The Baptism of OCS—a BFD

I preached this sermon to Rick and all the other good people of Spirit of Joy Lutheran Church in Fort Collins, CO on the occasion of my bestie niece Olivia Clare's baptism.
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Grace and peace from God our Creator, Hope in our Redeemer Jesus the Christ, and the promised gifts of the Holy Spirit are with you, always.

Good morning! It is such a privilege to be here with you. Full disclosure: I’m a brand new pastor. My ordination to the ministry of Word and Sacrament in the ELCA was just a couple months ago.

A thing I have learned very quickly is that most of my colleagues are introverts, but have to function as extroverts in the job—I am already an extrovert, so I usually come on pretty strong in the guest pulpit. My favorite task of my job is preaching—pretty related, my favorite task of being a human is talking—and so when Pastor Woody invited us to participate in the liturgy I replied to the email (first) saying “Sure! I’ll preach!”

Later, I looked at the texts.

In Ecclesiastes, King Solomon proclaims “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity!” In his letter to the Colossians we have a classic list from the Apostle Paul about everything that’s wrong with us. And in this morning’s gospel, God says, “You fool!” To the rich man. Perfect!

Our narrator in Ecclesiastes may seem like a downer. “I hated all my toil in which I had toiled under the sun,” he says, “so I turned and gave my heart up to despair.” Splendid!

And from Paul: “The wrath of God is coming on those who are disobedient.” Encouraging!

And in the parable from Jesus, “Take care! Be on your guard against all kind of greed; for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions...You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you.” No worries!

These texts are challenging. These are texts it’s really easy to shrug off as ancient and out-of-context and inapplicable to our communities and our realities. But, are they?

The parable from Jesus this morning is particularly interesting to me. A man has asked Jesus to convince the man’s brother to share their inheritance fairly. We don’t get a lot of clues as to what that family drama is about, but we have all probably prayed that Jesus would set right the person who disagrees with us.

But for some reason, Jesus does not arbitrate this, but instead tells a story. In it, a rich man has too much, he cannot even store it all. Rather than share in his abundance, he has his barns torn down and larger ones built. Self-satisfied, he relaxes, knowing he will always have more than enough for himself.

On one hand, this sounds like a very responsible and conservative retirement savings plan. But what Jesus is reminding the crowd--and us--is that old saying, “you can’t take it with you.” When this rich man dies, what good will his riches be? When he decided to build larger storehouses, did he first consider how he might share his abundance with his family? With his community?

How has his wealth affected those in his neighborhood?

Is he prosperous only on the backs of his laborers?

Who do you think harvested those crops and built those barns?

Does he pay a living wage?

Provide health insurance? Adequate vacation? Paid family leave?

Does he invest his profits in his community, ensuring a good quality of life for his neighbors?

No, it would seem. Instead, he has succumbed to the idolatry of comfort, the slippery slope of greed.

The rich fool in this parable is not alone. Here in the United States, the majority of our citizens live in greater luxury than any other country on earth. But that’s not saying a whole lot.

Our desire for more and more and more has made beloved children of God around the globe survive on less and less and less. Like this rich fool, we have come to assume that we alone have garnered our wealth and we alone are deserving of its use. And we can never be satisfied.

Ecclesiastes calls this same vanity into question. “What do mortals get from all the toil and strain with which they toil under the sun? For all their days are full of pain, and their work is a vexation; even at night their minds do not rest (2:22-23).” Theologian Grace Ji-Sun Kim comments: “The West has become so individualistic that many of us have forgotten about community and have lost a sense of social responsibility to one another. Instead, we work so diligently to fill the void of our one greed and lust that we fail to understand that what we do will affect others. We quest for money and status, which is meaningless at the end of life.” [1] And this greed is not just manifest in having the biggest barns.

We are embroiled in wars and armed conflicts around the globe. Climate change threatens the lives and livelihoods of billions of people. Politicians in this country and others are spreading fear, proposing policy based in racism, xenophobia, ableism, sexism, and heterosexism—not to mention “anger, wrath, malice, slander, abusive language, impurity, evil desire, and greed (which is idolatry)." I do not need to explain to a room full of Coloradans that gun violence is tearing our communities apart. It is easy to turn and give our hearts up to despair.

Thanks be to God, my dear friends, that there is another way.

This morning, like any given Sunday, we are gathered together to celebrate new life in Jesus the Christ. In this new life, Paul has written, “there is no longer Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave and free.” Our divisions, borders, and exclusions fall away. Truth, justice, love, compassion, kindness, joy, freedom, hope, and peace abound in this new life. And today, we are blessed to bear witness to the newest kind of new life—baptism.

If you haven't already been told, I met Kelsey Sprowell in seminary, as well as Pastor Amanda and Pastor Eric over there. Spring semester of our first year, we took a class about the sacraments, and practiced standing up at an altar and saying the right words and knowing where to put our hands. Inasmuch as this was going to be pretty fun, it also had to happen on a Saturday morning, outside of our regularly scheduled class time, and so some of us whined. I made the mistake of whining about it to Kelsey, who shot back, wide-eyed, “You get to practice BAPTISM! That’s a REALLY BIG DEAL!” You were right, Kels. As usual.

Baptism is a really big deal. This morning, it is our duty and our joy to gather at the font with Olivia Clare Sprowell, fresh-faced member of the family of God. I learned on Friday night, around the dinner table, that Kelsey Lynn Schleusener Sprowell was the first baby baptized here at Spirit of Joy, in December of 1984! The family of God, indeed.

You, Spirit of Joy Lutheran Church; you, Schleuseners and Sprowells and such; you, body of Christ; you have the honor, privilege, and responsibility to welcome this and every child of God into your midst.

In the liturgy of baptism, you will promise to support Olivia and pray for her in her new life in Christ. Olivia’s presence in this room and in the world is a fulfillment of God’s promise to always make things new. In order to keep up your side of this covenant, you must make sure that Olivia knows what her role is in the community and in the coming kingdom of God. It is your honor, privilege, and responsibility to make the world a better place for her and alongside her.

Her baptism into the family of God is your chance to affirm yours. Believe me when I tell you that you are beloved, dear ones. There is nothing that separates you from the love of God, no matter what anyone may have every told you to the contrary.

The world we have made for ourselves can be scary, I know. It can be so easy to see only scarcity and terror instead of abundance and hope. It can be so easy to put up walls instead of opening doors. But for the sake of Olivia’s shining face, you mustn't.

As witnesses to Olivia’s baptism, it is your honor, privilege, and responsibility to teach her—and remind each other—that all are welcome in this place. That God loves each and every one of us, not in spite of but because of our genders, races, abilities, and beliefs. That she is and that everyone is an equal member of the body of Christ. You have the rest of her life to show her the love of God, and—if you haven't already—you get to start today.

Thanks be to God!

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Salt, light, refuge, and space -- Confirmation Camp 2013


Each night at Confirmation Camp, the kids in charge of worship choose the Congregational Leader (youth director, pastor, intern, whoever's parent came with them) to speak about that day's Bible Study and the theme the kids have picked for the day. Because they are crazy, the kids who had Friday chose me. That meant that I had to talk about the culmination of the "Blessed to be a Blessing" study they'd been in all week, and somehow also talk about the outer space theme they'd chosen. Kids these days.

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Good and gracious God, We give you thanks for this time we have spent together, recognizing the blessings you are constantly giving us, growing in our love for one another, diving into your Word, hiking your mountains, rafting your river, singing your praises. Quiet our hearts and minds for a moment, that we might hear your voice.
Amen

So I have a unique opportunity to speak to you tonight. I'm in a funny sort of place right now because I've been serving as a pastoral intern at Holy Trinity in Littleton since last August. Three weeks from right now, I'll be back in California, where I'm from; internship will be over. 

And so when I'm thinking about how to tell you my story and how it's part of God's story and how it's part of your story, I'm thinking about how incredible it is, for this short time, to be related to all of you. 

Here we are, on a mountain in Colorado, around a campfire, after a week of play and worship and food and so much fun. A week ago, most of us didn't know each other. But this week, we ate at the same tables and we slept in the same cabins and we read the bible together and we sang in worship and we did skits at round-up and we had a dance off and we learned to play the guitar and we worked together on the ropes courses and we painted Sawyer's toenails -- how many memories have we made, all together? 

These friendships that we've made happened so fast, without us even noticing, probably. But a lot of us are going to leave tomorrow morning. And even the staff is going to do a little shuffling, with trips and day camps and all the amazing things they do. We're going to come down from this city on a hill, go our separate ways back to our separate churches, back to our houses and our families and our friends. 

What are going do with the newfound understanding of who we are as children of God that we got this week at camp? 

We are salt for the earth and we are reflections of the light of Christ and we are living stones, that together build a city on a hill! We have been blessed with so many incredible gifts - each and every one of you offers so much to the world. 

Hear these words from the gospel according to Matthew:

‘Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.‘Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.‘Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.‘Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.‘Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.‘Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.‘Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.‘Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. ‘Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you. ‘You are the salt of the earth; but if salt has lost its taste, how can its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything, but is thrown out and trampled under foot. ‘You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot be hidden. No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven. (5:3-16)

Everything that makes you who you are is a gift from God to the world around you. Every time you smile at someone, you are shining the light. Every time you participate in an activity you love -- play soccer, act in the school musical, laugh till you cry with your friends, bake cookies -- every time you do those simple things, you are seasoning everyone around you, enhancing the flavor of your community. 

And it's not just at camp that you are these things. It's not just when you give it up to the kitchen and support staff for their hard work, or paint Sawyer's toenails, or high five your congregational leader for being so cool -- it's not just when you are salt for people who know that you are salt. It's when your attributes and your actions are a blessing to those who do not know that you are salt or light or a city -- those are the ways that we take camp home with us. Those are the ways that we keep these newly formed relationships alive, even when we aren't in these same villages anymore. 

Since the theme for today is space, I was thinking this morning as we sang Little Room, about how even on the darkest night, God fills the sky with little sparks of light. It is you who are those little sparks of light. (Look up at the sky right now. Can you see any stars? It's cloudy. When the world is cloudy, it is us who have to light the night around us. Do you have a flashlight? Take it out. Light it up. Wow, right? That's pretty legit. Okay turn those off, now. I'm blinded by your light, haha)

And so for me, you guys, going back down the mountain tomorrow will be particularly poignant. It has been such an incredible blessing to be among you this week, and on a larger scale, being in Colorado this year. So many of you have been salt for my earth. So many of you have blinded me with the light of the Christ we know and love. So many of you have been that refuge, that city on the hill

And I hope you know it because I said it to you or thanked you in some way. But even if I didn't, the simple truth that we're all here together, piling our blessings on one another, you give me great hope for the future of the church and the world.

There's a lot of darkness around us. Space is a pretty big place. But when we, as the body of Christ, take full advantage of the blessings we have received and use them to bring out the flavor and the light that seems to be missing, and bring safety and comfort and refuge to a deeply weary world -- there are no limits to what we are capable of. The power of God to move over the waters and to create the farthest reaches of our solar system does not ever stop. Because God is powerful, you as a child of God are powerful. 

You have the power to go above and beyond -- to infinity and beyond, we might even say -- to reach the whole universe with your saltiness and your spark of light. 

You are blessed to be a blessing not just to Rainbow Trail this week, not just to your home church this Sunday, not just to your family and friends next week until you kind of forget about it. 

In your baptism, God blessed you to be a blessing to the entire body of Christ -- the entire humongous universe -- and when you get confirmed, you will be saying that you agree to go out and be that blessing. You will stand up there and say to your pastor and to your family and to God and to yourself -- challenge accepted. So as you make your way through your church's confirmation classes and camp and all the stuff that you'll do, remember what you learned this week. Remember who you are and what you're made of and why. 

I know that I will never forget you. Thank you and thanks be to God. Let's pray. 

Infinite God, we are in such awe of how huge you are and how much you love us and how much you give to us. Continue to remind us of just how blessed we are, in good times and in hard times, and never let us forget our identity in you. By the many names you are known, we pray. Amen. 

"I Can Breathe Again," Baywood

Let's just spend a few minutes with the unbelievable cuteness of this song.

I've had some less-than-gracious feelings regarding snow in the last 24 hours (and neither the snow nor my attitude is on its way out). But then I heard this for the first time in the car on the way in to work. Yeah, it just makes me think about how good it will be to be home again, where I don't have to scrape inches of snow off my car, or have unexpectedly wet feet because there's a hole in my favorite boots (sigh), but it has both the number one and two requirements of all "cute" songs (clapping and repetitive "hey," for the inexperienced among you)! Wow, what a sentence that just was. And what's funny is that it turns out that these dudes are Coloradans, and so like all the youtube comments are about being "home" in Colorado, and there's just some incredible irony here, for me.

Anyway, have a listen or four, and clap around your office (or classroom or break room or ski school) for a bit.


I lost myself to the snow, and then I found my way back home, again.
But I can only stay for a while -- hey hey hey hey.
Now that I'm own my own, again, finally I can breathe again.
But I can only stay for a while -- hey hey hey hey.