Sunday 20 April 2014

Homily Easter 2014, Year A
Christ Church, Bobcaygeon, St. John’s, Dunsford

Things had never looked bleaker for the disciples of Jesus the day after they had seen their master, their leader, their friend, the one who they believed was the Messiah, brutally executed by the Roman authorities and laid in a heavily guarded tomb.

The tomb was sealed, and could only be opened on punishment of death. Peter, who had denied Christ three times, was a broken man, weeping and discouraged. Judas, who had betrayed Christ, hanged himself.

It was left to Mary Magdalene, a friend and follower of Jesus and another Mary to come to the tomb that first Easter morning to find out if Jesus had indeed fulfilled his own prophesy that he would rise gain on the third day.

The fact that only his female followers were brave enough to go to the tomb was evidence that his disciples were a dispirited lot.

And all the four Gospels indicate it was women who first attended the tomb, despite their lack of status or credibility in the first century world.

So Mary was literally the first evangelist, the one who heard the message from the angel that Jesus had been raised, and would be going to Galilee to appear before those who followed him.

Then Jesus meets the two Marys and tells them not to be afraid—to share their good news with the disciples, so they will go to Galilee to see him.

One interesting part of the story of the empty tomb and the Resurrection is that Jesus never appeared to Pilate or to the Jewish authorities, or those who sought to oppose.

His appearances after rising to new life in a new body, were aimed primarily at re-energizing his disciples and others who followed him in order that they might go out and preach the Gospel to all nations.

It was an extraordinary transformation, because if the disciples had not take up the cross, and preached the Gospel we would not be here worshipping today as part of two billion Christians throughout world.

Jesus resurrection was an act of civil disobedience, of proving that even the power of Roman domination could not squash God’s activity in the world.

Jesus is and was Lord, not the Roman Casear, or any secular rulers since.

The Kingdom of God broke into the world, and demonstrated that death would not triumph over truth.

To the Romans it must have been perplexing. How could a Jewish peasant leader, a prophet, a teacher, triumph over the crushing weight of Empire.

The Romans persecuted these Christians unmercifully, but the movement begun that first Easter continued to grow. No matter how many Christians were thrown to the Lions, they wouldn’t deny their faith or go back to the Gods of Rome.

Hundreds of years later Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire, and unfortunately ever since then the church has been somewhat intertwined with power and privilege rather than carrying on its emphasis on following Christ, with his care for the poor and marginalized, and opposition to economic exploitation. Christ sought justice for all, not the domination by the few of the many.

Let us move forward to today. In some ways we may feel like those disciples did on Holy Saturday. Our secular society seems to be losing its moral compass. The rich grow richer and the poor grow poorer. Many youth are discouraged because there aren’t enough jobs. Our media exert unparalleled power, at the expense of the simpler pleasures of life. Our economic values get distorted when cutting taxes becomes more important that what taxes are used for—providing four our common life together, our roads, our schools, our health care system, our provision for those who are poor or disabled and the list could go on.

We also face a society where we are afraid to trust each other, and the internet has opened a new level of bullying, fraud , and vulnerability.

We like the disciples can hide behind closed doors and try to preserve our lives from all this.

But Jesus continues to call us to follow him, to preach the gospel, to serve others, to take risks and do the right thing.

Death does not have the final word. Jesus sets us free to challenge worldly powers when they are wrong, to pick up our cross, to resist the violence of the domination systems which still continue even in our relatively peaceful part of the world.

That may seem like a tall order.

But as I hear from other clergy about the new and inspiring ministries which are developing in every part of our Diocese I know that the picture of the church often presented in the media is not accurate. We may be declining in membership in some areas, but we are gaining in others, and those who remain members are much more committed to new ministries to address the mission of the church on a local level.

I can tells you that the parish I left in Toronto where I was a parishioner (not on staff), has recently hired two women clergy to work in the fields of Christian education –for children. youth and adults. The parish is building for growth.

In our own deanery we have the Theologian in Residence program. During Lent between 30 and 40 people joined in lively weekly studies at St. James Fenelon Falls and St. Paul’s Lindsay, both with Sylvia Keesmatt, our resident theologian.

We will be hosting Sylvia in the fall for another Bible study unlike any you’ve been to before. It is called Colossians remixed.

A committed and energized laity are the only way the church can grown. I will do my best as your priest in a ministry of word, sacrament and pastoral care. But I will also try and work with and enable lay leaders.

Today we commission officially our lay pastoral visitors. I think it is important to recognize their work. I couldn’t work effectively without them especially as I get more experience in this congregation, and when we work together we can provide the kind of pastoral care our congregations needs.

My Easter hope is that we can gain strength in the coming year as a Resurrection people. God has much for us to do in ministry. And we can all play a part.



Friday 18 April 2014

Jesus Emptied Himself



Homily Good Friday 2014, Christ Church, Bobcaygeon

One of the most troubling impacts of John’s account of the Crucifixion is the misinterpretation throughout the ages of the author’s characterization of “the Jews” being responsible for the death of Jesus, while Rome, reluctantly agreed.

The reason I mention this today is hearing of the most grotesque anti-Semitism found just this week in the Ukraine, where pro-Russians rebels circulated pamphlets remanding Jews register themselves and their belongings or be deported.

Sounds like the ultimate act of anti-Semitism, the Holocaust of Nazi Germany.

The roots of anti-Semitism throughout the ages have rested in a tragic misinterpretations and distortion of the Jews as Christ killers. And sadly even after the Holocaust Anti-Semitism continues—given new life by hate groups who keep popping up on the internet.

John certainly did not mean for this to happen. He meant the Jews to refer to the Jewish leadership who were co-opted by the Romans in a ruthless reign of terror over Palestine and Judea.

Pontius Pilate was a brutal thug, exiled to the most remote part of the empire, not the troubled and vacillating ruler he is portrayed as in John’s Gospel.

Why would John downplay Pilate’s responsibility for the death of Jesus, and put the blame mostly on the Jews.

The answer can be found on who John was writing for—the community of new Christians who had just been kicked out of the synagogue.

The Christians of John’s community were fighting for survival in a difficult religious atmosphere.

At first Christians were a faction within Judaism. They were Jewish in all respects. But their ideas about Jesus Christ meant different Jewish communities responded in different ways towards them.

How should we look at the Crucifixion in a time far removed from the actual historical event.

We believe as Christians it was a turning point in history. Jesus, sent by God as his incarnate son, came among us. He grew up among us, shared our human joys and sorrows, ate, worked, slept, and went on a three year journey of healing, teaching and preaching which built on the wisdom of the Hebrew Scriptures.

But Jesus knew his ministry could not continue indefinitely like this. He knew the power of Rome and the Jewish religious authorities could not tolerate his life changing message, and his growing following.

So he entered Jerusalem, and taught without fear in the temple at the time of the Passover…knowing there would be consequences. He shared a meal with his friends and prepared to be betrayed.

Paul says Christ emptied himself on the cross for our sake. There could not be a resurrection in triumph without the cross and sacrifice.

Rome should shoulder most of the blame for the death of Jesus. Rome was power—both economic and military. Power did not tolerate prophets who questioned the deity of the emperor and the many Gods of Rome, or the legitimacy of their domination system.

So the collision between the love of God for humanity, and the inhumanity and godlessness of Rome was inevitable.

And since that first Good Friday, the sacrifice of Jesus, has always been a reminder that our faith rests on God working in the world, against the forces of evil, sin, injustice and violence.

Our mandate, as Jesus passed on to his disciples at the last supper, is to love one another as Christ loves us, a love he "emptied" in his passion and death on the cross.





Homily Celebration of the Life of Norma LaChance 1937-2014, Christ Church, Bobcaygeon April 15, 2014

This is a celebration of life, not of death. Our memories of Norma have not died. Her spirit has not died.

In the reading from the letter to the Thessalonians one of the issues facing the early church was addressed. Early Christians, and this is one of the earliest texts in the New Testament, were concerned about their brothers and sisters in Christ who died. There was an expectation at that time that the end of the world as they knew it and the second coming of Christ was imminent.

So they didn’t want friends and loved ones who died to be excluded from rising to be with the Lord forever.

So they are encouraged by the words of Paul’s letter that those who die in the Lord will be cared for, and all will meet the Lord when He comes again.

The Romans passage adds another dimension to this message of consolation. “Whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord’s. For to this end Christ died and lived again, so that he might be the Lord of both the living and the dead.”

The God we believe in, the Jesus we believe in, the Holy Spirit we believe in, does not only care for us in life but in death.

We have no idea of the mysteries of death and eternal life. But we know God will never forsake us. As Paul says, we do not die to ourselves. We live on in the memories our friends and family, in the lives we have impacted.

Our Christian faith is a lived out faith. We believe God is active in our world. So it does make a difference how you live your life, and respond to God’s call.

So we gather today to give thanks to God for Norma and all the many lives she has touched. We mourn her death, but we celebrate her presence among us, and entrust her to God’s care.

Homily Celebration of Life of Steve Austin 1956-2014, Christ Church Bobcaygeon


This service is a celebration of the life of Steve Austin. You’ve heard the family’s memories of a man who was a respected and well liked husband, father, brother, worker, sportsman, outdoorsman.

We celebrate that life, which is full of good memories, as we mourn the earthly end of that life.

As Christians we believe death is not the end. We don’t know, and can’t describe what eternal life looks like, we confidently profess our faith that Steve is now in a place where is no more pain, no more dying, no more tears.

The reading from first Peter and the Beatitudes from Matthew’s Gospel give us a way to understand death in a different light. It is part of the circle of life, death and resurrection that we celebrate each year on Holy Week, the week we begin today.

God cares so much for humanity that he came among us, only to be rejected and condemned to death, a death we know he freely accepted for our sake.
The empty tomb on Easter morning is a testament to the power of God to raise his Son to eternal life.

Jesus wept at the tomb of his friend Lazarus, and when he saw how Lazarus meant to his friends and family.

Jesus weeps with Sheree, Brady, Riley and Joel and the entire Austin family as they morning the death of Steve, much too early in years.

What can be of comfort us in this difficult and challenging loss. I think it is in our memories of Steve, what he would have said, what he would have done, and simply being in his presence. Those memories will always be with us.

I’m sharing this from personal experience having both my parents die in the last decade. There are many times I think of them, and feel their presence in my own life. I miss them but God gives us the gift of memory to help ease the pain of absence of a loved one.

So please join in the rest of this celebration of Steve’s life, and pray for Sheree and the family as they move on in their life journey’s without Steve. One of things which is sometimes difficult after a death , especially of one so young, is that people don’t know what to say.

The best thing is to listen, to be a friend, to extend a helping hand, a warm gesture. Life won’t ever be quite the same without him, but faith calls us to care for each other, to help each other. We are our brother and sister’s keeper---contrary to the individualism which is all too common in our society.

Monday 7 April 2014



Dry Bones Live Through the Spirit
April 6, 2014/ Lent 5, Year A

There is a catchy song I couldn’t get out of my head after we talked about our Old Testament reading from Ezekiel at Bible study this week. Turns out “Dem Dry Bones” is a spiritual written by James Weldon Johnson, an African American born in 1871.

Sadly, the song has lived on mostly as a children’s song not a spiritual. It has been renamed “The Skeleton Song” by many sites on my internet search.

That is ironic considering that the Book of Ezekiel and its apocalyptic and alarming visions were so vivid and in need of explanation that Jewish children at that time were not allowed to read the book without adult supervision.

Rather than a funny story about skeletons, the real life situation, which inspired the Prophets vision came from Israel defeated, and in exile in Babylon, not knowing if the people would ever return home.

Jerusalem fell and the great temple was destroyed in 586 BCE. So Ezekiel wrote at a time of catastrophe, a time where people were losing their faith in God, indeed in everything.

And so Ezekiel has this vision that he is set down in the midst of a valley of dry bones. God asks him the question: “Can these bones live?”

Bones were important in Hebrew thought. The root meaning of bones, is powerful, which means the frequent references in this passage would stress the stability and firmness represented by the bones. And if the bones were strong so was faith.

That’s why the image of a field with very dry and unburied bones would indicate a spiritual calamity for Israel. Usually the bones would have been carefully buried.

Can these bones live: it is a question which humanity has often faced throughout history whenever there is catastrophe: when the Black Death swept through Europe in the middle ages, taking a quarter of the population, when The United States was plunged into a civil war with millions of casualties, when Jews were herded into concentration camps by the Nazis, when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, when apartheid enslaved and brutalized black people in South Africa…the list could go on.

And the answer is the same each time, only God knows. Only through God can the dry bones of catastrophe turn into bones, which are living, with sinew, flesh and skin.

To look at this passage symbolically, we all face times when we feel like “dry bones” without life, without spirit. But like Ezekiel we need to say to our dry bones---hear the word of the Lord.

What happens when Ezekiel prophesies to the bones---God promises to put flesh on the bones, bring them back to life.

Then there is a rattling sound and God breaths life into the bones.

The bones are the whole house of Israel. A whole people have been revived and God promises them new life and a return to their homes.

It is powerful vision, but God doesn’t act without Ezekiel’s participation.

And so when we encounter our own “dry bones” we need not only to pray for God’s intervention, but prepare to respond creatively, rather than passively and become agents of our own renewal.

The spirit, which blows in this passage from Ezekiel and makes the bones live, has echoes of the spirit of the creation stories in Genesis, and of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Disciples at Pentecost.

Having this Ezekiel passage read today is a good preparation for the story of Lazarus in John’s Gospel, which is rich in symbolism and in themes.

Just as God breathes new life into the valley the dry bones, Jesus offers the sixth sign of John’s Gospel---the resuscitation of Lazarus, four days in the tomb.

It is the sign, the miracle, that ultimately leads to the Cross in John’s Gospel. The message is clear Jesus is not only a healer and teacher, he has the power of life and death.

The raising of Lazarus foreshadows the Crucifixion of Jesus, but the raising is not the same as the empty tomb, and the resurrection we celebrate Easter morning.

Jesus is not only reviving a friend, he is showing that as God’s incarnate son, he has the power over death, and that death is not the end….that teaching will be reinforced by his Resurrection.

Jesus says to those who witnessed Lazarus rising: “Unbind him and let him go.”

That message can be for us to. To unbind ourselves, and allow God to work in us in birth, in life, in death, in resurrection.