During this summer of protests and yet another outbreak of protests and violence and racism and white supremacy in our country one thing that went unnoticed was the feast day on August 14 of Jonathan Myrick Daniels, an Episcopal saint and martyr. I remember it because ten years ago on his feast day marks the day that I began seminary.
Riding a Bike, Walking on Water
So, I remember when I was a little kid, I got a red Schwinn bike with a banana seat and easy-rider handle bars. It was cool! And I remember my grandaddy helping me learn. You see, where he lived, the road started out with the steepest hill in the world and as you picked up speed, it flattened out to a cul-de-sac that was, I don't know, maybe ten miles long.
What to Do with the Leftovers
I'm Sorry, So Sorry
Waste Joyfully
So, when I was a kid, my grandparents moved off their farm into the big city of Red Bank, Tennessee, outside Chattanooga. And my granddaddy had a huge garden. I mean, in my mind, at least it was big, but then again, I was little. Everything was big. It wasn't so big that he needed a tractor or other fancy equipment, just a tiller. But it was big enough that, because he didn't have that fancy equipment, planting time could be a big deal.
Snatching the Cup of Cold Water
So, a parishioner of mine in Knoxville was in intensive care. His condition was precarious, and the family was understandably worried about him. I was hovering with his family outside his room. He was sleeping, however, and we did not want to disturb him. Since there was no waiting room near by, we walked down the hall and went into the Surgical Waiting Room to sit and visit and rest and wait.
Canary in the Coal Mine
What Do You Want to Be When You Grow Up?
Hello, I'm...White (and Privileged)
Why Do You Stand There Looking Up Into Heaven?
If you ever have a chance to do a church tour around England, make your way to Norfolk. The motto of the village of Walsingham, in a reference to it's pre-Norman Conquest roots, is “Welcoming Visitors Since 1061,” and it is home to the Anglican Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham. And it is there, in the Chapel of the Ascension, that you will find it. Typically English, and typically weird.
Paul's Tour of Athens
Foxes
Most of you know that I love Sewanee. I was there this weekend to see the new crop of seminarians get pushed out into the world. But even I have to admit that once the ceremonies and the liturgies and the homework are done, the day-to-day life living in a seminary community on top of a mountain, far away from a city's hustle and bustle, can be fairly mundane, one day blending into the next.
St. Thomas on the Road
What an Easter!
So, in the back of my front closet in my house in Chattanooga, are some green photo albums that my Grandma put together so long ago. They have heavy black pages, and in them are these black and white photographs held in place by little triangle tabs that you would lick to glue in place. And while one of the pictures would occasionally break free from the tabs, remarkably, most of them are still held in place. Memories that are stuck in a certain kind of order, a way of remembering things that always were that way, even though they may not really have been that way at all.
Lazarus, Come Out
God in the Dark
So, I am a son of the South and a son of the Mountains. And this means many wonderful things to me. But it also means this: if EVER a weatherman announces some once-in-a-lifetime celestial event, like a full-on lunar eclipse eclipse or a dozen comets about to pass by so close we can almost touch them, on that day it will surely rain.
Just Say No
So, this mountain rises up from the lush Jericho Valley, a harsh, vertical desert of rough rocks, harsh edges, and slippery goat paths. It is Mount Quaratania, also known as the Mount of Temptation. After Jesus was baptized, he left the Jordan River and headed here, making his way up the mountain, for his encounter with what was ahead.
Don't Just Do Something...Sit There!
So, What'll It Be?
So, Moses is giving his farewell speech today. He has led this wild, complaining, endearing, loving, rough group of people for 40 years. It has, indeed, been an adventure. Escape from slavery. Miraculous interventions. Meeting God, hearing God, listening to God. Getting on the wrong side of God. Getting back in God's good graces. All while driving a car with thousands of unruly kids in the backseat.
Do You Really See the Savior?
So, generally I shy away from political themes in sermons. I tend to think they don't do much good, and in this current environment, you can be guaranteed that you'll make half your people angry, and the non-angry half will probably miss the point completely and so you've wasted your time, accomplishing nothing.