These next three weeks
we will be focusing on our core values,
those motivating and animating principles
that speak to who we are in the present
and the ideals we are striving to embody.
If we are indeed
striving to be followers of Jesus,
then our values should flow
from our desire to imitate Jesus,
to embody the ideals he embodies.
Focusing on these core values
allows us to examine the ways
we are already producing the fruit of the Spirit
and to develop practices
that help us to imitate Jesus more consciously
and intentionally.
They will also invite us to be honest
about all the ways we fail to live up to these ideals,
to confess them,
receive God’s grace,
and to extend that grace to others.
I have been the pastor of this congregation
for 2 years,
and I have spent this time getting to know us,
listening to our hopes and fears,
and serving alongside you
as we lived out our desire to follow Jesus.
There are three core values
that I believe both exemplify who we already are
and challenge us to grow in our likeness to Jesus.
They are Hospitality,
Generosity,
and Solidarity.
As a centering image for our core values
we have this icon,
written in the 15th century
by Andrei Rublev.
The icon depicts our reading for today,
three strangers,
seated at table
beneath the oak trees.
They share a simple meal.
In the reading,
Abraham stands by
and Sarah watches from a distance.
Neither are present in this image,
leaving the beholder to take their place
as host for God in the Guest.
The table is mostly empty.
If we are to wait on this table,
have they finished,
or do they need more?
Can we see the need of strangers
and recognize the calling of the divine?
Can we sacrifice our finest provisions
for the refreshment of others,
even if we only wait at the table?
Can we love the stranger
as our neighbor?
As our God?
Can we love our neighbors as they are,
for who they are,
instead of loving what they can do for us?
Can we be grateful
for how our neighbors’ needs
show us the way
to the hiding place of God?
Can we love them?
The truth is,
we set this table for God in the Guest
every week.
We bring here
a bit of bread and a bit of wine.
We offer our resources to God,
we give thanks,
and we receive a promise already fulfilled,
Just as God in the Guest
promises to return in due season,
so Christ will come again
to give us an inheritance
that will have no end.
We have fought so long
and so hard
and so often
about how Jesus is present in this meal
that we have failed to learn its lesson.
We come to this meal for a variety of reasons.
But a primary purpose of this meal
is to teach us to recognize God
in all the places God chooses to hide
and to bow and kiss the ground
before each and every sacred mystery.
Abraham sees and rises to serve.
Jacob sees and wrestles for a blessing.
Moses sees the bush ablaze but not consumed,
and leads his people to freedom.
Elijah finds God in the silence.
Elizabeth sees it in the womb of Mary.
The demons and Gentiles see it in Jesus.
The centurion sees it in the crucifixion.
Magdalene and Thomas see it
in the scared but risen body of Jesus.
Paul sees it in the blinding light
and he is never the same.
Scores of mystics have found it
in prayer and fasting.
Have you seen it?
Can you see it now?
If you have seen it,
how did it change and challenge you?
And if you haven’t seen it,
look here!!
Look in the font,
where God hides in the water.
Look on the table,
where God hides in bread and wine.
Look in the mirror,
where God hides in you.
Look in the face of the stranger,
where God is hiding in the neighbor.
Then welcome God in every form,
every need,
in every joy and sorrow,
in every saint and sinner.
Bow before the sacred mystery
and ask what you can do.
Make a place of rest
for God in every form.
We are already a very welcoming,
servant-hearted people,
who care about the well-being of our neighbors
and work to meet their needs.
We welcome guests to our worship
and we set a table to feed them.
We gather food,
make sandwiches,
and give our time and money
to feed our hungry neighbors.
But do we practice a hospitality like Abraham?
Returning to the icon,
if we are to be hosts to God in the Guest,
I ask you again:
Can we see the needs of strangers
and recognize the calling of the divine?
Can we sacrifice our finest provisions—
our building,
our identity,
our hopes for a return to the glory days—
for the refreshment of others,
even if we only wait at the table?
Can we love the stranger
as our neighbor?
As our God?
Can we love our neighbors as they are,
for who they are,
instead of loving what they can do for us—
like give more money
or keep the church alive?
Can we be grateful
for how our neighbors’ needs
show us the way
to the hiding place of God?
Beloved,
God comes to us
disguised as the other.
In fact,
that is what the word ‘holy’ means;
entirely other, separate, set apart.
God comes to us disguised as the Other
to show us that our neighbors are holy,
a sacred mystery of divine presence.
And when we welcome God in every form,
when we make space for God in the Guest
to rest among us,
when we sacrifice our finest provisions
to quelle the hunger of God in the Neighbor,
we have come to practice the hospitality of Abraham,
and God will rest among us.
Amen.