ALL SAINTS 2007
This is a joyous,
wondrous, exciting, solemn and holy day.
This is OUR Feast
Day—the Feast of All Saints.
And what we
celebrate this day is like circles within circles within
circles—circles never ending, swirling through eternity and into
the very heart of God.
Someone very wise
once said, “Christ does not draw lines to keep people out—Christ
draws circles to welcome people in….”
The first circle,
the most obvious one—the one that will take most of the time
today—is baptism. Today we will welcome into the Body of Christ a
new member. Grant will be washed in the waters of God and sealed with
oil as “marked as Christ’s own forever”.
This astonishing
circle encloses Grant and his family into the heart of God. God loves
Grant no less right now than God will love him after the water is
poured and the oil is smeared. God’s love is not bound by a little
water and less oil and the words we will say. But today he will be
welcomed “publicly” into the Church and proclaimed out loud as an
esssential part of the Body of Christ.
That matters. That
truly matters.
A second circle we
will draw today—a second way God welcomes people “in”—is that
you will be invited to receive the laying-on-of-hands and prayers for
healing. God’s children are invited to seek ‘wholeness’ in the
midst of the ‘brokenness’ of our world and lives. God doesn’t
call us to be “good”—we are called to be “whole” and
“well”—and the prayers for healing are instruments of that
completeness.
That matters. That
truly matters.
A third circle
drawn on this, our Feast Day, our celebration that we are the ‘saints
of God’, is that we will read the names of the members of this
parish who have died since the last All Saints day, a year ago.
You see, in the
wondrous love of God, those who have died are still part of the
Communion of Saints. Those we love but see no more are separate from
us now but united with us in our celebration and our feast. This day
holds up to God those who have died, those who journey on in this
life and those yet unborn. This is a ‘thin time’ and we can draw
very near to our loved ones separated by death and celebrate our
connection with them.
That’s another
circle. You all have been given a candle and you are invited to light
it on your way to communion and place it in some containers that
aren’t out here yet. That candle is meant to be a way for you to
remember those you love who have died. They are with us in the flames
as we approach the altar. They are part of our celebration. This is
the Feast of ALL Saints, even those who have died.
And there, on the
table in front of the bowl where we will baptize today, are the
cremains—the ashes—of some of the children of God. They died and
their remains were signed over to a hospital and they were cremated
by a funeral home and on this day—this wondrous and solemn day—we
will bury those ashes out in the Close and give our brothers and
sisters a resting place for their ashes though they already rest in
the heart of God.
Some people find it
a bit troubling and ironic that we baptize the living next to the
remains of the dead on this day. But it is just another of the
circles God draws to include us all—to remind us that in the heart
of God the living and the dead are all joined together. These are
thin and wondrous times. No one is left out.
Two final circles
include us and welcome us home. First, there is the bread and the
wine we share—which is, I promise you, the very Body and Blood of
Christ. God needs a Body in this world. God needs hands and feet and
lips to speak and ears to hear—and we are it! Listen to me—WE ARE
THE BODY OF CHRIST IN THIS WORLD. If we don’t do that—if we don’t
carry forth when we are dismissed into the world the hospitality and
compassion and love and grace and forgiveness and wonder of God—who
will?
It’s part of the
deal. You are marked as Christ’s own forever and you are expected
to be Christ to this suffering world we live in. You are the Light of
the darkling world. You are the salt of the earth. And if you don’t
do it, who will?
Today’s liturgy
is like a kaleidoscope of circles within circles within circles. And
we are enclosed by those many circles. And we are the Saints of
God—we are the Body of Christ—we are God bearers into the world.
This is our day.
Let us rejoice and be glad.
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