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    <title>Rev. Aron Kramer</title>
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    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2009-02-20:/aron//5</id>
    <updated>2009-10-16T01:54:40Z</updated>
    
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<entry>
    <title>2 Easter Sermon: &quot;Doubting&quot; Thomas</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2009/04/2_easter_sermon_doubting_thomas.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2009:/aron//5.16</id>

    <published>2009-04-20T16:58:24Z</published>
    <updated>2009-10-16T01:54:40Z</updated>

    <summary>Doubting is the moniker we give to Thomas, and I have to wonder if once again the Church is attempting to water down, sanitize and make clean something that underneath the surface could deeply transform us in some way we would have never expected.</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
    </author>
    
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        <![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal">Doubting is the moniker we give to Thomas, and I have to
wonder if once again the Church is attempting to water down, sanitize and make
clean something that underneath the surface could deeply transform us in some
way we would have never expected.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>In
this day and age when doubt has become the new faith, is doubting an
appropriate way to describe what Thomas was doing or feeling?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I say doubt is the new faith because it is,
and as Episcopalians we probably relish in that idea.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Sit down with a bunch of people who call
themselves Episcopalians and one will inevitably hear that the Church is good
because it lets people ask questions, it allows people to have doubts.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We have believed all along, as Episcopalians
that one has the right to ask questions, to doubt as Thomas doubted.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas is kind of our unspoken patron
Saint.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas allows us to believe that
we can live a life of faith steeped in the questions we have about God and
God's activity in the world.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But I want to ask us to look a little closer at this text
and wonder with me about the moniker Doubting.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Thomas himself does not say to the Disciples who tell him they have seen
Jesus, "I doubt it."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He says specifically,
"I do not believe you."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He has no qualms
in telling them all that they are lying, all 10 of them, each and every one of
them comes to him saying we have seen Jesus, not to mention the women.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>In this day and age ten people corroborating
the same story would put us in a place we call beyond a reasonable doubt.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas is not a simple doubter who demands
evidence, Thomas is a person who simply does not believe, he does not trust his
own friends, he does not, to put it succinctly, love them enough to believe
them.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">This is a two edged sword I believe, on the one hand, it is
pretty damning to have his sort of unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>To flat out deny the truth in the face of people who were speaking to
him about their experience and probably even looked transformed in some way as
well, you don't see Jesus appear out of no where and remain the same.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We are talking about some serious heights and
depths here in terms of Thomas' doubt.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>It was clearly unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>If
someone had this kind of unbelief in our Church we might throw them out, or
simply ignore them or somehow shun them from our midst.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It's true, someone with such a passionate
disagreement when the entire community speaks the same truth is more than a
simple prank or April Fools joke, this guy needs to go.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">The other edge of the sword is that it is interesting that
he did stand his ground so clearly and with such great passion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>There is something commendable in that.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>His doubt, his unbelief was rooted in
something that he believed strongly.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Clearly he had come to some sort of conclusion about what the future
would hold for the new Christians and was holding fast to that idea or vision
of the future.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He had made plans and was
out acting upon them unlike his comrades who had remained locked in the upper
room.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Maybe that is why he did not believe
them; maybe that is why he denied so completely the individuals he had called
dear friends.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He had made a vision and a
goal out of the desperation and the fear that resulted in the death of their
beloved Jesus.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He was acting on his own
inspiration and his own call, a call he believed Jesus had given him.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>What were these others doing?</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">I like this idea a lot; Thomas had the courage in the face
of the people who had just killed Jesus to be out in the world doing something,
creating something, carrying on Jesus' ministry.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas, of all the disciples, was the one who
had made plans and executed those plans to carry on the work of Jesus.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>How else might you describe his outright
hostility to the disciples in the upper room?<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>I think he probably felt the same way as Jesus did, aghast that these
men, ignorant men, had shut themselves away from the world, a world that Jesus
had clearly told them they needed to engage, love and transform.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The way the world will know we are Christians
is by our love, not our invisibility.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Thomas' passionate unbelief is something that we might want
to consider as we live out our lives of faith, and we may want to consider
changing his moniker as well; Doubting Thomas does not truly grasp the passion,
the zeal, the innovation that this man might have had at his core rather than
mere doubt.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I think we should call him
Thomas the Innovator, or Thomas the Creator, or Thomas the Doer, maybe even
Thomas the unbeliever or Thomas the denier.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>There are a couple of ways that we tend to see doubt in our culture
today.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>First as anathema, something we
should never have or know if we call ourselves Christians.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>This is not something many of us
embrace.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Second, doubt is a
dispassionate expression of our own disagreement, disconnected from the belief
of Jesus and the resurrection, or at best, timidly supportive of an idea we
have no intention of standing up for.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>The ten disciples were this kind of doubters, even after the first
appearance of Jesus they were still locked in the upper room, safe from the
hostile world.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Their doubt was more a
doubt that was rooted in fear and immobility; it was about indifference and
apathy, which often tends to be how we doubt as members of mainline
denominations.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Just let the majorities
decide for me, I am fine with what every one else is doing.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">The other kind of doubt is a spectrum from belief to
unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It is a spectrum that we all
walk and often find ourselves journeying back and forth from unbelief to belief
and back again.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Doubt is a journey, it is
something we do, and not something that describes us.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I think most of us would claim this is where
we land when thinking about doubt and what doubt is.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Indeed, I often say, doubt is not the
opposite of faith, fear is the opposite of faith, and doubt is only the
threshold to belief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Without doubt,
without questions, we cannot deepen and broaden and raise our faith.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Doubt, like the betrayal of Judas, is an
integral part of who we are as Christians.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But let's go back to doubting Thomas and look again at this
idea of what it was that Thomas was doing outside of the upper room away from the
disciples.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Could it have been that in
the absence of Jesus Thomas was the only one with the courage to be in the
world, continuing the work of Jesus?<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Could it have been that Thomas was formulating a vision of mission and
setting it into motion?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Maybe it was a
vision he felt he had to do out of obligation, maybe his work in the world was
empty, cold and not at all fruitful.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Maybe it was his plans, his vision and his mission that were bereft of
belief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Could it have been that the
appearance of Jesus to Thomas was less about making Thomas into a believer and
more about filling him more completely with a hope and passion and of course
the Spirit for the work he was doing.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Was
jesus really saying, do your work, carry out your vision continue my mission
with passion, with zeal, with joy and with spirit, for that is the only way
love will reign, even people as dense as these other ten disciples will see the
Good News in your work if you only carry it out first in love, not out of
obligation and dispassion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Jesus went to Thomas directly; Jesus sought Thomas out in
the midst of all the disciples in that room.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Jesus wanted to affirm what Thomas was doing, while also chastising him
for not loving his neighbor, loving his friends, loving his enemies.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Thomas' character, our character, Thomas'
mission, our mission requires love and peace to be carried out, without either,
our work is nothing but sowing the seeds of unbelief.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>May we all have the misdirected passion of
Thomas and be as open as Thomas was to receiving the Spirit and receiving new
direction from Jesus as love guides us in the mission and work we do.</p>

 ]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>Fear, Hope and Easter</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://downtownepiscopal.org/aron/2009/04/fear_hope_and_easter.html" />
    <id>tag:downtownepiscopal.org,2009:/aron//5.15</id>

    <published>2009-04-20T16:54:57Z</published>
    <updated>2009-10-16T03:23:05Z</updated>

    <summary><![CDATA[On the back of the Fantasy novel I am reading it says, "When hope dies, there's still survival."&nbsp; This has caused me to think a lot about humanity, organizations, faith and religion.&nbsp; When hope dies, there is still survival.&nbsp; Our...]]></summary>
    <author>
        <name>Rev. Aron Kramer</name>
        <uri>http://downtownepiscopal.org</uri>
    </author>
    
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        <![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal">On the back of the Fantasy novel I am reading it says, "When
hope dies, there's still survival."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>This
has caused me to think a lot about humanity, organizations, faith and
religion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>When hope dies, there is still
survival.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Our culture, the American narrative
is littered with stories of survival, stories that say to us, even when you
lose hope, if you just try hard enough, if you just survive, you will make it,
whatever making it might mean.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>It seems,
as we live in this difficult economic culture with regular glimpses of a turn
around, often followed by some new controversy or scandal, or economic blow,
all we can do is simply survive, hope has been lost it seems, and we are lost
as well.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">This of course makes me think we have a pretty cheap idea of
hope, a cheap idea of grace, a cheap idea even of the value of our own
lives.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Have you seen that cartoon with
the bird trying to swallow a frog but the frog has its hands tightly grasped
around the bird's neck?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The caption of
the cartoon which I have seen most, and I have seen many, says, "Never give up."
One of these two parties is going to die.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Either the bird will succeed and swallow the frog, or the frog will succeed
by strangling the bird and escape.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>There
is no room to imagine that the two would go out for martinis and dine instead
on a nice fish or some other edible plant that they could both enjoy
together.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>When survival replaces hope,
hope is indeed dead.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But maybe it is not that we have cheap ideas of hope, grace
and our own lives, maybe it is more because we have isolated ourselves from one
another in ways that prevent us from experiencing the glory that is God and the
personal sacrament of presence that was so strongly present in the person of
Jesus.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The extent of our communal
experience often is simply our nuclear families, and today, even that
experience is varied beyond recognition.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>We are in a confusing transition period as we try to discern and
understand how technological advances will change our lives, our future, our
church and our religion.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Did you see
that Trinity Wall Street twittered the passion this past week?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And how many of you on Facebook saw the
Passion of Jesus according to Facebook this week as well?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Some will say we are becoming more
disconnected, but I say we are becoming more fearful of claiming value for our
future lives and the future of the life of the communities we belong to.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">I wonder if hope has been replaced by survival, have we
finally gotten to the point where it is not so much our hope for things unknown
and unseen that drives us as it is a game of survival of the fittest?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Hope seems to be lost, or at the least, reduced
to cliché slogans that we do not really believe but continue to say, for the
sake of our children.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Vision has failed
us, personally and corporately.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>The
light that has shone from the heart of the Glory of God, human beings fully
alive, has been replaced by darkness, or at the very least, a dark cloud, a
veil of mist impenetrable to our sight, feeling and touch.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Fear has gripped our world, fear has gripped
our Church and it clings to us, desiring not our downfall, not our death, not
our destruction, but rather our apathy, our indifference and our
familiarity.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Yes, I said that, death is not the ultimate goal of fear as
we are pushed into survival mode, or into the darkness, survival is the
ultimate goal of fear.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Our energy and
attention focused entirely upon our survival is what fear seeks to accomplish,
the disciples succumbed to it in their denials of Jesus, the crowd in the cries
of "Crucify him" were coerced or moved towards survival by their own fear.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Anytime that which is familiar in a way that
is warm and gentle and historical comes under some threatening experience, fear
moves us to survival, fear seeks to squash hope and make it disappear.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">Brian McLaren, a contemporary theologian and author was
asked at a recent presentation he gave, "Is there any hope for mainline
denominations?"<span style="">&nbsp; </span>His response is one that
is genuinely insightful.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He said that
there is great hope, because while yes, it is difficult to turn the Titanic
around, you have to ask yourself, what is harder, turning the Titanic around or
turning 15,000 individual boats around.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Of course it is the Titanic that is much easier to turn than the 15,000
boats driven by individuals.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>He was
referencing our structures and our polity, mainline denominations having a
structure that lends itself to having a few highly placed leaders able to make
certain decisions to turn things around, where as his tradition, the
Evangelical tradition, is one that is quite varied and resists the type of authority
that is represented in most mainline denominations.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal">But he continued, lest you get comfortable in the false hope
that you can turn the ship around think of this bridge in <st1:place w:st="on">South
 America</st1:place>.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>A beautiful bridge
that was built to perfection, spanning a beautiful river that one year flooded,
and the erosion from the flood redirected the river around the bridge, so that the
bridge was no longer functioning and had no purpose.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Put in tension, those are two examples of our
future that are poignant to consider.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Both require change, transformation, new thinking in how we live and
move and have our being together.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>But it
is hard to change, isn't it, we often wish we could change, or simply choose
not to change because we have no hope in the transformation that change would
bring.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">Tom Peters, in his book the
"Pursuit of WOW!" asks, "How long does it take you to achieve change or
spiritual transformation?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>A nanosecond,
but it takes a lifetime of passionate pursuit to maintain that
transformation."<span style="">&nbsp; </span>I like this, we can
change in a blink of the eye, it is the lifetime pursuit of that change that is
the difficult part, it is the challenges and obstacles that we and others put
in our ways that keep us from accomplishing our Goals.</p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">Look at Mary Magdalene in today's
Gospel.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>She changed in the blink of an eye;
she changed at the simple saying of her name.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>The Gardner who stood before her turned into Jesus like that
(snap).<span style="">&nbsp; </span>If we listen, I believe we will hear
Jesus calling our names on a regular basis, every day Jesus calls to us, I am
alive, Jesus says, I have been resurrected, death no longer holds sway, I am
alive.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>We hear it, we know it, but we
too often leave it in the far reaches of our minds, never allowing that voice
to filter into our very being, into our broken hearts that long for healing,
human touch and relationship.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">In the naming of her name Mary is
changed and transformed.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Just as today
Emelia and D'Angelo will be transformed by the saying of their names.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>You can feel it as we baptize these children,
you can feel it when you read the Gospel, Mary's exclamation is full of joy,
full of excitement, full of newness, full of possibility it is rich and
wonderful and she has changed, but she falters immediately, because this man
whom she loves, who she walked with is alive, and she desires nothing else but
to hold him, to cling to him, to be with him, but what does Jesus say?<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Seeing her need, seeing her desire, he says
to her, do not cling to me.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>Do not hold
on to me, for I am going to a place that is more mysterious, more mystical and
more dangerous than anything you have imagined.<span style="">&nbsp;
</span>Go Jesus says, do not hold on to me, but go and tell others about
me.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>And today we start with Emelia and
with D'Angelo, tell them your story, share with them your relationship with
God, don't hold on to a sentimental nice and comfortable Jesus, speak to the
truth, the passion, the fire the excitement of the God we all love so that
Emelia and D'Angelo will be able to grow in the fire that is the love of
God.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;"><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-right: 0.5in;">In the letting go we find not
despair, but hope, in the letting go we find not death, but life, in the
letting go we find not nothingness, but abundance greater than we have ever
imagined.<span style="">&nbsp; </span>When we give up our fight for
survival we might just feel once again, in the very beat of our heart, the
power of hope in our lives.<span style="">&nbsp; </span></p>

 ]]>
        
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