We are in a few places at the same time.
So let me give you a sort of
“You are here.”
marker to help locate yourself liturgically.
First,
we are in week three of three
taking about our core values,
Hospitality, Generosity, and Solidarity.
Second,
We have reached the end of the liturgical year,
Year A,
the first in a three-year cycle.
The liturgical calendar
is a guide for the worship and devotion
of the Church,
a sort of discipleship curriculum
in which we reenact
the story of God’s saving love
in the life of Jesus.
Next week,
we will begin Advent,
a season of preparation that looks back
to the incarnation of God in Christ Jesus,
and looks forward in preparation
for the second coming of Christ in glory
to set the upside-down world
right-side-up.
We follow the birth of Jesus
with the life and ministry of Jesus,
as the revelation and manifestation
of God’s love for humankind
in the season of Epiphany.
This is followed by the season of Lent,
when we compare our lives
with the life and ministry of Jesus
and offer our sincere repentance to God
before we follow Jesus
from the triumphal entry into Jerusalem
to shouts of Hosanna,
all the way to the Cross
and the tomb.
Then we celebrate the Holy Season of Easter,
in awe and wonder at the works of God,
who raised Jesus from the dead
and promises to raise us too.
We ponder the mystery
of such misery and majesty
and what all this might mean for our own lives
as we watch Jesus ascend to the right hand of God,
leaving us with the Holy Spirit
blowing like a hot wind
to set ablaze the wildfire of the Church.
And when this whirlwind has past,
we enter the season of Ordinary Time,
the Season after Pentecost,
when we learn what it means
to live between the first coming
and the second coming,
what it looks like to live in the Kingdom of Heaven
now.
This day,
that is liturgical New Year’s Eve,
is Reign of Christ Sunday.
This single day
is set between liturgical years
to remind us to set aside nationality,
partisan allegiance,
and earthly citizenship,
and offer our loyalty, love, and service
to God in Christ
alone.
Matthew’s Gospel
tells us that when the Son of Man
comes again,
he will come as judge,
the divider,
the separator.
The Son of Man
like a cosmic shepherd
will separate the sheep from the goats,
sheep on one side,
goats on the other.
The sheep are those
who have cared for God
without knowing it,
and the goats are those
who have not cared for God,
also without knowing it.
Matthew’s Gospel
is written to a persecuted people,
a community of Jewish Christians
who have been separated from all the things
they though made them Jewish,
that made them God’s people.
They’ve been kicked out of the synagogue,
the temple has been destroyed,
and Jerusalem along with it;
they have in many instances
been kicked out of their own families,
lost their businesses,
lost their status in the community,
and have begun to follow an illegal religious movement
whose leader was killed by the very government
that now seeks to stamp them out.
This is why
in Matthew,
Jesus speaks so much about separation.
Jesus is naming the reality his followers are living
and assuring them
that none of this
has separated them from God.
Jesus is saying here in our gospel today,
“what they do to you, hungry ones,
thirsty ones,
naked, homeless, sick and locked-up ones,
they do to me,
and I promise you
they will not get away with it.”
The Reign of Christ
is about God in a body
showing us how to behave in our bodies,
and how we ought to care for other bodies.
The Reign of Christ
is about the incarnation
spreading like that Pentecostal wildfire
until each us is a burning bush,
ablaze and not consumed,
a beckoning curiosity
drawing us to the heart of God
in the very place
we’ve tried to hide from God.
Jesus speaks of a unity,
a radical solidarity with humankind
such that the two cannot be separated.
What we do to each other,
we do to God,
and to ourselves.
In fact,
that is the whole point of incarnation,
of enfleshment,
of putting on a body;
to stand in such solidarity with humankind,
that God might know by experience
what it is to be hungry, thirsty, naked,
sick, and locked up.
And in return,
that we might stand in such solidarity with God
that we might put on divinity,
to know by experience
what it is to transcend and transform the suffering of others
into the meeting place of God.
In fact,
the more we willingly enter into the suffering of others
the more we have taken up the cross as our own.
The movement from Hospitality,
to Generosity,
to Solidarity
is the movement from separation
to union
to unity.
We recognize God in the other,
we become the other,
and at last,
there is no other.
The Reign of Christ
is the final,
ultimate end;
the complete,
perfect,
entire,
total reconciliation of all things to God in Christ.
We live now in a penultimate reality,
the beginning of the reconciliation,
the becoming of the other.
If we can see,
trust,
act as though
ultimate justice is coming now,
among us,
in us,
through us,
then we can see Christ
as the Ruler of Heaven and Earth
and our neighbors will see it in us.
The calling of God
is to expand our consciousness of,
to wake up to,
to keep watch for,
the appearance of the Son of Man
in all of humankind.
Christ reigns on earth as in heaven
when we recognize Christ in each other
and stand in solidarity,
sharing each other’s burdens
until there is no “we” and “they,”
but only “us.”
If “you” suffer,
“we” suffer.
If “you” rejoice,
“we” rejoice.
In the incarnation,
God has chosen human dignity
as God’s own dignity.
We have no dignity apart from God,
and in God
we have the very dignity of God.
This is why we bring our babies to the font
and pour out holy water in the Name of the Triune God,
because we,
like the saints of Old,
have found a sacred place
where God has come meet us.
Not a place of stone and dirt,
not in a temple of marble and gold,
but in the naked,
needy,
vulnerable frailty
of this living body,
this human body
on this aging earth.
You are the meeting place
of God and humankind.
You are a living Ebenezer,
a breathing monument
to the goodness of a God
who comes to us,
who becomes us,
until there is only ever
God.
And when Jesus comes again in glory
to judge the living and the dead,
to separate the sheep from the goats,
you,
Beloved Child of the Most High God,
will be taken back to the font,
back to that holy moment
when you were hidden in the heart of God,
and the heart of God hidden in you.
The sheep and the goats will be judged
by how they treated you,
how they treated God in Christ
in you.
And in this time
between the first coming
and the second coming,
we are called
to expand our consciousness of,
to wake up to,
to keep watch for,
the appearance of the Son of Man
in all of humankind.
While the sheep and goats
have served God—
or failed to serve God—
unaware,
we serve a God we know.
We serve a God we know to be humble,
a God born in a human body,
a God born into poverty,
a God who got hungry and thirsty,
who needed shelter and clothing;
a God who was once a stranger to us,
a God whose broken body
needed help shouldering the cross,
a God who was arrested and murdered by the state.
If, as Paula D’Arcy says,
“God comes to us disguised as our lives,”
then we must also believe that God comes to us
disguised as the lives of others,
that God comes to us in the life we share,
and the depth of our love for our neighbor
is the depth of our love for God.
The degree to which
we have entered into the suffering of our neighbors
is the degree to which we have taken up the cross.
The measure of our worship
is the measure to which
we have ascribed worth to our neighbors.
The extent to which
we have given grace away
is the extent to which
we have believed grace can save us.
In this image of the Hospitality of Abraham,
we see only the disguise,
God in the Guest.
The story tells us
that Abraham stood by,
waiting at the table
to meet the needs of God in disguise.
But Abraham is absent in this image.
So are Sarah
and the hired hand
who slaughtered the calf
and prepared the meal.
We the beholder,
have now taken the place of Abraham.
We now wait at the table of the Guest,
to meet their needs,
to feed them, give them water,
to clothe, shelter, and care for them,
seeing through the disguise
to the very presence of God.
Solidarity is the invitation
to share in both the divine, eternal relationship of Godhood
and in the naked, needy, vulnerable frailty
of neighbor-hood.
Beloved,
The reign of Christ has come,
and it is still unfolding.
Jesus will come again
to judge the living and the dead
and his kingdom will have no end.
And as the kingdom advances,
as we strive to live out
and grow into our core values—
Hospitality, Generosity, and Solidarity—
we will find Christ enthroned
in the very life we live,
in the lives of others,
and in the grace and love we share.
As we stand in solidarity with God in Christ
and Christ in our Neighbor,
we will grow into the likeness of God
whose image we bear
like a living icon,
the fullness of him who fills all in all,
until there is only Godhood,
a divine, eternal relationship
of Solidarity.
Amen.