| Annual Parish Meeting Rector Report – George Yandell In my annual reports over the past eleven years, I have said these words, and I’ll say them again: This is your parish. I serve God with you, guided by the Spirit of Jesus. I want to tell what I perceive God has done, is doing, and what God may be leading us to do together. If there’s a slogan that sums up the past year, it’s “bridge over troubled water.” That’s how I have experienced the life and ministries we’ve extended during the covid era. If the parish is a bridge for us in living into our baptisms in the company of Jesus, you have done remarkably well. The results of our pledge campaign have surprised me and made me most grateful. Where is the bridge carrying us? That’s what the newly reconstituted vestry will continue to discern after they start their work in the meeting after this all-parish meeting. We are now into our 36th year as a parish- the founding parents are almost gone. New members are finding Holy Family and becoming part of the ministering body. We added 6 new members in 2021 during Covid. There were no Marriages, 2 Baptisms and 3 Burials in 2021. 6 members/families moved away, and 7 died since last year’s annual meeting. We’ll remember them in the annual meeting. Our average Sunday attendance in 2019 was 169. In 2020, our average attendance before we began worshipping outside and online was 146. It was tailing off by early February. Last year average attendance for our Sunday services was 86. For Adult Education online @ 12. Online Evening Prayer, Morning Prayer and Evensong engaged both parishioners and non-members. I am so grateful to those who’ve stepped up and are leading those services. Plus over 100 people who participate in some way in the parish but are not members. Even during Covid, people are finding Holy Family who might not have been aware of us before. Online participation for Sunday and Holy Day services Facebook: 4403 views YouTube: 645 Website: More than 2023Views. Unique viewers:175 Those who watched all the way thru:377 We probably have around 266 active adult members, but there’s no way to be absolutely sure since we’re not able to have many activities in person. Just to note- it’s not difficult to join the parish. Talk to me if you’re interested in joining. In the diocesan council virtual meeting in November, the financial report showed that in 2020, Holy Family had the 27th largest budget in the diocese of ATL, out of 115 worshipping communities. You will hear in the annual meeting about the finances in 2021 and the budget the finance ministry approved for 2022 and forwarded to the vestry- the vestry accepted it unanimously on January 25. Because of increased pledges and a good end to last year with good income and less than anticipated expenses, Holy Family is in good condition financially. You are the reason- your pledges have exceeded past years’ tallies, and you’ve set the table for enhanced ministries in this new year. 113 pledges totaling $445,000. These totals are remarkable when we cannot gather for most activities except via zoom. Four years ago, a group of us started strategizing with the diocese to accomplish the final goal in the parish Long Range Plan: “Eliminate the mortgage before refinancing is due in 2023.” Members of the 2019 vestry unanimously endorsed this major step. We reasoned that without mortgage payments we can free the parish for new initiatives in outreach, in ministry, and build a strong platform for Holy Family to thrive into the future. Gifts from over 60 members brought in more than anyone anticipated. Just over $468,000. The balance on the mortgage was just slightly less than $601,000. That left $135,000 needed from the Diocese. The diocese lent us that money, we paid off our commercial mortgage and the diocese loan was initiated at a much more favorable rate- @ 2%. This is saving the parish over $15,000 in mortgage interest and principal payments each year. It’s a major reason our budget for 2022 is conservative and balanced. This without any solicitations or without a campaign. I’ve never before had this experience in any of the other parishes I’ve served. Today the remainder of the diocesan loan is $54,692. It was $130,000 at the beginning of 2021. The numbers are published each week in the service sheet. I am grateful for all of you, even when we’re not together as much as in pre-covid time. You keep me focused on what’s most important, and you challenge me and one another to love like Jesus. You can read about the work the vestry and parish leaders have been engaged in over the past year in the annual meeting booklet. We have added new members to our ministries. They’ve brought strength and purpose. You can read about each ministry’s report in the annual meeting booklet. Worship: The Worship Ministry is chaired by Ric Sanchez, chief verger. With input from the clergy, vergers, altar guild chair, organist/choirmaster, usher chair, greeters, flower guild and others, we evaluate how services are working, and plan future worship. After the third Sunday in Lent two years ago, we started taping the services. A crew of us with no experience used cell phones to tape and process the services through Good Friday. Then we had to move out of the nave and have solo worship recording. Michael DeCamp, Steve Franzen, Allan DeNiro and I (sequentially) sweated through the taping sessions, then spent hours trying to upload the services onto Vimeo. Sometimes the uploading took hours and hours. It was harrowing. We dropped our smart phones on occasion. Didn’t help the production quality. Bit by bit we learned and gained more experience and recruited more volunteers to produce the services. We were able to move back into the nave in early summer under strict diocesan guidelines for recording and streaming. The team leaders contracted with 3Stage Design to record and process the services until the production volunteers could take on more of the taping. Using restricted funds for building furnishings, the production booth was constructed by Terry Nicholson and Jacques LeBlanc. Holy Family purchased the equipment for us to produce on our own. The volunteer producers were trained and assumed leadership and kept us online. We have missed only two Sundays in the past 18 months because of equipment failure. There are now 5 producers, 10 camera operators and 6 sound board operators. They can use 2 more sound people. Please consider joining the production team as we will need additional folks who can use laptops to stream live education classes. If you sign up, you get a reserved seat in the production booth. Because of our online presence, folks who didn’t know about Holy Family are seeking us out. Some are contributing online. It is evangelism. Thank you everyone engaged in our services for keeping our liturgy dignified, meaningful, and challenging. You can read Ric’s report in the booklet. Vestry Initiatives – Long Range Plan: The new vestry needs to revisit the Plan and make some adjustments. The LRP guides our work and keeps us on task. The Parish Development group was created to move us to having a more visible presence in our area and more intentional planning for gathering newcomers. Working with this year’s vestry has been grace-filled. I am most grateful for all they’ve done. See more in Sr. Warden Phil Anderson’s report of the vestry. I find it hard as Phil, Patricia Stimmel and John Rowan and rotate off. All of the vestry have done exceptional work over the past year. The calls you made on parishioners, the follow-up calls during the pledge campaign, kept folks plugged in and contributing, against all odds. Phil’s leadership has kept us on track, has generated plans for developing the parish, and has kept me accountable for the whole year. I’m pleased I get to continue to serve with those remaining on vestry. We actually have fun together, even when we’re focused on sometimes difficult tasks. Enhancing Stewardship of Money: In 2021 the vestry refined the Every Member Canvass. The response in turning in pledge cards in fall 2021 was stronger than last year. The Canvass co-chairs Jeannine Krenson and Allan DeNiro gave excellent leadership in planning and carrying out the stewardship of money campaign. It was thorough and participatory. Along with vestry and finance ministry leaders they met with all the ministries to solicit their plans and needs for 2022. Those meetings gave us more data sooner than any year before in preparing a budget that met nearly every goal the ministry chairs submitted. The canvass just ended was exceptional during the Covid restrictions. Your pledging has equipped the vestry to meet almost all the requests from parish ministries for funding. You can hear more about the pledge results from Treasurer George Miksch and Finance Ministry Chair Jim Braley in the annual meeting. Finance Ministry: Read the report of the Finance Ministry to learn the details of our use of your pledge dollars. I am most grateful for your work and especially for the leadership of Jim Braley as chair, and our treasurer George Miksch. Clergy Colleagues: Holy Family is graced with three clergy who volunteer in service to our parish. Their ministries for us are grace-filled, generous and essential to our spiritual and emotional health. To have colleagues like these is an asset beyond measure. Not only do they preach, serve at the altar, lead EFM classes, and serve in the Worship Ministry, do pastoral calls and push outreach efforts, but we also have fun together. I am daily grateful for Katharine, Byron, and Ted. Conclusions: How are we doing in accomplishing the mission of the parish: “Creating Christian Community: Engaging people in vibrant ministry”? Your input gives direction and support as parish leaders plan for stronger ministries. Your volunteering puts the plans into action. During Covid, your participation is a gift of community we all need more of. You can read about all the ministries’ accomplishments in the annual meeting report. Most important question: Are you engaged in vibrant ministry? If not, volunteer. Engage yourself in the work of a ministry or committee. Seek a higher plane of engagement with the Spirit of Christ. Speak with the leader of the ministry. Your ministries through Holy Family help fulfill your baptismal promises. You find colleagues and friends you haven’t known before. Being engaged multiplies your joy as you work with others in company with the Resurrected Lord of Heaven and Earth. This is a remarkable community of love, support and nurture, not only for one another, but for the wider community. I am honored to serve as your rector. G. Yandell |
Category: Sermons
3rd Sunday After The Epiphany – Katharine Armentrout
JESUS AND HIS BLUEPRINT
We have just heard Jesus layout what I would call His “blueprint for ministry”. He was filled with the Spirit that morning, as he read the powerful promises from Isaiah 61:
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go free,
19 to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”
And when he sat down and all eyes were upon him, he said, “Today, this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”
At the time that passage was written, faithful Hebrews had prayed for their long-awaited release from Exile and the rebuilding of Israel.
And, at the time of Jesus, faithful Jews were praying for God to release them from Roman domination, release from their crushing taxes, their poverty and oppression that had been created by that Roman system.
Jesus, when he said, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing,” is announcing that through his ministry those promises, promises made especially to the least in the kingdom, will be fulfilled and that the coming of God’s kingdom is upon them.
When he arrived at the synagogue in Nazareth that day, he had already undergone a profound spiritual journey –
He had been baptized in Jordan river where the Holy Spirit had descended upon him and a voice had announced “You are my son, the Beloved”; then, led by the Holy Spirit, he had spent forty days in the desert where he was confronted by the devil’s temptations.
I think it was during that time of great temptation and privation that, to use our vocabulary, Jesus came to terms with what being the Beloved, the Son of God, would require of him, what he would face in his ministry, but also understood that the Holy Spirit would accompany him through that ministry.
So, when he arrived at his hometown synagogue, Jesus took full ownership of who he was – the Anointed one – and proclaimed that Isaiah’s message of great hope would be fulfilled through His ministry.
And what was to be the focus of Jesus’ ministry? What was the laser-focus of his work? His focus will be God’s focus.
And God’s focus has been clear from the first pages of the Old Testament: His unfailing concern had always been the welfare of his people – both the spiritual and physical care of God’s people, especially those who are at the margins.
Remember it was our God who made clothes for Adam and Eve to cover their naked bodies before they left the Garden of Eden, a tender moment from the very beginning of our relationship with God;
And it was God who broke open Pharoah’s hold on the enslaved Hebrews and set them free.
It was God who sent the Cloud by day and the fire by night to guide them, and provided manna and water for the Hebrews as they made their way to the Promised land;
It was God who gave the Commandments that establish the rules for right living; the Commandments that prohibit murder and covetousness and lying and adultery, each of which prohibition protects God’s people from one another, and especially protects the vulnerable.
God is powerfully clear about his priorities when he says to the prophet: “Is this not the fast I choose? To loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the yoke, to let the oppressed go free. Is it not to share your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless into your house?”
God from the beginning has had the care of His people foremost in his concerns. And those concerns have always been laser-focused on the poor, the oppressed, the captive, the blind.
The word “poor” in both the Old and New Testament includes not only those who have little in the way of money or land or goods;
it includes those who, for one reason or another, are on the fringes or the outside of society – those marginalized by gender, race, physical handicap. Widows and orphans. Prisoners.
And who are the “oppressed”? They are those who are under the harsh control, either physical or economic, of others.
In Pickens County they are the poor who won’t, or can’t, speak up for themselves because of fear of loss of job; or won’t speak up about dangerous conditions in their rental trailers because they fear eviction; or immigrants who hide their illnesses or abuses for fear of deportation; they are the addicts whose lives are quite literally a prison;, etc.
If you wonder about this emphasis this morning on the poor and oppressed, if you are quietly saying to yourself “Oh it’s just Katharine the Deacon talking; she always talks like that”, then just consider this fact when wondering about the priorities of our God:
There are over 300 verses in the Bible that address our responsibility to care for the poor and to work for justice. The poor and the oppressed always have a priority on God’s care and concerns.
And it was these concerns that Jesus took up with his ministry.
We remember so many specific examples of his ministry to them: he healed the blind; he ate meals with the outcasts and sinners; he confronted those who would put heavy Temple tax burdens on the faithful poor; he fed the hungry; he healed the child of a gentile woman.
The ministry of Jesus to the poor and the oppressed followed the blueprint that he set that morning in Nazareth; and set the priorities and blueprint for his disciples and for us.
Priorities which we took on at our baptism when we each promised to seek an serve all persons, loving our neighbors as ourselves and promised to strive for justice and peace among all people, while respecting the dignity of every human being (not just those who look like us or think like we do) ..
This is God’s kingdom-work, Spirit-infused work, and as Jesus’ followers, we, each one of us, is needed for the work. Each us has been given unique gifts by God, as the apostle Paul tells us in our Corinthians passage.
Those gifts are essential to the mission and ministry that Jesus set forth on that Sabbath day long ago.
“You are the body of Christ and individually members of it.” Says Paul.(vs. 27.) Our individual gifts are important; and we know that when we come together with our gifts, as part of the Body of Christ, that we can accomplish even more.
As someone wrote, the best way to understand Paul’s point with the body of Christ is to think of it in the true Southern plural: “All y’all are the body.”
And the Kingdom work that is being done by “all y’all” here at Holy Family for the Pickens County community is remarkable. We pray each week for these organizations, but do you realize how many people from Holy Family are involved in making them work?
You have brought tangible good news to the poor through the food pantry and CARES Financial Assistance center, which was established right here at Holy Family; it truly is a haven for the poor of this County, and many from Holy Family have volunteered there and continue to support this wonderful place with donations of food and money. The Weekend Snack program, which provides food to kids in Pickens County, is an organization. It was started by folks at Tate United Methodist Church together with folks from Holy Family. And now 8 or 10 folks from Holy Family, along with other volunteers, pack almost 500 bags of food each week for the students who have signed-up for the program.
You have brought healing to the broken and the sick through the work at the Good Samaritan Clinic which got its organizational start right here at Holy Family. Quite literally life-saving work is done by the staff and the volunteers at the clinic.
Holy Family has many volunteers at Good Sam and a number of our folks are on the Board of Directors…Truly God’s saving work is done there.,
ACES, The Appalachian Children’s Emergency Center, is a shelter established with the help of a number of Holy Family folks. It provides a safe, loving home for older foster children who have been removed from their homes and have no one to care for them.
Our volunteers continue to serve on the board; they help raise funds for ACES; and they provide direct mentoring to the some of the kids.
Additionally we have volunteers working with the Boys and Girls clubs; we have Holy Family folks now serving on the board at Habitat for Humanity; we have volunteers up at Arrendale Women’s prison in Cornelia; we have volunteers at the Senior Center and helping with.
And this list does not include those volunteers go to Honduras and Haiti, when travel is safe. And I know that I am missing some! The needs of the poor and the oppressed just in this County remain great even though we are providing some wonderful services:
For instance over half the kids in the county qualify for free and reduced lunch which means over half the children in our county come from families that are near the poverty level; we have a terrible scarcity of affordable housing and the rents are now very high – at the apartments behind the Mountainside Hospital is $1,100 a month for just a 2 bedroom apartment and that does not include utilities; we have no homeless shelter in the County and yet we have folks who, for no fault of their own are homeless and have no other support.
Epiphany 2C – By George Yandell
Weddings in Palestine were major celebrations with extended family and friends. They typically lasted a week or more. In today’s gospel reading about the marriage feast there is more than meets the eye.
As today’s Gospel passage opens, Jesus’ mother is attending a wedding at Cana in Galilee to which Jesus and his disciples also have been invited. Food and wine were plentiful at such festivities. When the supply of wine runs out it was a social disaster for the host family. Jesus’ mother informs him of the shortage. Jesus replied to her, “Woman, what concern is that to you and to me? My hour has not yet come”. That seems harsh and abrupt, doesn’t it? Referring to his mother as “woman” is not an indication of a lack of affection or respect, but rather is how Jesus often addressed women. (Throughout John’s Gospel, Mary is not called by name but is referred to as the mother of Jesus.) [Adapted from “Synthesis, a Weekly Resource for Preaching and Worship following the Revised Common Lectionary” for this Sunday.]
Symbolically, a marriage feast points to the banquet associated with the coming messianic era as Isaiah portrays it in that passage for today. It was a joyful and extravagant event. When Jesus says, “Fill the jars with water”, the ordinary event of a wedding takes on cosmic proportions, as water becomes wine. The words of Jesus accomplished it. Acceptance of Jesus’ words is a crucial theme in John’s Gospel, as seen in Mary’s faith in her son: “Do whatever he tells you”.
An extraordinary amount of wine was produced—as much as 120-150 gallons. It draws attention to the extravagant abundance of the age of the messiah, beyond what humans can comprehend or expect. This abundance is exemplified again in the feeding of the five thousand later in John’s gospel. In the prophetic tradition, abundant wine is a sign of the restoration of Israel. [ibid] Notice the wine steward (probably as fussy as a good sommelier today) pronounced to the groom, “You have kept the best wine until now!” Jesus saved the celebration and the marriage- the guests at the wedding probably recalled the taste of that wine many times over the ensuing years.
The ‘chief steward’ in Greek is actually ‘governor of the feast.’ This is the only time the word is used in this sense in the Bible-all the other times it refers to a governor of a kingdom or a region. When John’s original readers heard this title they would have thought- “Why does this character have this title? Certainly he was a person in charge of catering or tending the wine, but governor?” Archi-trik’-linos. Literally, the ‘architect of the feast’. He presides at the feast, but is not a servant, nor the best man, but a guest chosen to run the affair because he is on close terms with the bridegroom. He is the one on whom all the action turns- a ‘fifth business’. I believe the gospel writer meant for his readers to realize the importance of that office in their ongoing ministry in Jesus’ name.
Marcus Borg, now of blessed memory, gives insight into the miracle of the water into wine. As the opening scene of public activity in John’s gospel, it discloses what the entire gospel is all about. It frames the story of Jesus. He says, “Big things happen on the 3rd day: in the Bible: notably the resurrection of Jesus.” [Jesus: Uncovering the Life, Teachings, and Relevance of a Religious Revolutionary, 2006 Harper Collins, p. 58]
“The beginning of the gospel anticipates its climax. ‘There was a wedding’ are words equally important in framing Jesus’ ministry: Marriage was a rich religious metaphor in Judaism and early Christianity: the marriage of God and Israel, the wedding of heaven and earth, the mystical marriage between an individual and God, the church as the bride of Christ….The [whole] story of Jesus is about a wedding. And more, it is a wedding at which the wine never runs out….. where the best is saved for last.” [ibid]
That’s the metaphor for us–following Jesus marries us humans to the divine. The feast keeps on going. The wine never runs out. Disciples of Jesus are continually amazed and included in God’s work. We are the ‘archi-trik’-linos.’ Through our baptisms, we architects have pledged “to seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving neighbor as self.” That supreme commitment means we engineer the ongoing feast that marries ordinary humans to God. And like the wine steward, we stand to be amazed at the abundance of joy that overflows- to be thrilled at the intoxicating love that results from those marriages. Sometimes a distressing event pushes us beyond our comfort zones to bond people together.
I was in ninth grade. My parish had begun to offer after-school tutoring to children in the neighborhood around our Church. It was a pocket of poverty with poor housing and lots of single-parent families. The youth group leaders pressed us to sign up to do one afternoon a week of tutoring to elementary school students in the neighborhood center. I didn’t want to sign up, but did, because they told us it was Christ’s work we would be doing.
I would walk over from the Church with other kids from our youth group on Wednesday afternoons. I got to know two of the kids who were siblings-boys in grades 3 & 5. The younger needed help with math, the older with reading and writing. I became fond of those boys over the months we worked together.
Then came an afternoon when they didn’t show up. The center director told me their mother was in the hospital and the boys were with their grandmother across town. I was distressed. I walked back to the church and went to the rector’s office- Mr. Garner let me in and I told him what had happened. He immediately got on the phone and called the neighborhood center, got the mother’s name and the hospital she was in. He said he was immediately going to see her. I waited until the other tutors walked back, and one of their mothers drove us home.
Just after dinner Mr. Garner called and asked to talk with me. He said, “George, I’m glad you let me know about those boys’ mother. She was startled to see me. She said she had a flare-up of her heart condition, but would recover. And she said the boys were worried about missing their time with you. She asked if you would come back next week. I told her I was pretty sure you would. Thank you for letting me know she was ill. God needs us all to pull together to make Jesus present to those in distress.” When I hung up, I was sort of bowled over.
I got back with the boys the next week. We were glad to be together. Then the following Sunday they showed up at Church with their mother. And they kept coming. When I graduated from high school, the older boy had started serving as an acolyte, the younger was singing in the choir. I’ll never forget Mt. Garner’s words- we have to pull together to make Jesus present to others. For me that’s the message of the marriage feast- do you see the progression? Someone told Mary about the wine running out. Mary told Jesus. Jesus instructed the servants to fill the water jars, then told them to take some of the contents to the chief steward. The steward tasted the wine, then gave credit to the groom for saving the best till last. He didn’t know where it had come from, but the servants knew. That’s the real message of the marriage feast for me. The servants of Jesus recognize where the abundance comes from, even though others don’t. Jesus marries us humans to the divine. The feast keeps on going. The wine never runs out. Disciples of Jesus are continually amazed and included in God’s work. That’s heady stuff, isn’t it?
1st Sunday after the Epiphany – Byron Tindall
On this, the first Sunday after the Epiphany, the church in the west remembers the Baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by His cousin, John the Baptist.
From the Merriam Webster website, we get the following definition of epiphany:
“Full Definition of epiphany
1:capitalized: January 6 observed as a church festival in commemoration of the coming of the Magi as the first manifestation of Christ to the Gentiles or in the Eastern Church in commemoration of the baptism of Christ
2: an appearance or manifestation especially of a divine being
3a(1): a usually sudden manifestation or perception of the essential nature or meaning of something
(2): an intuitive grasp of reality through something (such as an event) usually simple and striking
(3): an illuminating discovery, realization, or disclosure
b: a revealing scene or moment”
We’ll spend a little time this morning on the first definition provided by Merriam Webster, but first we need to explore the Baptism some.
All three of the synoptic gospels have the account of Jesus being baptized in the Jordan, albeit they are somewhat different. The writer of John completely ignored this part of Jesus’s life. Mark 1:4-11 and Matthew 3:1-17 record the other versions of the baptism. A full version of the baptism is found in verses 1 through 22 in Luke’s third chapter.
John was expecting the Messiah, the one who would save the Jews. I, personally, don’t think John’s expectations were fully met by Jesus.
Several problems rear their ugly heads for me in the entire concept of Jesus needing to be baptized. In Matthew’s account, John tells Jesus that he, Jesus, should be baptizing him, John.
Remember, too, that John was baptizing, according to Matthew, Mark and Luke, the citizens of “Jerusalem and all Judea” for repentance and for the forgiveness of their sins.
Now, the church has claimed for a very long time that Jesus was without sin. He never sinned in any way, shape or form. Why, then did he need the baptism of John? If Jesus was fully divine, as the church holds, he didn’t need to have the Holy Spirit descend upon Him as he was already “a part” of the Trinity.
My method of reconciling or answering these questions is a little bit complicated, but please bear with me.
The church holds that Jesus was simultaneously both fully human and fully divine. I don’t feel that the human Jesus had a complete and full access to the Divine Christ at all times. Glimpses into his divinity, probably. Total access, probably not.
I think that by this time Jesus had at least an inkling of who he was and what he had to do.
Jesus came into the world to bring God the Father to the people. Emmanuel – God is with us. He came to share our human nature. He came to share our human feelings – the frustrations, the hunger, the thirst for righteousness, the pain and every other emotion felt by human beings. He came into the world to live and die as one of us, to reconcile us back to God the Father.
In my opinion, Jesus felt he needed to be with the citizens of Jerusalem and all Judea in every aspect of their lives. Thus he presented himself to John to show solidarity with the rest of the population who had fallen away from the proper practice of their religion and were suffering under the rule of Rome.
As far as the dove coming down and the voice from heaven go, these are just another example of an epiphany, an expression of “an appearance or manifestation especially of a divine being.” This epiphany event was for those lucky enough to be present when John baptized Jesus.
While the Eastern Church recognizes the Baptism of Jesus on January 6, and the Western Church uses January 6 to commemorate the visit of the Magi to the newborn Christ Child, both are classified as epiphanies for me. They both qualify as such using the Merriam Webster definition. God revealing Godself to His creation.
Of course the Baptism and the visit of the Magi are not the only epiphany events in the life of Jesus. Other events were presented to smaller groups, even as few as a single person.
Epiphanies are not limited to the New Testament. There are many events in the Hebrew Bible where Yahweh reveals Himself to one or more of His chosen people.
Are epiphanies over and done with, a thing of the past? I hardly think so.
God shows Godself in many ways in this day and age.
Using the second definition from Merriam Webster, “an appearance or manifestation especially of a divine being,” God manifests or shows “Himself” to me in a variety of ways. Sometimes, I see God in and through music. I find God in the beauty of nature. I feel God at times during a worship service. I see God at work through other people who are doing His work. I find God in reading the Bible. I’m able to feel His presence when at prayer. I am able to find God in any of His creatures and in every nook and cranny of His creation. After all, God, the creator of all, is in everything.
The epiphanies today may not be as “spectacular” as at the Baptism of Jesus by John. Epiphanies can be extremely subtle. We just have to be on the lookout for the revelations so as not to miss them.
Christmas 2C – By George Yandell
Where did Jesus get his uncanny knowledge of God’s wisdom? It wasn’t all book-learning from the rabbis. Even children understood clearly what the adult Jesus said when he taught. I believe Jesus learned much of his attentiveness to God from Joseph, and also from Mary. Her acceptance of the angel Gabriel opened the way for Jesus. We learn most from what our parents do, not what they say. I imagine the young Jesus learned how to be attentive to God from watching Joseph, as well as learning from Mary and his brothers and sisters, and his rabbi. But learning to trust God from dreams- that was Joseph’s contribution.
Joseph couldn’t go to an analyst to work through his dreams. He had only his heart, his trust in God, and his willingness to take action. This was the second time Joseph had received a dream visit from an angel. The first visit was when Joseph had discovered Mary, to whom he was newly engaged, to already have conceived a child. Joseph had decided to dismiss her away quietly instead of marrying her. The angel came to Joseph in a dream and told him the child in her womb was from the Holy Spirit. Joseph was to marry Mary and name the child Jesus, the angel said. And Joseph followed the angel’s instructions to the letter, and now the Son of God was born, with him the step-father.
As we hear in the gospel, an angel of the Lord again appeared to Joseph in a dream. The angel gave specific instructions to flee to Egypt. We might say in contemporary language the angel pushed Joseph to seek political asylum because his child was in threat of death squads from Herod. So Mary, Jesus and he fled by night down the coastal roads into Egypt. Think about it- the holy family was going back along the same path the Hebrews had followed as they fled FROM Egypt because they had been enslaved by Pharaoh. In Luke’s gospel Mary is visited by angels- Matthew has Joseph three times visited by God’s emissary. It seems Joseph was something of a mystic- he immediately interpreted his dreams as coming from God.
And what do we gain from Joseph’s gift to Jesus? Meister Eckhart, the great Christian Mystic, wrote: “There is a force in the soul. God’s own self is this force, unceasingly glowing and burning with all his splendor, bursting forth in a continuous, unspeakable ecstasy of joy.” Eckhart goes on, “God begets the only Son now and in all eternity within every honestly watching soul. Everything that God the father has ever given to the only begotten son in human nature, God also has fully given it to [us]. Nothing is excluded; neither wholeness, nor holy-ness; God gave [us] all, as God gave Jesus all.”
Do you hear what God has done? God spoke to a humble man and woman and re-ordered our world from their responses. Jesus has been born for us, and in us. Jesus was born into conflict and became a refugee. Our own conflicted times are redeemed by God’s Son. God offers us all of God’s love in Jesus, in the Son of God born within us. God speaks even now to us, deep within each of us. To be attentive, to be faithful to what our souls teach us is all God asks.
We are the seers, we are the ones God speaks within and from today. The world is waiting to hear what God offers. The world yearns for our dreams of life and love to become models for living. They offer us creative life and renewed spirit to care for God’s world.
In the silence of eternity, the Word spoke. From his dreams, Joseph led the Son of God into safety and manhood. From within us, the Christ speaks his word now- “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life. I am with you always, even to the end of all things. The Father and I are one.” To be attentive, to be faithful. That’s all God asks of us. Listen and respond to God’s voice. Hear it in your dreams and in your waking. Be at peace with God and God’s only Son, born in us again today.
