Today,
we mark the 506th anniversary
of the events we now call the Reformation.
We call ourselves Lutherans,
a name chosen for us by our Medieval detractors,
because we admire and hold as true
much of the writing and thinking of Martin Luther,
an Augustinian Monk and accidental change agent,
who wrote prolifically,
polemically,
and sometimes transformatively.
What Luther intended to be an academic critique
of the corruption and heterodoxy of the Roman Church
became instead the underpinning of a new Church,
proclaiming justification
by grace alone
through faith alone.
While we do not celebrate schism—
praying alongside our Catholic siblings
for the unity Jesus prayed for
on the night of his betrayal and arrest—
we commemorate these events
as a movement of the Holy Spirit
to renew and enliven the Church
to proclaim the Gospel of God’s love.
This remembering is important.
We see in our first reading from Jeremiah
the price of forgetting.
The weeping prophet extols the people of God
to remember
when God took them by the hand
and led them out of slavery in Egypt;
to remember
when they abandoned the covenant,
to remember
their infidelity to God
despite their intimate, spousal relationship with God.
God promises an unbreakable covenant,
a law inscribed on the hearts of God’s people.
They won’t have to remind each other,
because everyone will already be acutely aware
of who they are
and Whose they are.
The psalm serves as a reminder, too.
We are living in a time of calamitous natural disaster,
of raging nations and shaky kingdoms.
Both Luther and the psalmist remind us that
“A mighty fortress is our God”
a very present help in trouble.
God will break the spear
and shatter the bow.
God will terrify the terrorists,
swat away missiles and rockets,
establish justice,
and shelter with the innocent.
This phrase,
“Be still, and know that I am God,”
which we embroider on pillows
and print on home décor,
is not a fluffy, sentimental cliché.
In the context of the entire psalm,
it reads more like,
“Shut up and remember:
if I am God,
you are not.”
In our Gospel lesson,
Jesus says,
if you continue in my word,
you will be my true disciples
and you will be free.”
But the people of Judea are forgetful,
preferring to remember themselves
as the promised children of Abraham
instead of the rescued slaves of Pharoah.
“We’ve never been slaves to anyone,”
said these Hebrew people,
whose central, generative, defining national story
is being lead out of slavery in Egypt.
But Jesus says that they are still slaves
to the sin that has insnared them,
and if they would just remember the truth,
they would be free indeed.
We, too, are a forgetful people.
This is why we commemorate the Reformation.
This is why the liturgical calendar
is a circle,
repeated on a three-year cycle.
Because we forget,
again and again,
and need to be reminded,
again and again.
We look back at history
as a static reality,
firm and immovable events
that tell us who we are.
Thing A happened,
therefore Thing B happened,
and so we can draw Meaning X
as our conclusion.
So mark your calendars,
and we will commemorate Meaning X
every year,
just like this,
forever and ever,
Amen.
But I think we have missed the whole point.
I think history itself
and the meanings we infer,
can teach us a much larger story.
Instead of focusing on individual events
and drawing universal and immutable conclusions,
we should see that the whole of history
is itself a repeating pattern
of order, disorder, and reorder.
There is ‘the way things were,’
a change occurs,
and this is the way things are now.
To use our own story,
the pattern is life, death, and resurrection.
We are invited less to believe that these things happened,
more to recognize our own experience in this story,
and to remember that resurrection is always coming,
and to trust in that fact.
This is faith:
God is faithful
and invites us to trust this is true.
Knowing this truth,
experiencing this truth,
recognizing this truth,
is faith that justifies,
because it is this trust that draws us close
to the very heart of God.
History is not a bare repetition of events,
anymore that the Creeds
are an invitation to see how many
seemingly impossible things
we can force ourselves to believe.
History is remembering
that life and death and resurrection
is the pattern of the cosmos,
the very nature of reality.
The reformation
was not a singular event.
The reformation is the eternal work
of the Holy Spirit,
who is always making things new.
God is forming,
we are breaking,
and the Spirit is re-forming,
again and again.
The call to faith,
is better understood as a call to faithfulness,
a call to fidelity,
to trust God’s re-forming work in the Spirit
will repair all we have broken,
and we are free to stop doing the breaking.
If we want to be Jesus’s disciples,
we will not have to muster up
some deep and abiding belief
in the promises of God.
If we want to be Jesus’s disciples,
we will have to remain in Jesus’ word—
that is,
we will have to remember
all the times we have lived the pattern
of life, death, and resurrection;
we will have to trust that God is faithful,
even when we are not.
And if life, death, and resurrection
is the pattern of the cosmos,
then the path of discipleship
is the work of grief,
the work of remaining committed to reality
as it is,
not as we wish it was,
not as it used to be,
but AS. IT. IS.
And the world as it is
needs committed disciples of Jesus.
The world does not need us
to pine for former glories,
to hang on tooth and nail
to bygone eras of greater influence,
overflowing Sunday School rooms,
and programming 7 nights a week.
The world does not need us
to fight our corner
of a theological debate,
to build a Christian Nation,
or mandate school prayer.
But the world does need people who know the truth
and can set us free.
The world needs people
who remember who and Whose they are.
The world needs disciples
committed to grieve,
committed to bearing witness to each other’s grief,
and committed to letting go
of all the things we use to avoid our grief.
We need disciples who will make a new path
by walking it.
We need seers who can feel the sacred energy
in rocks and trees and earth,
because they recognize and can teach us
that the whole cosmos
is the incarnation of God’s very self
and must be cared for as a sacred trust.
We need folks who can see a neighbor in need
and become a neighbor in return.
We need the spiritual-but-not-religious ones
to teach these religious-but-not-often-spiritual ones
how to love the world as it is
until we are united in a spiritual community.
We need mystics and mothers,
we need farmers and poets;
we need lovers and fighters,
advocates and accomplices.
We need to let the world know
that God is not mad at them,
but that God invites them to both
know better
and do better.
We need folks who know—
who remember,
who have been around the cycle
of life, death, and resurrection a few times
and can remind the rest of us.
Reformation is not our past,
as though it were behind us.
Reformation is the nature of reality,
the calling of discipleship,
the eternal work of the Holy Spirit.
We are made right with God
because God is love,
and because God is faithful
even when we are not.
So,
If you would be disciples of Jesus,
if you would be children of the Reformation;
learn to grieve,
learn to remember,
and become the Love and Grace you seek,
because the world needs dying and rising disciples
who will speak the truth
and set us free.
Amen.