Palm Sunday: Forgiveness

In our final part of the series on Becoming a Resisting Church, we have to ask ourselves what we should do when everything else we do to change hearts and minds fails. We can do everything right and we can still fail to make a difference in the world around us.

The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. reminds us that we are called by the Christ to forgive those who continue to walk a path of hatred and abuse. Dr. King says:

“In other words, forgiveness is not a matter of quantity, but a matter of quality. One cannot forgive four hundred and ninety times without it becoming a part of the habit structure of one’s being. Forgiveness is not an occasional act; it is a permanent attitude. This was what Jesus taught his disciples.” (Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Chapter 5: Love in Action.)

In our Gospel reading this Sunday we read about the great betrayal and denial by Saint Peter. During all his protesting that he would not deny Jesus, when called to take a stand and to be known as a disciple, he buckled and denied him. He even flew into a rage at the very idea of beings one of Jesus’ disciples.

Yet, Jesus came to him after the resurrection and forgives him and restores him to the ministry he was called to do. This is all part of the process.

We will have those who will refuse to change their ways. They will harden their hearts against the Gospel of Love and will stand opposed to the teachings of the Jesus they claim to serve. It is not our job to judge them, it is our job to love them. And we love them by giving them forgiveness.

I hope you will join me this Sunday as we look deeper at forgiveness.

Pax et Bonum,

Bishop Greer

Fifth Sunday of Lent: Confronting Evil

In our continuing look at Becoming a Resisting Church, we turn to the writings of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. We have spent the last 4 weeks looking at the various issues facing society and the church. Now we turn toward how we address those injustices and abuses.

In our Gospel reading this Sunday, we hear of the story of the woman caught in adultery. The religious nationalists of Jesus’ day brought her before him to catch him breaking the law of Moses. It is interesting to note, it was not Jesus who was breaking the law of Moses, but the religious zealots who did so.

The law of Moses required that both the man and the woman caught in adultery should be tried and stoned. (Leviticus 20:10) However, the religious nationalist, much like the Christian nationalists today, ignored the law and only brought the woman before Jesus.

I have long thought that when Jesus stooped to write in the dirt that he was writing the sins of the people who brought her to him. However, it could be that Jesus wrote the name of the man or even the verse out of the Torah that commanded both the man, and the woman should be stoned. Either way, it shamed them into leaving her with Jesus.

King talks about the kind of evil these religious nationalists were practicing. He states:

“We have seen evil in tragic lust and inordinate selfishness. We have seen it in high places where men are willing to sacrifice truth on the altars of their self-interest. We have seen it in imperialistic nations trampling over other nations with the iron feet of oppression. We have seen it clothed in the garments of calamitous wars which left battlefields painted with blood, filled nations with widows and orphans, and sent men home physically handicapped and psychologically wrecked. We have seen evil in all of its tragic dimensions.” (Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Sermon “The Death of Evil upon the Seashore”)

We see this evil every day in our world. The evil of removing immigrants who only come to our country to seek a better, safer life. The abuse of women who are having their healthcare taken from them. The LGBTQIA+ individuals who are being denied life-saving healthcare and having their rights taken way one by one. People of color who are marginalized and abused in the name of the Christian Nationalists racist god.

King calls us to stand up and speak out. We cannot remain silent in the face of overwhelming evil. We cannot allow these acts to be committed in our names. And even when these acts are committed in the church or by people claiming to be Christians, we must speak out and stand up to them.

The only thing evil needs to triumph is for good people to do nothing!

Pax et Bonum,

Bishop Greer

Resisting Hate

Our Gospel this Sunday points to a dystopian future of our world. A future where the heavens are destroyed, and the earth is in ruin. Sadly, so many Christians cheer this type of future that they miss the entire message of the Gospel. They believe that Jesus’ words are truth, except when it comes to this Gospel.

You see, Jesus said that these events will occur before the generation he is speaking to passes away. That is about 40 years or so after that speech. This Gospel has been used to predict the coming of the end of the world and the “rapture” to scare people into submission.

During the previous election, many conservatives used this language and these types of dystopian imagery to scare people into voting for them. They not only misinterpret the scriptures, but they do the very thing Jesus cautions against: they combine Caeser and God.

We continue to find ourselves at the edge of a cliff. Many Christians have given their faith, allegiance, and whole selves to political leaders. They have decided that the church must be an arm of the government and do the bidding of the government. However, this is not what Jesus wanted. In fact, Jesus was crucified by a combination of government and religion.

2000 years later, we are right back where we started. Our parish, Saint Francis Parish and Outreach, refuses to be an arm of the government. We refuse to marginalize those in our midst that political leaders build their campaigns on the back of. We refuse to dehumanize people of color, immigrants, LGBTQIA+, the poor and homeless, prisoners, women, and those who are elderly and in need of our support.

This Advent, we are offering a class on How to be a Resisting Church. We will look at the lives and messages of the Rev. Dr. Detrick Bonhoffer and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. We will learn their message of peaceful resistance to an unjust government. And we will offer this class to anyone who wants to participate.

December 3, 10, and 17 at 6:30 PM ET on Zoom, we will offer everyone a chance to take this class. To receive information on how to participate, you can email the parish at bishopgodsey@oursaintfrancis.org or fill out the form below.

We hope you will join us as we start this next chapter in our parish!

Pax et Bonum,

Bishop Greer