Discernment Committee Update!

By the time you read this, the candidate interviews will be finished, and your Discernment Committee will be in the process of visiting a select group of rector candidates, in their home parishes. Two or three members of the Committee will be visiting each of the chosen candidates, and will spend time getting to know him or her over a weekend. During this weekend, the Committee members will interview pre-identified members of the candidate’s parish and/or other people in the candidate’s life, to find out more about the candidate and his or her ministry and leadership style. Also, the Committee members will attend a service led by the candidate, including listening to a sermon. Once these visits are completed, the Discernment Committee will gather once again to choose the final three candidates to be presented to the vestry.

As the chair of the Discernment Committee, I have been incredibly blessed with an amazing group of dedicated Messiah members. All of us love this parish and are committed to seeking God’s direction as we move forward. Here are some thoughts by Committee members regarding the interviews, which were held over two weeks in August:

“I have been uplifted by the candidates' expressions of their deep calling to ministry. It has reminded me that God calls us all to bring about His Kingdom. Their questions and responses challenge me to expand my understanding of the mission of the church and inspire me to look forward to the work yet to be done.”—Leonora Will

“It was great to finally see and hear each candidate on video and get a feel for their personalities. We had questions for each, but often it was their questions for us that were quite revealing. I had definite feelings of excitement interacting with certain ones especially. One of them will be our new rector! I am blessed to be part of this wonderful discernment group.”—Janet Hryniewicki

“This process has led us to question constantly our ideas of the identity of Church of the Messiah and to probe the difference between what makes us comfortable and what may be the way we are called to grow into the future. Also, we are seeing that the call to a new Rector will be a watershed both in that person’s life and in our life, and will require strenuous adjustments on both sides.”—Biff Baker

“This has been an exciting process, full of possibilities for Messiah's future. By interacting with the candidates, we have been learning about ourselves, as the Messiah community. As the candidates answered our thoughtful questions, we heard how they feel and believe about what our parish feels and believes. As they asked us questions, sometimes we got so excited answering and telling them about Messiah, that we had to stop, as we talked so much we had to remind ourselves that they had more questions for us. In each interview, the room was energized with the Holy Spirit who has been with us every step of the way. The Discernment Committee is a wonderful group so dedicated to the charge to recommend 3 candidates to the vestry to lead Messiah into the future, and I feel so blessed to have been part of this amazing experience.”—Carol Harvey

Please keep Messiah, the Discernment Committee and the candidates in your prayers as we move into the final stages of this process.

Hispanic Heritage Lunch & Program

Sunday, October 28

10:15 a.m. Bilingual Eucharist
11:30 - 2 p.m. Luncheon

Wonderful Latin Food and musical program
Adults $10.00
Children $5.00

Stewardship Brunches

Join us after each service
Sunday, October 7.

Please bring breads, cheeses, or prepared egg dishes to share.

Blessing of the Animals


Saturday, October 6 at 10 a.m.

Bring your pets, photos of your pets, or even a stuffed animal to the church patio for a Blessing, a photo of you with your pet, and special pet treats too!

Friends of Music Presents...

Live organ music by Chris Elliott
Saturday, October 27 at 7 pm 

in the Sanctuary!
(Not Appropriate for small children.)

September 23, 2012 - Father Mark D. Stuart

What is the point of pursuing wisdom? Well, to become wise. That is, wisdom is its own end, or its own reward. This is sort of answer may suffice for philosophers (those who are “lovers of wisdom”), but St. James has other ideas. The wise person does not demonstrate wisdom primarily by thinking wise thoughts or uttering wise sayings. Rather, he or she lives a life punctuated by “deeds of gentleness born of wisdom.” St. James elaborates on this by noting that the wisdom from above is “pure, peaceable, gentle, willing to yield, full of mercy and good fruits.” Wisdom is not just a contemplative attainment, but must manifest itself in particular actions.

In our Gospel lesson today from St. Mark, Jesus introduces the issue that is the lynchpin of all Christian wisdom: the Cross. The Cross is the central moment at which the wisdom of God is displayed against the wisdom of the world. Christ’s true wisdom is self-giving, self-offering obedience to God for the benefit of others. Sadly, the disciples seem unable to grasp this as anything like wisdom.

This becomes even more obvious in the second part of our reading from St. Mark. As they walk along, the disciples argue and discuss which one of them is the greatest. Who is Jesus’ star pupil? But interestingly Jesus does not rebuke and reprimand them for aspiring to greatness. This, for Jesus, becomes a “teachable moment.”

It seems the problem is that apart from understanding the Cross, it is impossible to understand how becoming the last of all and servant of all constitutes greatness. The way of the Cross is no less confounding today. Because of this many speak of Christianity as a set of skills that one learns to practice, the way one learns the skills necessary to be a woodworker or a research chemist. But the practice of our faith is not as simple and tidy as learning a set of skills in order to become an expert.

Which brings us back to the disciples on the road. Not surprisingly, once inside the house in Capernaum Jesus is unimpressed by the disciples’ little argument about who is the greatest. It was Will Rogers who once commented that, “It is more important to be human than it is to be important.” Looking around for help to make his point, Jesus sits down, calls his disciples to gather round, and brings a young child into the group. Now to most adults of the time and certainly to adult male disciples focused on their alpha male teacher, children were of no consequence.

Think about that in our own day, as well. Children are the most vulnerable, least empowered persons in all societies. They cannot take care of themselves by earning a living and buying the necessities of food, clothing, and shelter. They cannot vote and do not pay taxes. Children are totally dependent and at the mercy of adults. They represent the most weak and defenseless qualities of humanity, although they frequently are precocious and have definite opinions.

Take for instance the Sunday School class of fourth-graders who were quizzed by their teacher one day. “Does anyone know what today is?” the teacher asked. Immediately a hand flew up from the back of the class and the little girl blurted out, “Today is Palm Sunday.” “Why, yes, you’re right,” the teacher proudly responded. “And does anyone know what next Sunday is?” Again the same little hand shot up, “Yes, I know – it’s Easter Day when Jesus rose from tomb!” And before the teacher could congratulate her, she continued, “But if he sees his shadow he has to go back in for another 6 weeks!”

Jesus sets just such a child on his lap in the midst of the disciples and tells them that they should treat her as they would treat him! The greatest, then is the one who is the least in the eyes of the world. The least in the eyes of the world is the one no one bothers to even see, the invisible one. As with the child Jesus embraces as his stand-in, He is the invisible Lord, whose greatness comes from his identification with all those in his day, as well as ours, whom we do not see because they simply are not important enough: the day laborers outside the Home Depot; the man on disability who cannot afford food once he has to purchase his medications; the single mother who has to work two minimum wage jobs to barely get by providing for her children; the senior citizen alone in the world with all her friends and spouse gone; the list is endless – we see these people every day, but we don’t really see them, because they are the invisible ones to us.

Maybe the true wisdom Jesus is trying to teach his disciples might be summed up by saying: “Start seeing the invisible.” Not because it is virtuous to do so, so that we congratulate ourselves on being the greatest at seeing. The wisdom of the Cross is the same wisdom that is capable of welcoming a child or any other invisible person of no consequence to the world in Christ’s name.

Too often Christians appear to view greatness just as everyone else does. Frequently, we rank parishes, clergy, or church members by the same standards of success the world does. Perhaps we should instead listen carefully to St. James’ list of attributes that constitute wisdom with his underscoring admonition: “Draw near to God and He will draw near to you.” Start seeing the invisible because to receive the invisible one is to receive Jesus and to receive Jesus is to receive God.

I give the last word to St. James: “Who is wise and understanding among you? Show by your good life that your works are done with gentleness born of wisdom.”

September 16, 2012 - Father Mark D. Stuart

In our Gospel lesson today from St. Mark, we are told that Jesus came into the district of Caesarea Philippi and asked the disciples, “Who do the people say that I am?” This was in essence the final exam question for them after an in-depth Jesus seminar. The disciples had lived every waking hour with Jesus for several years; they had heard him preach. He had taught them about the Kingdom of God in parables. They had seen him walk on water, still the storm, heal the sick, raise the dead. So, now Jesus wants to know how much has sunk in; what they had learned. This was the “$64,000 question.” What would the correct answer be? How much had they learned?

In Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Letters and Papers From Prison, the question is raised: Who is Jesus Christ for us today? Imprisoned in a land whose long tradition of Christianity did so little to oppose the Nazi evil that was to end his own life along with millions of others, Bonhoeffer could at that point no longer be content to point to traditional answers to such a question. The question still stands for us today and it is not one that must be asked only in the midst of terror or imprisonment. Whoever we are and wherever we may be, in apparent safety or in peril and affliction and dire need - if we are to relate to Christ at all, each individual must define what Jesus’ identity means in a particular sense, to find the meaning of the fulfilled life our Lord offers.

“Who do the people say that I am?” Jesus asks. The spiritual inspiration and setting for this question and the answer to be given is a turning point in the Gospel - from the mostly popular Galilean ministry of teaching, preaching, and healing - to the way of the Cross. And so the disciples chime in with all conventional thought about Jesus’ identity: “A prophet, Jeremiah, Elijah, John the Baptist,” and so on. All wrong. So, Jesus asks again more pointedly, “But who do you say that I am?” And it was actually the impulsive, bungling, likeable Peter who got the answer right, jumping in as quick as a Santa Ana parking ticket to say: You are the Messiah!

Something new was happening to Peter and the followers of Jesus - in them and around them. They were as Paul put it in Romans, “justified by his grace as a gift... to be received by faith.” This is considerably more than what Mark Twain once quipped: “Faith is believing what you know just ain’t so.” But the theologian, Paul Tillich, spoke of this experience as the adventure of faith. He said: “Faith does not mean the belief in assertions for which there is no evidence. It never meant that in genuine religion and never should be abused in this sense. Faith means being grasped by a power that is greater than we are, a power that shakes us and turns us and transforms us and heals us. Surrender to this power is faith. The people whom Jesus could heal and can heal are those who did and do this self-surrender to the healing power in him.”

This faith is never something set apart from life. It is not something reserved for Sunday more so than Monday. It is not a badge of righteousness, but the radiating center of action that permeates all of life. It is not a just an empty creed, but the axis upon which life turns. “You are the Christ,” Peter said, because he had been grasped and turned and transformed by the power of God in Jesus. And what did this mean? It meant a re-centering of life around Christ. Peter’s faith, then became the rock on which Jesus said he would build the Church.

Thomas Merton said, “If you want to know who I am, don’t ask me where I live or what I like to eat or how I comb my hair. Ask me what I am living for and push me on it. Ask me what I think is keeping me from living for the thing I want to live for.” Faith is the engraced desire to live for Jesus. So many of us balk at surrendering to this power in Jesus because we do not trust what God wants to work in us through the power of faith. Jesus challenges us, as He did Peter and all the disciples, to become children of God, rock-like in our commitment to following him, following him all the way…

But what then is the true way, the Way of the Cross? First, it is being grasped by the unconditional grace and unlimited power of God in Christ, saying yes to it from the depths of one’s soul. It is the experience of allowing oneself to be a child of God; it is totally free, full of love and joy and peace. Secondly, out of this primary experience, it is listening to and for the gifts God is giving us to act Christ-like in the world. In our new life in Christ, the way of the world will be confronted and this may be painful – that is what Our Lord is talking about in today’s Gospel. It is sincerity of actions, not empty lip-service that characterizes the genuine followers of Jesus... not to become ineffective “pet rocks” of Christ, but to part of the very bedrock of his strength to a foolish and shifting world.

Fear is something we all have experienced at some time, to one degree or another. But fear inhibits living life to the fullest. Faith and trust liberate us through real life in the Spirit & are gifts we all need to cherish and nurture. There are some people who demonstrate a tremendous trust in God, even under the worst of circumstances; but most of us are challenged in our ability to do so. Yet, the extraordinary thing is that we are, indeed, capable of great trust and faith in our everyday affairs. We begin each morning demonstrating trust by not worrying whether the sun will rise that day, or if the floor will be under our feet when we jump out of bed. Yet, admittedly, trust and faith are hard attributes to maintain in these difficult times.

When we are at peace with ourselves, personally through trust and faith and through harmony with our fellow human beings; we have then achieved the wisdom of building our house on the rock of Christ allowing us the ability to be able to experience the full power of the Spirit; reaching out with empathy and compassion in the service we are called to do.

Amen.

Greetings from your Discernment Committee Chair!

As you will see, our Rose Window is slowly but surely being filled in. The Discernment Committee has been working diligently and prayerfully to determine the next rector of our parish. As you read this, your Discernment Committee will have completed the interviews of the candidates and will probably be in the process of conducting parish visits. During these visits, members of the Committee will go in groups to visit the candidate’s parish and attend a service. After these visits, the Committee will meet to decide which names will be presented to the vestry. Our Committee is completely aware of the amazing responsibility with which we have been entrusted. Please continue to keep the Committee, as well as the candidates, in your prayers as we search of the next rector of this great church.

September 2, 2012 - Father Mark D. Stuart

I am sure we all have had a similar proper meal training as children: Sit up straight! Elbows off the table! Napkin in your lap! Wait until your mother begins to eat before you start! Do not talk with your mouth full! The Germans in their Teutonic specificity have two different words for eating: one for humans (“essen”) and one for animals (“fressen”) If your eating habits are characterized by the latter, you are in big trouble or the target of a supreme insult!

The rituals associated with eating begin early in a child’s life and grow more complex with our journey toward maturity. In every culture these rituals are one of the ways the “in” group holds itself apart from the “out” group. Those who are like “us” eat the same foods the same way we do. This true for many in mid-America throughout their lives and we who live in a large cosmopolitan area are indeed blessed to experience the diversity of cultures expressed in the variety of cuisines available to us.

Though we can embrace the mystery of our differences when it comes to food, at the time of Our Lord, dietary laws were a very serious matter for most Jews. Many struggled to hold on to their identity after the Temple was destroyed and even after it was rebuilt, identity was important in a world dominated by strong hellenizing and Romanizing pagan influences. In today’s Gospel reading the Pharisees noticed that Jesus’ disciples had not performed the precisely correct ritual cleansing before they eat: they had broken with tradition.

Our Lord encounters their slavish adherence to traditions with a holier-than-thou attitude by quoting the prophet Isaiah: “These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me…” In other words, Jesus warns the Pharisees to concern themselves with God’s rules rather than the rules of humans. He says that spiritual defilement starts on the inside; it arises from the heart. The word “heart” is a metaphor for the total person, one’s whole being. For those who are ritual specialists the focus is on the external; neglecting a dynamic, creative, life-sustaining relationship with the living God. The more they focus on outward actions, the less attention they give to inner attitudes… they focus on the rules but neglect a relationship with the living God.

Now rules and traditions are not bad in themselves and no one respects rules and traditions more than me! Traditions are fine, well, and good when they arise from a deep faith and point us and others to God – Our Lord does not advocate dropping traditions, per se. However when we allow traditions to prevent us from following God’s will they become idolatrous. When Jesus challenges the Pharisees to follow the spirit of the law, rather than the letter of the law.
A few years ago I was asked by a parishioner at my former parish in Hollywood, who was a member of the Board of Governors of HRC to be a guest on a panel at the University of Redlands speaking in favor of same sex marriage legislation. I began my remarks by clearly stating that I viewed this as a civil rights issue and I did not intend to address the matter from a theological or scriptural perspective within the scope of that forum. Nevertheless, at the close of the evening’s agenda, before I could even dismount the stage, up from the rear of the room came a group of students tightly gripping their Bibles and I knew they were headed right for me!

Sure enough they were Campus Crusade for Christ and I was in their sights as an apostate evil Christian Priest and they had Scripture quotations to defend their stance. But in their brain-washed arguments they did not anticipate that I could counter them with just as many examples and I rebutted them with questions like our Lord often did with the Pharisees until they could not answer.It was a valuable experience for me to make that trek to the inland empire only a couple of hours’ drive from the West Side of LA and see first-hand a mind-set so foreign to what I experienced in my part of town.I realized that I probably did not convince those campus crusaders, although I pray that just maybe I caused at least one of them to recognize that there is another law than the one they had been spoon-fed – a law of equality and love and decency. But I also sadly realized once again that there is a whole lot of anger and hate guised in the name of our compassionate and loving Savior.

Christian devotion is meant to help gain and maintain a new heart, a heart that is alive not dead, a heart that is compassionate not selfish, a heart that is large not small, a heart that is hospitable not judgmental. Christian devotion in all its forms is all about softening the heart, preventing it from becoming hard, keeping it tender. Other controversies than dietary laws today divide Christians and our own Anglican Communion. Each area of contention represents deeply held convictions about how we are to live and when they are challenged we get scared. And it is fear ultimately that fuels a phariseeism of the heart. Pure religion has to do with caring for others in distress, not stressing over pure religious practices. In our Epistle for today St. James admonishes us to be quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to anger.

The trouble for the Pharisees was that their scrupulosity about observing the law led them to depend, not upon God’s graciousness, but upon their own ability to channel their lives into certain predictable routines setting themselves apart as better than other people. Now if we’re honest we can admit that no matter how hard we try, we can’t always get it perfectly right every time. In despair we may seek consolation by comparing ourselves to others and end up with a dull and formal religion in which we become like Anthony Trollope’s Miss Thorne, whose “virtues were too numerous to describe, and not sufficiently interesting to deserve description.”

So what then makes a person good enough for God? What makes us good enough for God is the sacrificial love of Jesus Christ. It is His broken body and shed blood: that bread and that cup we share today that brings us closer to God. And the traditions of humans, even those of good intention, insofar as they become the basis for judging others, are of no account. As much as we honor our scriptures and traditions, they do not serve us well when we make them the basis of judging who it is God loves and who is acceptable to Him. In today’s Gospel lesson and throughout His ministry, Jesus denounces hypocrisy of the self-righteous and clearly reminds us that the outward forms of holiness are meaningless if we do not have the basics in our hearts: the basics that call us to do justice, love mercy, and to walk humbly with our God.

Amen.