Monday, November 26, 2012

From Black Friday to Cyber Monday

Having worked in retail prior to the emergent worship movement directed at the world wide web I fully recognize the importance of the "Christmas" shopping season to the retail bottom line.  Working on a modified commission basis, the Christmas 'bump' provided the opportunity to earn a higher wage during the other eleven months of the year.  Thus, anyone who wishes to declare the post-Thanksgiving shopping days 'evil' should spend some time in purgatory-retail sales!

However, over the past 25 years the change that has come about is the hyper-marketing of 'special days' as if by 'naming' those days there is some inherent bargain related to the day.  I have been monitoring a particular laptop for church on an internet shopping site and there has been absolutely zero change in the price during the past three days.a

What does this say?  Well, following on the heels of a national presidential election the reader should beware any and all advertising that promises you what you really don't need and fails to address your true needs or the true nature of the advertiser.  One of my sons noticed that Reeses spends very little on marketing their product.  The product is orange and brown, it is circular with ridges, and it consists of peanut butter surrounded by chocolate.  That is it.  That is what Reeses is, what Reeses looks like and what Reeses tastes like.

Words flatter, deeds communicate. "My brothers and sisters, what is the gain if someone proclaims to have faith but does not have works? That faith certainly can not save him, can it? . . . That faith, if it does not possess works, is dead in and of itself." James 2.14, 17

To answer the question, "what is the gain?" is simple; to convince someone else of their value so they will be accepted.  Be paltry with self proclamations of your identity but generous with self revealing deeds!


Wednesday, November 21, 2012

What to say on the Sunday between Thanksgiving and Advent?

The Liturgical Calendar is, on occasion, a blessing for non-liturgical folk like myself.  So often the Sunday after Thanksgiving coincides with the First Sunday of Advent so selecting a sermon topic is in a sense uncomplicated.  However, every so often the American holiday calendar and the Christian Church Holiday calendar fail to cooperate and a minister is left with a Sunday that is an enigma. You can't be thankful two weeks in a row, can you?

So the so named "Last Sunday after Pentecost" (officially the 26th one) suggests the topic of Christ the King in one form or another (Catholic: The Solemnity of, NCCCUSA: Christ the King). The Scripture readings are Dan 7, Ps 93, Rev 1, and John 18.33-37.

But in the midst of Pentecost (and the 6 months with no major Christian Holiday) and Advent (Yes, one can prepare for Christmas is ways other than shopping), the most important figure in the four gospels beyond Jesus is forgotten: John.  Very few incidents are included in all four gospels, but John the one who baptizes is included. Indeed, no one else in the Christian testament links Jesus to the Hebrew testament quite like John.  The Lucan account of his birth comes in the midst of 2nd Temple Worship activities and links both in a way that is distinct from the other three.  Luke ties the Christian story to the Hebrew story and the Christian deity (God) to the Hebrew deity (God), indeed there is no way to read about JB and miss the connection.

The key idea from JB's birth in 2012 deals with the inconvenient provision of this Hebrew Deity to prepare a messenger for the people of the Hebrew deity. But, come to think of it, when does God ever provide what we truly need at the time we think we truly need to receive it?  Doesn't God usually provide for us at the time and place when we don't expect, or have stopped expecting, his provision?

So here is a brief synopsis of "God's Inconvenient Provision"
1. God's Provision Appears When and Where We Least Expect It: Luke 1.8-12
2. God's Provision Meets Our True Needs and Exceeds Our Expectations: Luke 1.5-7, 13-17, 25
3. God's Provision Necessitates Our Faithfulness: Luke 1.6, 18-22
4. God's Provision Results in Praise: Luke 1.67-75

There you have an opportunity to connect Thanksgiving and Advent!