What sort of King is Christ?

I first had the opportunity to preach on Christ the King Sunday during my seminary internship at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Littleton, Colorado, in 2012. It is the Sunday that precedes the season of Advent and is an important commemoration in the life of the Church. In the time since, I have had very few opportunities to preach on this feast, because The Belfry did not have our midweek service the week of Thanksgiving, which is when we often would have observed it.

When I first sat down in 2012 to write that sermon, I was angsty. I didn’t really know what this day meant, and I presumed that it meant that we should see Jesus as a king in the way that we have had kings here on earth for millennia—as power-hungry, imperialist, colonizing, grossly wealthy, disconnected from the reality of the people they tower over. This doesn’t sound like who we know Jesus to be. So I typed out a bunch of stuff about how this was the opposite of the case and that Jesus was unlike any king ever before seen or seen since!

And then I did a few googles about Christ the King Sunday and wouldn’t you know, that is actually the premise.

The feast of Christ the King is officially known as the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe. It came about in 1925 during the rise of Benito Mussolini, the fascist dictator in Italy. Pope Pius XI insisted that supremacy over the universe belonged to Christ alone, not to any earthly leader.

Contrary to popular belief in 1925 and in this year of our Lord 2021, no earthly power deserves our unwavering allegiance—no political leader, no church leader, no celebrity, no king, no idol.

The idea of Christ the King is to subvert the idea of kings. No king wields as much power as the God who created the universe. Powerful people should take a look at themselves, have some perspective. It can be all too easy for us, these days, with our incredible technological advancement and our global communications, to think that we are truly the masters of this planet and its inhabitants.

To be clear—our actions on this earth can have ramifications on a global scale. But we are not all-powerful. We are not gods. We are not even kings.

Rather than ascribe Christ-like-ness to kings and rulers and dictators and autocrats and despots, the feast of Christ the King reminds us what true leadership looks like. In response to the sin that so easily entangles us in our earthly kingdoms, on this day the Church proclaims that the only, true way to wield power is to wield it like Jesus. To preach good news to the poor, to free the captive, to liberate the oppressed.

The Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe did not come about because Pope Pius XI thought the Sunday before Advent begins needed a little zhuzhing. This feast was declared in response to the real threat of fascism in the governments of Europe and in the hearts of each of us. A threat that has not diminished.

Some of you have not known me for very long, but those of you who do are perhaps not surprised that I was delighted to be the preacher on this anti-fascist feast.

But the sermon I began to prepare earlier this week is not the sermon I finished writing yesterday.

On Friday morning, a jury in Kenosha, Wisconsin found Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty of the reckless homicide of Joseph Rosenbaum, the intentional homicide of Anthony Huber, nor the reckless endangerment or attempted intentional homicide of three others. [1] I wrote and deleted and wrote and deleted several sentences about this.

Simultaneously, Travis and Gregory McMichael are on trial in Georgia for the vigilante murder of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man who was out for a run in their neighborhood. There was an altercation, they followed him, and they killed him.

A similar conversation will be had in that jury deliberation, about whether this homicide was justifiable. I wrote and deleted and wrote and deleted several sentences about this.

In slightly better news, Julius Jones’ death sentence was commuted by the governor of Oklahoma at the eleventh hour, after several appeals based on the likelihood of Mr. Jones’ innocence in a 1999 murder, for which he has been imprisoned for half his life.

There is plenty to read and watch about these incidents and these trials, and we shan’t re-litigate them this morning. I wrote and deleted several sentences about these events yesterday because I was processing my own grief. My own weary, unsurprised devastation that, time after time, justice is not truly served.

And there are plenty of sermons and adult forums in me about the abolition of the prison-industrial complex and the idolatry of whiteness and of guns, and we’ll get to those, but it turns out that today is not that day.

Today is a day to remember that when it is injustice that rolls down like water, when we cannot bring ourselves to mourn and rage and grieve and cry again this week, this month, this year about the same thing...our God joins in our weeping. Our God who lived and died among us in a callous world, understands what it is to suffer, and to bear witness to the suffering of others.

On this day when we commemorate the ultimate power of Jesus the Christ, we do the counterintuitive Christian thing of acknowledging the insufficiency of our own power. On another Sunday, I will remind you of all that you have the power to change in the world around you and implore you to take bold action in the name of Christ. But at some point, we do have to grieve.

Feminist author bell hooks wrote that “to be loving is to be open to grief, to be touched by sorrow, even sorrow that is unending.” [2] Our interaction with the world, as people who strive to love God and love our neighbors, will lead us to grief and to sorrow. It will lead us to joy as well, we are assured, but the more we are open to love, the more we are open to grief.

We cannot continue to absorb all of this terror and pretend it is having no effect on us. We have to engage with the world around us in a way that preserves our energy for responding, when we’re able. I am not recommending a head-in-the-sand willful ignorance; neither am I recommending a non-stop doom-scroll through your news apps and social media. Tuning it out does not actually make it go away.

An artist that I love, Nicole Manganelli, says that grief is tidal. [3] It ebbs and it flows and it sometimes feels that we are far from being swept away by it but then suddenly our sandcastle is overwhelmed and everything is soaked and we’re trying to laugh it off but it’s going to be pretty uncomfortable for a while.

We have to notice in our minds and feel in our bodies when we are grieving. That may seem obvious to you, because you’re thinking about mourning and grieving an isolated event, like the death of a loved one. But what about when the grief is not singular, but unending? Over and over and over, it crashes on our shores.

Under normal circumstances, we might share our grief with a friend or a therapist or a clergy person. But what about when they, too, are experiencing grief? What about when everyone is grieving, everything all at once? And it doesn’t stop?

How do we respond to a tidal wave of grief?

You may have heard of the Talmud, which is the central text of Rabbinic Judaism, outside the Torah itself, and predates Jesus by a few centuries. It expounds on the Hebrew Bible and is a source of great, great wisdom. There is a passage in it that I learned in seminary and it comforts me greatly, and I want to share that with you. It’s in reference to famous verses from the prophet Micah. It lacks concrete attribution, but a wise Rabbi once said:

"Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. Do justly now. Love mercy now. Walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it."

I am going to read it again just in case you missed part of it because I want you to really feel it.

"Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. Do justly now. Love mercy now. Walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it."

It is not the responsibility of this morning's sermon to wrap up the enormity of the world’s grief with a bow and tell you that it is all going to be okay. I am not in the business of toxic optimism, and neither is the Torah or the Talmud or the Gospel. This week, dear ones, I am daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief. Many weeks, over the last uh, several years, I have been daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief.

The daily grief of living and loving—job loss, death, breakups, diagnoses, struggles, fears—those continue apace in the midst of our national and global crises. We have tried to go about our regular human business while also trying to navigate the dueling traumas of rising sea levels and white supremacy and mass gun violence and political unrest and wildfires and wars and and and…

It is not imperatives to pick up the pace of your personal anti-fascist practice that you require from the pulpit this morning. It is rest. And it is not me who grants you that rest, of course, but it is Jesus the Christ, King of the Universe. In the Gospel According to Matthew, not remotely this morning’s assigned text, Jesus says, “Come to me, all you who are weary and carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest.”

This offer is personal and this offer is collective. Unshoulder your burdens in prayer to your God, unshoulder your burdens in community, work together to unshoulder the enormity of the world’s grief.

Do not expect the powers and principalities of this earth to easily give up their grip. But do justly, and love mercy, and walk humbly, in your small corner of the enormous world, knowing that it is Jesus the Christ, King of the Universe, to whom you pledge true allegiance.

I hope that in the midst of all this that you feel the freedom of it. You are free, as a child of God, from the compulsion to capitulate to earthly powers. You know the truth, and the truth has set you free. You know that true power and true glory is not of this world. You know that Christ is King. Any person who tries to convince you that they bear the real truth, that they wield the real power, that they have the real control, is wrong. You do not need to be seduced by empty earthly promises. You know that no leader can solve all the problems, no matter how they boast. No matter how many people shout their support for that person in an arena. No matter how many vigilantes rise up in their name.

As we transition into the Advent season next week, we’ll remember that a light shines in the darkness, and that the darkness has not overcome it. There is no promise that there will not be grief, but that God will show up in the midst of it. We’ll anticipate the birth of the Christ child and the return of Christ as King. Our world will get whipped into a capitalist frenzy in the coming weeks, and we will have the opportunity to speak into that void. Just like Christ the King is not about what the world might think it is about, Christmas, too, is a subversion of power.

The season of Advent is a time for peace and quiet, for hopeful expectation, for joyful recognition of a changing world. Jesus the Christ, King of the Universe, will come into the world as a tiny and vulnerable baby. The child of refugees, fleeing one oppressive regime for another. From the absolute humblest of beginnings, God will enter into our world to show us once again what true power and true glory look like. Stay tuned.

A Sermon on the Reformation, All Saints, and All Souls

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.

One of the particularities of life together at the Belfry that I enjoy especially is our good fortune to gather for worship on Wednesdays. Yesterday was Reformation Day (officially) and today is All Saints Day (officially) and tomorrow is All Souls Day (officially) and our friends who worship on Sundays had to rearrange those two or three to fit on either last Sunday or this coming Sunday or some combination therein, or maybe even skip one. But we, dear Belfry Lutherpalians extraordinaire, we get to co-celebrate all of it, today.

We get to see the beautiful overlap and influence of these days on each other. We get to sit right in the thick of the paradoxes of life and death, old and new, past and future, saint and sinner, orthodoxy and heresy, retention and reformation. What luck!

I bet someone has mentioned this to you in the past several months, but: this year is the 500th Anniversary of Martin Luther’s Protestant Reformation. It’s finally here! I’m not going to rattle off that information all the time, anymore. And that’s great. What’s even greater is that we are now officially, as of today, in the second 500 years of reformation. Think of the possibilities!

In the past 500 years, people have made sweeping changes in the Church that bears Luther’s name—we know that we are saved by God’s grace and not by our own works; the Bible has been translated into every language on the planet, and probably Klingon, because, nerds; people other than cisgender heterosexual white men serve as clergy (though of course we’re still working on the enforcement of that); celibacy is no longer considered the highest Christian calling (though of course we’re still working out our sexual ethics); we pray and confess directly to God, without the requirement of a priest; our liturgies are in the language of our hearts (though sometimes full of fancy church words).

And that is just the beginning! What will we do with our next 500 years, dear ones!? Where will we go? What will we do? Who will we be? Ugh, that’s so thrilling.

It’s important to me that we think about it this way—looking forward to our next 500 years—because our last 500 years have not been all sunshine and rainbows. The Church as an institution has been responsible for centuries of oppression, and has held back progress in the public sphere in a number of ways. We do not get to give ourselves a pat on the back without also acknowledging our faults. We are, after all, simultaneously saints and sinners.

Our gospel story for today underscores this. Jesus says, “If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; and you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free” (John 8:31-32). And the people listening to him are confused because they think they already are free. I can just see their confused faces. “Uh, we are not enslaved,” they reply, ish. And they’re right. They are not enslaved in the way that they think Jesus must mean.

But they are not free of their own sin. They are not free of the temptations of the world to hold power over one another, to control every little thing that happens, to be sure that they do not end up losing everything they have. They are not free of the systems in which they participate as members of their society. They are not free of the little voice in the back of their heads that says, “you deserve to be at the top of the food chain forever.” They are not free of the history of their people, for better and for worse. They are not as free as they believe.

When we hear this, in the United States of America in 2017, we may feel much like these friends of Jesus. “Uh, we are not enslaved.” We are not. And. We may not be entirely free, either. We are not, by our own power, free of the sin that so easily entangles us. We are not, by our own power, free of all the things we have done and the things we have left undone. We can, if we’re not careful, let this very fact trap us further. Or, as Jesus tells us and Martin Luther reminds us, the truth will make us free. The truth is that we are saved by grace through faith.

Yes, there will be real, human consequences for our actions. We will get in trouble. We will have to apologize to one another. We will have to practice humility. But in the midst of all this mess we are making, we are still beloved of God. You, precious creation, are known and claimed by the one who created you.

There is nothing that renders that untrue. Nothing you do—or fail to do—separates you from the love of God in Jesus the Christ. 500 years of Reformation hasn’t changed that, nor will 500 more.

For as far back as anyone can remember, the truth has set us free. As far ahead as anyone can dream, the truth will set us free. Which brings us to the saints. As they lived, they were beloved of God. Tonight, we are bittersweetly remembering them.

This practice, on days like today, alerts us that we have entered into a thin place. “There are places where the veil between worlds becomes thin. It’s not that God is somehow more present in [these] places, as if God could be more there than elsewhere; rather, something in [these] places and times invites us to be more present to the God who is always with us.”[1]

Look at the beautiful ofrenda Leo set up for us back there, and look at the things that remind us of the saints who have gone before us. We get to look at those faces and recognize each other in them. My family is over there, and you can probably see my face in my grandma’s face.

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As I look at all the photos gathered there, I wonder about the stories that you hold close to your heart about the people in them. And the objects you brought to remember them with, I wonder why you brought those things, and what they mean to you and meant to your loved ones.

These moments, here together in remembrance, these are so holy. This is the communion of saints. The generations that precede us show us what it means to be humans, to be members of our families, to be people of faith, perhaps.

We carry our histories in our hearts; we wear them on our bodies; we hear them in our songs and in our laughter and in our tears; we eat them when we cook our family recipes; we embody them when we maintain our family traditions. These people, smiling up at us from the table—or radiating from within our memories—they raised us in faith, shaped us in doubt and discovery. As we live into our present realities, we go about the lives they dreamed we’d lead. The examples set for us by generations of our families are combined together with the generations of all the saints, back to those who walked with Jesus, those who were descended of Abraham.

Jesus told his friends, ages ago, to continue in his word. To keep telling the stories about the truths they knew. To keep gathering for meals, and to remember him when they did. As we gather at these tables today, we are bringing our whole histories and our entire futures together in one beautiful, thin place. We look back, we look around, we look forward. God is with us, and the saints are with us, in each and every place.

Thanks be to God!

Love Your Neighbor -- Luke 10:25-37


This is the final sermon I preached to my beloved internship congregation, after spending 11 months with them in Littleton, CO. It also falls on the morning after George Zimmerman's not guilty verdict in the murder of Trayvon Martin. To say that a flurry of emotions accompany these words is a grave understatement.

Deuteronomy 30:9-14
Psalm 25:1-10
Colossians 1:1-14

It amazes me sometimes which Gospel texts are on which Sundays—what are the odds that on my final opportunity to preach the word to you, I’d be assigned some of the verses I think are most important out of our entire canon? Funny how the Holy Spirit and the lectionary conspire, sometimes.

Oh, and since this is my last sermon here at Holy Trinity and I have so many things I want to say, I just had to be upfront and apologize to Linda Jantzen that, like my first sermon to y’all, it probably has three and a half main points—but it has just one theme. 

Love your God and your neighbor. 

There’s a sticker on my car that says it, if you’re wondering how important I think it is. Love your neighbor. Love them with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength, and all your mind. You don’t have to listen any further if you don’t want to, because that’s all I’m really going to say. Jesus finishes the parable by saying to go and do likewise. So, feel free to go, now, and do.

Or stay and hear me out.

When I was in high school, we had a weekly bible study on Tuesday nights with our youth director, Jonathan. Jonathan was very frustrating, because any time anyone would ask a question, he would respond with a question—I don’t think he has ever given me a straight answer about anything. It was a sort of “stump Jonathan” game, because we wanted to test the depth of his knowledge—which was extensive—but he was too clever for us.

What was, in retrospect, great about Jonathan’s tactics was that he taught me to try and figure out the answers to my theological questions myself, and was off the hook for any time he had no clue what the answer was, himself. I have to admit that, when I now lead his youth in Bible Study on our summer mission trips, I employ the exact same strategy.

In today’s Gospel, we have a game of “stump Jesus,” in which a lawyer asks two of his best gotcha questions. First, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”—and of course, Jesus does not answer directly, but turns the question back onto the questioner! “What is written in the law? What do you read there?” Jesus asks. True to form, the lawyer answers correctly—love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and love your neighbor as yourself.” Jesus gives the lawyer a gold star, but he’s not done. His second gotcha question—who is my neighbor? This is the important question with the important answer. We are all so comfortable with “love your God and love your neighbor” because we do not know who our neighbors really are.

It is often very easy to love the people that live next door to us because it is likely that they are like us. It is very easy to love the people sitting beside us in church because it is likely that they are like us. There are a lot of people that it is very easy to love. People we have known for a long time, our dearest friends and family—though not always—and everyone we have surrounded ourselves with based on the fact that it is easy to love them! They are like us and they are not threatening and their lifestyle looks like our lifestyle and we go to the same schools and the same grocery stores and the same bank and they have a car like ours and a job like ours and isn’t it just so nice to have so many lovely neighbors.

But that’s not how Jesus answers the lawyer. He tells a story of a man who is beaten nearly to death on the side of the road, and the upstanding citizens—a priest and a Levite!—who skip right over this man who is obviously very much in need of their love, and the Samaritan who is moved with pity and stops.

Very rarely will you hear me spout out the Greek words of a gospel text—because none of us are Greek scholars, so it doesn’t do us a whole lot of good. But this story includes my all-time favorite Greek verb. Σπλαγκνα. And “moved with pity” is an okay phrase but what σπλαγκνα really means is love that comes from deep within your core. Gut-love, my undergrad Greek professor taught us to translate it. And I hope you can recall a moment in your life where you were moved, viscerally, to gut-love for someone. Or where you can tell that someone who cared for you did so out of σπλαγκνα.

Since you’re Greek scholars now, you may also know the words φιλεω ερος αγαπη. These are the Greek words for different kinds of love. These words are based on who the love is for – family or friend, romance, divine. It’s interesting to me that σπλαγκνα never appears on this list. Maybe this is because σπλαγκνα is not to or from only a specific group. Anyone can σπλαγκνα anyone. Or maybe it’s because God does not have a gut from which to σπλαγκνα. But this Samaritan man did, and so, in Luke’s gospel, he σπλαγκνα’d this devastated traveler.

And that’s because σπλαγκνα is no ordinary love. It’s an extremely rarely-used word in the New Testament. Only two other times, actually. In Matthew 20, Jesus is “moved with compassion” for some blind people. σπλαγκνα. And in Philippians, the Apostle Paul loves the church at Philippi because of the love of Christ…both of those “loves” are σπλαγκνα.

Jonathan, my aforementioned youth director, didn’t take Biblical Greek, but I’m pretty sure he understood the concept of σπλαγκνα, because while you’re probably familiar with the term “heart to heart” conversation, Jonathan calls them “gut to guts.”

And when I studied abroad in Türkiye, we learned a toast that is said among the dearest of friends: “cam cam’a değil can can’a” – not glass to glass but soul to soul. Not glass to glass but gut to gut.

This is what we’re talking about, here. Love the Lord your God gut-to-gut. Love your neighbor around this table not glass to glass but soul to soul.

This man from Samaria—this man who by virtue of his birth was seen as less than human—is the only one in this story who has known the real meaning of love, and has known just who his neighbor really is.

But Jesus didn’t tell this parable about a real-life Samaritan man. This story is not about somebody else. He doesn’t tell stories for our amusement or our observation. This story is about you, and it is about me, and it is about people we know and it is about people we do not know. It is about every person who has ever heard it. And it is not about being nice. The weakest interpretation of the words of Jesus is to respond simply with niceness.

What this man from Samaria has done for his neighbor was necessary and merciful and compassionate and more than just nice. But, what happens when this man, upon his regular travel of this road, notices that, each time, there is an injured man, beaten and bloody on the side of the road. What happens when robberies continue to occur regularly, and he continues to help these victims, and continues to pay this innkeeper? While he’s doing necessary good, he’s perpetuating an existing, damaging system. What happens when this man begins to ask why there are so many robberies along this road? What happens when he begins to seek to change the way the world around him functions? It is in the immediate interest of these dying men to receive medical attention—this much cannot be denied. But it is in their best interest to walk a road that is safe, where they are free from harm. It is in the society’s best interest to address the needs of those who rob their neighbors—what could be done to keep them from resorting to criminal activity to provide for their families? Seeking justice for ALL your neighbors is to truly love them.

You have heard me before quote the words of Dr. Cornel West, an activist and professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York, who is known for saying that “justice is what love looks like in public.”

This parable should lead us out into the public square to love our neighbors in broad daylight. To seek justice for our neighbors on the steps of our capitol buildings.

Catholic social reformer Dorothy Day has expressed this in a way that has sort of become my motto. She says,

"Whatever I had read as a child about the saints had thrilled me. I could see the nobility of giving one's life for the sick, the maimed, the leper. But there was another question in my mind. Why was so much done in remedying the evil instead of avoiding it in the first place? Where were the saints to try to change the social order, not just to minister to the slaves, but to do away with slavery?"

The charitable work that the church has done, historically, in the name of love has been so necessary and so good. And Holy Trinity has been no stranger to that important work.

Five times a year, we house and feed and transport and love families who are experiencing homelessness. What if we sought justice for those families, by advocating for living wages and fair housing practices, to the point where Family Promise as an organization was no longer necessary?

During the school year, we tutor and feed and love the Whiz Kids, who need a hand to get up to speed in school. What if we sought justice for those kids, by advocating for equitable school funding and teacher salaries and extra-curricular activities that allowed them to thrive—and, alongside their education, fought for a system that paid their parents enough to adequately feed them throughout the week?

Every few months, some of you gather together in worship with the women of New Beginnings Church at Denver Women’s Correctional Facility, loving those women by treating them like the beloved children of God that they are. What if we also sought justice for those women by advocating for a criminal justice system that does not disproportionately sentence women of color to harsher mandatory minimums, and a correctional system that does not dehumanize them through isolation, poor medical care, and violent means of control—and systematically disenfranchises them forever, once they are labeled felons? 

It is time that we take the words of Jesus seriously and make the move from mercy to justice.

It’s going to be hard. Justice in this country is complex, and often our criminal justice system disappoints us. Last February, in Florida, a 17-year-old unarmed black boy named Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by a neighborhood watchman named George Zimmerman. Last night, a jury pronounced him not guilty of murder. This verdict does little to reflect a society where neighbors are loved or where justice is served. The verdict itself notwithstanding for just one moment, there is still a young boy who is dead who should not be. There is still a neighborhood watchman whose life will never be the same. This encounter reflects a society for whom fear has overpowered love. The tears that this verdict brought to our eyes came from deep within our guts, deep within our souls. As we try to put the broken pieces of our hearts back together as we mourn Trayvon all over again, our guts are telling us, still, to seek justice.

Our guts and our God are telling us that this must not be the way we treat each other. We must love our neighbors, not fear our neighbors. What if we loved our neighbors so viscerally that we took that love so far as to never be silent when it comes to the sanctity of their lives—no matter who they are?

And so because this is the last time I will stand in this pulpit and tell you what I think Jesus is saying to us, please listen to me when I tell you that this is what he means when he says to love your neighbor.

This is what I have meant for the last 11 months when I have asked you to advocate alongside me for our neighbors whose voices have not been loud enough to effect change on their own.

This book and the stories like this that fill its pages are where I get those ideas and those words. You won’t hear me saying them anymore, after today, but they will still be in this book. And they will still be on the lips of every one of our neighbors who has been crying out to God for justice.

When you love with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind—when you do that in public—justice will roll down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream.

Go and do likewise.

Amen.