All Saints' Day-The Rev. Melanie Lemburg
All Saints’ Day Year A
November 1, 2020
A letter to all the faithful of St. Thomas Isle of
Hope on this All Saint’s Day
Dear
Beloved of God,
It’s
our first day in over 7 months to be back in worship in person together, and
yet still, we are spread out-in our pews and chairs and in our homes--among
three services, one of which is virtual.
It is 2 days until the most difficult and contentious election of my lifetime. We all need some good news.
It
is my usual custom when we have a baptism to write a letter to the baptismal
candidate or candidates about what we believe we are doing when we baptize
them. Since All Saints’ day is one of 7
major feasts of the church when baptism is especially appropriate and when it
is also appropriate to renew our baptismal covenant when we don’t have a
baptism, I thought we all might benefit from a letter to all of us who will be
renewing our baptismal promises today.
Our
epistle reading for today reminds us of the truth of our baptism: that each one of us is God’s beloved child;
that we claim that belovedness in and through our baptism and we recommit
ourselves to living as God’s beloved every time we renew our baptismal
covenant. It is a reminder that “we are
the people who love one another” whether that is the strangers we meet, the
people in our lives or in our households, and especially those we know too well
and don’t like very much or disagree with.
Our
gospel reading for today is the portion of Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount that is
known as the Beatitudes. It is an
unorthodox list of blessings that Jesus promises to his disciples who have
gathered near to listen to him on the mountain.
It is both “a description of and a summons to a new kind of life,
kingdom-life…Jesus is trying to help his disciples and us envision what life
will look like when we live according to God’s will and rule.”[i]
It
is also an important reminder for us that “when God is present and we live
according to the logic of the kingdom, all is not as it seems. Note that the list of those ‘blessed’ does
not align even remotely with a typical list of the blessed:” those who are
wealthy, powerful, independent, beautiful, charismatic, healthy, happy. Instead, Jesus lists as those who are blessed
those whom the world would consider to be cursed: “those who are mourning or are humble, or [those
who] extend mercy rather than exact revenge, or [those who] strive for peace
rather than exert their will through violence, just to name a few.”[ii]
And
today, on this All Saint’s Day, especially, we remember and lift up this
kingdom notion that all is not always as it seems as we remember and believe
that those who have died are still near us, surrounding us, upholding us with
their prayers and presence. We remember
and hold fast to the hope that is woven throughout our burial liturgy: that death is not the end but a change and
that when our mortal body lies in death, Jesus goes before us through death
into the resurrection to prepare a place for us there in God’s kingdom that is
both already and not yet alongside the vast company of all the faithful who
have come before us.
This
sermon on the mount and our renewal of our baptismal covenant this day both
serve to invite us to transform our vision of where God is at work in the world
in and through us. God is alongside and
at work in the poor, the mourners, the meek, the hungry, the merciful, the pure
in heart, the peacemakers, the persecuted.
And God is alongside and at work in and through us when we renounce evil
and proclaim the good news of God in Christ; when we seek and serve Christ in
all persons, loving our neighbor as ourselves and strive for justice and peace
among all people and respect the dignity of every human being.
Beloved,
this week will be difficult, and it will probably be divisive. One news source reports that 70% of Americans
are anxious about the election. The
renewal of our baptismal vows and the reading from the Beatitudes on this All Saints’
Day are timely reminders of a truth articulated by Richard Rohr: “voting is a deeply moral act-a decisive
statement of Christian faith that I matter, that justice matter, and that other
people matter.”[iii] As followers of Jesus, we are called to live
out the principals of our baptismal covenant and to vote for leaders who will
lead us to be our very best selves.
Today,
it is also important to remember, through the glorious example of the saints in
light, those who have come through their own ordeals of their own times and
entered fully into God’s kingdom; may they remind us of the hope of our
calling: through Jesus’s life, death,
and resurrection, God has shown, once and for all, that God’s love is stronger
than absolutely anything. God’s love is
stronger than Covid-19. God’s love is
stronger than partisan politics and a deeply divided nation. God’s love is stronger than the forces of
anxiety, grief, and fear that threaten to overwhelm us. God’s love is stronger than anything, even
death. As we renew our baptismal
covenant today, let us recommit ourselves to following the way of God’s
beloved, to following the way of self-giving love. And may the Holy Spirit renew in us the
faith, hope, and love that we need to face the days ahead.
[i]
David Lose in his blog post for Nov 1, 2020: http://www.davidlose.net/2020/10/all-saints-a-transformation/
[iii] Adapted
from Richard Rohr, “A Deeply Moral Act: Voting Is a Decisive Statement of
Christian Faith that I Matter, Justice Matters, and Others Matter,” Sojourners,
vol. 47, no. 10 (November 2018), 19;
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