Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas collect

Almighty God, you have given your only-begotten Son to take our nature upon him, and to be born [this day] of a pure virgin: Grant that we, who have been born again and made your children by adoption and grace, may daily be renewed by your Holy Spirit; through our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom with you and the same Spirit be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.

I wonder as I wander - St. Martin in the Fields, Philadelphia

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Monday, December 12, 2011

Disturb us, Lord



Disturb us, Lord, 
when we are too well pleased with ourselves,
when our dreams have come true
because we have dreamed too little,
when we arrived safely
because we sailed too close to the shore.

- Sir Francis Drake

Sunday, December 11, 2011

"May the God of peace sanctify you entirely" - Sermon for Advent 3 - The Rev. Peter M. Carey




The Rev. Peter M. Carey
Sermon preached at Emmanuel Episcopal Church 
Greenwood, VA
Advent 3, December 2011

“May the God of peace himself sanctify you entirely.”

Are we ready to have our life stirred up? Are we ready for transformation?  Are we ready to prepare the way of the Lord?

Sometimes we think that we are not really ready for Advent and this is why we rush to Christmas.  However, Advent has great gifts for us. 

We would be missing out if we rushed the ending.  You see, Advent has these wonderfully challenging readings.  Today, we begin with this most excellent Collect of the day, “stir up your power.”  Are we really ready for God to stir things up?  Are we feeling relatively secure with the way that we have things brewing and simmering on our own stovetops?  Are we ready for the great master chef to enter into our world and start stirring up things in new ways, putting spices in our bland soups, heating up our lukewarm entrees, and throwing us into momentary spiritual turmoil?  Probably not.

God enters into this world at points through the voice of the prophets, who definitely stir things up.  Isaiah appears and is anointed by God, to bring “good news to the oppressed,” “release to the captives,” “comforting all who mourn” “repairing ruined cities.”  This would stir things up, good news to the poorest of the poor – which might mean that those of us who are not the poorest of the poor may have to give up some of our material goods, some of our myth of security.  Release to the captives would mean that those we consider to be guilty would need to be not only forgiven, but reenter society. 

How does this stir it up stuff sound to you?  Isaiah also shouts praises to God, and has become fully enmeshed in God’s presence, in God’s glory, in God’s hope.  “My whole being will exult in my God,” and I will be wearing garments of salvation, and a robe of righteousness!  What if the stirring up that God is doing will enable even us, in our somewhat placid and bland and lukewarm lives, to be spicier, to be heated up, and to be thrust into spiritual turmoil, but with the reward that “our whole beings will exult in God!”  I want some of that cooking, how about you?

“Those who sowed with tears will reap with songs of joy!”

“Those who go out weeping, carrying the seed, will come again with joy, shouldering their sheaves.” 

How wonderful is this?  How crazy are these words, written so long ago, and inscribed in millions of Bibles around the world.  Those who sowed with tears, who planted while in mourning, who bent low to prepare the ground and put seeds into the earth, watering the seeds with their salty tears…these same folks will receive the fruits of these seeds and sing with Joy!  How could this be?  How does this God turn salty tears and small mustard seeds into great great trees of life.  How does this God turn our tears into Joy.  How does this God transform our weeping into song?

It is not ours to know the how.  But we do know the who. God does it.  As Paul wrote to the Thessalonians, “Rejoice always,” and how difficult this is, when we are sowing with tears, when we are going out weeping.  But Paul, no stranger to punishment, jail, and loneliness, claims “rejoice always”…”pray without ceasing” “give thanks”…”hold fast to what is good.”  And then he recognizes what might happen when God stirs things up.  He recognizes what happens to us when God enters into this world; even amidst our tears and weeping, even admidst our disappointment and loneliness. 

Like Isaiah, Paul believes that the entirety of our selves will become filled with God’s love.  Our entire selves, our minds, our souls, our bodies, our brains, our fingernails, our aching backs, our thinning hair, our weakening eyesight, all of it will be filled with God’s Spirit.  Paul prays, “May the God of peace himself sanctify you entirely.”  This is the kind of stirring up that I can handle, even if the pots on my stove are going to be disturbed.  Perhaps I need some disturbing.  Perhaps I need some spice in the bland soup.  Perhaps I need my entrees warmed up.  Perhaps I need a whole new diet.  God will do it.  This is what “stir it up” Sunday is all about.  “The one who calls you is faithful, and he will do this.”

Almighty and eternal God, so draw our hearts to you, so guide our minds, so fill our imaginations, so control our wills, that we may be wholly yours, utterly dedicated unto you; and then use us, we pray you, as you will, and always to your glory and the welfare of your people; through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Remembering Merton ~ December 10, 1968



Thomas Merton's work and life became known to me at an important point in my own journey of faith. I have much to say about him and love so much of his work. I will blog more about him soon, but right now I am remembering this wonderful person who helped me to see some hidden richness in the tradition that is Christianity. Remembering him today with love and fondness.

~ The Rev. Peter M. Carey






Thomas Merton - Dec 10 - "we are not converted only once"






"We are not converted only once in our lives but many times. 
And it is this endless series of upheavals, large and small, 
which leads to our transformation in Christ." - Thomas Merton










































Whatever will be, will be





Caught by our own thoughts, 
we worry about everything.
But once we get drunk on that Love
Whatever will be, will be.
Rumi ♥

Thursday, December 01, 2011

Advent – Putting on the armor of light




With the arrival of December 1st, we are now into the first week of Advent.  It is a time of busy-ness all around us.  Families gathering, shopping to do, decorating, an increase in social obligations, work parties, community parties, school parties – is this true for you as well?  It is also a time of increasing darkness as we move toward the shortest days of the year just before Christmas breaks in with all of its light and life. 

With all this busy-ness, and all of this activity, we may feel bombarded with “to do” lists, and also with the sense that there is a disconnect between the spirituality of Advent and the reality of the “holiday season.”

A helpful balm in the midst of this busy time is our Collect for the first Sunday of Advent.  Some of you might have missed hearing the Collect if you were away for the Sunday just after Thanksgiving, but it is perhaps my favorite Collect of the entire church year:

Almighty God, give us grace to cast away the works of darkness, and put on the armor of light, now in the time of this mortal life in which your Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility; that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious majesty to judge both the living and the dead, we may rise to the life immortal; through him who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

We pray that in this time of Advent that we would “cast away the works of darkness,” that, even in this busy time, with all the temptations to be “of the world,” we know that God is giving us grace.  In this time, we know that God is empowering us to find time to reflect, to ponder as Mary did, to seek to go deep, and also to remember God in the midst of the blitz of the holiday shopping season.

We pray that we would put on “the armor of light,” which is a fascinating image, one in which we use our own deep hope and joy to create a physical protection around ourselves.  However, this protection is not merely defensive, rather, like light itself, it fills the world with the light of Christ.  If you have read Harry Potter, this is something like (in my thinking) the notion of a patronus, which is a figure of light and life which emerges from our own positive thoughts of joy and hope.  This patronus or armor of light casts away the works of darkness, and all the things of this world which can steal away our hope and joy and love.

And so, I pray that even in the midst of the increasing darkness of these days, we all might find new ways to “put on an armor of light,” or (if you like) to push out our own patronuses into the world, projecting light, and hope and joy and peace and love into a world that is in such desperate need of them.  As we walk the ways of Advent, we prepare for the coming of the one true light, and we do not walk alone, for our armor is not merely protection for us, but is projected outward, and together we will fill even the darkest places with the light that God has provided.

Peter+