Showing posts with label see God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label see God. Show all posts

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Welcome Home - sermon for Sept 13


“Welcome Home”

Rev. Alison Longstaff, Sept 13, 2015
Bath Church of the New Jerusalem
Exodus 29:28-46; John 14 portions; Heavenly Secrets 10153 

Welcome back!  Welcome home!

It is a wonderful feeling, this feeling of coming home.  Humans need a sense of home more than we need anything else.  After any trauma or even just after a rough day, our first instinct is to go home—home, where we are safe; home, where we can rest and heal; home, where we can be truly ourselves; home, where we are loved exactly the way we are.

We all know this truth about home, and this is the home we all long for at the end of a long day.

Unfortunately, many people in this world do not get to have that experience of “home.” From foster children who are bounced around our social system, to families struggling with troubled dynamics, to the terrible plight of today’s Syrian refugees, there are many are in this world who have no consistently safe home to which they can go at the end of the day. 

Home.  In the human hierarchy of needs, home is foundational.  It is a level one need to have shelter and physical self-care. It includes the level two need for safety and security as well.

There is a primal human need for home.  “Home” is where we go to be restored and to find our center both naturally and spiritually.  We need to return to ourselves, to gather ourselves, to rest in safety and prepare for the coming day. That is why we feel such a strong need to go home when we have had a hard day.

Just this past week a friend was voicing her distress over the plight of the Syrian refugees.  You see, she knows what it is like to be a refugee. She fled Eastern Europe as a child all those years ago.  Her family had only a suitcase and the clothes on their backs.  She remembers to this day what it felt like, and feels keenly for these Syrians.

Can you imagine having to leave your home and country forever, not knowing if you would ever come back?  This is not selling your home to go to a new one.  This is walking away from the only home you have. I have heard from several friends in California who have been going through something similar, having time to grab only a few possessions before fleeing the wild-fires; not knowing if they will ever see their home and possessions again. Most of us cannot even imagine the scope of the rootlessness and sense of disorientation such a leaving can cause. 

Refugees are lucky if they even have time to stuff a few things into a suitcase.  Everything else gets left behind.  Now imagine that you must throw even that one suitcase of belongings away to save someone else.  Into the tossing waves or the fires go your most precious books and keepsakes—the family treasures, the spare clothes, important papers—everything.  You have nothing left but your life and your clothes, and if you are lucky, your family.
 
Do you feel that?  That compassion that you may be feeling is the presence of God within you.  That sympathy and that heartbreak are the Holy Spirit speaking in your heart.  God hurts when we hurt.  We are created such that we hurt when others are hurting.  That basic human empathy is the fabric of our souls—it is our birthright—to feel joy with and for others and to feel shock and sorrow with and for others.  That energetic movement—that e-motion—is the stirring of your spiritual blood, for you are made of love.

I think of all the thousands of people who stepped up to help at ground zero in the days and weeks following the 911 attacks.  Their sense of empathy and connection compelled them to give aid any way they could. Massage therapists and trauma counselors, volunteers to deliver water and sandwiches, truck drivers and hands that unloaded trucks, each heart found a way to serve according to their call. Each one was equally valuable and needed, yes, from the elite trauma and bereavement counselors all the way down to the Porta Potty service workers who made sure the hordes of volunteers had somewhere to, um, “go.”

Somewhere to go.  Yes, even including the euphemism, isn’t that what home is all about? 

We need a home to go to.  We need repeatedly to go home.  This church is a home for many of us here, and we don’t know what we would do without it.


Home. Home is where we are safe. Home is where we can rest and heal. Home is where we can relax and be ourselves and are loved anyway. Home is the place where we belong.

I hope this church feels just that way for each person here.  If you see this place as your home church I hope it feels safe and healing, accepting and supportive.  My experience is that this congregation does pretty amazingly well at these things for each other.  My experience is also that a few among this group are excellent at welcoming spiritual refugees. Several make an effort to invite new people back to their homes to build a better sense of welcome and inclusion. For those who do, well done!

In the deepest spiritual sense, God is our home.  The God of Love is what we have come from and to whom we will return. As our truest home, God ought to be our number-one go-to haven to Whom we bring all our hurts and all our trust. Is it true that God is the One to whom you turn when you need to rest and heal? Is it true that God is the One with whom you can be truly and completely yourself knowing that God loves you exactly the way you are?  Do you live and move and have your being in God?

Does that describe your relationship with God?  Does that describe your abiding inner emotional experience of God?

If so, you are among the very few and very lucky.

If not, you are like most people. Your answer may have been closer to, “Well, not exactly….”

Just for the record, while I know with my whole head, that God is my safest haven, I have trouble remembering that and acting on it.  I have trouble trusting that it is really true.  I have trouble living that truth.  (Some might say that that disqualifies me from being a good pastor.  But from within my socks and shoes, I think it at least makes me an honest pastor, and a pastor that knows what it is like to struggle to remember the genuine reality of God’s love.  What is the old saying? “Them as can’t, teach?”)  Even Mother Theresa struggled with her faith, so maybe I’m in good company.  And so if you are like me, you are in Mother Theresa’s company too.
 
Why is it that we have so much trouble making God our home, or what is the same thing, making our home in God?  Why don’t we simply trust God and from then on live in “the peace that passes all understanding”?

Swedenborg would say that our difficulty being able to sense and believe in the Divine presence is the natural result of our being temporarily stuck in physical bodies.  He would say that while we all have spiritual senses that will awaken after this physical body dies, meanwhile those senses are dulled, bogged down, or even switched off while we are conscious in these dense physical bodies. These physical eyes and ears are designed to see and hear physical things, not spiritual things.  And when we are plugged in to this physical reality which is so very, well, REAL to us, it is well-nigh impossible to believe in anything else. It is a bit like being a fish, with eyes and ears and senses designed to work in water.  While we live in the water, we have almost no idea what is going on above the water and may have trouble believing such a reality even exists.

Not only are our spirits cloaked in physical bodies, it often seems that when we need God the most, God is nowhere to be “seen”!  Of course we lose faith!  It takes training to learn to see God in the midst of the darkest times, and often our own anger and disappointment and sense of abandonment create a block to our inner senses.  We become so disillusioned about God that we don’t even want to hear an explanation of where God was when we needed Him/Her.  But if we look at our mortal condition through the eyes of love, it is hard to feel judgment for our understandable struggle to believe.  Of course we doubt and look elsewhere for security and comfort! It is only, well, natural.

Exactly.

I almost wonder if God designed our mortal condition the way it is to encourage us “grow up” spiritually.  How many of us would ever leave the comfort of God’s arms if we weren’t drawn irresistibly away?  How many children would learn to walk or run or do things for themselves if they never left their mother’s lap?  Looking back over my spiritual evolution, I strongly suspect that I would NEVER have left the spiritual nest or learned to fly if God hadn’t gently but firmly pushed me out.

Perhaps we cannot truly appreciate God as our safe haven until we have lived for a long time without that presence?  Rather like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz, perhaps we need to go somewhere very different for a while, because the struggle to find our way back teaches us to value what we had all along.  Perhaps it is the way God sets us down a few steps away and then beckons with parental arms and an encouraging smile, “Now come back to me!  You can do it!” and waits to sweep us up in joy when our faltering steps make our haphazard way back to the Divine embrace.

That is how we grow stronger.  That is how we learn to become spiritual adults. And God sets us down again and again, inviting us back. And we grow stronger with each step.

Before we end, I will just dip briefly into the gems of the internal meaning of John 14.  John 14 starts with, “Do not let your hearts be troubled.”  It starts with, “Don’t worry so much!”

The rest of the chapter is about finding our way back home, which is couched in a discussion of the Father and the Son being one.  Father is “concept” and Son is “action.” Father is “intention” and Son is “fulfillment.” These two things MUST become one in our lives, or they are without meaning or power. When Jesus commands, “You believe in God, believe also in Me,” he is saying, “You love the idea of God, now realize that you must walk the path I set before you to find your way home.  You’ve got the ideas; now start living them.”

But Philip (representing us) says, “Show us the father and we will be satisfied.”  “Philip” means “a lover of horses.”  “Horses” in the Word always symbolize our understanding, so “Philip” is our love of ideas.  Philip is saying, “Isn’t if good enough if we just think and talk about the ideas?”  This shows our reluctance to make changes in our way of living.  WE are satisfied by just having shiny and interesting ideas.  We balk at allowing God’s teachings to transform our feelings and lives.  This is rejecting a lived theology (Jesus).  There is a part of us that is happy to keep God as a concept, far away, up in the sky, not right here, down on the ground, in this moment and in this choice.

Jesus says, “Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me?”  He is saying, “I have walked with you and asked you to walk with me.  I have loved you and asked you to love me, and still you are saying, ‘I’d rather just keep it all about ideas, okay?’”

The only possible answer to that is, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.”  Keeping the commandments means allowing the golden rule to guide us. It means that the learning we do in this space shows up in a transformed life out there.  It means that we become more aware day by day of how we are not as kind as we might be, or not as trusting as we might be, or not as wise as we might be, and we make small changes. It is in these moment by moment wobbly choices that we take our baby steps back to our true home.  God’s love and wisdom find their home in our lives through small, daily changes.

John 14 ends with, “Let us arise and go from here.”  Jesus is saying is time to walk the walk, not just talk the talk. It is time to move on towards our true spiritual home, which is with God.

The closer we draw to this state of spiritual homecoming, the closer we will get to that place where we feel most alive and most ourselves.  Yes, it takes work, but the more we do the work, the better the work feels, until the life of heaven becomes something we love and which gives us joy.

May you continue to walk towards your truest home, for as you do, the more clearly you will hear and feel God’s message in your hearts:

“Welcome back. Welcome home!”

The Readings
Exodus 29: 38-46 portions “Now this is what you shall offer on the altar: two lambs of the first year, day by day continually.  This shall be a continual burnt offering throughout your generations at the door of the tabernacle of meeting before the Lord, where I will meet you to speak with you.  I will dwell among the Israelites, and I will be their God. And they shall know that I am the Lord their God, who brought them out of the land of Egypt that I might dwell among them; I am the Lord their God.

John 14: 1, 8-9, 18, 23, 27, 31 
“Do not let your hearts be troubled. You believe in God, believe also in Me.
Philip said to him, “Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied.”  
Jesus said to him, “Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me?
“I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you. 
“If you love Me, keep My commandments; and My Father will love you, and We will come to you and make Our home with you. Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. 
But that the world may know that I love the Father, I live as he commanded me. Arise, let us go from here.

Heavenly Secrets 10153. 
The statement, “And I will dwell in the midst of the children of Israel” from Exodus is describing a spiritual dynamic. It is describing the way the Lord flows into and is present within the loving-kindness of those “in heaven” and those “in the Church.” “In the midst” is describing those things that live most deeply inside us, which always starts out good because it is from God.

The Lord flows into and is present within a person’s kindness and good intentions, which are always from the Divine Love. This goodness is each person's true self, for each person’s character is made of good desires. “Goodness,” here means what we love; everything we love we call “good” anyway.


Sunday, October 19, 2014

Heaven Come Near - a sermon

“The Kingdom of Heaven Has Come Near”
Rev Alison Longstaff, October 19, 2014
Bath Church of the New Jerusalem
Isaiah 9: 1-4; Matthew 4: 12-17; HS 3195 [2]
  
This sermon is in anticipation of All Saints Day and All Souls Day, both of which are drawing near.   In this sermon I play around with the gender of God.  Use the gender you prefer in your own mind.  Here we go:

“The Kingdom of Heaven has come near.” 

These were the final words of our Gospel reading today: “The Kingdom of Heaven has come near.”  

What feelings does that phrase evoke in you?   

“The Kingdom of Heaven has come near.”

When I truly sit still with this statement, it evokes a sort of trembling awe.  It is as if my spirit becomes quite still, and my eyes and ears open wide.  There is a kind of inner excitement and anticipation.

But that reaction isn't true every time I see this sentence from scripture.  Sometimes it brings up quite another response.  After all, the full phrase is: “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has come near.” And on days when I feel like a failure, and when I doubt my worth and lovability, my response might rather be to pull the blankets up over my head and whimper, “Kingdom of Heaven, please go away.” I feel too overwhelmed by my own flaws, and tend think that the “Kingdom of Heaven” drawing near would just make me feel extra unworthy in contrast.

But I’m talking to Swedenborgians, and Swedenborgians in particular are very good at remembering that God is a God of Love and Mercy, not judgment.  Right?  Right? 
          
Well, whatever we feel, I bet we could all agree that God probably doesn't want us cringing and cowering away from His outreaching love.  S/he does NOT want us, when we think of the Divine, to expect a beating.  After all, what loving parent would ever want their child to respond to their approach by cringing away in fear?  When God draws near, God always lifts us up in love.  It is we who judge so harshly, and then we project it onto God.             

So, having said this, why would God say, “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has come near”? It sounds rather shaming.

I do know that when God draws very near to us, we can get a sense of the overwhelming Divine Love for us all.  And anyone who has felt this great love—this transformative, redemptive, passionate delight in us—cannot help but be changed.  Experience just one close encounter with the Divine Love, and one changes, which is another way of saying one “repents.”  Being changed by God’s love is just as genuine a repentance as any shame-filled, hand-wringing litany of all the ways we've messed up. In fact, self-shaming without any redeeming compassion or sense of God’s love and forgiveness is an incomplete repentance. 

After all, “repent” means “re-think” or even “re-frame.” Repentance means seeing things in a whole new way.  Repentance doesn't have to involve feeling bad or beating ourselves up at all.
 
Yes. Repentance means seeing things in a whole new way.  Why else would Scripture say, “The people who walked in darkness, have seen a great light?”  We see things in a whole new light when God’s great Love enters our life.  That is the effect of God drawing near: new love; new sight.

Who are the people that walk in darkness?  All of us. All of us. You and me and Joe the mechanic down the road....  In fact, most of us most of the time “walk in darkness.”  But eventually there are times in each of our lives, each differently, when the kingdom of heaven draws near, and we feel touched, we feel changed, and things look suddenly much different. Upon each of us, the light does shine. God is near each of us, all the time, and sometimes we can feel this.

Let's each take some time to reflect on if and when such encounters with the divine might have happened in our lives.  Sometimes these experiences are quite profound and sometimes so very gentle that they might be described as a whisper into our consciousness, or a “still, small voice.”  What, if anything, has happened to you in your lifetime, that you felt, or maybe thought you sensed something quite extraordinary and sacred move just beyond the veil of the ordinary?

Just sit with that a moment.

I had such an experience in my hospital training when I witnessed a “Code Blue”.  I stood with the other chaplain just outside a gentleman’s room while the emergency team worked urgently to keep this man’s spirit in his body.  Instead of fear or sadness, I was filled with a sense of overwhelming beauty.  The absolute focus and silent respect of the medical team and the prolonged endurance of their fight to bring this gentleman’s spirit back affected me deeply.  It was rather like an honour guard standing in respect at the passing of a great leader. 

And all the while I had an indescribable sense that the man was somewhere up above, watching the whole show, not the least bit upset, hand in hand with his partner who had been waiting for him.  Call me fanciful.  I don’t know what is true about any of what I sensed that day.  But as I passed through that experience, I got goose bumps. Something, that I choose to call “heaven,” was near. 

It turned out that the gentleman did indeed pass on. The medical team called the time of death. Then it was time for the pastoral team to move in to support of the grieving family.  It was terribly sad, and yet the witness of their grief and the team’s expertise and compassion was terribly ... beautiful.

Celtic spirituality uses the term, “thin places” to describe physical locations where they believe that the veil between the spiritual realm and the physical world are particularly thin.  Pilgrims seek these places out in Scotland, Ireland, and England in search of a spiritual encounter, a new direction, or a new sense of self or mission.  Sedona in Arizona is also considered such a place. 

But I don’t know if we need to go anywhere to seek out the thinning veil, though there is nothing wrong with doing so.  In my experience, it finds us.  Did I sense a thinning of the veil when that man passed through?  I don’t know. I think so. I do believe the thinning veil happens all the time, though we generally don’t have ears to hear or eyes to see it.  Maybe there are places on the earth where it is easier to sense things on the other side. But most people I know have had some experience where they sensed a divine presence, or felt there was something deeper and sacred overlaying a quite ordinary experience, regardless of where they were on the planet.  And I believe this sort of experience is heaven drawing near, no less and no more.  I also believe that God guides even whether we are open or not open to such encounters, so we are not doing something wrong if we don’t have such experiences often.  I don’t think we need to stress about any of it, but just simply to sit in stillness and awe if it happens to us.

In our culture, we tend to dismiss such happenings.  We tend to doubt our own inner experiences, even the most profound.  Why is that?  Well, one reason might be that such spiritual events, such divine encounters leave no evidence, they leave nothing scientifically measurable as proof of their passing.  They leave only a mark on our hearts—not on our physical heart muscle—but on our spiritual heart, on our love. We can’t measure such experiences or record them or photograph them or get a certificate of authenticity for them. Anyone not open to the mystical tends to ignore such things.

Also, when God draws that close, and touches our hearts, it can be so intimate, that we may not want to share it.  We may scarcely dare to acknowledge it to ourselves, let alone anyone else.  We know just how ready the world is to mock stories of such experiences, and scourge them and crucify them. So it is understandable that we tend to keep such experiences quietly to ourselves.

With that said, let me reassure you that nobody needs to raise their hands—just answer quietly inside yourself—in what ways have you ever sensed the kingdom of heaven drawing near?  Perhaps you think you never have, and maybe that is true.  If it is, that is nothing to stress about either. We are all made differently, and God designed each one of us, perfectly formed for the task S/He has in mind for us.  Some of us are particularly sensitive that way, some less so.

I consider myself rather dense to spiritual reality.  Of the few experiences I have had, all but one could be written off as a fanciful imagination.  God protects even my freedom to believe in them or not.  But I do know, that whatever these experiences are—that so many of us have and are afraid even to admit to ourselves—they leave us changed.  We’re never quite the same afterwards.  We may have felt goose bumps, or a racing heart, or felt slightly shaky during the encounter. We may have seen things or heard things a little out of the ordinary.  If it is positive, it is heaven drawing near.

Think about it: if God loves us so much that He was willing to die for us; if God says She is always knocking and all we have to do is open our hearts; then maybe, just maybe, the kingdom of heaven is nearer than we ever imagined, and maybe that little thrill you felt as you watched the candles being lit, or that new baby sleep, or the way the light fell across the fields when you drove in here, wasn't just a nice feeling, but God’s hand, brushing the hair out of your eyes.  Maybe, just maybe, God is very close indeed, just waiting for the day we open your eyes and look Him or Her full in the face and smile.

The kingdom of heaven is drawing nearer all the time and we do not need to be afraid of it.  All we need to do is allow it to be so, and trust that God has our future for good in mind.  Repent?  Of course we repent!  If you are like me, I’m always thinking and rethinking whether I’m good enough or doing the right thing.  I can’t help it.  God might just wish I worried less about whether I’m good enough, not more.  But in any case, I do know our spiritual well-being is always in God’s sight, and we can see it in our glimpses of the light of God’s love for us, and the warm feelings that stir whenever heaven draws near.  And heaven is always nearer than you might think.

And so, as we leave this place of worship today and head out into our lives, let’s see if we can be a little more attentive to the whispers of God’s presence in our lives.  Let’s see if we can notice the brush of His robes, the whir of angels wings, and the warmth of Her steadying hand in our lives over the coming weeks, and be comforted, for the kingdom of heaven is indeed drawing near. Amen.

The Readings
Isaiah 9: 1-4
Nevertheless, there will be no more gloom for those who were in distress. In the past he humbled the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali, but in the future he will honor Galilee of the nations, by the Way of the Sea, beyond the Jordan— The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned. You have enlarged the nation and increased their joy; they rejoice before you as people rejoice at the harvest, as warriors rejoice when dividing the plunder.  For as in the day of Midian’s defeat, you have shattered the yoke that burdens them, the bar across their shoulders, the rod of their oppressor.

Matthew 4: 12-17
When Jesus heard that John had been put in prison, he withdrew to Galilee.  Leaving Nazareth, he went and lived in Capernaum, which was by the lake in the area of Zebulun and Naphtali—to fulfill what was said through the prophet Isaiah: “Land of Zebulun and land of Naphtali, the Way of the Sea, beyond the Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles—the people living in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned.”From that time on Jesus began to preach, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.”

Heavenly Secrets 3195 [2] 
In the Word frequent mention is made of “light.”  The inner meaning of “light” is right-thinking from a good heart. On the deepest level of the Word “light” means the Lord Himself, because S/He is goodness itself and truth itself.  There actually is light in heaven, yet it is infinitely brighter than the light on earth.  Spirits and angels see one another and all the beauty of heaven by this heavenly light. The light of heaven seems to be just like the light on earth; but it is not like it, for it is spiritual in nature.  It is made out of wisdom; so that it is actually wisdom which illuminates the eyes of the angels.  The wiser the angels are, the brighter is the light in which they are.  This light shines within the understanding of mortals, especially within the minds of mortals who are actively pursuing a heavenly life.