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After fifteen weeks of Lent and
Easter, after the arc from SEE to BURN, after Pentecost and Trinity Sunday and
Corpus Christi, we arrive at Ordinary Time. And I want to tell you what that
means for Saint Francis Parish and Outreach this summer, because the word
ordinary does not mean what most people think it means.
In the liturgical calendar,
Ordinary Time is called ordinary not because it is routine or unremarkable but
because the weeks are numbered. The Latin root is ordinalis: counted, ordered,
in sequence. Ordinary Time is the counted time of the year, the long season of
growth between the great feasts, the weeks when the Church is not celebrating a
particular mystery of Christ’s life but is living out the implications of
everything it has already celebrated.
The implications of everything
we have celebrated since Ash Wednesday are significant. And this summer, we are
going to spend eight weeks sitting with those implications in a very specific
way.
Introducing
the Series: The Kingdom Worth Everything
This Sunday we begin a new
eight-week series called The Kingdom Worth Everything: Costly Discipleship in
Ordinary Time. It runs from June 14 through August 2, and it is designed to do
two things simultaneously: look outward at what the kingdom of God looks like
in the world, and look inward at what it costs the disciple to be someone who
builds it.
The series runs alongside our
Thursday evening book study on Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s The Cost of Discipleship.
Bonhoeffer published that book in 1937, while directing an illegal seminary for
the Confessing Church in Germany, the community of theologians and pastors who
refused to let the Nazi regime take over the Protestant churches. He was
arrested by the Gestapo in 1943 and executed at Flossenburg concentration camp
on April 9, 1945, three weeks before the end of the war in Europe. He was
thirty-nine years old.
He opened The Cost of
Discipleship with a sentence that has stayed with me since the first time I
read it: “Cheap grace is the mortal enemy of our church.” And the alternative
he offered was not expensive grace, grace that you pay for, but costly grace: grace
that forms you, changes you, demands something of you, and produces in you the
kind of person who cannot simply look the other way when the world requires a
witness.
The series has eight words, one
for each Sunday. Taken together they describe the shape of costly discipleship
for a community like ours in a moment like this.
CALLED (June 14, Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time)
SPEAK (June 21, Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time)
CROSS (June 28, Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time)
YOKE (July 5, Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time)
GROUND (July 12, Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time)
PATIENCE (July 19, Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time)
WORTH (July 26, Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time)
ENOUGH (August 2, Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time)
Each word opens a specific text
from the Roman Catholic Lectionary for Year A. Each word also connects to a
chapter or theme in Bonhoeffer’s argument. And each word carries a specific
claim about what this community’s life together looks like in August, in the
South, in 2026, when the cost of discipleship is not a historical abstraction.
The first word of the series is
CALLED, and it comes from one of the most important single verses in the Gospel
of Matthew.
Jesus is looking at the crowds.
Matthew tells us he had compassion on them, because they were distressed and
were reclining, like sheep without a shepherd. The Greek behind those words is
visceral. These are not people who are a little spiritually unfulfilled. They
are people who have been worked over by life and left where they fell. And
Jesus sees them with a compassion that the New Testament consistently describes
as coming from the gut, from the deepest place in a person.
And then he says to his
disciples: the harvest indeed is great, but the laborers are few.
I want to preach about the call
that comes out of that seeing. Not the call that comes after you have made
yourself worthy or sorted out your theology or resolved every doubt. The call
that comes while you are still in the middle of all of it. Paul tells the
Romans that God demonstrates his love in that, while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us. The call does not wait for us to be ready. It meets us in
the field, distressed and reclining, and it sends us to find the others who are
there too.
The kingdom worth everything
begins with a seeing. Come and hear what that means for this community, in this
city, in this summer.
Augusta
Pride: We Need to Get There
I want to close this blog post
with a direct appeal, because Augusta Pride is this month and we are running
out of time.
We need $775 to have a Saint
Francis Parish and Outreach booth at Augusta Pride 2026. The connection between
that booth and the series we are beginning this Sunday is not accidental. The
kingdom worth everything includes the queer people of Augusta who have been
told by every religious institution in their lives that God does not want them.
The costly discipleship Bonhoeffer writes about includes being physically
present in the places that matter, with your name on a sign, saying what you
believe out loud.
A booth at Pride is not a
gesture. It is the series word CALLED made visible outside the sanctuary. We
were called to see the distressed and the thrown-down and go to them. Augusta
Pride is one of the places they will be.
If you believe in what this
community is doing this summer, give what you can and share this need with
people who care about this kind of ministry. Every dollar helps.
Venmo: @saintfrancisparish
PayPal: paypal.me/saintfrancisparish
Cash App: $saintfrancisparish
See you Sunday. The harvest is
great, the laborers are few, and the kingdom is worth everything it costs.
Pax
et Bonum, Bishop Greer
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