Thursday, February 15, 2018

How Long O Lord?




The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world that it leaves to its children.
                                                                                                                                ~Dietrich Bonhoeffer

In the wake of yet another mass shooting, I’ve heard many folks of good faith saying that we need to have a “national conversation” concerning the proliferation of guns – specifically the easy availability of assault rifles in our country.  Conversations are all well and good, but we need to know with whom to have these conversations. 

With the help of the Center for Responsive Politics and figures provided by the Federal Election Commission as of May 16, 2017, I’ve put together a list of elected leaders on both sides of the political aisle who received campaign contributions indirectly from the National Rifle Association through PACs, their individual members, or employees or owners, and those individuals’ immediate families.

Perhaps our conversations should start here with phone calls and handwritten letters to those elected to represent us saying we’ve had enough; saying that what we do to the least of these, we do to Christ;  We can have all the conversations we want, but until elected officials hear from us, our conversations are in vain.  How many more children have to die by assault rifles before we take our “thoughts and prayers” and put them into actions and policies?

By the way, the monies listed below do not include the millions of dollars spent by the NRA to defeat those who advocate for background checks and the outlawing of military grade assault weapons.  According to the Center for Responsive Politics, since 1990 Political Action Committees associated with the National Rifle Association have given over $20 million to political campaigns of both parties.  This is madness; and it has to stop.  As people of faith we must take a stand.  How can we do anything less?

Blunt, Roy (R-MO) Senate$11,900
Comstock, Barbara (R-VA) House$10,400
Burr, Richard (R-NC) Senate$9,900
Coffman, Mike (R-CO) House$9,900
Grassley, Chuck (R-IA) Senate$9,900
Guinta, Frank (R-NH) House$9,900
Hardy, Cresent (R-NV) House$9,900
Hurd, Will (R-TX) House $9,900
Katko, John (R-NY) House $9,900
Mills, Stewart (R-MN) House $9,900
Paul, Rand (R-KY) Senate $9,900
Poliquin, Bruce (R-ME) House $9,900
Portman, Rob (R-OH) Senate$9,900
Rubio, Marco (R-FL) Senate$9,900
Zeldin, Lee (R-NY) House$9,900
Heck, Joe (R-NV) House$8,900
Hoeven, John (R-ND) Senate$8,450
Isakson, Johnny (R-GA) Senate$8,450
Blum, Rod (R-IA) House$7,450
Goodlatte, Bob (R-VA) House$7,450
Johnson, Ron (R-WI) Senate$7,450
Young, Don (R-AK) House$6,950
McSally, Martha (R-AZ) House$6,500
Ayotte, Kelly (R-NH) Senate$5,950
Boozman, John (R-AR) Senate$5,950
Culberson, John (R-TX) House$5,950
Faso, John (R-NY) House$5,950
Garrett, Scott (R-NJ) House$5,950
Ryan, Paul (R-WI) House$5,950
Shuster, Bill (R-PA) House $5,950
Smucker, Lloyd (R-PA) House $5,950
Tenney, Claudia (R-NY) House $5,950
Young, Todd (R-IN) House $5,950
Cole, Tom (R-OK) House $5,000
Lankford, James (R-OK) Senate$5,000
Thune, John (R-SD) Senate$5,000
Bacon, Donald John (R-NE) House$4,950
Bergman, John (R-MI) House$4,950
Boehner, John (R-OH) House$4,950
Boustany, Charles Jr (R-LA) House$4,950
Comer, James (R-KY) House$4,950
Crapo, Mike (R-ID) Senate$4,950
Gallagher, Mike (R-WI) House$4,950
Hudson, Richard (R-NC) House$4,950
Kennedy, John (R-LA) Senate$4,950
Mast, Brian (R-FL) House$4,950
Mullin, Markwayne (R-OK) House$4,950
Scalise, Steve (R-LA) House$4,950
Shelby, Richard C (R-AL) Senate$4,950
Smith, Lamar (R-TX) House$4,950
Tarkanian, Danny (R-NV )House$4,950
Vitter, David (R-LA) Senate$4,950
Young, David (R-IA) House$4,950
Calvert, Ken (R-CA) House$4,500
Murkowski, Lisa (R-AK) Senate$4,500
Scott, Tim (R-SC) Senate$4,500
Bishop, Rob (R-UT) House$4,000
Dent, Charlie (R-PA) House$4,000
Loudermilk, Barry (R-GA) House$4,000
McHenry, Patrick (R-NC) House$4,000
Mica, John L (R-FL) House$4,000
Walberg, Tim (R-MI) House$4,000
Yoder, Kevin (R-KS) House$4,000
Zinke, Ryan K (R-MT) House$4,000
Aderholt, Robert B (R-AL) House$3,500
Bishop, Sanford (D-GA) House$3,500
Chabot, Paul (R-CA) House$3,500
Joyce, David P (R-OH) House$3,500
Lewis, Jason (R-MN) House$3,500
McCaul, Michael (R-TX) House$3,500
Nunes, Devin (R-CA) House$3,500
Olson, Pete (R-TX) House$3,500
Taylor, Scott W (R-VA) House$3,500
Tipton, Scott (R-CO) House$3,500
Valadao, David (R-CA) House$3,500
Bishop, Sanford (D-Ga) House $3,500
Budd, Ted (R-NC) House$3,000
Cook, Paul (R-CA) House$3,000
Cuellar, Henry (D-TX) House$3,000
Duncan, Jeff (R-SC) House$3,000
Ferguson, Drew (R-GA) House$3,000
Graves, Tom (R-GA) House$3,000
Hunter, Duncan D (R-CA) House$3,000
Jenkins, Evan (R-WV) House$3,000
Knight, Steve (R-CA) House$3,000
LaHood, Darin (R-IL) House$3,000
Latta, Robert E (R-OH) House$3,000
Love, Mia (R-UT) House$3,000
Newhouse, Dan (R-WA)House$3,000
Paulsen, Erik (R-MN)House$3,000
Reed, Tom (R-NY) House$3,000
Stewart, Chris (R-UT) House$3,000
Tiberi, Pat (R-OH) House$3,000
Black, Diane (R-TN) House$2,500
Blackburn, Marsha (R-TN) House$2,500
Carter, John (R-TX) House$2,500
Collins, Doug (R-GA) House$2,500
Curbelo, Carlos (R-FL) House$2,500
Davis, Rodney (R-IL) House$2,500
Fareed, Justin (R-CA) House$2,500
Granger, Kay (R-TX) House$2,500
Collins, Chris (R-NY) House $2,000
Hanna, Richard (R-NY) House $2,000
Peterson, Collin (D-Mn) House $2,000
Stefanik, Elise (R-NY) House $2,000
Walz, Tim (D-MN) House$2,000
Duckworth, Tammy (D-IL) House$50


Peace in Christ,
Pastor Doug


Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Pastor Doug's Ash Wednesday Sermon 2018




Isaiah 58:1-12

One of my “beefs” about the season of Lent, is how often we get it wrong.   Without fail I hear the same Lenten conversations year after year.  Maybe you’ve heard them too.

this year for Lent, I’m giving up…

Or, “this year for Lent, I’m taking on…

For years, we have gotten Lent wrong because of this emphasis on “me”.  Certainly, each of us are personally invited to enter into the season of Lent and into its disciplines: “Self-Examination, repentance, prayer, fasting, sacrificial giving and works of love.”  And that is all good and that is how it should be.

Truly each of us in this season of Lent are exhorted to enter more deeply into the promise of Christ’s embrace as he passes over from death to life with each of us.
But all too often, “self-examination” ends there in the personal space called “me.”  All too often, our Lenten story becomes an autobiography about Jesus and me neglecting the public reality of Jesus and community.

Now don’t get me wrong:  I admire each and every one of you for being here this evening when clearly you could be home reading a good book, watching the Olympics, or binge watching on Netflix.  But here you are in this place beginning yet again on a journey, marked not by ease and self-fulfillment, but by a cross and selfless servanthood.

Here you are tonight standing face to face with the harsh reality that each of us is broken – publicly confessing our sin – confessing that we have not loved God with our whole heart or our neighbor as ourselves.

Here you are tonight standing face to face with the harsh reality that each of us “are dust and to dust we shall return” as dirty, dusty ashes anoint our foreheads; acknowledging the fragility of life.  If we don’t believe we are dust, just look at the latest mass shooting that claimed at least 17 victims in a South Florida high school today.

And yet, for all that we do here tonight, this evening’s Ash Wednesday liturgy is not simply about us.  It is not simply about Jesus with us.  It is more than that:  Much, much more than that.  If the prophet Isaiah has anything to say about our service this evening, he would tell us that unless love and care for the poor and vulnerable emerges from tonight’s service, then our time together this night has simply been a waste of time.
 
Tonight, we catch Isaiah at his prophetic best, as he confronts a society that is content with not only neglecting the poor and needy, but literally oppressing them, living by the mantra of “make Jerusalem great again.” 

Who after all has time to loose the bonds of injustice, to let the oppressed go free, or to share their bread with the hungry?  Not us, we’re too busy building walls to protect us from change and to preserve the way things used to be in the good old days.
But if scripture is clear on nothing else:  It is that God’s very heart is with the widow and the orphan.  God’s very heart is poured out in love for all on the hardwood of a cross.

In this season of Lent as we journey from this night to the cross of Good Friday and the empty tomb of Easter morning, may we do so not alone isolated from the world around us.  But with Christ – God’s heart.  And on this life changing journey may we walk with God’s heart; may we be God’s heart in this place and in all the world.

Amen.


Thursday, February 8, 2018




Mark 9:2-9 (Transfiguration of Our Lord)

Daily I find myself wandering through our beautiful sanctuary, marveling at the stained-glass windows that depict God’s handiwork in the universe.  My favorite window is the one I call the “NASA window” in which a Gemini spacecraft is depicted alongside orbiting electrons, protons, and neutrons bearing witness to the reality of God’s presence not only in the heavens, but specifically in science.  Whether it be God the scientist or God the Word made flesh, each window reveals a bit of God’s identity.  And yet as beautiful and as inspiring as each of these windows are, they do not tell the whole story.  It’s hard to imagine, but God’s amazing love story with humanity and all of creation goes far beyond the images contained in these windows.

As these windows cannot begin to tell the entirety of God’s story, neither does the transformative event in the gospel reading for this coming Sunday.  I can only imagine how beautiful it must have felt atop that mountain where in God’s presence, Jesus was bathed in glorious light, hanging out with the greats: Moses and Elijah, being affirmed as God’s beloved son.  Had I been there with Peter, James, and John, I too would have wanted to capture the glorious moment; I too would have wanted to build the biggest damn booth possible.    Who wouldn’t want to remain in such a holy place commemorating such a holy event?  It’s not everyday that Moses, Elijah, and Jesus show up to the party.

But Jesus doesn’t stay there in that glorious place. Instead he goes back down the mountain; back down into the darkest of valleys; into the broken lives of those below – healing, teaching, and feeding.  – calling us to follow.  And so we follow; not remaining in our glorious sanctuary, but down we come and out we go into the streets of our city; into the lives of those who feel hopeless, broken and disconnected; proclaiming in word and deed that God’s love story with all creation is alive and well.

The windows in our sanctuary cannot tell the whole story of God because they do not contain an image of you reaching out in love to family, friends, or maybe even strangers.  There’s no window showing the homeless being fed at Mustard Seed Kitchen, or being housed four weeks out of the year in our Sunday School space.  There’s no window depicting you feeding the hungry at REACH House or speaking out on behalf of the most vulnerable among us at City Hall or at the County Legislature.  There’s no window of you helping the chronically homeless find permanent housing through the Homeless Initiative.  It is only when the windows of our sanctuary combine with the windows of your life in Christ that we begin to catch a glimpse of God’s entire love story for humanity.

Fed and nourished each week at the foot of the cross, you and I are God’s windows in the world, revealing and proclaiming a God whose love knows no boundaries; revealing and proclaiming a God who will not be limited by the walls of this world and the hatred that builds them.

We have a different story to tell than the power brokers of our world.  For our story is God’s story; a story of love that is limitless, reckless, and above all, abundant.  Join us on Sunday as we are once again fed on the mountaintop -  to feed the world.

Peace and Love,
Pastor Doug