this, I’ll tell you that.”

No other church runs a program like the one atTrinity Cathedral, homeless advocates said.

Read the entire article HERE.

Thriving L.A. Church compared to Church of England

Lucy Broadbent compares her homeland’s Church of England to the progressive parish she now eagerly attends in L.A. in an article published in London’s The Times.  It is an upbeat article about a parish getting things right.  Here’s the beginning of the article:

It’s not that I am especially pious. Believe me, I was mostly praying for cashmere this Christmas. As the old joke goes: Am I religious? No, I’m Church of England. But I have a confession to make: I do go to church, and not just at Christmas either. I go all the time. Even on weekdays sometimes.

I’m aware that such an admission is rather like owning up to being a trainspotter these days, but then I don’t have to put up with the desolate aisles and empty pews that most of you have become familiar with in Britain — where the best that can be hoped for on a Sunday is a faint whiff of incense and three old ladies and a homeless person singing watery hymns.

According to a report published tomorrow there is a sharp decline in religious belief in Britain. Half the population now calls itself Christian, down from two thirds in 1983. At the same time, the proportion who confess to “no religion” has increased from just under a third to more than four in ten. If Jews and Muslims are included, non-Christians now represent 7 per cent of the population, up from 2 per cent 25 years ago.

I hate to sound as if I’m boasting, but at the Anglican church my family attends in Los Angeles, you have to go early if you want a seat. Rather like being at a football match when your team has just won, the sheer numbers alone leave you with a spring in your step and a song on your lips.

St James Church, which sits at the intersection of an affluent middle-class neighbourhood, and many poorer communities in LA, is an Episcopal Church, that is the American equivalent of the Church of England. But, unlike its British cousins, it is packed because it goes out of its way to create a community in a big, sprawling city. There’s a supper club on Wednesday nights, set up with the intention of giving mums a night off, and a chance for families to make friends.

You can find the entire article HERE.

Sister Libby’s 1/17 Sermon

Update from Haiti

From Episcopal News Service

Rejecting offers to evacuate him from Port-au-Prince, Episcopal Diocese of Haiti Bishop Jean Zaché Duracin said Jan. 18 that he must remain in the Haitian capital.

“No, I will stay with my people,” the Rev. Lauren Stanley, one of four Episcopal Church missionaries assigned to the Haitian diocese, told ENS the bishop said in response to the evacuation offer.

Stanley was home in Virginia when the magnitude 7.0 earthquake struck just before 5:00 p.m. local time Jan. 12 and has been monitoring diocesan reports from there.

“The people are strong,” Duracin told Stanley, echoing messages she has received from other priests. “We still have our people, and they are strong. We need to help them.”

Another Episcopal Church missionary, the Rev. Canon Oge Beauvoir, the dean of the diocese’s seminary, is still in Haiti and working with Duracin. Mallory Holding, 23, and Jude Harmon, 28, two Young Adult Service Corps missionaries, left the country late last week.

Duracin, who was made homeless by the quake, said he is caring for 3,000 other homeless victims of the quake in a tent city in downtown Port-au-Prince. More than 100 of the diocese’s churches have been damaged or destroyed, he said, including the demolished Cathédrale Sainte Trinité (Holy Trinity Cathedral) in Port-au-Prince. At least four of the diocese’s 254 schools, ranging from pre-schools to a university and seminary, were destroyed.

Read it all HERE.

Haiti & Episcopal Relief and Development

Haiti is a diocese of the Episcopal Church.   Consequently, we have close connections with folks in Haiti.  Episcopal Relief and Development (ERD) has been working in Haiti for years.   They have some information about what’s going on in Haiti on their website.    On the bottom of the page is a link to  a video statement from presiding bishop Katherine Jefferts Schori.

Her statement is a strong contrast to the ridiculous statement from Pat Robertson.    It’s the “true story” emphasis he has right after telling of the pact the Haitians made w/ the devil that gets me.    [I apologize if Pat's statement is old news.  I have been at a Diocesan Council retreat so I'm just getting caught up.]

If you want to donate to ERD’s fund for Haiti, click HERE.

Baptism Sermon 1/10/10

“It’s My First Day Being Homeless”

Here’s another beautiful reflection from Kirsten Paisley, who is one of our faithful volunteers when we feed and house about 100 homeless folks in our parish hall.   You can find the entire post at Trinity Cathedral’s Crosstalk Blog

I’ve been meaning to tell this story for awhile; I haven’t had time until now.  It happened last Wednesday afternoon.

People were just arriving.  I went outside to make sure that the smokers were set up with their ash-can.  (We don’t normally allow smoking on the premises, except for overnight guests.)  I was walking through the solarium, when someone walked up behind me.  I’d never seen him before.  He looked well-kempt; I didn’t think anything of it.  I said hi.  He introduced himself.  Then he asked me,

“Do you have any programs to help people?”

“What do you need?”

“It’s my first day homeless.”

Oh.  My heart about fell out of my chest.

I asked him if he knew about Loaves and Fishes.  He did.  I was still racking my brain.  I said, “Okay, good.  Hmm.  I’ll find out.  Come with me.”

I knew there would be people on the front steps, smoking and hanging out.  There were.  I said, “Hi, I’m just making sure you guys are set up.  And, this is R___.  It’s his first day.”

They welcomed him immediately.  I slipped back inside.  I didn’t realize that I had just done the most helpful thing I could for him.  I didn’t think I knew how to help.  And so I found Kathleen.

“There’s a guy outside that I want you to meet.  It’s his first day homeless.  You’ll be way better than me.  I don’t know what to tell him.”

“What do you mean?”

“Resources.  I don’t know what’s here.”

She got a Street Sheet, and marked it with a highlighter while she talked to me.  And she said, “They’ll know more than we will.”

I went back outside, armed with an actual tangible list of resources.  And I found him, sitting on the front steps, surrounded by five or six old-timers who were giving him advice.  One of the locally famous had ridden up on his bicycle.  He was counseling him about what programs he might be eligible for, being so newly on the streets.  Someone else, homeless himself for the third time, told him, “It’ll be easier for you because you’re new.  There are more ways they can help you.”

I sat next to him on the steps, and gave him my Street Sheet, which they’d clearly told him about.  And I listened to everyone else.

They had completely taken him under their wings.  He still had the lost, anxious look in his eyes.  He still wasn’t able to laugh.  But they were telling him all the ways that he was not beyond help.  They were homeless themselves, and didn’t have any more material wealth than he did.  But they were doing what they could, to make sure he’d be okay.  Telling him that he could camp with them.  And reminding him that he was there tonight, and safe.

I said to him, “You fell in with the right crowd.”  And I went back inside, leaving him in the best hands possible.

This is what community is.  These people have nothing tangible.  They couldn’t give him a house.  But they had experience.  And they shared it.  I can’t imagine being as lost as he was—which is why I felt so helpless.  But they could.  They’d been there.  Each of them had had a first day, when their sense of safety unbuckled and fell off.  They had each had a first night, when they didn’t know where they might sleep.  They couldn’t rewind the clock, for this man.  But they could, and did, walk through this evening with him.

Come.  See the graces that I get to see.  Steve Skiffington coordinates shelter nights.  Contact him.  Help cook dinner, meet people, get to know them.  You don’t need any special skills.  Don’t worry that you might feel as clueless as I did last Wednesday.  And don’t be afraid that you won’t know how to start a conversation.  “Hi!  How are you doing today?”, is as good a start as any.

There’s more.  You can find it HERE.

This Sunday: Baptism

This coming Sunday we remember the Baptism of Jesus.  At Trinity we will also be baptizing a few people into Christ’s body.  Sarah Dylan Breuer has written a very good reflection on the gospel reading this Sunday from Luke’s gospel.  I’ve excerpted a portion.   I commend the entire reflection.

On some level, I think that we all know that the world as our worldly powers have ordered it is not working, is not giving the human family abundant life as we were created and still ache for.

And I believe this is part of the Good News of our Baptism. If some part of you believes that the world as it is on the front page of the newspaper is not the world as it was meant to be, you’re not crazy and you’re not just a starry-eyed idealist; you are feeling God’s call in Baptism. If some part of you wants something more than the chance to achieve enough to feel pressured to achieve more or to defend what you thought you won, you’re not just greedy or lazy or odd; you’re feeling God’s call in Baptism. And if you feel at times that the world and the life you’re aching for is more than you could bring into being by your own achievement, even if you wanted it only for yourself and those you care about (and who can restrict caring to just a few?), you haven’t run into the thing that makes the dream impossible; you just might be hearing the call of Baptism.

Paul: Justification by faith OR works

There’s an interesting article I found on Religion Dispatches by Pamela Eisenbaum  that posits that when Paul wrote about “justification by faith” he was speaking specifically to Gentiles, not Jews.    It has been commonly understood that when Paul wrote about justification by faith, he was replacing the Jewish system of Torah observance with a new way of being religious.  Justification comes through “faith” not “works.”  But this article suggests that Paul wasn’t changing or critiquing Judaism.  He was rather presenting a way for gentiles to be justified (by faith) that was just as valid as the Jewish way (by works.)

Since Christianity was originally a sect of Judaism, there were Jews who expected Gentiles to obey the Jewish laws, to basically become observant Jews, in order to become Christians.   According to this article, Paul was saying, “No. Jews are justified by Torah observance but Gentiles are justified by faith in Jesus.”   Paul wasn’t replacing the Torah observance of Judaism — in fact Paul continued his own pious Torah observance.   Rather, Paul was presenting a different religious system for Gentiles that would graft them into the family of God.

I now want to read Paul more carefully to see how this plays out, but it seems plausible, and intriguing.

Here’s the article:

In recent years, a rather animated conversation has been taking place about the apostle Paul. This conversation has largely been between those who identify with what is commonly known as “the New Perspective on Paul,” and those who wish to defend a more traditional understanding of the apostle. I can’t say for sure which side is winning the debate, but some of us who were initially inspired by the New Perspective on Paul have decided that it has not gone far enough—and want to push it even further.

The debate about Paul has to do with how one understands his mission and message, particularly what he meant by his famous dictum that one is “justified by faith.” According to the traditional view, which was established by Augustine in the early fifth century and developed more fully by Luther in the sixteenth, “justification by faith” refers to the belief that one cannot be saved by God through one’s deeds or “works.” Instead, one must be saved by “faith,” specifically faith in Jesus.

Religion predicated on salvation by “works” is represented by Judaism. Within this paradigm, Judaism and Christianity are antithetical religions, with Judaism being the bad and most primitive kind and Christianity being the good and most evolved form. Thus, built into the supposedly Pauline idea of “justification by faith” is an implicit anti-Judaism—a big problem for the Protestant theology that is founded on this reading.

The New Perspective emerged largely to address this issue. In contrast to the traditional interpretation, this new reading argues that Paul never meant the phrase “justification by faith” to be taken as a general theological principle about personal salvation. Rather it had to do with the relationship between Jews and Gentiles. Paul’s condemnations of “justification by works” were condemnations of Jewish Jesus-followers who saw the special laws of Torah observance (Sabbath, dietary laws) in elitist and exclusivist terms, and who were trying to impose those laws on Gentile Jesus-followers as a condition for membership in the Christian community. Paul’s argument with them was that Gentiles did not need to turn themselves into Jews in order to enjoy divine favor. The death and resurrection of Jesus had broken down the barriers that Jewish law had created between Jews and Gentiles.

No Beef with Judaism

Both the traditional and New Perspective views still see Paul as having some sort of issue with Judaism—Jews are portrayed as using the observance of Torah to keep people out of their elite club. The new, radical reading, by contrast, takes as its foundation that Paul remained fundamentally Jewish throughout his life (both ethnically and religiously) and had no “beef” with Judaism at all. “Justification by faith” in this scenario does not constitute a critique of Torah observance in general. Rather it is a critique of Gentileobservance of Torah in particular. In no way does Paul condemn Judaism, and he certainly does not construct Judaism and Christianity as antithetical religions. His letters were written to a Gentile audience, and if there is any condemnation of religious practice to be found in the apostle’s writings, it is the idolatry of Gentiles, not the observance of Torah by Jews!

Paul makes it absolutely clear that his message was to Gentiles. In Galatians 1:16 Paul explicitly says that God called him in order that he “might proclaim him among the Gentiles… .” Paul’s teaching about “justification by faith” (which in any case does not constitute the core of Paul’s message) meant that Gentiles were not accountable to God for their lack of Torah observance. To Paul the death and resurrection of Jesus signaled the end of the age; as a result, Paul became concerned about the fate of Gentiles. The prophets had predicted that all the nations would come streaming to Jerusalem to worship the one God, and Paul’s mission was to turn all the Gentiles to God before the world ended.

The traditional view of Paul portrays the apostle as converting from Judaism to Christianity and in that process converting from a narrow, spiritually hollow, and xenophobic form of religion to one of grace, faith, and openness. From a Jewish perspective, however, the understanding of Paul’s proclamation of Jesus as the only way to salvation hardly makes Christianity a religion of openness. Thus the debate over how to interpret Paul is more than academic. If the newer reading of Paul gains widespread credibility, it has the potential to transform some key aspects of Christian theology and to rid Christianity of its residual anti-Semitism.

Jesus Saves, But He Only Saves Gentiles

Ironically, the more Jewish Paul is deemed to be, and the more we read him within his own historical context, the less parochial his message becomes. Because Paul preached exclusively to Gentiles, we know his message was intended for specific people, namely, for the Gentiles, not for all human beings. This means Jesus is not the universal means to salvation. Jesus saves, but he only saves Gentiles. Paul wasn’t worried about Jews—they were taken care of because they had an eternal covenant with God in the Torah.

Granted “Gentiles” is a big category, and Paul’s categorization of Jews and Gentiles is a rather simplified way of looking at the world. Nevertheless, Paul’s retention of the categories of “Jews” and “Gentiles” constitutes a vision of redemption in which human difference remains even at the culmination of history. He envisions all the various nations coming together to dwell in the new creation as children of God, but they are included in their variety as different peoples.

When Paul says “all Israel will be saved,” he doesn’t mean that all Israel will convert to Christianity—Christianity as a religion hadn’t even been invented yet anyway. He means all Jews and Gentiles will be part of the family of God.

They will be related but they will not be the same.

Although it may seem simplistic, I believe Paul’s message is conducive to thinking about religious pluralism, which is certainly one of the most critical issues facing us today. To be sure, Paul did not anticipate the religiously complex world in which we live. His view was too simplistic to be adopted as is; it will require more theological reflection and development. But an understanding of redemption that envisions people coming together while maintaining their differences is certainly inspiring, and that the second most important person in the history of Christianity articulated this vision of redemption offers Christians an authoritative resource for thinking about religious pluralism.

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