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                    <text>Jesus the Human Being: A Stunning Revelation of God
From the series: Journeying With Jesus on the Road Less Traveled
Text: Ezekiel 1:26; Luke 9:55-56
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
February 24, 2002, Lent II
Transcription of the spoken sermon
The “Reading from the Present” is in your liturgy. You can take it home. Read it
this afternoon about five times and then you may get some hint as to what I was
trying to say this morning. It is a writing from Walter Wink, who has done a very
interesting study and has published a book now entitled, The Human Being. As
we journey on this road less traveled with Jesus in this Lenten season, the thing
that I am hopeful will come through to us is what came through in Jesus. I'm
hoping that we can see through Jesus to what came to expression in Jesus. I'm
going to try to chip away this morning at an idea that I hope will continue to
come through this Lenten season, so that you can look back at Lent 2002 and say,
“That's when Dick hammered us over the head week after week with the idea that
it was not Jesus per se, but what came through Jesus, what came to expression in
Jesus." I make that critical distinction because you see, in the Church, in the
tradition of the Church, we have come to worship Jesus as God, and that was the
farthest thing from Jesus' mind, that he should have been ever considered
anything but a human being.
The elevation of Jesus to Godhead was the creation of the ancient Church,
centuries two through five, in its creedal formulation which borrowed from the
very technical, philosophical language of the Greek philosophical tradition. Jesus
never said, "Worship me." Jesus said, "Follow me."
We can understand how that happened. We speak of incarnation, the Christmas
miracle. We speak of God being embodied in Jesus, and one of the things that
that elevation of Jesus to the status of deity has done is it has preserved over the
centuries the story itself. We can see, in retrospect, how that process took place.
But, it's very important for us to realize that it was not Jesus' intention that he be
worshiped, but that he be followed.
Now, how do you give expression to what came to expression in Jesus? They said,
"My God!" They said, "It was as though God were with us," and it was just a tiny
step to go beyond to say, "Jesus is God." But what they were trying to say was
that, in the experience of Jesus, they had the experience of the nearness of God,
© Grand Valley State University

�Jesus the Human Being: A Stunning Revelation of God

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

of the grace of God, of the compassion of God, of the love of God. And so,
beginning in the Gospel of John, the fourth Gospel, we have this very high
doctrine of, teaching of, incarnation: famously, in John 1:14, 'The word became
flesh and dwelt among us." Or, as John says in the 14th chapter, "Jesus said, 'If
you have seen me, you have seen the father.'" Or, as Paul says in II Corinthians
4:6, "We have seen the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of
Jesus Christ." You've heard me say that over and over and over again. Jesus is our
window to God.
Now I want to make a subtle shift which is terribly important. What we have done
traditionally is we have said that God became other than God is, assuming human
nature, thereby revealing the nature of God. So, for God to become human was to
move out of deity into humanity. Now, what if we just turned that around and
said, as a matter of fact, what happened was that Jesus revealed, not the divinity
of God, but the humanness of God? What if the stunning revelation is this - that
God is human? What if Jesus, being a revelation of God, did not take Jesus
becoming something other than God is, accepting, assuming another nature
foreign and alien to God? What if the stunning revelation is that one looks at
Jesus and says, "God is human."
I can imagine all sorts of bells and whistles are going off in your minds, and all
sorts of questions being raised, but just let's think about it for a moment. We
think that we are human. But, we're not human. Now and again, here and there
we act humanely. Now and again, here and there we manage to be fully human
according to that ideal that we carry with us. But, for the most part, we are inhuman. We are people on the way. As Walter Wink says in the insert that you're
going to read five times this afternoon, we are not yet human. We're mere
promissory notes. We are mere intimations of what it would be to be human.
Therefore, as another scholar has said, that famous missing link between the
primate and the human that is always thrown up as an argument against
evolution, that missing link isn't missing at all. It is we. We are still primates in so
much of our life and human society. The stunning revelation is that God is human
and calls us to be human in the fullness of the humanity as it was manifested in
Jesus.
Now, that's something to think about. Let me give you a little background. I read
from the first chapter of Ezekiel. The phrase "son of man" in Ezekiel occurs 93
times. That is a lot. The phrase translated "son of man" is in the Hebrew, bin
Adam. Remember Adam? He was the husband of Eve. But, that really wasn't his
name. It was A-dam, a creature of the earth, a human made of humus. Bin Adam
is “a son of the human.” Now, in Ezekiel's vision, it's a marvelous vision. If you
read the insert five times this afternoon, read the first chapter of Ezekiel six
times. It's the throne vision. It's that fun vision that is celebrated in the Negro
spiritual, "The Wheel Within the Wheel." It's called the throne vision and in the
opening paragraph of the first chapter, Ezekiel says, "I saw a vision of God." It's a
vision, a vision. This vision of God comes down to the verses that we read, where

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

the prophet goes out of his way to say, "I don't really know how to describe what
I'm trying to describe. It seems like this. It seems like, as it were. It had the
appearance of..." Finally, he says, "It was as though this one who was revealing
himself to the prophet was human."
Now, let's go to the Gospels. What self-designation did Jesus use over and over
and over again? Son of Man. He always called himself the son of man. He never
called himself Messiah. He never called himself son of God. He called himself son
of Man. Son of man translated is bin Adam, or the Greek translation of that
Hebrew phrase. It is interesting that the early Church took all of the exalted titles
possible and attributed them to Jesus, so that the whole creedal elevation of
Jesus in the early Church was by use of titles that were exalted. The early Church
never used son of man in its creedal formulation. Why? Well, the best translation
of son of man is human being. Some translations would say mortal, or human
one, but Walter Wink, and I think he has good basis for this, said, "I think the
best translation for the phrase 'son of man' out of the Greek language would be
Human Being." So, what Jesus is doing in the Gospel, whenever he refers to
himself as the son of man, is referring to himself as a human being.
Frankly, the Church was never very comfortable with that. The Church was never
able to write any hymns or creeds that celebrated the human being, because, after
all, weren't they trying to celebrate God in Christ? Surely they were. But what was
missed was that the God in Christ was human. Far beyond the humanness that
you and I have yet achieved, for we are people on the way and lagging all along
the way, but the stunning revelation is that what came to expression in Jesus was
the humanity of God. I don't have time this morning to try to go back in those
Creation stories and the human being created in the image of God, but what I see
in this is that our calling to be like God is a calling to be fully human.
When Jesus has set his face to go to Jerusalem, and he goes through Samaria, the
Samaritans aren't happy with him because there is a jealousy, a terrible racial
violence between Jews and Samaritans, and so they are not happy at all that he is
going through Samaria to Jerusalem. The disciples recognize the resistance that
he is receiving and James and John are nicknamed in the Gospels the "sons of
thunder," no doubt with a reference to Elijah, the great Hebrew prophet. They say
to Jesus, "Let’s call down fire from heaven." Colloquially speaking, they said,
"Let's blast the brothers." I don't know how they thought they could call down fire
from heaven, but after all, Elijah did and consumed the prophets of Baal, so
maybe it would work again. Let's show them who we are.
In a good Bible with a footnote, a very well-attested reading adds Jesus' words,
"You don't know what spirit you are of, for the human being (the son of man)
has come not to destroy human life, but to heal it." Now, that, I believe, is pretty
solid biblical basis for seeing Jesus in his full humanity as a revelation of God as
human. Therefore, the call to us to be God-like is a call to be not something other
than we are, alien to our nature, but to be fully human, and the calling to us as a

© Grand Valley State University

�Jesus the Human Being: A Stunning Revelation of God

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4

community is to be humane. That is not a bad place to leave it on the threshold of
our annual meeting as we celebrate this community.
I mentioned Wednesday night to the pilgrim band that comes for Eucharist
during Lent, the irony that it is in the Bible Belt, that it is in the religious ghettos,
that it is in the places of the high concentration of conservative Christian
congregations that there is altogether a lack of humane existence, that there is
fear and divisiveness and an excluding of people left and right. To me, that's an
irony. It says to me that maybe the people who are left in the Church by and large,
in a generalization which is always dangerous, are so fearful, fearful of being
pulled into this full humane existence, fearful of that which is human, striving to
be divine, as it were, not recognizing that to be divine is to be human, if the
revelation of Jesus is the true revelation of God. It is an irony that we have the
greatest difficulty in tight Christian communities to be open to the other, to that
which breaks the mold.
I am grateful for this community. As we go into this congregational meeting, I'm
grateful for this community that inclusion here is more than a catchword, that we
have learned the inclusivity of the grace of God and that we practice it. That we
stand on our identity statement published every time we publish a liturgy, that
this is a place that is open to all, regardless, that we are open to all manner and
condition of humankind, because we celebrate God as creator who, in the creative
initiative, has brought forth a magnificent prodigality of diversity.
We have also learned here that Jesus is our window to God, but not the only
window, so that we can be open to people of other faith traditions. For, what we
have learned is that our religious formulation and structure is a human, creative,
imaginative construct. We made it in response to a vision, in our case, a vision of
Jesus who learned a vision from Ezekiel, and the whole Christian Church in all of
its forms and structures is our response to that mystery of God that came
unveiled in Jesus. We respect and honor great traditions who follow other
windows into the mystery of God that will always remain a mystery.
I am thankful that this community is open to all people, no matter where they are
on their faith journey, and to those who cannot articulate any faith at all, but
simply are seeking, and who need and desire a community of compassion that is
humane.
Tonight is the closing ceremony of the Olympic Games. It has been a wonderful
17 days, beginning with that magnificent opening ceremony. If you have watched
over these past couple of weeks, you have seen humanity at its best. Have you
seen the faces of the camera focused, and those faces so alive, so beautiful, on
bodies so trained and taut? And then, the parade of the nations, a symbol of the
global community more eloquent than any sermon I could preach.
In the exhibition of skating last night, with the pressure off, Michelle Kwan, who
was supposed to get the gold, skating gracefully and beautifully with her face wet

© Grand Valley State University

�Jesus the Human Being: A Stunning Revelation of God

Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

with tears for the gold that she missed, and the people loving her all the more. Or,
the Canadian pair and the Russian pair whose skating brought out the supposed
scandal of judging and therefore, a double gold this year, and there they were
bound hand in hand, arm in arm, body to body, the four of them in a most
magnificent display of reconciliation and peace. I'll tell you what - the human
possibility is so magnificent. Where there is love, where there is grace, where
there is humility, freedom, and openness, dear God, what we could become!
What we could become is human, by God. That's a stunning revelation.
References:
Walter Wink. The Human Being: Jesus and the Enigma of the Son of the Man.
Augsburg Fortress, 2002.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>What Comes Through in the Jesus Story?
From the series: Journeying With Jesus on the Road Less Traveled
Scripture: Genesis 1:1-5, 26-27; Matthew 9:1-8
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 10, 2002, Lent IV
Transcription of the spoken sermon
It is Lent again and we are in the midst of the season, and we take Robert Frost’s
very apt description of the road less traveled as the way of Jesus, for he, indeed,
chose a road less traveled. We come again to this season and we listen to the
stories as we try to sense again what there is about him, one so difficult to follow
and yet, one whom we know intuitively is right and is the only hope of the world.
Jesus traveled a road less traveled and because of that, that is, because the road is
less traveled, the world is in the state that it is in.
You will, no doubt, remember the theme of my Advent sermons. Well, of course,
you will. "God in the Mirror of Christmas." Never forget it again. That series
represented for me an insight, a breakthrough, a new level of understanding
which is somewhat a miracle at this advanced age. You may remember when I
remind you that how I had said for years and years and years as I came to the
Advent season, we celebrate here the one who came and is coming again, right?
That is the Advent theme. The one who came and is surely coming. And how for
years I spoke of the one who came in humility who will come in great glory, the
one who came in poverty as a child who will come in glory to judge and to reign.
And all of a sudden I woke up to the fact that those two portraits of Jesus are in
conflict with each other, that the Jesus of Christmas is quite other than the Jesus
whom we expect to come in clouds of glory, that the God mirrored in the Jesus of
Christmas is quite other than the God who sits on the throne and sends the Son
to judge the earth and to establish the kingdom. The God of Christmas is the God
revealed in the flesh of a human being, a child, vulnerable, humble, poor. The
God of the second coming is the God who brings vengeance on his enemies,
saving and establishing the elect, to be sure, but causing his wrath to be poured
out on all the enemies.
As I wrestled with that in the Advent season this year, I really felt I was seeing
something for the first time, a tension within the New Testament itself, a conflict
in the image of God that was mirrored at Christmas, and that is mirrored in what
are spoken of as the last things or the end events. And then rather
serendipitously, I had among the pack of books I took to Florida, three particular
© Grand Valley State University

�What Comes Through in the Jesus Story? Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

books that ail reinforced that insight and made it leap out at me and jump off the
page: James Carroll's Constantine's Sword, the story of the church 2000 years in
its history with the Jewish people and the awful, awful history that the church has
over against the Jewish people, Jack Miles, who had written God: A Biography,
now Christ: A Crisis in the Life of God, and Walter Wink's The Human Being:
Jesus and the Enigma of the Son of the Man. Two weeks ago I had an excerpt in
your liturgy from The Human Being, and I have one again today. It is my only
hope that this morning won't be totally wasted, that you might go home this
afternoon and read it six times and say, "Oh, that's what he was trying to get at."
This morning follows up on two weeks ago when I said the stunning revelation
that what we see in Jesus is that God is human. The revelation in the flesh of
Jesus is that God is human. Traditionally we have said Jesus came from another
realm, the second person of the Trinity assumed human nature in order to reveal
God in human nature, but as a divine intruder, he came in from another realm
and revealed a God of another nature, alien to our humanity. But, the more you
look at it, the more you think about it, the more I wrestle with the scriptures
about it, what was really happening in Jesus was that, in the humanity of Jesus,
we saw God as human.
I read from the first chapter of Genesis where the Hebrew writer understood our
humankind to be created in the image of God. And in the old Hebrew myth of the
Fall, all of the hell on earth is because that image was defaced in the Fall. You
have heard me say often enough here that that story makes a lot of sense, but I
could understand it better if it would be re-written to say all the hell on earth is
because the human being created in the image of God was created potentially in
the image of God, and in the emergence, the evolutionary emergence, we see
signs, hints here and there of that image of God coming to expression in the
human, but we are far from human.
Jesus was the human one. But, how far we fall short of Jesus. Jesus, the human
one, revealed God and we say we're human? We're not human. We are still
advanced primates. Do I have to convince you of that? Go home and turn on your
television and the first item will be the terrible, terrible violence in Israel. We see
these two people who will destroy each other. Or, get the report on the elections
in Zimbabwe, where Mogavi after 20 years of oppression and domination, uses
his thugs to brutalize a people who get up at dawn and walk for hours and stand
in line for hours to cast their ballot, hoping for a change, and knowing all the time
that it is rigged and fixed and the domination and the oppression will continue,
the corruption and the graft. Or, go to Afghanistan. Need I say more?
Or, you might yet hear the news report to Congress from the Pentagon about
designing smaller nuclear weapons to be able to use on seven targeted countries,
including China, Russia, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya. My God, people, as a
representative from the Brookings Institute said, over against the claim from the

© Grand Valley State University

�What Comes Through in the Jesus Story? Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

Pentagon that this isn't really a change, he said, "Oh, yes, it's a change. What it is
is the regularizing of nuclear weapons."
Don't we know? Do we think because we are the most powerful, do we think that
we can throw our weight around to the extent that we can tell every other nation
to disarm and to get rid of their armaments while we design more? Do we think
somehow or other that God has made us sovereign? Well, are we human? Here
and there, a hint of a humanness breaks through. But we are advanced primates.
We are still pre-human beings, and to say that Jesus reveals God as human is not
to pull God down. It is to say that that call to us to be like God is a call to us to be
human.
When I read my books, particularly the one by Walter Wink from whom I have
given you a second excerpt today, I was just amazed how strongly was reinforced
that sense that I had of that conflict built into the very New Testament itself,
between the God revealed in Jesus at Christmas - poverty, humility and grace and that God of the second coming who will wreak hell on earth. You remember
perhaps two weeks ago that I said Walter Wink points to Ezekiel's vision of God
in the first chapter of Ezekiel where Ezekiel sees this vision of the throne and that
one, that figure, is one, as it were, human, and Ezekiel is the one who is
constantly addressed by that one as the human being. “Son of man,” it is, but son
of man is translated as human being.
So, we have Jesus taking up that vision of Ezekiel and that designation as son of
man, human being, for himself so that Jesus goes through the Gospels talking
about himself as the human being, the son of man translated every time you read
it as human being. You have Jesus as that human being bringing to expression
his understanding of God. That is today what I am trying to say - what comes
through in the Jesus story?
Walter Wink, in the little excerpt printed out for you, says there are certain
questions. Before he was worshiped as God incarnate, how did Jesus struggle to
incarnate God? Before he was worshiped as God incarnate - that's what
happened, isn't it? Jesus as human being was elevated more and more and more
until he became God. It happened already in the New Testament, and it came to
culmination in the 4th and 5th centuries in those creedal formulations: Jesus of
Nazareth elevated to be son of God, divine deity. But, before that, when
Nicodemus went to see him, how did Jesus embody God? When people met him,
when they encountered him, what did they experience? What came through to
such an extent that before long they are calling him God? What came through in
the Jesus story? Before he became identified as the source of healing, how did he
relate to and how did he teach his disciples to relate to the healing source?
I read the little story in Matthew. He heals the paralytic and they are amazed, and
Matthew says in the eighth verse they glorified God that God had given such
authority to a human being, to human beings, plural. Matthew is saying what

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Jesus did was not just that Jesus did it, but that a human being did it, that there
is in human beings the power to heal and the power to forgive.
So, before Jesus was singled out and set apart, when he was just one of them and
he encountered the paralytic and he said, "Your sins are forgiven and rise up and
walk," what was it? What did they see in him? What did he elicit in the paralytic?
Was it not a human being looking at another human being and seeing in that
human being God, the divine, the healing power itself? And all at once, they took
him out of the midst and set him apart, now he becomes the healing source. But,
before that, how did he relate to the source of healing? Did he not somehow or
other live in the stream of a recognition of God whose very nature is to forgive
and to heal? Before forgiveness became a function of Jesus’ cross, how did he
understand people to have been forgiven? He extended the forgiveness before he
ever died. If you go according to traditional atonement theology of the church,
you have to say that Jesus anticipated the fact that he would die for the sins of the
world, so in advance, he let him off the hook. Isn't that ridiculous? Jesus
extended forgiveness because Jesus believed that it was God's nature to forgive.
God didn't need a pound of flesh. God didn't need a blood sacrifice. Jesus
extended forgiveness as a human being to another human being because it was
his conviction that that is the way reality is, that is the way God is.
What comes through in the Jesus story? What was it that flowed out of him? We
speak about Jesus as the revelation of God. Revelation. Once again, in our long
tradition of the church, we talk about revelation theologically as though,
somehow or other, God breaks in from some other realm. That is not the way it is.
Revelation – somebody has an idea, someone has an experience. Moses, fumbling
around in the wilderness, struggling with his past and his experience in Egypt,
about his own people, suddenly looks up and there's a bush on fire. He hears a
voice, he gets a call, he goes on a liberation mission to deliver the children of
Israel. Moses had an experience that became a revelation and founded a people.
Buddha had an experience. It was an individual, subjective, life-transforming
experience, and what he experienced found resonance in others and in
generations, founding a whole civilization. What happened to Jesus was not
different from that. Jesus was a human being. He had a consciousness of God.
His consciousness of God was that God was against all forms of domination. If
you read the writing by Walter Wink, you will find him describing domination
and it is his sense, as he reads the Gospel (that is the best lens through which to
understand Jesus), that Jesus stood against all forms of domination, that God
was non-violent and all-inclusive. That was what came through in Jesus. That is
how Jesus experienced God. That is what Jesus embodied. That is the impact
Jesus made on those around him, so that a community was formed. Now, that
community failed to live very long in terms of that initial coming to expression,
because already, as I said, in the New Testament, there is this movement to a
second coming and quite a different idea of God. But, initially at least, what came
through in Jesus was an understanding of God as non-violent and as all-inclusive,

© Grand Valley State University

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and, if you believe that, and if you begin to pick up followers, and if it gives
indication that it might become a movement, then if you are in power politically
or religiously, you have to kill such a person, because that vision is very
dangerous. That vision can start a whole revolution. So, you have to crucify the
author of that vision. And, of course, that is exactly what happened.
It’s one thing, of course, for Jesus to have been in the peasant crowd, an itinerant
rabbi in occupied Israel, speaking the way he did. Speaking the way he did in his
context, it is rather obvious that those who were downtrodden and oppressed
would have been drawn to his vision. To be sure, he paid with his life for it. But,
you know, it is quite another thing when you are in 2002, when you are a part of
the American nation, affluent, powerful,-when you are the shakers and the
movers of the world as we are, thank God we made Jesus into a cult figure. Thank
God we made Jesus the savior of the world. Thank God we said he came from
heaven to die on the cross for our sins and returned to open heaven's gate.
Thank God we did that, because if we hadn't done that, we would have had to
deal with the real Jesus, and to deal with the real Jesus will get us in all kinds of
contradiction. To deal with what came through in Jesus, intuitively we know it is
true. Intuitively, we know Jesus was right. Intuitively, we know that Jesus' way is
the only hope of the world. Intuitively, we know that Jesus was the light of the
world.
Once again, he wasn't the only light. He wasn't the only one that had an idea, an
experience that blossomed into a great movement that had positive effect, but for
us, that is where we go. We go to Jesus, and what comes through in Jesus is so
contrary to the power arrangements of our world, that we have to make him a
salvation figure, and we cannot really afford to see him as a human being who
lived as we live in the context of history as we are, because it contradicts us every
time we turn.
I don't know what to do in Israel. What do you do in Zimbabwe? What do you do
in Afghanistan? What do you do about nuclear weapons? If the world were like
Jesus, then we wouldn't need any of that, and I am not a pacifist. Some of you
may be. If you are, you're closer to Jesus than I am. But, I know sometimes
violence is necessary. I think of the Second World War. But, I know that pacifists
are right and Jesus is right to the extent that, if we don't follow the way of Jesus,
at some point we will destroy the human story and the human possibility.
I am not despairing. I am not without hope, because God is full of grace, and God
will never give up on us. But, if we would, this Lenten season, face honestly what
comes through in the Jesus story, we would have serious wrestling to do with how
we negotiate 2002 and Century Twenty-one. The one thing at least we ought to
do is admit, "Jesus, I can't follow you. It's too tough. It's too costly. Intuitively, I
know you're right, but I just can't go there." That would be more honest and more
authentic and more God-pleasing than to sing, "Hallelujah, what a savior!"

© Grand Valley State University

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References:
James Carroll. Constantine’s Sword: The Church and the Jews: A History.
Houghton Mifflin Company, 2001.
Walter Wink. The Human Being: Jesus and the Enigma of the Son of the Man.
Augsburg Fortress, 2002.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Road Taken Makes All the Difference
From the series: Journeying on the Road Less Traveled
Scripture: Luke 4:1-13; John 12:12-28
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Palm Sunday, March 24, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood and sorry I could not travel both," so said
Robert Frost, for Robert Frost knew, contrary to the wisdom of Yogi Berra, that
when you come to a fork in the road, you cannot just "take it" You have to choose.
We have been following Jesus, journeying with Jesus this Lenten season on the
road less traveled, and we come today to Jerusalem and the culmination of that
way that he went, because the road that we choose makes all the difference.
The Gospel portraits of Jesus are very clear in presenting him as one who lived
with intentionality, with a strong sense of identity, following consistently a vision
that led him to Jerusalem and finally to crucifixion. So, this morning we find him
approaching and entering that Holy City as the culmination of his ministry.
Jesus did not begin at this point to make those choices that led him to death, for
the Gospels are clear that he had been one who had been choosing the road less
traveled consistently throughout his ministry. Matthew, Mark and Luke all give
us temptation narratives, Mark simply referring to it, Matthew giving a rather full
account, and Luke the account that was read a moment ago.
The temptation story is not a historical event, not Jesus out on the wilderness for
forty days coming back to say, "This is what happened." But Luke tells us in the
opening verses of his gospel that he checked all the sources he could in order to
get the fullest possible handle on this Jesus, on this tradition that had grown now
for Luke some five decades after the event itself. When Luke wants to paint the
portrait of Jesus, at the onset of that ministry, he records this mythical story of
Jesus' encounter with the adversary, with Satan, because the temptations that
Jesus faced throughout all his ministry were clearly temptations to use his
considerable power - to make a stone into bread, serving himself and perhaps
socially the needs of people, using his considerable power to manipulate the
political system and by compromise and expediency gain worldly acclaim. Or,
perhaps, charismatic that he was, using the religious community manipulatively,
coercively, forcing belief through some dramatic action of one kind or another.
These were not temptations that were there in the very beginning for Jesus, but
© Grand Valley State University

�The Road Taken Makes All the Difference

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

Jesus wrestled from the beginning with those very possibilities which were
always open to him. Luke tells us that, once that encounter was over, the Devil
left him for a more opportune time, indicating that Jesus was not yet done with
the temptation to compromise that to which he was committed.
Jesus was intentional about who he was and what he was called to do. John's
Gospel tells us that he started out as a disciple of John the Baptist, teaching and
preaching around the Jordan. But things weren't going so well there, and he
thought it best to move on and that probably represents more than just moving
out of the territory. It probably represents his movement away from John the
Baptist, the fiery preacher of the judgment of God, looking for the wrath of God to
be poured out on that people. Jesus, becoming uneasy with that, finding for
himself the model of the suffering servant in Isaiah, the model for his own person
and his own ministry, moving up into Galilee in what is called the Galilean
Spring, and Luke tells us in the paragraph following the temptation story about
how Jesus delivered the prisoners and caused the deaf to hear and the blind to
see. Jesus initiated a ministry that was the embodiment of the grace of God,
bringing joy and inspiration and healing and liberation to people.
Then in the middle of Luke's Gospel, chapter nine, verse 51, Jesus set his face to
go to Jerusalem, and now we see him there. I had Bob read the account in Luke's
Gospel, even though I had lifted John's account in the 12th chapter of John's
Gospel. I was going to do John because I was going to point out that John is the
only one who uses palms, and palms were a nationalistic symbol, and the people
were receiving Jesus as a national hero, and they were ready for him to make
some move to restore the dignity and the freedom of the nation. His mounting
the donkey in John's Gospel was his own action to correct their misconception of
what he was about and who he was. But with things in Jerusalem as they are as
we speak, I simply had to go back to Luke's account for he comes into the city as
the peaceable king. There aren't even any branches in Luke's account. Then he
stands on the crest of Olivet and weeps over the city. "If only you had known, if
only you had known the things that make for peace. You missed the moment of
your visitation, and now it is hid from your eyes, and there will not be one stone
left upon another."
Once again, nobody was there with a stenographer's notebook and nobody had
their camera at the ready, but what Luke is telling us in placing Jesus there and
putting those words in Jesus' mouth is that it was Jesus' way that led him to that
point that would have looked over Jerusalem and would have seen the imminent
devastation and ruination of that city and that people, for when Luke was writing
his Gospel, this was not prophetic, this was not foreknowledge of what was about
to happen. You didn't have to be a rocket scientist to know what was going to
happen, as a matter of fact, but what Luke was doing five decades later was
describing what actually happened, because in the Roman-Jewish War of 66 to
70, the whole city was finally brought to absolute and utter ruin, never again to be

© Grand Valley State University

�The Road Taken Makes All the Difference

Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

that place of the Temple and the priesthood and the center of Jewish religious
life.
And so, Jesus comes to Jerusalem on this day to bring his message finally to the
very center and the heart of the leadership of this people, and he can see what is
going to happen. I thought to myself, with what is happening in our world today,
I can hardly not set that passage before you because it does say what I have been
trying to say in these Lenten weeks, both on Sundays and on Wednesday nights,
that is that there are two roads, that Jesus took the road less traveled, the way of
God's inclusive grace and unconditional love and non-violence, and that way is
the only hope of the world. Jesus, as he stands before Jerusalem, is holding out
the only hope of the world, and that is to find the way of peace.
As we worship this morning, Jerusalem is burning, hostility, terrorism, violence
and death is everywhere, and the situation there seems to be almost a carbon
copy of that which was going on 2000 years ago, except today the ones who are
desperate, the ones who would do the foolish thing of challenging overwhelming
power are the Palestinian people, aren't they? What chance did the Jewish people
in 66 to 70 have in the rebellion against Rome? Really none at all. It was an act of
suicide. But, people can get that desperate so that it doesn't matter. When they
have lost everything, then they do the desperate thing which has no hope at all of
success, but which is the final sign of their utter frustration, anger, resentment,
and hopelessness.
We have not visited anything in this Lenten season that we have not visited many
times before. We probably have not taken up any themes that we have not
reflected on together before, but somehow or other, in the wake of 9/11, it all
comes so poignantly before us. It seems so fresh; it seems so contemporary. It
seems like these events surrounding Jesus and Jerusalem are happening all over
again in our world, and we see these ways that divide. There is business as usual,
and business as usual has been the rule for the past 2000 years, for the way of
Jesus has not been followed. Business as usual is real politics. Business as usual is
the imposition of force to coerce the settlement. Business as usual is that politics
that uses whatever force is necessary in order to maintain the status quo or to
return things to the status quo, the use of force being necessary to accomplish
that purpose. The imposition of force continues to be necessary in order to
maintain that status quo. Nothing really changes with the imposition of force.
Hearts are not changed, minds are not changed, behavior is not changed. Rather,
it is coerced, and so there is a lock put on it and the maintenance of some
measure of quietude, however that may be described.
The other way is the way of Jesus, the way of peace, which has not been tried. The
way of peace which hasn't been tried, of course, sounds so Pollyanna. It sounds
rather ridiculous, doesn't it? It sounds like preacher-talk. It is the kind of thing
you expect to hear in church, but thank God when you get to Monday morning it
is the real world, whether you are in the corporate rat race, or whether you are in

© Grand Valley State University

�The Road Taken Makes All the Difference

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4

the military, or political assignment, or whatever it may be, because the real
world out there doesn't take Jesus seriously.
And yet, you know, when you think about Jesus, in spite of all of the darkness
into which we are entering right now, Jesus was not a tragic figure. Jesus was a
person of great joy. Jesus was an inspiring personality. Jesus was noted for his
table fellowship, the camaraderie of the meal. Jesus was a healer Jesus loved
children. Jesus was a human being, Jesus lived a humane existence and created
humanness about him. So, I grant you, it sounds silly to suggest in a world like
ours, post-9/11, focused even now in the Middle East and in Jerusalem, to talk
about the way of Jesus, doesn't it? And yet, when you stop and think about Jesus
himself and who he was and what he embodied, has anyone in history impacted
human behavior more? Has anyone made a difference in the world more than
Jesus? And when someone did take him seriously like Gandhi, look what was
effected. And in our own country, in the civil rights era of Martin Luther King,
that way of non-violent resistance?
For 2000 years it has been business as usual, pretty much, and here we are. We
could destroy ourselves, we really could. How much into a corner does Israel have
to be shoved before they use nuclear capability? You might say they are smarter
than that. What if it is existence or being driven into the sea? And what if, as
some young Egyptian student suggested, that a suitcase-sized nuclear bomb
could eliminate the problem of Israel? And what if that situation continues to
escalate until it becomes a civilizational war which astute commentators are
speaking of? We could bring this planet back to the Stone Age where the only
thing that would be alive would be some moss on a rock somewhere.
Well, I suppose that sounds also like dramatic pulpit rhetoric, but it really isn't.
Our world is really in crisis, and business as usual, real politic, the imposition of
force, the exercise of power has brought us to the brink of disaster. So, Jesus the
Pollyanna, Jesus the silly, unrealistic idealist - there he stands looking at
Jerusalem and saying, "You missed your chance, and now it’s hid from your
eyes." That is the way it is with us. We can get to a point where we just can't see
anymore, and then just awful things can happen.
So, Jesus -I don't know, Jesus, but I wonder if with the Internet, for example, if
you could come back or somebody like you could get on the Internet, could begin
to filter this around the world, could somehow or other grab the attention of the
whole global community of people who essentially are people of good will, and
take it out of the hands of the power brokers and let the people speak. I just
wonder whether there aren't people, multitudes – I wonder if there isn't
somebody somewhere that could embody again that which Jesus embodied,
because the world is before a fork in the road: two ways, two roads diverge in the
yellow wood, and we have to choose which one we will follow.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Just Imagine: The Real Miracle of Easter
Easter Sunday, The Festival of the Resurrection
Scripture: I Corinthians 15:35-37, 42-50; John 20:11-18
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 31, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
We have come a long way in a few weeks. If you have been journeying with us,
with Jesus on the Road Less Traveled, we have been in some dark environments,
and we have felt the heaviness increasing until Thursday evening, the night in
which he was betrayed, and Friday noon, the crucifixion. It has been a long way,
and in a post-9/11 world, we have felt it more poignantly, perhaps, than at any
time that I can remember. In the darkness, as it concluded, the end of the
journey, we heard the mixed messages, "My God, my God, why hast thou
forsaken me?”, "Father, into thy hand I commend my spirit," and now here we
are on Easter Sunday morning once again, amid the flowers in all of their beauty,
and the flickering candles, the magnificent music, and this setting of Easter
worship.
Is it too bright too soon? Do you ever feel that? Just too bright too soon to move
out of that darkness into the splendor of this moment - is it simply too quick a
transition? One of our families who faithfully worshiped throughout Lent and
entered very, very thoughtfully into that journey with Jesus told me they came
Thursday night but wouldn't be here this morning because they simply couldn't
move that quickly out of the darkness and into the light. I respect that. I feel that
somewhat myself. For, what are we celebrating this morning? What has brought
us from that somber and sobering darkness into this beautiful moment? What is
Easter, after all? What is it all about?
A simple answer which the Church has given down through the centuries, of
course, is that obvious answer. Jesus died in order that I might live. Jesus died to
open heaven's gate. He lives and now we, too, shall live. Easter is about
resurrection. Easter is about that movement from life through death to life
eternal. And certainly, that is no insignificant movement and that is no
insignificant realization, particularly if, as we celebrated here yesterday, we
experience the life of one loved and lost a while. Not an insignificant affirmation
if one receives a terminal diagnosis and knows that one's days are numbered. And
so, in no way do I want to say that promise of Easter, that Christian hope is
without deep meaning and great significance.
© Grand Valley State University

�Just Imagine: The Real Miracle of Easter

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

But, think with me for a moment about that. Is that really what Easter is all
about? Is Easter really all about the assurance to Richard Rhem that, at the point
of his death, he need fear no darkness, for the light will dawn? I mean, what
about all of the history that we have been traversing together? What about the
journey of Jesus into the darkness of his day which seems to be replicated all too
well in the post-September 11 world when Jerusalem is burning, when Hindu and
Muslim are massacring each other, when the globe trembles with the anguish
that has it in its grip. Is it really enough to say that Easter is about my personal,
ultimate, eternal life? We've done that in the Church, of course. We have made
that promise, and again it is not insignificant, but do you feel my question? Isn't
there something more? Aren't we brushed into a broader canvas? Isn't there
another story going on?
My own personal existence is one thing, but what about the whole cosmic
movement of 15 billion years? What about the course of human history? What
about this creature that we are who comes to consciousness and to awareness and
who gives society and culture and civilizations? What about the vast canvas of
human history? What about the awesomeness of creation? What about the
human possibility, the human experiment? Isn't there more to it than whether or
not I live and die and live again? Isn't that a narrow focus compared to the
broader question? Haven't we missed what Jesus was all about?
Let me suggest to you this morning that perhaps Easter is about human
transformation. Maybe Easter is about social transformation. Maybe Easter is
about a dawning awareness of something new. Maybe Easter is about the
transformation of the world. Maybe all of that in which Jesus was engaged and all
of the struggle and the anguish of the human community is reflective of
something deeper and something more, and maybe the followers of Jesus in the
wake of his death had something dawn upon them that said, "My God! He lives!"
Resurrection and the nature of it has been debated and discussed from the
beginning. Peter read the lessons, Paul's long 15th chapter of I Corinthians. The
Corinthians were Greeks, somewhat philosophically inclined, and there were
those who were saying there was no resurrection, and Paul said, if there is no
resurrection, I have no message to preach, your faith is vain, our preaching is
empty, nothing has happened then if there is no resurrection. But, when he got to
try to explain what in the world resurrection was, Paul didn't know any more
than you do. Did you hear the torturous way he was arguing about that
resurrection? In fact, he starts off that one paragraph by saying, "You fool!"
That’s the kind of thing we do with one another when we're not sure, raise our
voice, get shrill. Paul didn't know what he was talking about, of course. He
certainly wasn't talking about corpuscles. He wasn't talking about a physical
body. I thought some years ago I mentioned that Easter certainly wasn't about
the resuscitation of a corpse. I really thought everybody understood that by now,
but not everybody did. It ruined a few Easters, I think.

© Grand Valley State University

�Just Imagine: The Real Miracle of Easter

Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

But, you know, if you just hear Paul, he says flesh and blood cannot inherit the
kingdom of God. What is buried is perishable; what comes forth is imperishable.
He talks about a physical body and a spiritual body and, frankly, Paul is going
around in circles because it's not about corpuscles for Paul, because Paul was on
his horse and on his way to Damascus and the light knocked him off his horse
and he had a vision of the ascended Lord and there were no corpuscles there. He
had to go into the city and sit there in the darkness for a while and think about it.
And what happened to Paul after his resurrection experience was a
transformation, an absolute transformation and he was turned around in his
tracks. He began to think differently and he became passionate about something
of which he could never have dreamed.
John's Gospel, written some six decades after the event, John who is dealing with
people who have no possibility of any kind of encounter with the corpuscular
Christ, tells the story of Mary and she recognizes Jesus. And of course, in the
story, she wants to grab him and he says, "Don't hold me, Mary." Well, John is
simply saying, isn't he, that this thing is not about bodies? Or, Thomas who
missed the Easter Sunday night service, shame on him. And when he's told about
the fact that Jesus was there, he says, "I don't believe it. I won't believe it unless I
can put my finger in the wounded hand." And then the next Sunday night he was
in church and, without coming through a door, no corpuscles there, Jesus - a
hand, a wounded hand without corpuscles, can you believe it? There you are,
Thomas. Well, Thomas doesn't need to touch the hand, because Thomas
suddenly sees something and he says, "My Lord and my God."
It is about transformation of understanding, about seeing something, and John
writing six decades after the event has to deal with people whose only hope is to
be able to believe it without handling it. As a matter of fact, it's not about
handling it. It is about finally understanding it, it is finally to see what came to
expression when the word became flesh. What was embodied in that life? That is
the point - what came to expression, what was the story, what was that initial
impulse of the Jesus story that led to the Jesus movement that caused people
after his crucifixion to say, "The Lord is risen." Wasn't it that they began to see
that in this human one, this human being, God was revealed? So, God is revealed
as human. So, human beings are called to be human. And in these past weeks I
have suggested that we, contrary to what we assume, are not human, we're
advanced primates. But then someone suggested to me that that is a slander on
the monkey world. Monkeys don't behave as poorly as we do. But, you get the
point.
The point is that Jesus embodied something - some truth and beauty and grace
flowed through that flesh, and they saw it, and he was crucified, and they were
crushed, and they said, "Oh, but he lives!" What lives is what he embodied. What
lives is that which he represented. What lives is what he incarnated. God lives.
God's intention lives.

© Grand Valley State University

�Just Imagine: The Real Miracle of Easter

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4

Easter is about human transformation. Easter is about seeing something. Easter
is "Aha! I understand." Easter is Jesus getting through.
Sometime or other in the past I put aside this little sheet, thinking some Easter
I'd need a message. I came across it recently going through a lot of old materials,
and it talks about an imaginal cell, from imagination. An imaginal cell. It is about
caterpillars and butterflies. You know, the butterfly is the symbol of Easter par
excellence, the transformation. Well, this paragraph talks about imaginal cells.
Let us compare our situation with a metamorphosis of a caterpillar into a
butterfly.
When the caterpillar weaves its cocoon, imaginal disks begin to appear.
These disks embody the blueprint of the butterfly yet to come. All of the
disks are a natural part of the caterpillar's evolution. Its immune system
recognizes them as foreign and tries to destroy them. But, as the disks
arrive faster and begin to link up, the caterpillar's immune system breaks
down and its body begins to disintegrate. And when the disks mature and
become imaginal cells, they form themselves into a new pattern, thus
transforming the disintegrating body of the caterpillar into the butterfly.
The breakdown of the caterpillar's old system is essential for the
breakthrough of the new butterfly. Yet, in reality, the caterpillar neither
dies nor disintegrates, for from the beginning its hidden purpose was to
transform and be reborn as a butterfly.
What a magnificent analogy. What a beautiful picture. Imaginal cells. Someone
named them imaginal cells. I'd love to know the zoologist who did that. I'd love to
know why he/she called them imaginal cells. Those are cells that, coming out of
the egg, the caterpillar carries with it, and they lie dormant in the caterpillar for a
period of time until they begin to make their move and then eventually, in the
transformation, they become the imaginal cells. Are they not the cells, perhaps,
that imagined the butterfly? And imagining the butterfly, eventually the butterfly
becomes the reality of the caterpillar.
Imagination, you know, is one of the great human faculties, and we have
denigrated it by saying, "Oh, it’s only your imagination." Nonsense. Those who
study the human person say the imagination may be that very place where the
Spirit of God has the opportunity of imprinting the human mind. The
imagination can take human language and create a whole new reality, because
when we tell our stories, we create a new reality. Reality is language embodied,
and the imagination is that faculty by which we can dream of something that has
never been.
And what if all of the anguish and all of the travail of the present - what if Hindu
and Muslim at each other's throat, what if the Arab world in all of its anger and
its terror against us, what if Palestinian and Israeli, what if all of the shaking of
the foundations in this present day is the travail and the birth pangs of a whole
new world of which we have not yet dreamed? What if Easter is that indomitable

© Grand Valley State University

�Just Imagine: The Real Miracle of Easter

Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

human hope, because of that creative spirit within us that keeps pushing us to
imagine another way of being, a different reality, a transformed world? What if
Easter is about the dawning awareness of that which has never been, except in
the intention of God? What if Easter is about something we've not yet dreamed of
and even now is underway?
Just imagine! That's the miracle of Easter.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Two Understandings – When Friends Disagree
Eastertide II
Scripture: Galatians 2:11-14; Luke 24:28-43
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
April 7, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
It must be obvious to everyone that this world needs to learn to engage in
conversation and dialogue to be honest with each other and to listen to each
other, in order that we might live in peace. Our world is breaking apart because
we can't speak to each other or hear each other.
I am using this occasion, the week after Easter, to think about the resurrection
from two perspectives, because in May we are having two scholars come our way
who differ on their understanding of the resurrection. And they are coming in
order to stimulate conversation among the faith community of western Michigan,
to be a model for a manner in which such conversation can take place.
Marcus Borg, who has been here a couple of times and is a real friend of this
congregation, will be joined by N. T. Wright, who is an excellent scholar and who
happens to be a very good friend of Marcus. N. T. Wright is the Canon of
Westminster Abbey. If you watch the funeral on Tuesday of the Queen Mum, I
am wondering whether N. T. Wright may be a part of that, since he is the Canon
of that great cathedral in London. They were in school together at Oxford and
became friends, respecting each other, holding each other in high esteem, and yet
differing in their perspectives. They become a good model for a way in which
religious people can differ with one another and yet not break community, and
converse with one another and seek to deepen the understanding one of another
and to enhance that understanding.
N. T. Wright is a rather traditional, evangelical scholar. He is an excellent scholar,
but his position is traditional and evangelical, it is what probably you grew up
with, what I grew up with, the kind of position that I preached for many, many
years. Marcus Borg represents a position, an understanding of the resurrection or
a biblical interpretation which takes into account the developments of modernity
and critical studies of scripture. Anytime you have a difference in your
understanding of the resurrection or any question, you can be sure it goes back to
a difference in understanding of biblical interpretation.

© Grand Valley State University

�Two Understandings: When Friends Disagree

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

The book that Marcus and Tom Wright wrote together, The Meaning of Jesus:
Two Visions, has chapters, each of them contributing a chapter, on, for example,
The Resurrection, the Virgin Birth, Is Jesus God?, What Difference Does It
Make?, and so forth. It is a very interesting dialogue they carry on between them.
When I read N. T. Wright, I read my past. When I read Marcus Borg, I read
someone who has taken account of the critical studies of scripture and the whole
drift of the post- Enlightenment world that seeks to understand phenomena apart
from the miraculous or the interventions of some supernatural incursion into this
world.
And so, obviously for me, I understand, I stand with Marcus Borg, but I respect
N. T. Wright as probably as fine a spokesperson as one could have of that
traditional point of view. Just to have them speaking together and expressing
their differing perspectives brings before us a model of conversation and
understanding that I think is very positive, for it is possible to differ with another
without writing the other off or living in alienation and separation. We don't do
that very well in the religious world. God knows we've not done that very well in
the church. Congregations have been split; denominations have been formed over
lesser differences than the differences between N. T. Wright and Marcus Borg on
the resurrection.
To hear them, to watch them, to observe them relating to one another, in this
case, in the pages of this book, becomes a lesson, a model, for how we can engage
one another and respect one another, learn from one another, and continue in
relationship, even though we understand that we differ in our perspectives and in
our interpretations.
As I said, N. T. Wright has a traditional view of the resurrection. If you would
read the chapter in the book, The Meaning of Jesus, that he writes on the
resurrection, you would find him insisting on some kind of bodily physicality as a
sign or as a mark of resurrection. He is a very bright man and he understands the
issues clearly, and he is careful, and so he is careful to indicate that he is not
talking about the resuscitation of a corpse, obviously. Nonetheless, he wants to
insist on the necessity of the empty tomb; for N. T. Wright, if the tomb is not
empty, there is no Easter. There has been no resurrection.
Now, Marcus Borg, on the other hand, says the empty tomb is a matter of
indifference. He doesn't care if it is empty or not. If the bones, the skeletal
remains of Jesus should be found, through DNA tracing sometime, Marcus
wouldn't care, because, for him, the resurrection is not about a corpse coming to
life, but a life in God, a spiritual existence that is still experienced as a presence
among those who knew Jesus and followed him. Marcus loves to go to what is
also my favorite resurrection story, the Emmaus Road, two men journeying from
Jerusalem on Easter. They are sad of heart because of the events of Good Friday,
and they are joined by a stranger whom they do not recognize. As readers, we
know that it is Jesus. He says, "Why are you sad of heart?" They say, "Well, where

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Richard A. Rhem

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have you been?" And then he begins to speak to them about the scriptures, to
interpret the scriptural tradition that what has happened is exactly what would
have been expected in the prophetic books, and so forth. They come to the village
and it is getting toward evening, and he makes as though he would go on, and
they say, "Come in to us," and so he comes into their home, he acts as the host, he
blesses the bread and breaks it and gives it to them, and "poof," he is gone. But in
the breaking of the bread, they recognize him, and they say, "Now that we think
of it, did not our hearts burn within us as he spoke to us along the way?"
It is a beautiful story, reminding us, of course, of the experience of the Eucharist.
Luke is writing this Gospel story some 50 years after the events. There is a
congregation, a community to whom he is writing, a community, obviously, that
shares the Eucharist. What Luke is saying to them is that the presence of the
living Lord is experienced in the community in the breaking of bread. The
sacramental nature of the Church is the medium by which the risen Christ is
experienced in the community. There is no body there. They don't recognize this
person. Obviously, this isn't the corpse coming out of the grave. It is a symbolic
metaphor. It is a beautiful, beautiful story. If only Luke would not have given us
the next paragraph, because now they run back to Jerusalem and meet with the
disciples and a few others on Easter night, and they say, "The Lord was made
known to us," and they learn that Peter also had an experience, and now they are
gathered there and "poof," there he is again. But, now N. T. Wright is smiling all
over the place because now this risen one seems to want to underscore a certain
physicality. Even though he came "poof” into the room, nonetheless, he says,
"Handle me." And then he says, "Do you have anything to eat?" So now we are
dealing with the kind of physicality that is other than that of the Emmaus Road
story.
Well, Marcus Borg would say that is a later edition that indicates a time when
faith was being tested and there was a tendency to speak about a ghost-like
existence, but lacking reality, and so there was a kind of concreteness that was
shadowed forth in this story in order to say, "Look, this thing is real this
substance here."
Well, the biblical scholars can talk back and forth, and some of you are in one
paragraph and some of you are in another, and that is perfectly all right. That is
the way it should be. But, as a matter of fact, both Tom and Marcus would say
that Easter is the originating event of the Church and that Easter, in its summary,
is Jesus lives and Jesus is Lord, that the experience of Jesus post-crucifixion, the
experience, whether it was in some kind of story, some kind of appearance such
as Luke records here in Emmaus, or in Jerusalem, or whether, whatever it is,
there was a community of people that gathered post-crucifixion that said, "Jesus
lives." And believing that Jesus was alive, that Jesus had not simply died and was
gone, they said Jesus was right. This was God's vindication of the way of Jesus, of
the life of Jesus, of that which Jesus embodied, of that which came to expression
in Jesus.

© Grand Valley State University

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And so, what difference does it make whether the tomb is filled with the remains
of Jesus, or the tomb is empty, If there is a community of people that are united
in the fact that what was embodied in Jesus is a way of life and grace?
I cited last week that paragraph about how the caterpillar is transformed into the
butterfly. The caterpillar carried with it from the egg certain cells. The zoologist
calls them imaginal cells. Imaginal. I love it. Those are the cells that have the
blueprint of the butterfly. Those cells have the genes for legs and for wings, and
that old caterpillar, scrounging around on the ground, suddenly finds something
happening to its physical being that at first is attacked by the caterpillar's
immune system as something foreign but, eventually the new take over and there
emerges the butterfly, because that caterpillar was not made to crawl, but to fly. It
was not made to be a fuzzy worm, but a multi-colored butterfly in the sky. Now, if
the transformation takes place, what does it matter what the process is? If the
reality is there, then what is the big deal about the historical details that surround
it, for one a literal story of a body coming out of a tomb, for another, a spiritual
transformation, but for both, a transforming presence that is a sign that in this
cosmic journey of ours there is a bias toward life, creativity. If one comes to that
conclusion, then one can allow that another may come by it in another way. Why
start a new church? Why walk out on the sermon? Why begin a new
denomination?
Now I don't mean to say that distinctions are not important and differences
cannot be significant. Paul, for example, a Jew who was convinced that the way of
Jesus was dangerous, was undercutting the traditions of Israel and therefore had
to be stamped out. Paul has an experience, a vision. He is blinded. He
contemplates. He is turned around 180 degrees, and he becomes the apostle to
the Gentiles. Paul who was on the way to stamp out the Way becomes the one
who says in his transforming experience, “This must be God's move to include the
nations, the Gentiles." Paul never became anything else than a Jew and Paul
never rejected his Jewish religious faith. Paul was a Jew; Jesus was a Jew and
they, understood the God of Israel to be the only God there was, but what Paul
saw now was the possibility of all people coming into the relationship and the
covenant community of this people of Israel. As Paul said, "You know what? They
don't have to become Jews. The grace of God is sufficient. They can come directly
to God without coming by way of Moses with circumcision and dietary laws and
all of that. For Paul, that was a transforming experience. That was a total change
of paradigm. It didn't have to be another religion. It was simply the same God of
Israel embracing all by grace.
Well, what about the rest of Jesus' Jewish disciples? What about Peter, for
example? Well, Peter had an experience, too, at the house of Cornelius. He has a
vision, "Go preach in Cornelius’ house, the Roman centurion." He is preaching
and the Holy Spirit falls upon that house and he says, “O my God, now what?"
Now, they got it, too, but Peter was not the man that Paul was, with all due

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

respect to the Roman Catholic Church. Paul saw through. Paul glimpsed grace.
Paul saw something new.
Peter granted it, but it wasn't the passion of his life. And so, now they are out in
the mission field, out in Galatia, in the community that had started as a result of
Paul's preaching, and these are Gentile people now. It is not kosher. The table is
not kosher. That's okay with Peter. Peter intellectually knows the truth. It doesn't
matter. It's a religious thing. Religious things don't matter. They're optional. You
choose them, or they choose you, and you follow them and that is fine. But, they
are not absolutes. It’s not as though a lightning bolt is going to hit you. And so,
Peter has ham and buns in Galatia. But then, somebody comes from Mother
Church in Jerusalem, some of James' people, and Peter sidles past the table with
the ham and buns, and he moves over to the kosher table. Paul says, "Peter,
you’re wrong. You're not wrong to stay kosher. Stay kosher, if that is your choice.
But, don't eat one way one day and another way another day because the food is
there. Have integrity and authenticity in your person.
And so Paul confronts a friend, not about whether he is right or wrong, but about
the consistency of behavior. And so, I believe, in the church, as well. It is not as
though we need to agree on a lot of things, but the thing we need to be able to do
in the community of faith is to talk about it and to move for integrity of
understanding and action, so that where our perspectives differ, fine. That's okay.
But, is there enough that unites us that is common that we can celebrate together
so that we don't break community? If it is to be authentic community, then we
are also able to confront issues and be honest one with another in order that it
may be an authentic community, because you see, the human experience is the
experience of being rooted in history and, therefore, marked by limited
understanding. And that limited understanding means that there are no
absolutes. There may be an absolute, but every human perspective is relative, and
every human understanding is a partial and tentative understanding on the way,
hopefully, to fuller understanding. And so it is in the church. Peter could have
stayed Jewish. Israel is ongoing. Israel lives today. There would not have been
any problem with Peter continuing his Jewish faith. Paul's point to him was don't
equivocate between the two. Don't be hypocritical. Be honest in your faith and in
your behavior.
Friends can differ, and those differences can be argued and can be grounded and
founded and legitimate. There is no one to say it is this way and no other way is
possible. But, when we get an insight, as Paul did, when there is a breakthrough,
we ought to be able to bring it to expression and talk about it. For example,
western values in our world - can we talk about them? What about that which
looms on the horizon, the possibility of civilizational clash? Are we able to
express our values in the most articulate and persuasive way possible, without
having to kill one another?

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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What about in the Church, for example? In the question of sexual orientation, we
begin to understand some things. We understand things about the human
creature. We understand the diversity of creation. We understand that this is not
a matter of choice, but is a given. Then, what is the Church to do? To go on with
its bias and its prejudice? Damning and separating people and cutting them out?
Of course not. And if the Church does that as an institution, it has to be
addressed. The point has to be made so we can be engaged in conversation and
dialogue, not to break community, but in order to make community honest and
authentic and open.
There is no party line here and I value the diversity of understanding and
perspective. Don't expect the pulpit to dot every i and cross every t and be able to
embrace it all. I have a point of view and I have a responsibility to make it as clear
as I can, and I will. But I promise you, as well, that I'll listen and we can continue
to talk about these things together. If you'd like a shot at it, come on Wednesday
night. We can have a good free-for-all about six weeks in a row with differing
perspectives authored by two friends who come at it differently, but in the
exchange, help all of us to come to a clearer understanding of where we are and
why.
God knows the world needs conversation, or we will kill each other.
References:
Marcus J. Borg and N. T. Wright. The Meaning of Jesus: Two Visions.
HarperCollins Publishers, 1999.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Whose Truth Are You Living?
Eastertide V
Scripture: Philippians 3:4-11; 4:10-14; Matthew 28:1-10
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
April 28, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
On Easter I gave you the analogy of the caterpillar and the butterfly, the butterfly,
of course, the prime symbol for Easter and for resurrection. I mentioned that the
caterpillar takes from the egg certain cells and those cells have within them the
blueprint for the legs and the wings of the butterfly, and at a certain point in the
development of the caterpillar, those cells begin to create disks within the
creature which are perceived by the immune system of that creature as being
alien and foreign and therefore are attacked, but eventually they overcome. The
zoologist calls those cells imaginal cells, a wonderful name, imaginal cells. They
imagine within themselves what that caterpillar can become, and when they
finally overcome the resistance of the immune system, the caterpillar is
transformed into a butterfly that, in all of its beauty, flies away in freedom. That
analogy, of course, is received on Easter Sunday as an analogy of that
transformation that occurs at the point of our death. Certainly it is a beautiful
analogy for that possibility, that transformation about which I remain agnostic,
because who knows what kind of transformation that might be?
This morning I want to point out what I really intended to point out but probably
didn't have the time or didn't have the presence of mind to do, and that is that as
the Easter message title was "Just Imagine the Real Miracle of Easter," I want to
point out that that analogy is apropos, as well, for the possibility in our present
existence to come to new insight, to come to transforming understanding, to
come to a new way of being, to be given the gift of eyes to see and ears to hear,
and to see the same things we've always seen, only to see them in a new way such
that it is transformative of our life and of our being. So, I raise the question this
morning in order to get at that - "Whose Truth Are You Living?"
An intentional question - whose truth are you living? Not "Whose Truth Do You
Believe?" but whose truth are you living? In other words, what is the vision that
has informed your life? What is at the center of your passion, what creates the life
map, the sense of orientation for your ordinary days and for those crisis periods
that come now and again? What is that at the center, the core of your being?
Whose truth are you living?
© Grand Valley State University

�Whose Truth Are You Living?

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

That question is a question intended to illicit an answer from you which, if I were
so lucky, would be "my truth." Whose truth are you living? Tell me you're living
your truth. Perhaps that seems a bit presumptuous. Maybe that even feels
arrogant to you. Live my truth? My truth? Who am I, after all? My truth? I'm a
part of a long tradition.
Perhaps in answer to my question, rather than saying, "My truth," you might say,
"I'm Christian," or "I'm Muslim." Or you might get more particular, you might
say, "As a Christian, I'm Protestant." If you're really picky, you might say, "I'm a
Lutheran or a Methodist or a Presbyterian." In other words, we define ourselves
often in terms of a group with which we are affiliated. We gain our identity
through that group-think which has formed and shaped us, the community of
which we are a part, and if you would say to me this morning some answer like
that, not "My truth," but "The Christian tradition," then I think you would be in
good company, most likely with the vast majority of folk who would so define
themselves in terms of some such community affiliation. I must say that is not all
bad because if you would have answered me, "I live by my truth," you would only
have come to your truth through one of the great traditions.
Our truth does not emerge in a vacuum. We are shaped and formed, and that is
why, in a community like this, we nurture our children and we shape our youth.
We have a responsibility to pass on a tradition which has been a positive
tradition, a positive power and shaping force in our lives. It has given us order. It
has given us some sense of the meaning of life, of the direction of life. It has
spoken to us of God and of humankind and of history and culture, and it has
helped us to find our way in the passages of life. So, don't hear me denigrate the
tradition and the respective traditions, and even the narrowing down of those
traditions into creedal forms and confessional groups, for all of us, finally, will
have to come in that way if we would come to our own personal place to stand to
say, "I stand in my truth. This is my vision. I have seen something and I live by it
and its illumination floods my life."
Nonetheless, it is possible to move beyond that group identity to a personal vision
which can be absolutely transforming and liberating, and maybe if I said it
against its opposite, it will make some sense. Recently someone put in my hands
a magazine called Islam, and this very nice glossy magazine had on the cover,
"Discovering the Truth: What Islam Stands For," and when I went to the lead
article, it gives some of the history of Mohammed. It was during one of those
times in a cave that God sent his first revelation to Mohammed. Mohammed was
now the final messenger of God and would be used to deliver the universal
message to all humankind. The Archangel Gabriel came to Mohammed and
commanded, "Read." Mohammed, terrified, replied, "I'm not a reader," for he
could neither read nor write, as literacy where he lived was rare. The angel took
hold of him, squeezed him with incredible force, released him and repeated the
command, "Read." Mohammed repeated himself and once again the angel
squeezed him until Mohammed thought he could bear it no longer. After the

© Grand Valley State University

�Whose Truth Are You Living?

Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

third time, Mohammed felt the intense ringing of bells and heard Gabriel recite
the literal word of God, words so powerful that it felt like they were inscribed on
his heart, "Read, in the name of your Lord who created you." He ran from the
cave in terror, trying to escape the intense and frightening experience, but
everywhere he looked on the horizon, he saw Gabriel. He could not escape, but he
had already been chosen. Over a period of twenty-three years, the revelation
continued to come.
It is a magazine like Christianity Today or a house organ like The Banner of the
Christian Reformed Church or The Church Herald of the Reformed Church. It is
very nicely done and it presents the truth of Islam while it says "Discover the
Truth: What Islam Stands For." And then it gives accounts like this and I was
reminded as I read it of much Christian literature that assumes again, quite
naturally, this is the truth. Gabriel did visit Mary, the virgin Mary. Do you believe
that? If you believe that, do you believe this? If you believe this, then there is a
revelation beyond what is here, a final revelation, a final testament. The
respective religions claim to have the truth and so I say, "I'm a Muslim," or "I'm a
Christian," then my truth is defined for me. There is a dogma, there is a teaching.
It is all there in creedal expression and confessional statement, in ritual form. All
of the accoutrements of the religious experience of the respective traditions, all of
them assume a kind of literality about their truthfulness and its congruence with
reality as it is. So, if you belong to such a group, you don't have to have your own
truth. You could have group-think.
Now, once again to set this over against what I want to get at this morning. I
often have people say to me, "We don't believe that!" Oh, don't we? Who is we?
We don't believe that, or we believe so and so. We do? As a group, as a
community. Have we all thought it through? Have we all come to a personal
appropriation of that community expression? Hardly. We find our identity in that
group connection, just like we find our identity in the U.S. of A. or the Red Wings
who won again last night. We get our identity out of that kind of group affiliation
and we simply become a part of it, and I want to suggest to you this morning that
there is the possibility of a transformation when one can move beyond that
group-think, beyond that traditional statement, to one's own truth, to one's own
vision. There is the possibility of finding one's being transformed here and now,
coming to that epiphany saying, "Oh, I see!" To have eyes to see and ears to hear
the same old thing in a brand new way, which can be transformative.
Paul was such a person. You may say, "Oh, yes, Paul. Thank you very much, I'm
not Paul. I'm never going to be knocked off my horse by a blinding light from
heaven. I'm just ordinary. Don't push me too much."
But, think of Paul. Of course, Paul was a religious genius. I think Paul was one of
those special vessels, one whose epiphany becomes epiphanic for a whole
community of people who probably more than Jesus is responsible for the shape
of the Christian faith and Christian tradition. Paul, and I read his little

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 4

autobiographical piece, was deeply traditioned. He had the right connections, the
right parents, the right bloodlines, the right sacramental ritual discipline, the
right affiliation in terms of Pharisee concern for the serious observance of the
law, engaged and zealous, so he confesses, "I persecuted the Church." In terms of
being responsible to that tradition that he had embraced, blameless. He sets all
that forth because he says, "I set it all to the side, because of this transforming
vision that I had."
I simply lift Paul up as one who was so deeply traditioned, but by the grace of God
was able to move out of the hedgerows and the binding narrowness of a strong
tradition into a grand and glorious freedom that enabled him to soar. Paul
experienced the transformation such that it knocked his socks off, and perhaps
that is rare, but I hold him up as an example of what can happen and to make the
point that all of that tradition, all of that structure, all of that ritual, all of those
creedal statements and confessional expressions - all of it is the scaffolding
through which and by which the building is erected. And all of it is good and all of
it is valuable and all of it is of worth, because you can't erect the building from
ground up without all of that paraphernalia, and neither can you come to your
truth, to your personal vision, to that which you'd die for because it enables you
to live. You cannot come to that, either, without the help and the aid of all of the
agencies of the religious experience. All of those things are simply the means to
the end of the vision of God that sets you free. That is the transforming thing of
Paul. It was not a matter of Paul, the Jew, becoming a Christian. There wasn't
even Christianity at the time. Paul was born a Jew and died a Jew as Jesus was
born a Jew and died a Jew.
This was not a conversion from one religion to another. This was a conversion
about the understanding of religion, that religion is not a burden to be borne, not
a routine to be followed, an obligation to be executed, but religion, all of it, is to
be entered into and practiced in order that we might be set free from religion, in
order that we might play fast and loose with it, in order that we might live lightly
with it, valuing it for what it is and continuing to make it available in order that it
might continue to be the agent of nurture and formation, but then, to recognize
that it can be shuck off in order that one can have wings to soar.
A pastor is crazy to tell his people that. The philosopher George Santayana wrote
this marvelous statement:
Ultimate insights (now, that's what we are talking about) have a tendency
to undermine the orthodox approaches by which they have been reached.
Wow! Did you get that? Ultimate insights have a tendency to undermine the
orthodox approaches by which they have been reached. The saint pulls his ladder
up with him into his private heaven. I get the vision. I see it. I'm thankful for all of
the accoutrements of that structure, the community that has brought me to the
point where I can fly, and then I pull my ladder up into my private heaven and I
don't tell you about it, because otherwise you might think you don't need me

© Grand Valley State University

�Whose Truth Are You Living?

Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

anymore. The community of the faithful on whose sturdy, dogmatic shoulders he
has climbed must not be deprived of the means of following his example. In other
words, I have to be very careful to talk to you about my truth and to suggest for
you your truth, because it is the sturdy shoulders of the dogmatic formulas upon
which I have climbed to my vision, and if I undermine the sturdy shoulders of the
dogmatic tradition, how will you join me in your private heaven?
Now, of course, I only do this because I can trust you with it. I only do this
because you are a mature community. I only do this because somewhere there
has to be a community that is honest about the fact that all religious practice is
valuable and relative, important and non- essential, and all of it is for the end and
the aim of a vision of God that transforms human life and allows community to
be a community of peace and reconciliation.
Some years ago, The Economist magazine had a special edition on God, and there
was a statement in it which I never forgot. It went like this:
The trouble with the world is that there are people who believe they
understand God perfectly and they meet other people who think the same
way, only differently.
Is that a picture of our world today? While it is necessary, in the nurture and the
formation of children and youth, and adults, to create the possibility for the
probing of reality, of God, of grace, of meaning through structures that have
stood the test of time, it is also high time that as a Church we get honest. I
suppose part of it is all of this terrible struggle in the Catholic Church right now,
and all of this language about the Holy Father and all of the folderol about the
robes and braids and miters, and I see all of that and I think, "Religion
institutionalized is a sickness."
But, I don't know how else to create the possibility of you coming to your own
truth unless we continue to think, probe, worship, engage in our ritual, and then
trust that now and again, here and there, someone will say, "Ah, I see! I see! I
see!" And one or two a year makes it all worthwhile

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>You Need Never Walk Alone
Confirmation Sunday
Scripture: I Corinthians 11:17-26; John 21:9-14
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
May 5, 2002, Eastertide VI
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Last week I suggested to you that I would hope that you are living your truth. The
question was, "Whose Truth Are You Living? and I said I would hope you could
answer me, "My truth." And yet, I am aware of the fact that, for most of us, life
moves along. There is enough to detract us, enough to keep us occupied, and not
many of us without some stimulus, pause long to ask ourselves the serious and
ultimate questions of life: "Why is there something rather than nothing? Is this
all there is? What does it all mean?" But life does have a way of catching up with
us, and I have a theory that most of us don't probe those deep questions or think
about them a great deal until life does catch up with us, and then some peak
experience perhaps, or some diagnosis filled with terror, or crisis, causes us to
ask, "What does it all mean?" The whys and the wherefores of our human
existence remain, even for the most reflective life, a mystery and a question.
I said last week I hope that you have moved to a point where you can say, "I'm
living by a vision, by an insight, by an intuition that resonates with my own being.
I have a sense of living my truth." But, I also indicated that one does not come to
that in a vacuum. There is a tradition into which we are born. There is, for most
of us, an orthodoxy of one sort or another in which we are schooled. Some of us
who are older have been thoroughly schooled in it, and that tradition serves a
purpose. It does become a scaffolding or the ladder by which we scale the various
questions and issues of life to the point at which we can come to claim our own
truth.
On Confirmation Sunday we recognize that, as a community of faith, we do take
seriously the traditioning that enables one finally to fly on one's own. At Christ
Community we take that traditioning very seriously. We have our eighth grade
class, some 20 strong at the 10 o'clock service, who will be given their candle.
Here at Christ Community, at Baptism, as you know, we give to the parents a
candle at the point of the infant's baptism with the suggestion that they light that
candle on the anniversary of the baptism in order that they might tell their child
about the story of their baptism and its meaning. But on Confirmation Sunday,
we give our young people their own candle, and by means of that ritual,
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Richard A. Rhem

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symbolically, we are saying, "We have done what we could do, but now it is up to
you to guard the flame of your faith and to keep it burning." In the hymn that we
just sang there is that phrase, "When you go out where demons dwell." What
parent has not been through the scary experience of launching a child, knowing
that, finally, they have to go out on their own and the individuation process is
such that we cannot guard them and keep them? We have to turn them loose.
And so, symbolically in the Church, in this community, at least, that is what we
are saying today. "Here is your candle. We have done what we could do."
I think we do it well here, and Colette brought to us the Worship Center which is
a nurture program for children, I believe, second to none, a program which has
beautifully appointed space with great intentionality and a highly trained and
dedicated team of teachers, ministers, celebrants. Colette has written the
curriculum which we use here for three-year-olds through fifth graders, and Mary
Ackerson has written it for the next three grades. I don't think any other
congregations could boast that the curriculum that the children and youth are
exposed to is as reflective of the understanding, the insight, the spirit, and the
posture of the larger community. This is not something you go out and buy in
some bookstore warehouse. This is not some commercially produced product that
has to appeal across the spectrum of theological positions. This is a curriculum
that nurtures our children in the finest and deepest insights and the spirit of this
community. Perhaps most important, beyond all of that, is that intentional
greeting of the child and in every way possible at every opportunity possible, to
say to the child "God loves you. You are loved of God, and one day God will call
you to be God's servant, helper in this world," that continuing positive regard that
saturates our children as they go through.
And we share the stories; we share the biblical stories told in wonderfully creative
fashion, and the way of Jesus, the stories of Jesus, going through the life of Jesus
as we in this setting go through the Christian Year. The children are invited to
hear the story with the question, "I wonder," and that question or that
questioning, wondering mode is followed through consistently into their
adolescent years, so that our children are engaged, their imaginations are
engaged, their minds are engaged. They are welcomed into the story and then
invited to wonder about it.
One has to be an old fossil like me who had it all the other way to appreciate the
difference that that makes. For example, what is the catechism method? The
catechism method is a method of questions. Well, you might say, that's just like
the Worship Center, just like our youth classes, raising questions. But, there is
this difference: In the catechism method, you are given the answers and you
memorize the answers. I don't mean to demean that or denigrate that. After all, it
has worked for generations. And certainly some of us who were persecuted thus
had the lines of that tradition deeply, indelibly written on our being, and that is
precisely why, for some of us, it has been so difficult to learn to fly, because we
have earned with us the baggage that was loaded on us in the most caring and

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Page 3

loving fashion by those with the best of intentions. But, you do see the difference.
Are you invited to wonder? Or, is the question raised to which you are given the
answer to memorize? You can do that whole thing without thinking about it at all.
You can go through that whole procedure without once asking, "But is it true?
What does it really mean?" So, what I am saying this morning is that we have
been serious about bringing our children and our youth to a point at which they
have had a sense of being a part of a tradition, a thought-ful tradition, a tradition
that has a point of view, an understanding, and I think, frankly, we have done it
very, very well. I can say that without anything about myself because it is done
totally apart from me. But I have never in all these years of my ministry known it
to be done as well as it has been done here in the last dozen years.
Today we say to our confirmands, "You have a candle now to nurture on your
own. We have done our best to give you a sense, an identity, of who the
community is in light of the larger tradition, and now you are prepared to find
your way." What I really want to say to them, and I think that it has meaning for
all of us, regardless of whether we stand to get our candle today or not, is that,
"Although you're on your own and I hope you find your own truth, you need
never walk alone." That's quite something other. You need never walk alone,
because you belong, because you are a part of a family, because you are a part of a
community. I think that is so terribly important. If we have done our job right,
then those whom we launch will always feel some kind of a spiritual bond here.
Ryan and Michelle Boeve will bring their newest child from Sarasota, Florida, to
be baptized here. I don't know if you were here a year or so ago when Jim
VanEenenaam brought his latest baby back and Peter Theune spoke then, talking
about the miles and the geography, from California to Spring Lake Children's
Moment here, and the reasons one would come back in order to celebrate that
sacrament here. That sacrament of initiation brings one into a family and a
community and one belongs, and in everything that we do, we try to say that. And
where it is said and received successfully, there is a bond that is never broken.
There is a community here and a family here and no matter how far you go, or
wherever your journey takes you, you do belong. There is a rootedness here and
an affectional bond, and a community of people who care and embrace. I think
that is terribly important.
I read the passages I did this morning because they are about the Eucharist, and
in a few moments we will celebrate our Lord's Supper, or the Eucharistic Feast,
and that meal is a sign of community, of family. Where is a family gathered best?
Around the table. Where do the best things happen in a family? The family meal.
And Jesus' ministry – There have been those who have looked at it all, and said,
“You know, the very heart of his ministry and his life was that open table
fellowship," and the point of it was that everyone was welcome to come, that
there were no outsiders, the open table, a sign of the inclusion of the grace of God
that was embodied in Jesus. That was his way. That was that which marked him.
That was that which set him off from the religious establishment. That was one of

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Richard A. Rhem

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the factors, of course, that got him crucified. But, during the days of his ministry,
he was constantly at table, breaking bread.
We know the story of the Last Supper, or maybe it was a Passover meal. It was
Passover time. The Gospels differ as to whether it was on the time of Passover or
the day before, but it doesn't matter. He had a Last Supper, in any case, which
was consistent with the practice of all of the days of his ministry, and it is that
meal that we will remember in a few moments. But, it didn't stop there, for we
have in Luke two instances of Jesus at table in resurrection appearances - the
road to Emmaus and the story immediately following, when he was with the
disciples. And then the little story in the 21st chapter of John's Gospel, which the
scholars say was tacked on to the Gospel; it probably was not a part of the
original. What that 21st chapter was about was who had authority in the
leadership of the new community. I'm not interested in that, but I think it's a
rather delightful picture to see the disciples back at their trade again, out fishing,
Jesus on the shore saying, "Lads, have you caught any fish? Come and have
breakfast." This was consistent with the whole pattern of his ministry that he took
bread and fish and they had a meal which certainly had to be reflective of the
meals they have had before, and of the Passover meal that he shared on the
evening of his betrayal, and of course, in that early community some decades
after his death and resurrection, as John was writing, it was reflective of that
Eucharistic theme which was the meal that marked the family.
It was not just an ordinary meal. It was a meal in which everyone was invited and
everyone came on the same basis. That is why Paul scolds the Corinthians in the
passage I read. He says, "Some of you, you 'haves' come and have a big feast, and
the 'have nots' don't have anything." We know from the social context of the time,
they were dirt poor. And so, there was a division within that early community in
Corinth. There were those who had plenty who, with insensitivity, humiliated
those who had nothing. Paul said, "You are not discerning the body of Christ. You
are not eating and drinking worthily."
You know what that meant to me when I was a kid and the communion service
was held? It meant that some people were coming to the table without sin
confessed. If you were raised a Scottish Presbyterian, you would have been
introduced in a former century to the practice of "fencing the table." You get the
image? Fencing the table was a preparatory service in which the congregation
was confronted with all of the potential sin in their life, called to confess and to
get right with one another, to come to the table with everything cleared, the
accounts all cleared. That's what the preparatory service was about. As a child, I
remember a wonderful pastor of my childhood who preached a great sermon, a
preparatory sermon from the verse in the Psalm, "If I regard iniquity in my heart,
he will not hear me," and if you don't think we went out of there in fear and
trembling ... The sacrament was so holy that you couldn't approach it unless your
hands were clean and your heart was pure.

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

Now, I don't know what Paul would have said about that. He probably would
have said, "Well, that's a good idea." But, might he not have said the same thing
he said to the Corinthians for another reason? Why are you making distinctions?
Why are you making this a table of particularity rather than a table of universal
access? Because, who is righteous? Who is ready to come to this table, standing in
one's own righteousness?
At Carl Juhl's funeral a little over a week ago, I was moved sitting here as Bob
Kleinheksel was the Celebrant and he gave the invitation to the table. An
invitation to the table at a funeral is always a delicate matter, because you have all
sorts and conditions of humankind. You have rabid Baptists, serious Catholics,
lapsed atheists, particularly when it's a Juhl funeral, what kind of mongrel folk
will come? I was so moved at Bob who, I think in the inspiration of the moment,
said, "Come to this table. Come, whoever you are. Come from wherever you are
coming from. Come if you believe; come if you believe nothing; come if in this
moment you want to experience solidarity with this family in this moment of grief
and loss."
We are so privileged, those of us who get to offer the bread and the cup. We get
eye-to-eye and soul-to-soul contact. It is a moving experience. It is a table of the
family, a table at which we belong, wherever we are in our journey, a table at
which we belong. And so, you need never walk alone.
Do you realize how radical that is? Do you realize what a far cry that is from
institutional Christianity generally? Do you realize how risky that is? Do you
realize how grace-full that is? How marvelously exciting that is? How beautifully
it reflects Jesus?
You belong here and wherever you go, you can always come home here, and the
table will always be set. You need never walk alone.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>What’s the Holy Father To Do
With a Mother Like Rosie O’Donnell?
Recognition of Colette Volkema DeNooyer
Scripture: I Corinthians 13; Matthew 18:10-14, 19:13-16
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
May 12, 2002, Eastertide VII
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Thirteen years ago when Colette joined the team, she used to chastise me a bit for
the prosaic nature of the titles of my sermons, lacking all creativity and invitation,
so I thought that, on this the day on which we honor her ministry as she lays it
down, I should extend myself in finding an interesting title. After the long service
last week, someone came up to me in the courtyard and said, "Dick, I'm going to
cancel," and I thought, "Oh, no, I've lost another one." But, he said, "I'm going to
cancel my trip up north because of the sermon title next week." Actually, the
sermon title doesn't have anything to do with Colette. As a matter of fact, it
flashed into my mind in a moment's time before this day was ever set as the day
to honor her. It flashed into my mind in a moment, and I knew I had my Mother's
Day sermon, and I even contemplated, when we determined this to be the day we
should honor Colette, if I should change the sermon. But, on more reflection, I
thought, "No, I think it fits."
"What’s the Holy Father To Do With a Mother Like Rosie O'Donnell?" Rosie
O'Donnell, the talk show host on television, comedienne. I have never seen one of
her programs; I know very little about her. My research assistant, Char Zoet, at
the library, dug up all kinds of interesting information which saved me, having
already proclaimed my determination to speak about Rosie O'Donnell. But, on
one of those times that I moved from my loft through the bedroom and into the
bathroom, which I do on occasion while Nancy is watching television (I say to
her, "Are the Red Wings ahead," or "Are the Pistons winning?" or whatever, and
then I retreat again to Jesus and the loft), but, on this particular evening, Diane
Sawyer was interviewing Rosie O'Donnell, and I paused long enough to realize
that I must sit down and listen, and I was deeply moved. I was touched, because I
saw embodied the kind of love and grace that I wish were always the hallmark of
the Christian community, for Rosie O'Donnell, in her interview with Diane
Sawyer, was coming out of the closet and declaring herself to be gay, not in order
that she might tell the whole world of her sexual orientation because she says, "It
was never really a very big deal for me," but, she came out of the closet and on
national television wanted to be known as a gay parent, and the reason she
© Grand Valley State University

�What’s a Holy Father To Do with a Mother Like… Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

wanted to be known as a gay parent was that she has entered a crusade, a crusade
that would help people to understand that to be a parent, to be a good parent, has
nothing to do with one's sexual orientation.
It happened that Rosie O'Donnell, who has adopted three children of her own,
became aware of a situation in Florida where a family was being threatened by
the Florida agencies that were going to take away a young man who had been
with this couple for ten years. The couple has gathered together a family, five
children, black and white, all five of them HIV positive. Diane Sawyer interviewed
the children. They were well groomed and well spoken and obviously a tight
family unit who gave every evidence of being very, very normal, and very much in
love with their family, and with their two gay men parents. When Rosie learned
that Bert, who had been with them for ten years, might be taken away because, in
Florida, if you're gay, you cannot adopt, she went into the trenches, and she
determined herself to say, "Look, I'm gay. I'm a gay parent, and I'm a good
parent, and I care about children, and to discriminate against gay people as
parents is to deny the hundreds of thousands of children who have no parents or
home to call their own."
Rosie one day saw the story of Amanda on television, a little five-year-old who
had been raped and beaten. Through a long story to which I cannot go, she finally
found this little girl in a home with twenty others from five to seventeen. She
related to all of them, took a picture of each one, but finally was able to get aside
with Amanda, giving her a Beanie Bunny, and then Amanda looked at her
affectionately and asked, "What's your name?' Rosie said, "Roseann." Amanda
said, "Amanda." As she went to leave, Rosie couldn't quite let her go, and so she
said, "I have a gift for you," and Amanda lifted up her Beanie Bunny and said,
"You have already given me a gift," and Rosie reached into her pocket and
brought out a polished stone on which was inscribed, "Love." She said to
Amanda, "Every time you see this stone, know that I love you and there are a lot
of people that love you and care for you."
What's the Holy Father to do with a mother like Rosie O'Donnell? I use the Holy
Father, of course, only as a symbol of the Church. The poor man has enough on
his plate at this time without having to deal with Rosie O'Donnell. But I use him
as a symbol for the Church at large which finds it so hard to learn the lesson of
the Apostle Paul who said that love is finally all that matters, and all that lasts
eternally. As I thought of the love embodied in Rosie and her care and her
compassion for children, it is a love unlike the saccharin, sweet, sentimentality of
a Hallmark card, but it is the love that gets involved and engaged. It is the love
whose passion is committed to justice and to the well-being of others, and in
Rosie's case, to the well-being of children.
I thought what better model on Mother's Day than to say, really, all that matters
is love. That kind of love. And the reason I thought it would apply to Colette, as
well, is because she was an "abused child." She had to go to Sunday School and

© Grand Valley State University

�What’s a Holy Father To Do with a Mother Like… Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

Catechism, and like most of us, she suffered through that and she pledged to
herself that she would do something better for her children. And so she created
the Worship Center. She created all of the stories, the curriculum, and she
perfected the method, and she blessed her children and the children of us all, and
the children of hundreds of congregations scattered about whose leaders she has
trained. It was because of her passion for children, her love for children that she
gave of herself, her energy, her mind and her heart to the creation of this
marvelous program which, although she lays down the mantle, will go on to
continue to bless our children and our children's children, I trust.
And then there was another reason … It is because beyond her skills as a
Christian educator, Colette went on to further her education, to gain her
ordination, and in our midst she has become a preacher extraordinaire, and she
has preached intelligently and passionately and she has not backed away from
being a prophetic voice in our midst. In the midst of the team, as well, she has
spearheaded a programmatic dimension of this ministry, for example, with Peter
Theune, inaugurating our ministry to people with homosexual orientation,
leading to the ongoing program of the Circle of Friends and the creation here of a
community that has lost its fear and, in love, has been able to embrace all people,
so that we have the marvelous experience of seeing love literally melt barriers and
build marvelous relationships in a community that has been able to move beyond
bias and prejudice and fear and alienation and become, perhaps, just a little bit,
the embodiment of what a Rosie O'Donnell is on the broader screen of the world
today.
And so, Colette has been creator of Worship Center, prophetic voice, but I
suppose, finally, the storyteller with the children gathered 'round her, and the
image with which we will always hold her is that marvelous image in the Gospel
of Jesus who, when the disciples tried to push away the mothers with their
children, Jesus said, "Let them come, for to such belongs the kingdom," and he
took them on his lap and he blessed them.
What's the Holy Father to do with a mother like Rosie O'Donnell? I don't really
know, but this somewhat less than holy father would say, "Bless you, Rosie. Bless
you, Colette. Thank God for you both."

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Root of Vision and Values to Die For
Memorial Day Weekend
Trinity Sunday
Scripture: Jeremiah 9:17-24; Acts 7:51-60; John 14:15-20
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
May 26, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
On the calendar of the Church, this is Trinity Sunday, always the Sunday after
Pentecost. After going through the cycle of the life of Christ and celebrating the
gift of the Holy Spirit, the Church has paused to take in its image of God - God the
Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit.
On the calendar of the nation, this is Memorial Day, the day in which we
remember those who have paid the supreme sacrifice in order to preserve the
freedoms and the liberties that we enjoy as a people. On this Trinity Sunday,
which is also Memorial Day weekend, I want to suggest to you that the liberty and
the freedom and the blessings that have endured in us as a people are rooted in
the Triune God, that the vision and the values that have flowered and blossomed
into this marvelous civilizational opportunity that is ours is not an accident, but a
consequence of the vision and values that are rooted in God. Not accidental. To
try to combine these themes this morning, let me suggest that the Trinity has
become simply a dogma for us. It is a code word; it is that which marks the
Christian tradition, a doctrine, and is largely incomprehensible to the vast
majority of Christian people, incomprehensible because it was forged in language
and philosophical conceptuality that we no longer share. It is no longer
meaningful to us, and so, what we do is repeat the formula and, as I said, it has
become a code word. It is a symbol for the God that Christians imagine. But it is
hardly understood in the terms in which it was originally forged. And yet, the
forging of it was very important because, through that very dogmatic structure
down through the centuries, we have preserved that initial vision, that vision of
God, the God revealed in Jesus and experienced in the ongoing presence of the
Spirit.
As a matter of fact, all religious experience is Trinitarian in form, for we cannot
understand God or comprehend God. God is a Mystery, but that Mystery takes on
a face. It takes on a form or a shape now and then, here and there, a shape, a face.
Moses, perhaps, killing an Egyptian, seeing the abuse of his own people, fleeing
into the wilderness, struggling, wrestling with the nature of the human condition,
© Grand Valley State University

�The Root of Vision and Values to Die For

Richard A. Rhem

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confronting a bush that burns and is not consumed, hears the voice of God and
goes to lead the people of Israel out of bondage and into freedom. Moses becomes
a founding figure, and the Exodus becomes a founding story, and a people, a
community is shaped and a tradition is formed. And out of that tradition comes
the Jew, Jesus, whom, encountered, caused those who knew him to say, "My God,
this is indeed the embodiment of God. This is the face of God. In this one's face
we see the heart of God." He was crucified, but they said, “You know, he lives. He
is with us still - in the Spirit."
And so, John, writing his Gospel some six decades after the event itself, trying to
give expression to it, stammers and stutters when he says, "I am in the Father and
the Father in me, and you in me and I in you..." This kind of religious gobbledygook - what does it mean, after all? Can you make any sense of it? Hardly, I think.
Yet, one certainly gets the feel for what John was trying to say. He has Jesus
speaking about the Father and he says, "I'll talk to the Father and have him send
you another advocate, a helper, the Spirit of truth that will be with you." And then
two lines later, he says, "I am coming to you. I won't leave you orphan, I am
coming to you." Well, is the Spirit coming or is Jesus coming? I suppose that is
what was being pointed at.
The reality behind it was an ongoing experience of the presence of the Mystery
that had taken concrete shape - whether in Israel as Torah or in the Christian
movement as the continuing presence of the Risen Lord rooted in Israel,
finding embodiment in Jesus,
articulated in the Trinitarian dogma.
All religious experience is that way - there is a Mystery, there is a concretion, and
there is a personal experience, or presence. Stephen, having encountered Jesus,
seeing God in Jesus, giving witness to his faith, enraging those who were
listening, is set upon, and he has a vision to which he gives witness. The heavens
open, the throne of God, the brightness, the glory, and Jesus ... Stephen, full of
the Holy Spirit, dying in the manner of Jesus with forgiveness on his lips.
All religious experience is Trinitarian in form - a Mystery finds concretion and
continues to be experienced as a personal spiritual reality, and, as a matter of
fact, the history doesn't matter much once you "get it."
I laughed a year or so ago when I heard on the radio about a Jewish rabbi in
California who suggested to the Jewish community that there wasn't a shred of
historical evidence for the Exodus. Well, they got as angry with him as some
people have gotten with me. Misery likes company. I enjoyed that. But, as a
matter of fact, what difference does it make if the values of human freedom and
dignity that came to expression in the Exodus, if the understanding of God as the

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Richard A. Rhem

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God who grounds human dignity and freedom, if that is grasped, if that is
understood? It doesn't really matter if there was a Red Sea or not, or if the Sea of
Reeds parted or not. And if what came to expression in Jesus, if what was
embodied in Jesus is once grasped and one is grasped by it, then, if you're
interested and curious you can ask about the historical Jesus, but as the
philosopher Santayana said, when we have to do with poets and saints and
heroes, that which comes to expression in them is a grace and a beauty and a
truth that flows through them. They are the channels of it, they are not the source
of it. They are simply the channels of it. And that which comes to expression
through them, the truth, the beauty, the grace, is the thing in itself, and the
historical data becomes as insignificant as William Shakespeare to the marvel of
the drama, the plays which he offered, for you don't experience "Romeo and
Juliet" or "A Midsummer's Night's Dream" and wonder about 0l' Will, for it is the
truth, the aesthetic experience, it is that which moves us in the depths of which
Shakespeare was but the channel, the container, as it were. So, on this Trinity
Sunday, all religious experience is Trinitarian.
I performed a wedding for a Jewish young lady yesterday, and in a prior interview
of the bridal couple, she asked, "Do we need references to the Trinity?" I said,
"No, God's enough." "But," I said, "as a matter of fact, your religious experience is
Trinitarian," and it took her aback a little bit. But I think I convinced her, because
that is the nature of religious experience. It is Trinitarian, because the deep
mystery of God, the ground, the source, the creative center of all that is – for,
after all, we didn't create ourselves, this cosmic process, this amazing venture of
which we are a part, whatever its source, whatever its ground, whatever the
creative process, whatever the creative interaction that moves it on – that
Ultimate Mystery we call God. That God takes on a shape or a form or a face and
continues to be experienced as an immediate spiritual reality, and that is the
truth of the Trinitarian nature of religious experience.
In Israel, it was all rooted for us, but it came to sharp focus in the face of Jesus,
and continues to be experienced in the power of the Spirit. Thus, this Trinity
Sunday we celebrate God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit. That, for
us, is a statement of our faith and I am suggesting that that is the root of our
vision and our values. It is that which has shaped Western civilization. I think I
can say that, without fear of contradiction, Western civilization is rooted in that
kind of vision and those values that emanate from Hebrew prophets, from Jesus,
from the articulation of the Nicene Creed, that creed that gives expression to the
experience of Jesus who was the embodiment of the God of Israel.
Look where it has gotten us. On this Memorial Day weekend we celebrate
Western civilization in all of the awesome wonder that it is, all of the blessings
that we have received, those blessings of political democracy, human freedom,
the rule of law, pluralism - all of the wonder and all of the blessing of being a part
of this Western civilizational grouping in this United States of America, which has
blossomed and flourished, this society that was founded at the time when

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Richard A. Rhem

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authoritarianisms of every sort were being thrown off. Although Western
civilization is not synonymous with the separation of Church and State, that is the
manifestation in this nation, and I would advocate that greatly, because any kind
of religious authoritarian claim on a people, on a human spirit, tends to stunt and
to stifle. But we have been free, free to dream, free to create, free to organize, to
assemble, to worship. It is a magnificent vision, with marvelous values rooted in
God, the God of Israel who took on human flesh in Jesus, who continues with us
in the power and the presence of the Spirit.
We are at the peak of our power. We have power to act unilaterally in the world.
We have power to impose our will and to have our way. We are the mightiest
nation on earth at this time, unchallenged by that which would take second place,
and we are afraid. We are afraid because we have been faced with the reality of
the fact that might and power cannot secure us, that billions spent in military
armaments, that borders guarded and walls raised high cannot make us safe. We
have become as a civilizational grouping and as a nation challenged by Islamic
civilization in a clash of civilizations, not simply Islam as a religion, but thinking
now in terms of those great civilizational groupings, we have been challenged and
we are challenged. We have found that there is no safety in our might and our
power, in our position or our prestige.
Bernard Lewis, who teaches at Princeton and is purported to be the foremost
authority on the Islamic culture, has written a book, What Went Wrong? It was
published just months before 9/11. He does not blame the West or America for
the situation of the Islamic civilizational grouping. He does not blame Israel. He
gives a very careful, historically accurate analysis of the Islamic civilizational
group at this time, and he concludes his study by saying, "If the peoples of the
Middle East continue on their present path, the suicide bomber may become a
metaphor for the whole region." This was written months before 9/11. 'The
suicide bomber may become a metaphor for the whole region." There will be no
escape from a downward spiral of hate and spite, rage and self-pity, poverty and
oppression culminating sooner or later in yet another alien domination. The
suicide bomber, a metaphor for a whole civilization.
Here we are at the peak of our power, with all of our might, and we are afraid,
because we have learned the limits of securing our self in such a situation.
Last week in our Perspectives discussion following the service, Tom Wright
suggested that we are empire, and he said, "I hope that you will not have to learn
the lesson that the British Empire learned after the 19th century's domination."
Someone listening heard him say that we were evil empire. He did not say we
were evil empire, he said simply we are empire. That really cannot be disputed.
We are the dominant power in the world, and any power so dominate that it can
impose its will and act unilaterally is empire. And an empire need not be evil. An
empire need only to operate as an empire in order to create the kind of alienation

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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that we have in our world today. The only possibility of resistance to empire is
that revolt from weakness of which the suicide bomber is a metaphor.
So, in this Memorial Day weekend, when our vision and our values rooted in the
Triune God are under siege, how will we respond? It is a very complex situation,
dear friends. You see, the vision and the values that we claim, that we hold, that
have flowered so fruitfully in our midst are the vision and values that have
emanated from below, from Israel. On the world scene, nothing. From Jesus, a
Jew, crucified. We call ourselves in the West "Christian." That is our religious
tradition. But, that which was embodied in humility, indeed, humiliation, poverty
and alienation has flowered and blossomed until it is the professed creed of the
mightiest nation on earth. It is one thing if you're wealthy. It is one thing if you
are in poverty to suggest redistribution of wealth. It is one thing if you are small
and without strength to suggest the sharing of power. It is one thing if you have
no say to seek your place at the table and to claim that everyone should have a
voice.
But, what do you do when you rule the world and claim to be shaped, indeed, to
have been shaped by the vision and the values of the God reflected in the face of
Jesus? It is a very, very complex situation that we face. For, those who are poor
and alienated and destitute and hopeless are not intrinsically virtuous. And we
are not villains. But we are altogether human and the issue involves politics and
economics, but finally it is not a political matter nor an economic matter. It is a
moral question. What do you do if you follow Jesus? If you value the kingdom of
God, the realm where God rules, what do you do when you are top dog? Or, is it
top gun? How do you act? How do you respond? How do you address the wounds
and the bleeding and the bruisedness of the human family?
We can continue to be strong and mighty and as vigilant as possible, as long as
possible. But empires rise and fall and the West will be no exception. Or, we
might try some radical thing that has never been tried before - that is, from a
position of strength with an authentic humility, asking what the moral solution to
the ache of the world might be. And how we in our power, our might, our
resource, might begin to make a difference that would drain off the hate and the
resentment and begin to reconcile the alien nations, if indeed it might be possible
to move toward human community.
It is one thing when Jeremiah, simply a preacher in the midst of little Judah,
speaks as the mouthpiece of God saying, "Let not the powerful trust in their
power, nor the wealthy in their riches, but let them delight in this - that they
know me, the God of steadfast love who delights in justice and in righteousness."
It is one thing for Jeremiah in Judah. But, what if it were not some poor
preacher, but some eminent figure who could capture the fascination of his
people, this people, I believe, who are of good heart, far better than the system
that they have put in place? What would it be if someone might rise to say, "It is
time for us, from the peak of our power, to begin to take seriously the Triune God

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Richard A. Rhem

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revealed in Jesus, that ultimate Mystery?" Oh, we speak about God, I know. We
know so much about God. We are so confident and so familiar about God. It
doesn't matter if you call it God. What we are talking about is that which is
Ultimate. What I am asking is that which goes against the grain. But it is the
grain of the universe, by God.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Art of Worship
A Celebration of the Arts
Scripture: Psalm 148; Revelation 4
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
June 9, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Some weeks ago when I knew we were going to have some especially beautiful
artistic expressions in this service, I thought it would be appropriate to reflect a
bit on an experience such as this where we are blessed, where we are exposed to
beautiful artistic expression and to think about the art of worship. As I did that
more particularly to the immediate preparation, I recognized that there is an art
of worship in terms of the execution of the flow and the movement of it all. There
is also the art in the worship, the concrete expressions which are the artistic gifts
to the community. And so, for a few moments, think with me about the
experience that we are having together about art and worship, and the art of
worship.
I have to give you just a brief autobiographical sketch and that is that I was an
absolute cultural barbarian in my youth. Out of a very wonderful and devout
home that was pious and solid and full of love and grace such that I could not
wish anything else, there was a total vacuum in terms of artistic exposure. No
sense of the classical in art at all. And my father was a very serious and devout
elder in the church in which I grew up, a very solid, stolid, provincial, parochial
church with a Dutch ethnic flavor, of good peasant stock, by and large. To my
father, being a serious elder, the finest sermon was the longest sermon on the
shortest text, and I will reveal to you my own sickness as a child because I used to
take a little notebook along so that at Sunday dinner I could render the theme,
the text, and the three points of the sermon. There were always, of course, three
points. The sermon, point one, point two, point three, and the application. I
always embarrassed my older sisters by being able to whip it all off, but it was
three hymns, two prayers, and a sermon. I even remember as a child some
grumbling when the uppity organist (I've never seen one, but they can be that,
I'm told) offered some Bach in place of the old favorite hymns. After all, if the old
hymns were good enough for Jesus, they were good enough for us, too. So, that is
the environment out of which I came.
Now, let me tell you about three experiences I had. One was about thirty-five
years ago in Pittsburgh, an overnight during which I wandered downtown
© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

Pittsburgh into a cathedral. I don't know what it was, Episcopal or Catholic, but it
was a magnificent space. The sun was setting and the light was filtering through
stained glass and the high vaulted arches, and it was a moment for me, I'm telling
you about it thirty-five years later, it was the first time that I ever became aware
that beauty could be the vehicle of the experience of the transcendent. It was a
marked moment in my life. I didn't understand it then, but I experienced it then.
It may have been because the church at which I was a pastor at the time had the
ugliest sanctuary in North America. It had a flat ceiling and it was so big and
when they needed more seats, they added chunk, and in order to hold up the roof,
they put two metal poles in the middle of the aisle. They called them Aaron and
Herr, because they upheld the arms of Moses as he was praying. It was an
absolutely ugly place that was broader than it was deep, and you really had to be a
good preacher to make it in that place, I'll tell you. Out of that experience I go to
Pittsburgh and I have this Epiphany moment.
Some years later I was at McCormick Seminary at a seminar on the Apostles
Creed and the great Lutheran theologian, Joseph Sittler said, "You know, you
Presbyterian Reformed types always come at it through the head, the intellect,
whereas the Catholic tradition comes at it through the senses, so that there is an
intuitive grasping of the present reality of God. Smell and sight and touch - all of
that which is the other path to God, and perhaps it is really the only path to God
because God will not be known or experienced through rational deliberation. The
mind simply breaks down at the point of the experience of God, at the holy and
the sacred."
Well, light bulbs went on in my head. I who had been bred on the Heidelberg
Catechism that says that God will not have God's people taught through stained
glass windows with images and dumb idols, but rather by the lively preaching of
the word, suddenly saw that there was no need to choose between the lively
preaching of the word and all of the magnificence of that Catholic tradition which
is so rich in its artistic and aesthetic dimension.
Then, in Leiden, the Netherlands a few years after that, I was wandering alone in
the city where I had spent four years, and I wandered into the Hooglandse Kerk, a
great old church that had been taken over by the Reformers in the sixteenth
century from the Catholic tradition, and they scrubbed it clean of every sign of
Catholic idolatry. And they had recently redone the church. There were clear
glass windows, whitewashed walls, stone floor, and on a huge pillar hung a pulpit
which screamed out of the Reformed tradition that it's the sermon, Baby! Around
that pulpit there were folding chairs and it was sterile and the starkness of the
sterility struck me, and I walked up the street and went into the one Catholic
church in Leiden and felt like I was entering a warm womb. There with muted
light and candles flickering and the chancel regaled with brass and gold and
flowers, marble and granite - all of that inviting me in, embracing me, as it were,
and the contrasting experience two blocks away reminded me of my Pittsburgh
experience which I remembered sharply but had not reflected upon. But the

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

McCormick Seminary experience had been cause to reflect upon. Now with
understanding I allowed myself to be invited in to that sacred and holy presence
that was replete with such beautiful artistic expression. What I learned and what
my experience has suggested to me is that the aesthetic is the vehicle for the
experience of the holy. That beauty is the wing upon which the soul sours into the
presence of God in such a way that no rational discourse can ever break the soul,
because the presence of God is that which hits us at the subconscious level. It hits
us in the depths of the soul. It is not a mind thing and it is not a head trip, for it
blows the mind, the sacred and the Holy. Beauty and artistic expression is that
which invites us into that experience.
As I was thinking about these things, I was reminded of an article somebody gave
me some months ago, and I had not thought about it in terms of what I am
talking about this morning at all, but it is the story about new vestments being
introduced to St. Mary the Virgin's, an Episcopal Church on 46th Street in New
York City, a half block from Times Square. They say of this church – known as
"Smoky Mary's" for its liberal use of incense, the church officially described as
Anglo-Catholic – that it is about as close to Rome as a Protestant church can get.
Its service is intoxicatingly ornate and draws a wildly diverse congregation of
New Yorkers, black and white and everything else, uptown, downtown, out of
town. It goes on to talk about a young man, Patrick Bowlin, who was a
dressmaker, and who captured this vocation of making vestments and is totally
committed to it and delighting in it. He made these vestments at Smoky Mary's.
Frank Griswold, the head Bishop of the Episcopal Church, and two deacons stand
regaled in absolutely magnificent vestments, gold and yellow silk, and on and on,
but the fascinating thing to me as the story went on talking about vestments in
terms of that about which we are talking today, one person is quoted as saying
that it represents a real return to what we call the sacramentals, and he says the
bare-bones, the Bible kind of thing, is not feeding the senses, so what you see is
the church trying to appeal to the senses in the best sense of the word. They
realize that liturgy and vestments are a way to inflame the senses, and these make
another path to God.
I thought, that is exactly what I am trying to say. A worship filled with artistic
expression, with appointments, space, with care given to every detail, and then to
inflame the senses in order that, through inflamed senses, we might find a path to
God, for I am convinced that it is the aesthetic dimension that can best introduce
us to the presence of God.
It is a tricky area. There are diverse people and diverse cultures and diverse
religious traditions, and we are talking about style and taste, and there can be a
lot of arguments about this, but I want to give a word for the kind of experience
that we have cultivated here over the years and continue to cultivate. Not that it is
the only way. When I watch late-night TV, I see what Harvey Cox says in his
book,

© Grand Valley State University

�The Art of Worship

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4

Fire From Heaven, that Pentecostalism is sweeping the globe and when I see
hands raised and eyes glazed over, people in another dimension, I have to admit
that that is so foreign to me, yet I don't want to denigrate it, although I do feel
somewhat like the story of the gentleman who was about three rows from the
back who said, "Amen!" as the preacher was speaking. Five minutes later, another
"Amen!" a little louder, and the usher came up and tapped him on the shoulder
and said, "Sir," and the man said, "I've got religion!" The usher said, "You didn't
get it here."
Now, not to denigrate it, but to acknowledge a wide spectrum of opinion and
taste and style. Nonetheless, I want to say that the aesthetic dimension can be
that vehicle, that means by which the soul is lifted into the presence of God, and
again, more than the intellectual discourse of the pulpit, it is the being "washed
over" by that beauty, that beautiful expression in any one of its forms that allows
us almost subconsciously to experience the holy and the sacred and God.
Dorothee Solle, a German theologian, activist, has written a book recently about
mysticism and her own quest, and she said, "I have two women friends who
recently left for the Catholic Church and I don't approve of that. I don't believe
anyway in these divisions among churches and why would they go to the Roman
Catholic Church that says no to women, no to humane sexuality and no to
intellectual freedom?” Then she says that, in the liturgy of the Catholic Church,
they found God, and isn't that what we all are seeking, finally, the kind of
experience that would leave us, on occasion, limp, the kind of experience that
would enable us to go out, perhaps not making any rational statement about the
experience, but just that something had washed over us that had renewed and
restored us. I don't know, I don't want to say this in opposition to intelligent and
mindful religion.
The best statement of it – I have it in the insert for you; you can read it when you
go home – by John Knox, the English theologian in his little Christology, where
he says that symbols can lose their power sometimes because the symbol no
longer grasps us with its truth claim; the truth no longer resonates in us. Then he
says the heart cannot long rest in what the mind finds false. But, he goes on to
say, "I'm not setting the mind and the heart over against each other, but the mind
in its quest comes finally to the experience that blows the mind." It is not as
though it is a bypass of the mind or the understanding. What we do here is not
without intelligible design.
It is just that what we are seeking here must move us beyond our mind's limits so
that the mind is expanded and stretched, literally, until our minds are blown with
the glory and the presence of God, and that kind of worship is more than simply
fulfilling the Sunday obligation. That becomes something for which one hungers
and thirsts. You can test it by whether or not in the experience of it there is a
sense of human wholeness and humane existence that lodges in your soul and
whether going out you are marked by the fruit of the Spirit which is love and joy

© Grand Valley State University

�The Art of Worship

Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

and peace and longsuffering and gentleness and patience and kindness. As we
come together, this assembly demands artful worship full of beautiful art in order
that our soul may have wings to soar into the presence where the angels chant,
"Holy, Holy, Holy Lord God Almighty! Heaven and earth are full of your glory."

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>God, Freud and Fathers
Fathers’ Day
Scripture: Psalm 103; Luke 11:1-13
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
June 16, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
A Reading From the Present:
... I know that my own world was defined by a polarity between a happy
but somewhat impractical father and a wise, no-nonsense mother. It
seems logical to me that I should see the cosmos in much the same terms.
There's a wise, no-nonsense, loving feminine side to it and an impulsive,
creative masculine side to it. My ideal of a whole, wholesome human being
is one who combines both, whose maleness is tempered with wise
femininity, or whose femaleness is balanced by a certain male
impulsiveness.
It doesn't take an advanced degree in philosophy or theology to note that
people's ideas of God more or less tell you nothing about deity, but a good
deal about the sort of parents they've had. It is an article of faith that we
are made in the image and likeness of God, but in whose image and
likeness do we form our ideas of deity? Most of us, all unconsciously,
pattern the image after our mothers and fathers. If our parents were loving
and understanding, we tend to see God as a benevolent provider. If our
parents were strict or distant, we tend to see God as an aloof
disciplinarian. All theology in the world, whether administered in Sunday
School or at our parents' knees, won't undo the sense of Godhood that we
unconsciously develop from being around our parents.
John Allen's Journal, Vol. 1, No. 39, 6-13-90
That, too, is a word of the Lord.
Well, it is Fathers' Day. As I was thinking about Fathers' Day and thinking about
fatherhood in terms of God and human relationships and the family, I was
reminded of Freud, the psychoanalyst and great scholar, who has put his imprint
on all psychological understanding subsequent to his own life and scholarship,
although certainly there have been those who have come along to correct him
here or there or challenge him here or there. It was the conviction of Sigmund
© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

Freud that religion's origin rests in the helplessness of the human being, that we
come into this world helpless infants, totally dependent, and there is an initial
attachment and bonding with the mother who is the provider of all things
necessary. Eventually that relationship bonds also with the father who becomes
the strong protector figure. It was Freud's conviction that human religion can be
explained in terms of human impotency and the vulnerability, the helplessness
and the fiercesomeness of the human experience that cries out for comfort and
support and protection and security.
Freud was an atheist but, I think, an atheist in terms of traditional, orthodox
theism. He was, he said in his own words, "a godless Jew," and yet he was
fascinated by religion and he continued to think about it, and particularly in the
last decade of his life he was almost exclusively concerned with the nature of
religion. He never changed his mind about his conviction as to religion's origin
rooted in human helplessness. And he saw the religious structures, the religious
forms and institutions that we have created as human beings, he saw that all as
wish fulfillment. The deep-seated wish that things were safe and secure, the deepseated wish that there would be some buffer against the fate, against the
vicissitudes of life, against life's terrible vulnerability and, especially, assuaging of
the painful thought of death. And so, in the creation of, in his case, Judaism, or
Christianity, Western religion particularly, there was the projection of the strong
father figure, that primal figure who was the security and the final arbiter of all
things, so that finally life would be reconciled in all of its complexity, and
ultimate justice would prevail, extending existence into another life.
Freud has not been universally followed, by any means. Nonetheless, his was an
honest wrestling with the nature of religion. He also dealt in another whole
dimension of his thinking which I am not able to go into, nonetheless, in his
recognition of the conflict between the human being and that father figure. The
one who provides comfort and security is also the one who causes resistance
because of the control and the domination. And so, that conflict intrinsic to the
human being, the conflict of a helpless and impotent being wanting safety and
security, finding it in this primal figure of the father who is projected on the
screen of reality and called God, but a God, then, who is also controlling and
almighty, against whom we resist and revolt. So, the love-hate relationship, the
desire for the affection and the affirmation of the father, and yet the resistance to
the control and the domination of the father - all of that Freud saw in the human
being's religious struggle.
As I said, Freud hasn't been followed on that altogether by any means, and he has
been challenged seriously by other voices. But, the one thing that he did bring out
which, frankly, I have come to conclude and I have shared with you in one way or
another many times is that he is right in the fact that religion is a human product,
a human imaginative creative construct. That religion didn't fall out of heaven,
that it is not the consequence of some revelation of God which through the Holy
Spirit was enscripturated in a book so that what we have in our Christian faith is

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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a divine religion authored by God. No, for all human religion is human religion. It
is creative, it is imaginative, it is a human construct, and it is put together in
order to meet the deep exigencies of our human situation. It is creative in order to
enable us to live in some kind of serenity and tranquility in the very vulnerable
position in which we find ourselves.
People create religion. The religion that we create is either good or not so good. It
serves our deep-seated needs and desires, or it doesn't, and what we do, we do
here, understanding that. For example, the baptismal service is a beautiful service
with deep meaning, the sacramental moment in which we consciously are aware
of the gift of life, the gift of a child, and of the necessity for nurture and for care,
and all of that which goes into it. Likewise, the Eucharist and all of the
sacraments of the Church, all of the things that we do, the vestments, everything
about us. These are the things that we have created over centuries which convey
meaning that enable us in an observance to bring us into the conscious awareness
of the mystery that sustains us.
The only difference I would have with Freud is that he, based on Feuerbach and
the projection theory of religion, says that all religion arises here in human need
and is projected outward and there is nobody "out there." The only difference I
would say is that that human need and that sense of vulnerability and that desire
for security and comfort and some meaning in this miasma of human experience
is a response. It is not the initiatory action of the human being, but it is the
creative response of the human being to the mystery and the reality of our human
situation.
Freud set us on the track of all of that kind of thinking and he was in line with
what was going on in his own time, in Feuerbach and Karl Marx and eventually in
Nietzsche. All of that development of 19th century atheism was a reaction over
against that old conception of theism, of a deity "out there" in control, pulling
strings, pushing the gears of the universe. As the whole scientific method took
hold after a couple of centuries, and historical consciousness came to being, the
whole faith structure was examined with critical rationality – the rule of the day–
to where the human dimension of religion was exposed and came to be
understood.
Now, I say it came to be understood. It still is not understood in the church at
large. This time of the year I always go into a severe depression because, sick
person that I am, I still read the newspaper about the accounts of what is going
on in the respective denominations, and, if you once see religion as a human
creative, imaginative construct, then you read these grand proclamations of the
respective synods of the church - "God's will, God's word, God said ... God said
yes, God said no. God said women should be in the clergy. God said women
should not be in authority over clergy people. God said this, God said that”– it is
so ridiculous. I don't know how I lived in that house as long as I did. So we still, in
the church at large, have not faced up to the kind of insights that surfaced with

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Richard A. Rhem

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Feuerbach and Freud. But, on this Fathers' Day, I want to say that the
possibilities for us are better than ever they have been for the recognition of the
humanity of fathers, of the whole being of the male which does not exclude the
female.
In the church today, that struggle is still going on. In fact, to my despair, it is in
the church where these insights are resisted, and what it is is a threat to
authority, of course, by male clergy all masked by faithfulness to the Bible as the
word of God, all of that. It is so distressing.
But, we could move beyond it and we have moved beyond it here, thank God. We
have come to see, as the little piece I read a moment ago, that the human being is
not biologically determined according to cultural stereotypes, that all of us bear
within ourselves the male and the female, and that it is not the cultural stereotype
that says the male is this and the female is that by which we have to live. We can
break free of that. We can get beyond that, so that there is not a pre-described or
a preset determination of what is a man and what is a woman and what is the role
of the one and what is the role of the other. We are at a time when we, I think,
with critical rationality and insight that we have from all of the sciences, can see
that there is such a thing as maleness and femaleness and that they are not
destined biologically as ultimate absolutes. Rather, it is a cultural determination
as to how the genders mix and how they can proceed in the execution of life in all
of its dimensions, once again, in the church, so that the role of man or woman in
the church is indifferent. There is not a reason in the world why there should be
any question about whether or not a man or a woman is qualified for leadership
in the community of the people of God.
On the other hand, the good news for men is that while the feminist movement
has brought all of this to our consciousness and has refused to go along with
those deeply ingrained cultural stereotypes, it has allowed also the liberation of
the male, so that the male no longer in order to be male, in order to be a man, has
to act out some kind of macho role, one in control, dominating and authoritative.
That in the mutuality of male and female there can be the adjustment that fits any
particular pairing which is a wonderfully freeing insight, so that no longer do we
have to operate on the basis of what culture or society at any particular time has
determined is the role of the one or the other.
The Bible is a book that comes from a patriarchal society so that you can't go to
the Bible to solve questions of gender equality or the mutuality of male and
female. It just isn't in here. And yet, there is within our tradition, wonderful
treasures that can be retrieved, and I read one of the most beautiful ones this
morning. Psalm 103, in the eighth verse, speaks about God being merciful and
gracious, and the Hebrew root of the word merciful is the same root for the word
womb, and what the text is literally saying, by way of the Hebrew poet in Israel
who centuries ago had come to an insight that that mystery which is the mystery
of life is womb-like. The word gracious has as its Hebrew root the word that

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Richard A. Rhem

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describes the wailing of a woman for her young that has been removed through
weaning, so that in the Psalm 103, eighth verse, you have two powerful feminine
images for God - a womb and the wailing of the woman for her young, that
maternal yearning. And then in the 13th verse we have "God is like a father, a
father who pities his children, a father who understands us fully, God who knows
our frame, who remembers that we are dust." It is the most beautiful image, an
image of God full of compassion, full of understanding who says, in effect, it's
okay to be human. In all of your humanness, you are accepted. In all of the
ambiguity of your being, in all of the ambivalence of your person, in all of the
light and shadow of who you are, in your masculinity and your femininity and all
points in-between, God knows your frame and God is merciful and
compassionate, like a father. It's not exactly the father of Freud where there is no
ambiguity there. This is a God of whom the Psalmist can write in powerful
feminine terms and then speak of God as father, merciful, gracious,
compassionate.
Of course, out of that Hebrew tradition comes Jesus, and the New Testament
scholar, Edward Schillebeeckx says that the key to the insight of Jesus in his
relationship to God was his use of the word Abba as the form of address. Abba,
father. In the New Testament it says, "Abba, father," but father is a translation of
Abba. Abba is more intimate than father. It is the most intimate address of a child
to a parent, to a father, Abba. Jesus had that sense of intimacy in relationship to
God. And he lived in that kind of spirit, obviously, because one day they said to
him, "Teach us to pray." He must have lived in a kind of transcendent
atmosphere such that they said it's contagious, teach us. And so, he said, "When
you pray, say 'Father...'"
In our own cultural situation this has become such a problem. The feminist
movement which I affirm totally has necessarily had to be aggressive and
abrasive sometimes in forcing us to face the language problem. And so, in a little
bit we will sing "Creator, Christ and Holy Ghost," in the Doxology, and that is a
compromise. That is an acknowledgment on our part that Father, according to
Freud, has been a problem for many, that that controlling, dominating figure has
been a block to some in their attempt to have an intimate relationship with God.
So, we will sing Creator, Christ and Holy Ghost.
It doesn't do it. I don't know how to do it any better, but it doesn't do it. Creator is
not Father. We could better say Father-Mother. We could better say to you, "Say
Father-Mother," whichever feels good to you. Maybe we could say Father-Mother
real quick. And anybody that has a problem with that is not reacting rationally,
they are reacting emotionally. Of course, in all this stuff we react emotionally
because we play these cultural linguistic games and we have our identity all tied
up with certain ways to do it, certain words. Language is so terribly important.
Language is so important that we have to deal with language, and so we sing
Creator, Christ and Holy Ghost.

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 6

Now I know, I watch some of you. You've never been willing to do it and you keep
saying Father, Son and Holy Ghost. Well, go ahead. Bless you. But, some of you
might as well say Mother, Christ and Holy Ghost. What I am saying is that we
have had enough time and enough intelligence to begin to be reasonable about
these things and to be able to go back to the scripture and, instead of taking a
couple of texts from St. Paul in some kind of ridiculous argument that God is
male and Jesus was male and therefore it is only male authority in the Church
and in the home, the father. This is a strong strain in fundamentalist culture in
our day. The strong headship of the father in the home. It's ridiculous. We need
strength and authority and compassion and love in the home by fathers and
mothers, and this idea that somehow or other God has appointed the male to be a
dominant authority figure just doesn't figure.
On this Fathers' Day, I want to say, "Fathers, you don't have to be so tough
anymore. You can be free from that cultural stereotype that says you need to be in
charge and control, and, consequently, you mothers will have to fill in the slack.
Of course, that's what's been going on all of the time. It has just been a charade.
We know that.
Brian Wren, the poet and hymn writer, has written a book about language and
God. It's a very good book, too, and he wrote this poem:
Gallery: A Song for Boys and Men:
Can a Man Be Kind and Caring?
Can a man be kind and caring?
Jesus was.
Can a man who's kind and caring
be adventuresome and daring,
bravely doing right, walking in the light?
Jesus did, and so I can: I will be a Jesus man.
Can a man be sad with crying?
Jesus was.
Can a man who's sad with crying,
shed his tears, yet keep on trying,
loving to the end, enemy and friend?
Jesus did, and so I can: I will be a Jesus man.
Can a man be hurt and broken?
Jesus was.
Can a man who's hurt and broken
show his friends how God has spoken,
giving to us then, power to start again?
Jesus did, and so I can: I will be a Jesus man.

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 7

From What Language Shall I Borrow? God-Talk in Worship: A Male
Response to Feminist Theology, Brian Wren, 1989)
If more of us men would be Jesus men, the feminist movement would evaporate
in a moment. There would be no need for it.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Companions: The Mark of Community
Scripture: John 21:9-14
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
June 30, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
At the invitation of Jesus, "Come and have breakfast," the disciples gather around
him for a breakfast of bread and fish on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. That story
is in the 21st chapter of John, which we are told is an addendum to the Gospel
that was the last to be written. Those who study the scriptures tell us this
addendum was probably about the issue of leadership in the early Church
between Peter and the beloved disciple. However that may be, it is also felt that
this addendum to the latest Gospel reflects some very early Galilean tradition.
Jesus is purported to meet the disciples after the resurrection in Galilee, but there
is no other account of a meal with the disciples than this, and this seems to be
rather awkwardly melded together with the appearance to Peter, a fishing story.
But I'm not really interested this morning at analysis of the passage from that
critical standpoint, but rather to see in the midst of that chapter this delightful
picture of Jesus on the seashore having prepared breakfast for that group of his
disciples, inviting them, "Come and have breakfast," and in the midst of that
breakfast meal, they recognize him.
As he stood on the seashore and asked them how they had done during the night,
they had to say it had been a fruitless night. So he gave them one more
instruction, one more cast, and they had this miraculous catch of fish, and they
had a sense, could it be? Was it really he? But, they dared not ask. However, in
the breaking of bread and the sharing of a meal, their eyes were opened and they
knew it was the presence of the risen one. Very much like the disciples on the
road to Emmaus, joined by the third, didn't know who he was until they sat at
table and he broke bread and their eyes were opened and their hearts burned
within them, and they said, "It's the Lord." They experienced the presence of the
crucified one and their exclamation, their profession of faith was that the story is
not ended, he lives. Jesus lives.
And so, we have in this little scene the evocation of the hints of the Eucharist
feast that was to become the central sacramental act of the Christian Church. This
is not surprising, because Jesus was always breaking bread. Jesus was always at
table with someone. In fact, we're told that the open table was the very mark of
Jesus' ministry, a table that was open to all, that excluded none, a table where so
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Richard A. Rhem

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many wonderful things happen in this life. Where there was breakfast or lunch or
dinner, it seemed that he did his best work, gathered his community and
nurtured that community around the table breaking bread. On the night in which
he was betrayed, he gathered with his disciples, whether in an official Passover
supper or not, it was, indeed, a momentous last supper.
And so, it is not surprising that they had gone back to Galilee, Peter for example.
What do you do when you are afraid? When you are disappointed? When you are
confused? You go back home. And Peter went back fishing, for what do you do
when your world falls apart? You reach out for that which is familiar and you
return to the routine. And then, in that setting, in Galilee, after fishing all night, a
seaside breakfast and their eyes are opened and they recognize him.
Early Christian iconography indicates that the meal of bread and fish was more
predominant than the meal of bread and wine. And so, here we have in John's
addendum this 21st chapter, a little scene, a breakfast scene of bread and fish
which was the place of recognition where their eyes were opened and that
translated then into the life of the church into what we have just experienced. It is
a shared meal ritualized, to be sure, routinized, to be sure, how else can we do it
in an assembly like this? But, the Lord's Supper or the Eucharist has been that
central sacramental act in which we have recognized the presence of the Lord.
In the history of the Church, that meal became the chief means of explaining the
meaning of the death of Christ. We know that history. If you happen to be from a
Roman Catholic background, the word transubstantiation may ring a bell with
you, for the priest duly ordained has an indelible grace by which he is able to
perform the miracle at the table, changing the bread into the body and the wine
into the blood. Well, at the time of the Reformation in the 161h century, Martin
Luther said, "No, I don't think so. Rather, the word is consubstantiation. Not
substance transposed into another, but a substance now surrounding the bread
and the cup, over and above and around." And John Calvin said, "Well, Martin
Luther, not really. How about through the Holy Spirit? Spiritual partaking of the
bread and the cup." And then, of course, there is the Free Church tradition. Those
in the sacramental tradition sort of look down their noses at the Free Church,
saying, "Well, they have only empty signs, you know. It's just simply a memorial
feast."
Well, you can see what the Church has done in its splitting of hairs, so to speak, in
trying to understand what actually happens in that supper. But, the main central
meaning of the church's explanation was that, somehow or other, that supper was
a representation of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ whereby our sin was removed and
we were reconciled to God. That is the tradition, and that is where most of us
began, at least, in experiencing the supper, and for many of you, I suppose, the
partaking even this morning would mean "I am forgiven, I have peace with God,"
and that is wonderful and beautiful, and I don't want to take that away. But, I do
want to suggest even another possibility alongside of that. I don't think it is a new

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Richard A. Rhem

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insight. I think it may well reflect the very earliest experience of those disciples
and that early Jesus community. For, as I said, they were always at meal with
Jesus, and sharing those moments where bread was broken, where the blessing
was said, and where they, in fellowship, came to know each other in intimacy, in
that experience, they were experiencing community.
And so, I like Dominic Crossan's suggestion that Easter wasn't all crammed into
one day or one week or even forty days, but rather, that Easter continued to
happen. Easter continued to happen wherever those who had been with Jesus
and lived with him and had experienced him broke bread with one another and
looked each other in the eye and said, "O my God! He's here. The crucified one
lives. Jesus is with us still." The presence of God experienced in the breaking of
bread was the confirmation of the fact that the story didn't end on the cross, but
there was something more, that ongoing presence of the holy and the sacred in
the midst of the community of those who broke bread together.
The Gospel of John is preeminently the Gospel of incarnation. "In the beginning
was the word and the word was with God and the word was God, and the word
became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld him." Or, in the letter of John,
"No one has seen God, but the one who dwells in love, God dwells in that one."
The letter that begins, "The word of life that our hands have handled, our eyes
have looked upon," the tangibility of the love of God in the flesh of Jesus - that
was the heart of John's Gospel. The word became flesh and, if you hear it, what
the gospel is saying is that God is revealed in the human, that the human being
becomes the mirror, the reflector, the container of God. Jesus, in this Gospel, in
response to the request, "Show us the father and we will be satisfied," says "If you
have seen me, you have seen the father."
Now, once again, the tendency of the Church has been to take that, isolate that,
elevate that, make that a once-for-all preeminent, supreme revelation of God to
which we always hark back. But, if we could hear the Gospel, we would hear the
message as being that God is revealed in the human, and that means in the flesh
of Jesus, and it means in your flesh and in my flesh – that the revelation of God is
revealed in the humanity of those who are God's creatures.
Incarnation was not once for all. Revelatory luminosity did not nest in one alone.
In Jesus we saw it first. In Jesus, they saw it clearly. In Jesus, they said, "O my
God!" And he was crucified. And they gathered together here and there, now and
again, in this grouping and that grouping. And as they sat at table and they
blessed and broke the bread, suddenly they knew in the midst of them who he
was. It is in the breaking of bread that God is present. It is in the sharing of a
meal that God is experienced, tangibly. It is in looking into the eyes of another
and feeling melded to the soul of another and coming into the intimacy of
communion that God is experienced.
Companions - that is what we are. That is the mark of community. The word
companion comes from the Latin prefix con, with, and panis, bread. The word

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Richard A. Rhem

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companion means with bread. A companion is one with whom one shares a
meal, with whom one breaks bread, because to break bread with another is to
enter into a dimension of intimacy, and that intimate relationship of sharing a
meal is a locus of the revelation of God, of the experience of God. I really believe
that is what those post-resurrection stories are trying to tell us - that it was in the
continuing gathering of those who had been with him and loved him that they
experienced him in the action that had marked him and their relationship with
him, at table in fellowship.
It is something to experience – in a ritualized service like this. In 1990, when we
changed our format from passing plates down the rows to coming forward, I for
the first time experienced the wonder of a Eucharist feast, because I have had the
privilege of taking the bread and catching the eye, and in a moment of intimacy,
being able to say "The body of Christ." I'll tell you that is high drama. That is a
sacred moment, a beautiful experience, because it is in that moment that God is
present in the body of Christ represented in the bread.
But it is not the bread. The Church has had such arguments about what happens
to the bread or what happens to the wine. It's not about bread and wine. It's
about soul to soul, eye to eye, person to person. It’s about companions who break
bread and who in a community of love, time and again, say, "O my God!" And
there's a feast to follow, and the potential for God to be experienced in this ritual
is no greater than the possibility of God being experienced in the courtyard. I hate
to admit that because next year Bob's going to say, "Well then, why don't we just
dispense with worship?" And I love worship. As much as I love to eat, I love
worship more.
But, it's the same thing if I am true to my principle - it's when you're gathered at
table, when there is communion, when soul meets soul and eye meets eye, when
there is love and grace, where there is forgiveness and understanding and
awareness and attention - there God is present. There God is revealed; there God
is known; they recognized him. In other words, to re-cognize, cognizance,
knowing, re-cognizance, to know again, to know as the one as the same as before,
to become aware again of what you knew before. The one you knew you want to
see in Galilee. The one you knew, you recognize, your eyes are open, you say, "Oh,
oh, oh, aah! That’s it! Jesus lives. God is present. All is not lost. All will be well."
And so, in a few moments around those tables, if you take a moment and don't
immediately dig into the roast pork or the sweet corn, but if you take a moment
to look at those around the table, a moment of recognition, a moment of loving
embrace where souls meet souls and the community of God's people, God is
there. God will be there. You will be awash with the presence of God. Bread, wine,
fish, sweet corn, pig roast - the means is indifferent. It is the relationship. It is the
community. God in the presence.
Sometime ago I made a hospital visit and the person I was visiting had a visitor, a
person I had known for a long time a long time ago, but hadn't seen for a long

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Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

time, and he had not seen me. As I came into the room, he became somewhat
startled, and he said, "Oh, oh, I haven't seen you for a long time. You've put on a
lot of weight." And I said to him, "Yes, that's true, and thank you for mentioning
it." You know, some things are better left unsaid because all of us who fit the
national profile of being overweight know it, and we really know what we should
be doing about it, but we all have our rationalizations, too, and I have mine, and
it's simply the nature of my life in ministry. I'm very serious, it’s the nature of my
life in ministry. Somebody is always saying to me, as Jesus did, "Come and have
breakfast" or lunch or dinner. My whole life is a life of companionship,
companionship with myriads of people with all sorts of conditions, wonderful
people, wonderful moments of breaking bread and of being aware of one another
and being in conversation, being in the intimacy of human connection. I suppose
it's not just the bread. It's probably what I wash it down with, but besides that, it
isn't easy to stay trim when you are a companion of so many wonderful people
But, I'm deadly serious. You hear me speak often of my Tuesday pilgrimage to
Grand Rapids where in a little corner of Duba's bar there is a table set and a band
of brothers meets and when we are all assembled, we lift our glasses and our host
says, not infrequently with a trembling voice, "To the wonder, miracle, glory and
joy of life." I want you to know that God is present and that place is awash with
the holy and the sacred. That ritual, that moment, that human community - what
can you say but, "O God!"

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Revolution Then and Now
Independence Day Weekend
Scripture: Isaiah 42:1-9; Psalm 33:10-17; Matthew 5:38-48
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
July 7, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
On this Independence Day weekend, I invite you to think with me about our
nation, especially in the present circumstance of our post-9/11 world. It is always
appropriate to reflect on the good fortune we have enjoyed - the privileges that
we have enjoyed together as a people, as a nation. What a heritage we have
entered into. What marvelous freedoms and liberty have we lived with. What
advantages have we had. What a glorious vision was that vision that founded a
constitutional democracy and all of those things that down through the last two
centuries and more have made the American experiment. And an experiment it
is. In that heroic document with its great language, the Declaration of
Independence, we read of self-evident truths and of inalienable rights. But, as a
matter of fact, the truths of the vision upon which this nation was founded are
not at all self-evident, and the rights that we claim are not at all inalienable
human rights. As a matter of fact, only a small minority of humankind has ever
enjoyed them as we have, and those rights as documented in our founding
documents are rights that even, at the time of their affirmation, were affirmed
and appreciated by only a minority. But what a marvelous nation this has been in
which to be able to pursue our happiness. And how grateful we should be for that
privilege that has been ours.
I did a little rummaging around this week thinking about this moment in order to
understand how such a nation could have been born, and it is all the stuff that we
learned in American History 101, but we forget, and so I had to refresh my
memory. It was about ten years before the Revolutionary War ever began that the
difficulties between Mother England and these colonies began to heat up. It is so
typical, such a typical human story: England of empire, England of king and
crown, and these thirteen bedraggled colonies with no national government, no
army, no legislative body, really a confederation of colonies, and Mother England
began to twist the arm just a bit. They had been rather exhausted emotionally and
financially through the French and Indian War. They had not paid a great deal of
attention to these colonies. These colonies became rather independent-minded,
and when England caught its breath and began to feel that it should maintain

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Richard A. Rhem

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certain situations and conditions here, and to raise enough finances to enhance
the imperial treasury, of course, the sparks began to fly.
These were people from a common tradition, they spoke a common language
and, as you go back and read about those events, one wonders that there wasn't
someone there able to sit them down together and to talk together, because it was
obvious that the human ego was flying high, that there was a battle of wills that
was building up, and, human animals that we are, someone will either back down
and submit and become submissive, or the clash is inevitable. So, the sugar tax,
three pennies on every pound of molasses imported, a very costly tax for these
colonies that were apparently importing a lot of molasses to produce a lot of great
rum.
And the tea business, the East India Tea Company, unhappy about the fact that
tea was not being consumed as it should have been with a boycott at work. It all
comes down to rum and profits eventually, doesn't it? And so, we have that
sterling episode of the Boston Tea Party and all of those great events, and as you
read it, you can remember, perhaps, if you are as old as I am, how those old
history books used to make you thrill to the story of the Revolution.
I suppose it is fruitless at this point to raise the questions as to whether or not it
ever should have happened, but I think it is important for us to be reminded of
the fact that there was a time when this nation was being born, that Mother
England, the King and the Crown, were calling us terrorists and that we became
violent in our pursuit of freedom and liberty. And it is good for us to remember
that, as someone has said, one person's freedom fighter is another person's
terrorist.
At that time, we were weak and poor and ungoverned, and so we didn't have a
great deal to lose and let it all go, and when you are fighting for your homeland
and for a future, when your blood is running fast, then, of course, what can the
imperial forces do against you? But we did get involved in war and thousands of
lives were lost and there was tragedy in thousands of homes, and from all of that
has emerged this great nation and it is fruitless, as I said a moment ago, to
contemplate the question as to whether or not it was a good thing. Certainly it
would seem that it could have been settled in some other way without bloodshed,
but that is the human story, isn't it?
So, we have a great heritage and we have enjoyed great privileges beyond
comparison. But, there was a time when we did resort to violence in order to
realize our dream. And it is probably important to remember that. I entitled the
message "The Revolution Then and Now" because, although it was a local contest,
geographically limited, happening in a small corner of the world, nonetheless it
was a revolution and the revolution today is a global revolution, and all of the
dimensions of it have changed drastically. But, as a matter of fact, that dream in
the human heart which we pursued even with violence is a dream not so far from
the human heart of earth children around the globe. The times have progressed

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Richard A. Rhem

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and technology has progressed and the world has become as small as a grapefruit,
and we live in a global village today in which it is no longer possible for
something which happens in one little corner not to affect the whole. And so,
what do we do in this moment of our own crisis? This moment when our
freedoms and our way of life and our peace are being challenged and disturbed?
How well are we reacting to the revolution now?
Well, if we were still those thirteen colonies without any power or prestige or
position in the world, it would be a very simple thing for me to preach to you
today. I would remind you what the Psalmist said, although his conception of
God is one which I cannot adopt anymore: God looking down and sort of smiling
at the machinations of humankind. Nonetheless, there was an insight way back
there, millennia ago, when the Psalmist said, "An army cannot save and a
warhorse is vain hope for salvation or victory." Even then the Psalmist knew that
that which is effected by force affects nothing, finally. If we were just the thirteen
colonies and a nondescript people on the face of the earth, I'd point you to Isaiah
42. It is one of the servant songs. In those middle chapters of Isaiah, there are
several poems called the Servant Poems. One of them is Isaiah 53. But the one
read a moment ago in chapter 42 is about the servant who will bring justice to the
land, and he will not break a bruised reed or snuff out a smoldering wick. In other
words, with tenderness and compassion, the servant of the Lord will work at
justice. The 53rd chapter of Isaiah speaks about this same servant who, as a lamb
to the slaughter, is led away to die. You say, "Nice image. Great hope. Happy
motivation for us to follow in his steps."
But, Jesus followed in the steps of the servant. We feel that it was those servant
songs that shaped Jesus, and if we were just thirteen colonies of a nondescript
people, I would preach from the Sermon on the Mount about moving away from
that system of justice that said an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, moving
away from the natural animosity and hostility against the enemy to a love for the
enemy, an emulation of God who causes the rain to fail on the garden of the just
and the unjust and causes the sun to shine on all God's children. Because, you
see, in God's view there aren't any enemies. We make enemies one of another, but
God has a problem. God is the God of all people, and so what does God do? Rain
falls on the gardens of both sides. Abraham Lincoln, in his second inaugural
address, brought an uncharacteristic humility to the office of the presidency, an
uncharacteristic sensitivity and spirituality, and in his second inaugural address,
he recognized the fact that both sides in that bitter struggle in the Civil War read
the same Bible and prayed to the same God.
So, Jesus said love your enemies, be perfect as your father in heaven is perfect,
but perfect is not a good word. A better word is mature. Or, in Luke's rendering of
the Sermon on the Mount, it is be compassionate as your father in heaven is
compassionate.

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If we were just ordinary folks like the rest of the world without a great deal of
power or responsibility, I could preach those things and you could hear those
things and say, "Sure, that's good."
Obviously, might does not make right. Obviously, military force does not create
heaven on earth. Obviously, the world needs justice and it ought to be done with
compassion and tenderness. And sure, loving one's enemies is a better way to go,
Jesus. Even though it did lead to a cross. But, you see, the problem is that is not
who we are.
I've never particularly cared for Jesse Jackson. The last time I confessed that
publically, somebody gave me a book by him, so you don't need to do that. But,
one of our alumni from Christ Community, Jim Dykehouse, sent me this from a
Chicago paper, Jesse Jackson to Yassar Arafat, an Open Letter. It’s one of the
finest things I've read on this whole situation. Speaking about the PalestinianIsraeli situation, Jesse Jackson writing to Arafat says,
Terrorist attacks can destroy, but they cannot build. They can generate
fear, but not hope. They can revenge past injury, but cannot rebuild future
prospects. In the end, an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth leaves
everyone blind and toothless and bloody."
A little later, he says,
"Non-violence establishes the moral legitimacy of your cause. Nonviolence requires discipline and training. It speaks to hope for the future,
not hate of the past. It engages the young, not in individual acts of despair,
but in collective actions of hope. Terror bombings appall the world
community. Non-violent resistance will engage that community and force
it to respond. Palestinian statehood and Israeli security are two sides of
the same coin. The one cannot exist without the other. Terror bombings
generate hatred, fear and distrust and insecurity. Non-violent resistance
recognizes the humanity of your opponents. It challenges their moral
sensibility, but not their military capacity. It forces them to recognize your
humanity and because it demonstrates your discipline, your commitment,
your love of life, it lays the basis for co-existence rather than coannihilation. Non-violence is not passive suffering. It is an action strategy.
It actively resists repression. It actively challenges the occupier. It actively
disrupts business as usual. Non-violence is not a coward's path. Nonviolent demonstrators must face anger, violent responses, beatings, jailing
and worse, and be disciplined enough not to respond in kind. For the
Palestinians, non-violence may be the only road to statehood now. It
would demonstrate the nobility of your people and the justice of your
cause.”
If we were just thirteen colonies, without cutting a great swath in the world, I
could preach Jesse Jackson's advice to you. If we were just an ordinary people, I

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would know what to say to you. But, we're not. We're the world's one super
power. We're the greatest nation on earth in terms of our military might. We can
act unilaterally. We can force our will. We can devastate any nation we choose to.
We are limited somewhat by world opinion, of course, but not by what we can do,
if we would do it. We use the Bible often in our political rhetoric, but won't you
have to grant me that most of that appeal to God and the scriptures is simply that
- political rhetoric? And isn't it ironic that those who pledge the greatest
allegiance to the Bible are the very people who are marked by a militant spirit, by
some kind of sense that this nation is God's chosen vessel for the evangelization
of the world and, therefore, we can do anything in God's name for God's cause
because it is bringing in God's kingdom?
Somehow or other, the game has changed on us. Even as recently as World War
II, a great evil could be confronted and dealt with. But, the game has changed.
The enemy has become almost invisible and the ability to attack insidious, and
our most visible and powerful weapon systems are impotent against the crisis we
face today.
If we were just an ordinary people, I would recommend the way of Jesus. But, it's
really foolish preacher talk to recommend that way to the most powerful nation
on earth for, in spite of the fact that we claim the scriptures as the source, the
vision of our Western civilization, we know there are limits. And so, what do we
say to ourselves as this great nation that we are?
I really believe in the American people. I believe in the goodness of the American
people. I believe, if you scratch the surface of the average American, you will find
a good heart and a good intention and a desire for peace and well-being. But, we
get all caught up in empire. We get all caught up in our economic prerogatives.
We get all caught up in the privileges of being number one, and when you are on
the top of the heap, why in the world would you give your life away? When you
are ruling the world, why would you yield up your authority and your power? If
you are the United States of America, the last thing in the world you want to do, if
you're smart, is tangle with Jesus, because it just does not make sense. It cuts
against the grain of our animal nature.
And so, I don't know what to preach if I can't preach Jesus. Or, should I assume
that there really is that goodness down beneath the surface of the vast majority of
our country's people? Should I assume that if someone should rise up and suggest
that what we really need is not the reorganization of our security system, because
in all honesty, there is no security, that what we really need is not the
enhancement of our defense budget, for a military response is a vain hope for
victory, to paraphrase the Psalmist. Would I dare believe that if someone arose
who dared to suggest that what we really need is a new national vision and a new
national purpose, that the people might follow?
To my knowledge, what we did after the Second World War was unprecedented,
and the nations of Germany and Japan were re-created as strong and vital and

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Richard A. Rhem

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healthy societies, because, in a sense, we loved the enemy. What would happen
today if, rather than declaring our independence, we acknowledged our
interdependence with all earth children? And rather than declaring the
superiority of our way of life, of our religious perspective, we acknowledged that
all peoples and traditions have their identity and their pride, and if we invited all
together to sit down at the table in order that we might understand one another's
traditions and discover the sources of violence and injustice that are there, in
order that in all traditions we might come to see that, at base, all of them point to
God as the source of life, of humane existence.
What would happen if, rather than mounting our power and asserting our rights,
we really followed Jesus?

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                    <text>Dropping the Salvation Fantasy
From the series: Spiritual Life – Religion Re-Imagined
Text: Psalm 131; John 3:1-10
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
July 14, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
I begin this morning a brief series of messages on the spiritual life—re-imagining
religion. The connection between the two is this: they are not the same, but
religion provides the form and the structure for the expression of one’s spiritual
life. I believe it is good to think about that and perhaps to make an attempt to reimagine that religion, because religious forms and structures can aid and abet the
expression of our spiritual life, or hinder and block, causing the spirit to wither.
And so, from time to time, it is good to ask ourselves about our religious practice,
our religious experience, the structures and the forms that we utilize in the
expression of our spiritual life.
Thomas Moore’s book The Soul’s Religion was a trigger for this discussion. Some
years ago, Moore wrote The Care of the Soul, which impressed me a great deal. I
like this book, too, not so much that I intend to share what he speaks of there, but
I like the format. He speaks autobiographically. And as I was reading his story, I
was reminded of my story and the fact that there is a great similarity in that he
was deeply rooted in the Roman Catholic tradition, coming to the point of
ordination to the priesthood when he left the Church. Deeply traditioned as he
was, he has never been able to get it out of his soul, nor does he want to. But with
its form and structure, the institution can no longer be the vehicle by which he
can express the spirituality of his life.
As I thought about his autobiographical expression, I began to think about mine.
I have spoken for a long time about being in the springtime of my senility, but I
have spoken about it so long that I suppose I should confess that I am well into
the summer of it now. So rather than trying to remember these things, I decided
to make a list. I identified eight transformations in my own pilgrimage, my own
experience, and I share them with you, not because you are so interested in mine,
but because as I do this, perhaps I can do for you what Thomas Moore did for
me—cause you to think, “Where have I been? Where have I moved? Where have I
come to and where am I going?”
Well, this is my story; this is my list.
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I have come from a conservative orthodoxy to a liberal openness.
I have moved from a supernatural theism to a religious naturalism.
I have moved from religion as verifiable truth to religion as experience of
the sacred dimension of all reality.
I have moved from religion’s dogma to religion as poetry, from religion as
institution to religion as community, from religion as consisting of
absolute truth to religion as emerging experience, from Christianity as
exclusive to Christianity as one magnificent window opening on the holy
and the sacred.
And finally, I have moved from religion as salvation from damnation to
religion as celebration of life.
That is quite a journey. I have made a slight course adjustment, some might say
180 degrees, and I would have to agree. Most people who have gone through that
kind of transformation, most Christian leaders or religious leaders, I should say,
have simply left the institution. They have left the institution probably as an
expression of honesty and their own integrity, no longer able to profess, to affirm
the institution’s forms and structure and creedal statements. They simply have
left the institution as it was. And, of course, there are others who have been
invited to leave the institution because their views were judged to be heretical.
I have been very fortunate, and I think my experience has been a rather rare
experience, in that I have been able to continue the spiritual quest, to continue to
wrestle and struggle with the faith within a community because you have joined
with me. You have gone with me on this journey, some of you kicking and
screaming all the way. Some of you were relieved because you were already there
before I was. And some of you, frankly, were just sort of watching from the
sidelines, not really engaged.
Whatever the case, I have had the rare privilege of being out of the institution,
but not out of a community that is a continuing spiritual community on a
journey, on a spiritual quest. Thank God for that, because I’d starve otherwise. I
am of no practical good for anything else. But more than that, it is the passion of
my life to create a community for that narrow niche of people who have gone
through the same kind of transformation that I have and have doggedly refused
just to throw in the towel and to give up on the spiritual life. And so, it is with a
great deal of gratitude that I recognize, having gone through such a
transformation, that there still is a community in which we can engage together
on the spiritual quest with a freedom to re-imagine religion and to bring our
understanding of religion more into conformity with our general human
experience.
This is a wonderful time to be doing this, because we are in a time between the
times. Maybe that is always true to some extent, but it certainly is true in this
period of history in which we are living. This period has been going on for some

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time. I don’t know when something will gel out in the future, but we are in a time
between the times.
Those who study the philosophical development and religious theological
development, the history of ideas, put the past into periods. They will speak of the
ancient world and then perhaps the medieval world, and that medieval world
included the Reformation world in which my particular brand of faith was honed.
From there we have modernity, the last three and a half centuries, the modern
period. We have spoken of that many times, characterizing it as the rise of critical
thinking, the empirical method of verification spurring the development of all the
natural sciences. It included the nineteenth century with the rise of historical
consciousness and the sense of everything developing, the whole evolutionary
cosmic emerging drama. And modernity presented a tremendous challenge to the
old orthodoxy, to the age of faith, so that we are now at a time between the times.
Modernity has been around long enough. Today there are those who speak of
post-modernity, but that’s a story I won’t get into. Let me simply say that
modernity has been around long enough so that its challenge has produced a
reaction in our world today, a reaction we speak of as Fundamentalism.
Fundamentalism is a reaction to the threat to religious forms and structures and
creedal statements that is brought on by critical rationality and by scientific
discovery of the nature of reality, of historical development, and so on. The
Fundamentalist is one who reacts against that because he or she feels threatened,
because a religious community is really a cultural, linguistic community. We have
our own language, our own vocabulary, our own forms, our own structures, and
our own rituals. As long as we operate in that little circle, we are comfortable. It
triggers meaning for us. Baptism, the Lord’s Supper, the scripture readings, the
prayers and hymns, all trigger meaning. A certain vocabulary is used, a certain
phraseology, and that community is comfortable with it.
Now when you begin to analyze all of this, take it apart, it becomes scary. Our
meaning and our life are tied up in that cultural linguistic complex of things.
When that begins to be threatened, the Fundamentalist is born. (Someone has
defined the Fundamentalist as one who reiterates yesterday’s answers to today’s
questions.) Religious experience becomes more and more disconnected from
everyday experience, because out in the world of business, the world of industry,
the world of the arts, philosophy, or education, life goes on. New knowledge
brings new methods, new breakthroughs, new technologies, and we enter into
that whether we are Fundamentalists or not.
Now if I am a Fundamentalist I fly in jets, access the Internet, and invest in
stocks and bonds. There is no way my religious community and commitments are
going to keep me from being part of the broader cultural scene. But my religious
experience, in that case, becomes more and more disconnected from the broader
world; it becomes a compartment of my life rather than watering the whole flow
of my life. And so the Fundamentalist reaction is a recognition that we are in a

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time between the times; the old is dying, and the new is too frightening to
consider.
I did my devotions yesterday with the Grand Rapids Press as I always do on
Saturday morning, in order to find some fodder for my sermon or something to
get excited or angry about, and I’m usually successful. I am thinking about all of
this and then I read this big article about how the mainline denominations, all of
them, have commissioned a survey about how to grow again. This is really a
survey about how to survive, because they all know they are dying, having all
experienced significant membership loss. I could have told them what they found
out with a lot less cost.
The survey revealed that churches need leaders who are innovative and creative
and who are persistent in their purpose. They decided they can no longer build
churches simply for “waspy” folks like us. They have to go after racial groups,
ethnic and minority groups, and so forth. Well, I wonder why, when there are still
enough waspy folks around. The crisis is that they are asking the wrong question.
Why are people dropping out? Why are there thousands fewer church members
today than there were ten years ago? Is the issue Church survival? Is it to try to
figure out how you can hold on, hang on? Or ought the institutional forms be so
open, flexible, fluid and free that they can shape themselves around our changing
lives?
On the back page of the same article was a story about the Missouri Synod
Lutheran pastor who participated in Rudy Guiliani’s request to have a prayer
service in Yankee Stadium after September 11. Do you remember the story?
Yankee Stadium was full and there was a Christian, a Jew, a Muslim and a Hindu,
and they had a service in which they sang “God Bless America” and prayers were
offered for the nation. The Lutheran pastor who participated as a Christian is
about to be ousted from the Missouri Synod Lutheran Church because his
participation in that service might have given the impression that there are other
gods or other ways to God.
That kind of thing is really atrocious, isn’t it? If you are thoughtful, if you are
sensitive at all, you would say such an institution really deserves to die because it
is mindful of its own life, its own particularity with a kind of absolutist
exclusivism that a thoughtful, sensitive, intelligent person could not honestly
affirm in our world, in our day.
The old institutional forms are dying. We are in a time between the times when
the old is dying. I don’t know how long it will take. Maybe there will be another
blush of triumph and another hundred years or so, but the old institutional forms
are dying.
The other reaction to the whole movement of modernity is one of modern
atheism or agnosticism or just simply the writing off of the spiritual life as though

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one was an animal. The extreme expression of that is nihilism, that there is no
meaning, nothing means anything. The nihilist would simply say that this whole
cosmic drama is just a chance accident unwinding who knows where, and
certainly with no purpose, with no meaning whatsoever. And then there are
hordes of our contemporaries who, without consciously saying, “I am a nihilist,”
are living a nihilist existence, barren of any kind of transcendent dimension in
their life.
T.S. Eliot wrote a poem, “The Waste Land,” his poetic commentary on modernity,
in which he speaks about the great Western religious symbols as a “heap of
broken images.” That’s where it is for a lot of people. With the eruption of critical
thinking and the scientific method and the whole rise of modernity, the tragedy
was that religious people were threatened and so they fought it. Many in the
scientific community insisted that what they were dealing with was all there was,
and there was a great deal of hubris on that side. And so many who were
thoughtful and intelligent, simply dropped out. In the West, the intellectual elite
left institutional religion, although they have continued in some kind of personal
spiritual pilgrimage.
We are in the time between the times when on the one hand there is a shrill
Fundamentalism that is afraid because it is losing its grip, and on the other a
barren spirituality that lives just a little bit above an animal existence. So it is a
wonderful time to be thinking about this.
Where do we go? Well, I suggest in the title that we drop the salvation fantasy.
Just drop the salvation fantasy. What do I mean by the salvation fantasy? I mean
that God is a creator who created humankind perfectly, that humankind was
tested and failed the test, came under the curse of God’s wrath and stands in
threat of eternal damnation. Then God provided in Jesus Christ the atoning
death, taking our sin and guilt, therefore offering forgiveness for those who
repent and believe, assuring them of heaven.
That is the story; that is the myth. I don’t care whether you take the lilting liturgy
of the Anglican community or the passionate address of evangelist Billy Graham
or the rumblings of television evangelist Jerry Falwell. Down deep that is the
story. That is the myth. That is what is being talked about. It may be talked about
in sophisticated tones or it may be talked about in down and dirty, blunt
language.
I am suggesting that we ought simply to give it up. Give up the idea that God
created a creature, put it to the test, and then failing the test, will damn it unless
there is repentance and acceptance of Christ’s atoning death. That picture of God
makes God a monster and the picture of humankind is degrading. We are not
God-damned creatures. We are animals emerging out of the jungle with all of the
survival instincts clinging to us. But we are something more. Something within us
lifts up our eyes and lifts up our hearts and beckons us beyond where we are.

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Something tells us that what we see is not all there is. We are magnificent
creatures.
Are we lost? O, my God, we’re lost. Of course we are lost. We are trying to find
our way. That is really what the whole religious quest is all about, the spiritual
quest; trying to find our way. Who are we, after all? It is not as though God is
angry with us, alienated from us. We’re just simply lost.
Salvation? Of course. That word has its root in salve, meaning “healing”. Do we
need salvation? Of course we need salvation. We are a blind and lost people,
barren in our spiritual life and confused and disoriented. Do we need help? Dear
God, we need help. But that is exactly what the invitation is from the God who
would never abandon us, the God who embraces us, the God who calls us into a
web of meaning. God is not “out there” somewhere, but that sacred and holy
dimension which is in us and beyond us, which binds us together in a web of
meaning and relationship.
You might be surprised that a sermon on dropping the salvation fantasy should
have in its text the words “born again.” But I think of old Nicodemus. I suppose
that the author of the fourth Gospel was trying to bring Nicodemus to the
attention of the Jews who were trying to continue in Judaism without following
Jesus: “Look, one of your own leaders followed Jesus. He is a model, an example
for all of you.” Old Nicodemus, a rabbi, a member of the Sanhedrin, a leader of
the Jewish people, a representative of the best of Judaism, the best of Israel,
came to Jesus one night to say, “What in the world is going on? Who are you?
Who am I? What’s up?” And Jesus said, “You have to be born again.” Or born
from above, or born spiritually.
It is not so different from what I’ve experienced. I’ve been “born again.” I’ve seen
things that I looked at forever and never saw before. I’ve had fresh spiritual
insight, was able to move out of the cramped and crimped straitjacket of original
orthodoxy that claimed to be the exclusive truth and into the spacious grace of
inquiry, of openness, and freedom. Religion needs to be re-imagined so that one
like Nicodemus who was deeply rooted in the establishment could come and be
confounded by the statement that he had to be born again. Born again not as
Jimmy Carter popularized it, not as the television evangelists harangue us about
it, but born again with eyes to see and ears to hear, with a fresh awareness of new
openness, and with a hunger and a thirst and an ongoing spiritual quest that is
never done, but always inviting us to something more and something beautiful.
Did you hear that marvelous statement of Psalm 131? “O Lord, my heart is not
lifted up, my eyes are not raised too high. I do not occupy myself with things too
great and too marvelous for me, but I have calmed and quieted my soul like a
weaned child with its mother.” There is a certain humility and rest and trust and
peace, knowing that we are woven together in the bundle of life which consists of

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beautiful relationships and deep and profound meaning that causes us to see the
wonder and the miracle, the glory and the joy of life, which is a gift full of grace.
Last evening I sat on the bluff and watched the sunset and in that magnificent
western sky illumined by the globe, the sun poured its radiance across the waters
and there was a path of yellow gold. Then I went up into the loft and continued to
work as the evening sky emerged. When I looked out the window later, I saw the
silver crescent of a moon next to the evening star and noticed on the lake that the
yellow gold path had become a silver path of moonlight, and I said, “O, my God.”
And it is enough.

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Prayer With Eyes Wide Open
From the series: Spritiual Life – Religion Re-Imagined
Text: Psalm 130, Mark 1:29-39
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
July 28, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
The Reading From the Present comes from Thomas Moore’s recent book, The
Soul’s Religion. It is actually a quote that he gives us from a poet, Wallace
Stevens. I liked it because I thought it had something to say about the breadth of
experience of the spiritual life about which we have been thinking together.
Wallace Stevens writes this in his Journal, 1902:
Last night I spent an hour in the dark transept of St. Patrick’s Cathedral
where I go now and then in my more lonely moods. An old argument with
me is that the true religious force in the world is not the Church, but the
world itself. The mysterious callings of nature and our responses. What
incessant murmurs fill that ever laboring, tireless church. But, today in my
walk, I thought that, after all, there’s no conflict of format, but rather a
contrast. In the cathedral I felt one presence, on the highway I felt another.
Two different deities present themselves, and though I have only a cloudy
vision of either, yet I now feel the distinction between them. The priest in
me worships one God at one shrine; the poet another God at another
shrine. The priest worshiped mercy and love, the poet beauty and might.
In the shadows of the church, I could hear the prayers of men and women.
In the shadows of the trees, nothing mingled with divinity. As I sat
dreaming with the congregation, I felt how the glittering altar works on my
senses, stimulating and consoling them, and as I went tramping through
the fields and woods, I beheld every leaf and blade of grass revealing or
rather betokening the invisible.
Sometimes the things that we talk about here together stimulate other thoughts,
and we have been talking about religion and spirituality these weeks—how
religion is the structure through which our spiritual lives express themselves,
whether for good or for ill. Someone gave me a quote from the AA community. It
goes like this: “Religion is for people who are afraid of going to hell. Spirituality is
for people who have been there.” As is often true, AA has a lot of wisdom. But our
religious life does, in many ways, determine the nature or the degree to which our

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Richard A. Rhem

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spiritual life is really in tune and in touch with where we are and where we are
living.
This morning we consider “Praying With Eyes Wide Open.” Prayer is certainly
the center of our religious experience. Prayer is the heart and center of our
spiritual life. To pray is to be human, to be religious, to be spiritual. Without
prayer, there is a barrenness that certainly bespeaks a sickness of soul. Prayer
comes in many forms and takes many shapes, probably as many as there are
those of us who pray.
Following the cue of Thomas Moore, who did some autobiographical writing in
his book, I have shared with you some of my own autobiographical experience,
and when I think about prayer, I think of my own story. I have had such a
difficult time with prayer. I have been a terrible model of prayer. I have never
successfully had a devotional life, and I confess that before you, my people. That
is not the fault of my childhood, because my childhood was saturated in prayer.
Three meals a day began and concluded with prayer. The day did not end without
the offering of a prayer. In my youth, I was involved in all kinds of prayer groups.
If I had been young these days, I would have been one of those kids gathered
around the flagpole on the schoolyard. Because of my ambiguous feelings about
that whole thing, I realize that I must keep in check any criticism. If someone like
me could fall as far as I have from that, then there is hope for those gathering,
too.
In my college years there was more prayer and prayer groups. In seminary I
worked with a pastor who was marked by his prayer life and everyone knew it. If
you mentioned his name, everyone knew he was a man of prayer. Under his
tutelage, I developed my own devotional style in the morning. It centered around
a little loose-leaf notebook, page after page of names and causes and concerns,
and every morning, I mean every morning, I rose early and on my knees paged
through that book. I continued that practice when I came here in 1960 for a little
while. But eventually it faded.
I suppose it faded because I hated every minute of it. It was not me. For me, it
was not natural. It was not the air I breathed. I am not sure if it has something to
do with my being lazy, and it may. It may have something to do with my lack of
discipline. I confess that, too. Or it may be that even way back then there was an
intellectual problem that I had with prayer that I was unwilling to admit to, which
perhaps short-circuited any vital prayer experience. I’m not sure.
For a sermon on prayer in the midst of this congregation it would be smart of me
if I would let my colleague Peter preach. But on occasion over the years, I have
helped someone when I have spoken about prayer and my own difficulties. It
seemed to give them some hope, having a lousy prayer life themselves.

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

�Prayer With Eyes Wide Open

Richard A. Rhem

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Still, I pray, for prayer is the heart and soul of religious experience. My life is a
dialogue. I am talking to myself all the time, and praying may be talking to
oneself in the presence of that greater reality into which our lives are woven. It
may be consciousness and awareness in the face of the web of meaning, the
tapestry of reality of which we are a part. Certainly I pray, as I think we must all
pray.
Perhaps it was why I responded positively to Thomas Moore’s book, for he has a
chapter entitled “The Instinct for Prayer” in which he speaks about an impulse to
pray. And I know that. Don’t you? To be human is to have an instinct to pray, to
bring to expression that which is in our depths. There are those situations in life
when we have the impulse to pray, when there is that spontaneous eruption from
within. And so, prayer really is the heart and center of religious experience, the
dialogue and conversation that goes on within us.
I speak about prayer with eyes wide open, because increasingly that is my
experience. As I said a couple of weeks ago about the transformations through
which I have gone in my spiritual journey, I have moved from a supernatural
theism to a religious naturalism, where God is not “out there” somewhere,
waiting upon my prayers in order to manipulate the human situation. God is not
beyond the reality of which we are a part, running things and waiting to be
influenced by the volleys of prayers from earth’s children. I don’t believe that. I
don’t think one can think intelligently about that and carry on the practice with
any vitality.
There are recent studies about the effectiveness of prayer for people with illness,
but I’m not too impressed with that, either. What do those kinds of studies finally
prove? If we need to prove that prayer works, are we really afraid that God
doesn’t exist and that there is nothing to it? I suppose there is some value in that
sort of study, but I would rather not go there. I would rather pray with eyes wide
open, recognizing that the whole of reality is of a piece, and that it is shot through
with God; that the whole of reality is a seamless robe pregnant with divinity; that
my life and your life is a part of a totality laced with creativity, and to the extent
that we come to an awareness and an appreciation of the reality of which we are a
part, our prayer will flow. I think Thomas Moore is right. There is an instinct for
prayer and we ought to go along with it without too much intellectual
machination, trying to figure it out. The Psalmist, for example, wrote a beautiful
ejaculatory expression: “Out of the depths I cry to thee, O Lord. Lord, hear my
cry. Hear my voice.” The Psalmist made a plea for forgiveness, resting in the
graciousness of God. “Lord, if you should mark iniquities, who could stand, but
with you there is forgiveness.”
I have been there, haven’t you? When we have failed, when we come face to face
with our flaws, and then experience the grace of forgiveness through that
spontaneous eruption, we say, “O Lord, out of the depths I cry to thee.”

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Or perhaps in its original form prayer was that kind of ejaculatory expression in
the face of our helplessness. For in the face of the mystery of life we often feel
helpless, knowing there is more of our existence beyond our control than that
little piece over which we have control. And so, perhaps out of fear, or out of
wonder, or in the face of great joy, we pray. We cry to the Lord. Out of our depths
there erupts the expression of those deep emotions that are so much a part of
who we are. Prayer can be that kind of spontaneous expression.
And then there is the prayer of awareness. I think of that passage of Mark’s
Gospel where Jesus has the whole village at the doorstep of Peter’s mother-inlaw’s home. Jesus had healed her and now the word is out that he is there, and so
they bring everybody to the doorstep. Through the evening he reaches out, giving
of himself in his healing ministry. The next morning, Mark tells us, a long while
before dawn he arose and found a solitary place and he prayed. I suppose that is
how one lives with intentionality. I suppose that is how one keeps from getting
swept away with inordinate success or bitter disappointment, by having that
encounter, that moment of awareness, that attention in the presence of God. If I
had been Jesus and had a successful evening such as that, I would have gotten up
before breakfast and put posters on every telephone pole about the time of the
next healing service. But Jesus prayed. And when they came after him and said,
“Hey, we have something good going, Lord,” he said, “Let’s get out of here.” He
had found his center in the presence of God.
There is that prayer of awareness and attention, that self-consciousness in the
presence of the other that enables us to keep our balance. And there is the love
and care expressed in prayer. We express our love and care by saying to one
another, “I’ll pray for you.” I don’t know how many of us actually do it, but we all
tend to say it, and when someone we love, or when we ourselves come into crisis,
again it is simply natural and instinctive to pray.
About three or four weeks ago, one of my closest friends, a colleague in ministry
for over forty years and a person known to this congregation, Bud Ridder,
experienced a stroke. When I got the news, it impacted me greatly because I
realized how meaningful that relationship is to me. I said to him, “I came to see
again how much I love you.” Although he came out of the stroke rather well, the
doctors discovered an aneurysm and announced the necessity of serious surgery.
Last Tuesday at lunch at Duba’s, because Bud is a member of the table, we
discussed his forthcoming surgery. We raised our glass to him with eyes wide
open and expressed our love and care and how we would carry him in our hearts
and in our minds. We actually talked at the table about prayer. “We will pray for
you,” we said, meaning we care for you, we love you, we yearn for all of the
recuperative, health-giving, life-giving powers within you to be released in the
presence of our love and care.
When I called Friday afternoon, knowing that he had gone into surgery at seven
o’clock in the morning, he wasn’t back into recovery. Nor at five. Nor at nine. The

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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one word I did get was critical, and I couldn’t get through to the family because of
some phone problem, but I left a message on a voice machine. Saturday morning
I got the call. He’d been in surgery twice and the surgeon had been with him for
sixteen hours. Bud was hanging on by his fingernails.
I had a wedding to do south of Grand Rapids, so I intended to do the wedding
and on my way back stop at the hospital. But there was another call. The signs
were going down. I went directly to the hospital to be there with the family. And I
saw him. If you’ve ever seen one who has come through that kind of trauma, you
know.
I had to do my wedding, but when I came back to the hospital the bed was
removed. I found he was in surgery again, a third time.
And so, I sat with his wife, Lenora. I just sat with her. Her pastor came and I sat
through that and we had prayer with eyes closed and hands held. I remained
because I was determined to stay until the surgeon came back, and when he came
back, the news was somewhat good. They thought they had things stabilized. But,
he said, “The trauma the body has experienced is extreme. He is critically ill.”
And he left.
There I was with Lenora. How do you leave? I left with eyes wide open. I told her
I would be preaching today about prayer and the only way I knew to pray for Bud
and for her was face to face and to say, “I hold you in my heart,” because I believe
that with all of the marvelous technology and the tremendous dedication of
medical people, there is a process underway. I stand by that process and wait and
hope, believing that my presence and my love and my care are the only prayer
that can make a difference.
I don’t say these things because I know them. I only share with you my
experience, and I know that I have never had a successful devotional life in
decades. But I pray all the time, with eyes wide open, feeling myself part of the
web of life and meaning and community that is you. For me, that is enough.
Moore, Thomas. The Soul’s Religion. New York, NY: Harper Collins, 2002.

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

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Reenchantment Without Supernaturalism
Text: Genesis 1:1-23; Revelation 21:1-7
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
August 4, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
The Reading From the Present comes from the book Reenchantment without
Supernaturalism by David Ray Griffin, and that title of the book is the title to this
sermon. David Ray Griffin is a philosopher-theologian who concerns himself with
finding a way to express the faith, to experience God in a world which has become
disenchanted. He quotes the German scholar Max Weber, who says that it is
modern thought that has disenchanted the world. The more we know of all of the
science and technology, the more we discover, the more we understand, the less
mystery and the less magic there is— the less enchantment there is.
I have been saying to you that I would love to create a new sense of enchantment
for you in your spiritual life experience. The word “disenchantment” is cited by
David Ray Griffin, although now I find it popping up all over the place. Griffin
says that the consequence of that disenchantment is that the world is no longer
believed to contain any inherent meaning or normative values around which
human beings should orient their lives. That is serious. There has been a reaction
to that, and Griffin says the majority of those who have reacted say that the
mistake was to leave the supernatural God, the Creator, who was the foundation
of morality. But David Ray Griffin disagrees and says:
My title, Reenchantment without Supernaturalism, signals that this is not
my view. Completely rejecting supernaturalism, understood as the belief in
the possibility of occasional interruptions of the world’s most fundamental
causal order, I present a world-view that, although saturated with values,
is fully natural. This world-view does involve a form of theism, but it is a
fully naturalistic theism, according to which divine influence is a natural
dimension of the world’s most fundamental causal order, never an
interruption thereof.
In so many words, David Ray Griffin is trying to speak of God as one who is
immanent in the process of reality of which we are all a part, and not a God
external to reality who now and again dips in, pulling a string or shifting a gear or
tweaking that natural process. He wants us to have a vision, an understanding of
the totality of reality, which is a naturally moving event, an ongoing event, laced
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through with the mystery of God. But this is not the God of the old tradition who
snapped his fingers and let it all come into being, guiding it providentially
through the whole process to an end that God had set. That conception, that old
orthodox conception, is one that has run aground on the shoals of modern
knowledge. Consequently, we have a world that is in large measure, in terms at
least of the leading intellectual voices, a world that is devoid of God, and so
devoid of mystery—devoid of wonder. Griffin’s intention is to recapture that
which the old system was able to communicate, but in terms of a story that is
resonant with our present human experience.
So I invite you to think together with me about it, to see where we are. Although it
seems that science has laid bare the reality of which we are a part, the scientists
say the more we know the more the mystery grows, and the gap between what we
know over against what we don’t know is tremendous. But scientists continue to
look and to study and to uncover, and it is a dramatic process. In the process
information has trickled down and the world has become, in many respects and
for many people, disenchanted. It becomes a mechanism, a machine. It is
bloodless, spiritless.
The consequence of the scientific method and the empirical method and the
pursuit of the natural sciences is that, in some quarters and with some leading
voices, the conclusion has been reached that matter is all there is; there is
nothing more. There is no such thing as spirit. There is a naturalism that is
materialism, which is atheism in so much of the modern world as a consequence
of modern thought, and I think Max Weber probably was right in his observation.
His life stretched into the twentieth century and he was a towering scholar. He
looked at the whole modern experiment and said it had left us with a
disenchanted world.
Science is powerful because it produces results. It sends airplanes into the sky
and rockets into outer space and men to the moon. That compelling power makes
the one who would speak of spirit or religion or the spiritual life tremble in their
boots before the amazing accomplishments of the sciences. Of course, to deny
spirit, to deny a sacred dimension to reality is not going to work very long,
because we are people who desire meaning. We are more than the physical body
that houses us, and so there has been reaction.
One of the phenomena of the last century is the rise of Pentecostalism. In his
book Fire from Heaven, Harvey Cox documents the global expression of
Pentecostalism, which is the immediate experience of God, God the Holy Spirit,
an immediate experience of the holy. If you watch any late-night television, you
will see on occasion some Pentecostal services where there are thousands and
thousands of people. Hands are raised, people come forward, and they are slain
in the Spirit. If I would describe it a bit unkindly, I would call it an emotional
orgy. But, as a matter of fact, it is a spiritual, emotional fix, and it is a global

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phenomenon. It simply points to the fact that the human animal is more than
simply a physical body.
The other reaction that we are perhaps more familiar with is Fundamentalism,
which is a militant mind that would reverse everything to a former paradigm, to a
former understanding. The old way. Of course, you cannot go home, but this
militant Fundamentalism is in reaction to the myth of science that claims that
there is nothing beyond what you can touch and taste and handle. The reaction to
that has become violent in our day. Thus, there is Pentecostalism and
Fundamentalism. The problem with the old tradition and with Fundamentalism
is the literalization of our biblical stories.
It was appropriate that the scripture lesson was read by the choral readers this
morning. There was a touch of theatre. There was a little bit of drama, which
points to the fact that Genesis 1 is a poem, and it is a myth of origins. That
beautiful picture of the city of God and the union of heaven and earth in
Revelation, again, is a marvelous image. The way it was read enables us to sense
that there is something more going on here beyond a literal description of reality.
Let me try a little experiment this morning. Let’s think of the whole cosmic
process of billions of years. Let us think of it as a river of being unfolding, the
River of Being unfolding. If you go down to the end of Washington Street in
Grand Haven, you can see a map of the Grand River with its various tributaries
winding their way here and flowing out into Lake Michigan. Let us just think
about the Grand River as the River of Being. As the river nears Grand Haven, the
human species arises. The human being becomes conscious, self-conscious,
conscious of the other; community grows; the mind develops. Let’s picture that
budding human phenomenon on a houseboat on the Grand River, plopped right
there in the middle of the river. They don’t know how they got there. They have
no sense at all of that river on which they have streamed. They don’t know where
they are going, either.
The analogy breaks down with the Grand River, because you know the Grand
River empties out into Lake Michigan. But the River of Being is being formed as
we move on. The human project is right on the threshold of the unfolding drama,
and we don’t know where it’s going. But people need to have a sense, a sense of
where their houseboat came from and where it is going. And so people create
stories, stories of origin and stories of ultimate destiny.
The Genesis story is such a myth. Where did we come from? Why are things the
way they are? What does it mean? That vision of Revelation—where is it all going
to end? What is it going to be? Whence have I come, whither am I going, what
does it mean in the meantime? Those are the kind of stories that you have in
Genesis. They are the kind of stories you have in the Bible. They are the kind of
stories you have in every religious expression of humankind and in every
circumstance and every geographical location. They are the same questions.

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Ultimate questions. Because we’re human. Because we wonder about that. How
did it begin? Where is it going? What does it mean?
The River of Being continues to unfold. Along the way, the human being
continues to think, to experience. He or she gains some knowledge and has a
beginning sense of history. One day the mechanically minded among them
develops a helicopter, and they go up and trace that river, study the course over
which they have come. It’s fifteen billion years of river, and they say, “O, my God!
Look at the Big Bang! Look at the billions of years it took for this meandering
stream to reach this point. Look at what we are a part of and where are we going!”
Well, we can make some projections; we can speculate. But the scientific mind
begins to take over and experiment. Pretty soon we have the scientific method,
which I described a moment ago, with testing and inductive reasoning. In the
midst of the human story we develop a very potent myth that this is all there is.
And we cannot deny the stuff on which science has based this information. That
knowledge is hard knowledge, although it continues to be adjusted. Scientists
continue to refute themselves in order to find a better understanding.
But why would we fight knowledge? Isn’t it ridiculous that there is a
Fundamentalist Christianity that is heralding Creationism in the twenty-first
century? Isn’t it interesting that there is a more sophisticated stealth bomber
approach with this Intelligent Design idea, trying to get God back into the
equation?
So what is it we need? And where are we? Well, let me suggest that the Genesis
account of creation is still profound. I can read it and understand it and
appreciate it. I understand the profound insights that were coming to expression
there, and I can understand the longing for that holy city and the union of heaven
and earth. Those are images and they continue to be fruitful images. They
continue to inform us in the River of Being where we are traveling together in our
particular little houseboat. But don’t you think that it would be better if we could
find a way to incorporate all that the sciences lay bare for us, all of that
knowledge, with a sense of the holy and the sacred woven through it? Wouldn’t it
be better if our River of Being was not simply matter, not pure materialism as
opposed to any God-presence, so that it does not lead to atheism, but rather to an
understanding of God in terms of the human experience which is common to us
all in our day? Wouldn’t it be better if we embraced a naturalism without
supernaturalism, a reenchantment without supernaturalism, a God-presence
without the engineer tweaking things from above, dipping in here and there?
I did mean to tell you about my friend Bud who is critically ill, but still with us.
Last evening was a bit difficult and so I was called in. He has not yet awakened,
and the day before the family gathered around him. One of his daughters is an
ordained pastor. She put together a beautiful healing service, just for the family.

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They read scripture and said prayers and they anointed Bud with oil, oil for
healing.
Does that work? Yes, I think it works. Can it heal? Yes, I think it can heal. Is there
something miraculous about that? No, not really. But the love and the care of
those who are concretely present with a ritual involving anointing and touch will
trigger whatever is possible to be triggered in terms of the healing potential of
that body.
If you go into the room, you will find computers of every sort— banks of them.
Medical science can tell you everything about the blood, liver function, kidney
function, the dialysis process, the breathing tube. They can tell you everything
about neurological function, blood pressure, temperature, all of that. It is
amazing. You want to talk miracles, that is a miracle. And I’m thankful for every
one of those machines, every one of those tubes and wires, and every one of those
competent medical personnel who can calibrate it all in order to sustain life. But
when you know all the statistics, when you know everything about that body that
is lying there, you still don’t know anything about the human being.
I could always get Bud to laugh, particularly when I would talk a little Dutch to
him. So I shouted a little Dutch in his ear, and I got just a little flicker of the lip, a
little recognition, a little communication. That is so much more than all of the
statistical data that you could offer me. Yet there is no conflict whatsoever. For
when science has done everything it can do, and I want it to do everything it can
do and in the best possible way, then it still has not answered the question of who
are we, because that’s a human question. That’s a spiritual question. That is the
transcendent dimension that hovers over the tapestry of the natural connections
and causal relationships and all of the processes that make up what we call
nature.
What we need is a new story. I can still preach from Genesis meaningfully
because I understand what they were getting at, and it was a profound word. But
when you are in the River of Being, and Being continues to unfold, and you have
just begun through your intellectual capacity to understand something of the
past, you realize that you are the consciousness of the process now, and you are
the voice of this process. It is unfolding before your very eyes, and your stories of
origin and ultimate destiny were told as tales way back there. Look where you are
now. Are you going to absolutize an ancient story that was profound, a profound
myth with deep understanding? Are you going to say that it has to be literalized
and it has to be the template over which I look at my world today?
No. That story isn’t sacred. It’s marvelous! There has never been Eden; there has
never been Paradise. There has never been a moment of perfection from which
we “fell.” The story, according to everything we can learn and know, is the story of
emergence, of spirit, spirit seeking to soar while still anchored in the mire.

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

�Reenchantment

Richard A. Rhem

Page 6	&#13;  

Human beings—what marvelous creatures we are! Look what we can do. Look
what we can create. Look at the beauty we can create. Look at the love we can
make. Look at the joy. Look at all of the wonder of the world, the human world,
and all of the hell we create. We are emerging creatures full of ambiguity, torn in
two directions, knowing the life of the spirit, still very much of the flesh, fleshly.
I need a story, a new story that will honor the integrity of creation and that
process, that tapestry into which our lives are woven. I need a story with all of
life’s meaning and all of its wonder and beauty, but a story that sees it all with
enchanted eyes, knowing that there is more than meets the eye, knowing that it is
all permeated with God-presence, with the Creator Spirit, the spirit that seeks to
come alive in us. For you see, the Christian story at its heart is the story of
incarnation, that God became human.
In the beginning was the word, God spoke the word, creation came forth. In the
beginning was the word and the word was God, and the word became flesh. The
word became human. In the River of Being unfolding at some point, God became
human and the human became the vehicle of divinity, the voice, the soul, the
spirit, the instrument through which the whole process is made divine by the God
who is present, not apart from it.
Thank God for the richness of all we know and the mystery that beckons us still,
and in the meantime, that sense of community in which we experience life
together, enchanted.
Griffin, David Ray. Reenchantment without Supernaturalism— A Process
Philosophy of Religion. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2001.
140

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Garment of God
From the series: Creation – God’s Ecstasy
Text: Genesis 1:24-31; Psalm 8; John 1:1-5, 14-18
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
August 18, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Before we begin the Reading From the Present, let me introduce the author to
you. She is Beatrice Bruteau, an author I do not know. Someone gave me her
book, which happens now and again, and it went on that tall stack, “To be read.”
Then I was pursuing things and thinking about what I would be preaching, and
for some reason, I picked up that book and found out that it was precisely what
the preacher ordered. Bruteau understands the things I have been contemplating.
Beatrice Bruteau is a contemplative and co-founder of Schola Contemplationis,
an international network of contemplatives. The Roman Catholic tradition does
that a lot better than the Protestants. The whole contemplative tradition in the
Roman Catholic Church is very strong. Bruteau was part of the founding of the
American Teilhard de Chardin Association and founded the Teilhard Research
Institute at Fordham University. Teilhard de Chardin, a French Jesuit scholar,
worked in the science field and had a fascinating conception of nature, of reality
as moving toward an omega point. Fordham is a great Catholic university where
scholars have done a great deal of work in spiritual formation and the mystical
tradition.
Beatrice Bruteau is also a scientist and handles with great facility chemistry,
biology, and physics as they play into cosmology. She lays open the universe, the
cosmos as it is understood scientifically in our day, but doing so as a
contemplative, as one who follows exercises and disciplines which enable one to
be in communion with that transcendent reality, that mystery we call God. In
short, she is a scientist who is also deeply spiritual, and her pursuit of science is
really to have a better understanding of natural reality in order that her spiritual
life be consistent with her understanding of nature and vice versa.
Beatrice Bruteau’s book God’s Ecstasy provides us the theme for these summer
messages. She speaks about the nature of reality in a way that a spiritual person
can pray and contemplate. At the end of her book, she addresses the
contemplative because, all the talk about the cosmos, about science is really so
that one may pray, that one may speak of God in a significant and meaningful

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way. (That is true here, also, in case you didn’t know it.) In this paragraph, she
addresses the contemplative:
So, what now in light of this cosmic miracle, this cosmic drama that I have been
talking about, what about the contemplative? Does the contemplative have some
special role? I say to the contemplative, “Feel at home in the universe. Study it.
Try to understand at least some of its innumerable marvels, including ourselves
who are more and more capable of this understanding. Marvel at that. Rejoice in
the cosmos. In spite of all its hurtful ways, look at what it has done, is doing, is
capable of doing. If you can see the God you love as present in, even as, this
world, then feel that union and rejoice at that. And be active in it. Contribute to it,
participate in the building, in the artwork, in the healing, in the understanding.
This is where reality is. You yourself are both a member of the finite and a
member of the infinite. You are a participant in the trinitarian life cycle, for you
are doing the incarnating and the creating and the realizing and the rejoicing.
God’s ecstasy creates the world and the world’s ecstasy realizes God, and you are
right in the midst of it all.”
You can read that again this afternoon, but let’s see if I can make some sense of it
for just a moment. The sermon is entitled “The Garment of God,” and my
intention is to point to the natural world, the universe, as the garment of God.
You will remember that we are talking about all of this because what we want to
try to do is to be able to speak of God in a meaningful way in the light of
everything else we know about our world. Too often, tragically, the conflict
between science and religion caused science, in part, pridefully to say, “We don’t
need the hypothesis of God.” And it caused fearful religionists defensively to say,
“That science can’t be true.” So you get an impasse and there has been a conflict.
The first Sunday in October, David Ray Griffin is coming, and he is a process
theologian, a process philosopher, who is doing very much what the author of the
morning is doing. His latest book is Reenchantment without Supernaturalism.
His book before that, Religion and Scientific Naturalism, is an attempt to deal
with the world and its “stuff” as we know it today, and translate our
understanding of God in such a way that there is not dissonance between our
understanding of the world and our image and imagination of God. And so, in
Griffin and in Bruteau, the world is understood not as being static, something
simply there, but rather as process, something underway. It is an unfolding
drama which involves matter, beginning, they tell us, with an infinitesimal spark
or speck of explosion, and an expanding universe has been a consequence of that
initial “Big Bang.”
This universe, which is expanding as we speak, has eventuated not simply in
matter, but also in people like us who are matter, flesh, but who have minds and
spirits as well. This cosmic process has moved to a point where the conscious
human is aware and able to reflect back on the process and to conceive of an
infinite mystery that becomes incarnate in the finitude of the universe. The

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universe has moved to a point of consciousness and awareness where it is able in
its finitude to have a sense of the infinite. So the loop is closed, as it were. From
that Infinite Mystery we call God, the ground of everything, being flows out, and
the being that flows out is incarnate in cosmic reality. The cosmic reality in us
becomes conscious so that we are able to look back to our source, and to worship,
to be moved, and to offer alleluias to that Infinite Mystery.
The world, then, is the garment of God, the incarnation of God. Ecstasy, God’s
ecstasy. Ecstasy comes from the Greek preposition ek, which means “out of,” and
statis, and when you are ecstatic, you are out of yourself. We speak of people in
ecstasy as being beside themselves. Well, God is beside God’s self in ecstatic flow
in a world which is matter, a cosmic reality which is in process—not a thing, not a
static being, but an event—a happening that has eventuated in us who say, “Oh, a
happening! Hallelujah!”
I love the prologue of John’s gospel. That is why I go back to it again and again.
“In the beginning was the word....” I like to translate that as “In the beginning
was the intention.” I’m not claiming this morning that the biblical writers had the
sense of this that David Ray Griffin or Beatrice Bruteau have, but something’s
going on in that writer. “In the beginning is the intention and the intention is
with God.” Or, let me say, if we don’t quibble too much about terminology, that
Infinite Mystery had an intention which flowed out in the form of cosmic reality,
and in the midst of that process, that intention became flesh, human.
In classical Christianity, we have said that the word became flesh, meaning Jesus
Christ. Jesus Christ becomes the revelation of God the Father, and we have made
that a unique, once-for-all kind of event. But what if we move beyond that? What
if we sense behind that a deeper genius, an insight, an intuition that the intention
of the Infinite Mystery which becomes flesh in Jesus finds Jesus not once-for-all,
but as the paradigm or the model of that which is true of the whole process? What
if the intention becomes cosmic reality and in the human becomes conscious,
able to pray and to praise?
In verse fourteen, “the word became flesh and dwelt among us.” And then we
have the eighteenth verse: “No one has ever seen God.” No one has ever seen the
Infinite Mystery but the only son, the one that became flesh and revealed this
God. Someone translated that in a marvelous fashion, particularly if you are one
of the rather to be pitied people who ever went to seminary. What you do in
seminary is take a text and learn how to exegete a text. Exegesis is a particular
disease of people who work with the Bible. Exegesis is how you open a text,
interpret a text. Someone marvelously translated the eighteenth verse as this
eternal, this only son exegeted the father. Isn’t that beautiful? As though Jesus is
the exegesis of God. The Infinite Mystery becomes manifest in the exegesis of the
human.

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I wonder about the Hebrew poet who penned Psalm 8: “When I consider the
heavens, the moon and the stars, what am I?” The writer knows, and we know: a
speck of cosmic dust that has breath and mind and consciousness and is able to
contemplate the moon and the stars and the heavens and is able to wonder and to
sing “Alleluia.” But then he says, “You have made us,” not as the old translation
has it, “a little less than the angels.” Someone translated it that way because they
didn’t dare say what it really says: “You have made us a little less than God.” I
suspect that was a reflection of Genesis, the first chapter, which speaks about the
creation of the human, the male and the female, in the image of God, the likeness
of God.
The ancient writers are not dealing with cosmology as we know it. They have not
a clue as to the cosmic reality which is unfolded before our eyes through all of the
sciences. But wasn’t there some deep intuition of that close connection between
the Infinite Mystery and the finite creature bearing the image of God? Wasn’t
there an awareness and consciousness that as they looked into each other’s eyes,
they were experiencing God? In our human experience, we have personified God
as a father, or as a mother, a mother hen gathering her chicks, or a nursing
mother who would never forsake her child. We have learned in our human
relationships, we have intuited, we suspect that that Infinite Mystery is the source
of all and the expression of that which is the highest and the best of our own
human experience.
And so the world, the cosmos, is the garment of God, the finite incarnation of that
Infinite Mystery, an incarnation that has become conscious in the human who is
able to pray and to praise and to be in communion with the source of all being in
contemplation.
Beatrice Bruteau has another book which I have never seen, but I smiled as I read
the title. I suspect what she says in that book entitled Radical Optimism. Because
as the Infinite Mystery in ecstasy flows into being, and that being becomes
conscious and in communion again with the Infinite Mystery, who knows where
it is going? Who knows what is yet before us in the unfolding drama?
I have to say this: We can no longer sit passively by as spectators, for we have
become actors, indeed co-creators, and we have it in our capacity to make heaven
on earth or let it all go to hell. We have it in our capacity to make it a humane
cosmos or to allow the horror of which we also are capable to run loose over the
earth.
Ah! What an amazing way to live—with wonder and awe before this miracle
unfolding. But you say, “What I really want is that intimate relationship with
God. What I really want is that immediate intervention of God the Father.” I
understand that. That is a totally natural desire and yearning, and it is probably
much of the source from which religion arises. But you can’t have it, because that
is not the way the world is.

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If we are honest about our human experience, as much as we wish we had that
personal immediacy and a God who now and again would tweak and twist and
arrange, we know we are part of a self-creating universe. That is the most difficult
thing as a pastor I have to say to you, my people, because I take away from you
then that which is dearest and most desired. Do I leave you desolate? No. Because
if you have my arms, you have God’s arms. If you have my tears, God weeps with
you. If you experience grace and forgiveness from me, that’s a cosmic experience,
and of course, I receive the same from you.
Does that mean, then, that all simply is human? No. The human is divine, the
finite incarnation of the Infinite Mystery. After all, God is a speculative idea,
friends. It is a philosophical idea. God is a word. It is a label. But, flesh, flesh and
blood, arms, compassion, human compassion, human love and care, all this is the
incarnation of God. It is not to say that’s just human. It is not, and you ought not
to say, “You’re not enough.” Because I’m all you have. But I’m God, and you are
God. We are God to one another. We are the flesh and blood of God. We are the
incarnation of God, and as the future unfolds, that Infinite Mystery with the lure
of love beckons us to love, because God is love and the one who dwells in love,
dwells in God, and God dwells in that one. To love one another is to make heaven
on earth, and it is wonderful. It is amazing, and when you have loving human
arms around you, there is nothing you cannot go through.
References:
Bruteau, Beatrice. God’s Ecstasy, the Creation of a Self-Creating World. New
York, NY: 1997.

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

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                <text>A sermon given by Richard A. Rhem (Dick) on August 18, 2002 entitled "The Garment of God", as part of the series "Creation: God's Ecstasy", on the occasion of Pentecost XIII, at Christ Community Church, Spring Lake, MI. Scripture references: Genesis 1:24-31, Psalm 8, John 1:1-5, 14-18, .</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1029387">
                <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Lemmen Library and Archives</text>
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      <tag tagId="73">
        <name>Immanence</name>
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      <tag tagId="404">
        <name>Natural religion</name>
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      <tag tagId="405">
        <name>Process theology</name>
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