Thursday, September 30, 2010

Speaking of elections

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/09/shouldnt_taxpayers_get_a_recei.html
I thought this was a really interesting idea-a receipt for the taxes you pay over the course of the year (this is of course making the assumption that federal government revenues are fungible, so that while a specific percentage of your salary officially goes to social security and medicare, that's not exactly put in a lockbox). You'll need to do some basic multiplication to get your actual figures, but this is good for comparison's sake.

Anyway, is there anything that strikes you as unexpected? Anything that is higher than you would have thought? Lower?

I was rather content to learn how much of my money is going to things that I at least don't think are actively evil.

Also, apparently, this is one of the things that people are often far off on (I certainly was repeatedly surprised) so before voting, education!

Monday, September 20, 2010

race map

 One of the things I wrestle with as a pastor in St. Louis is working with the segregated nature of our city. Its common knowledge that there is a racial divide in the city, but this map, based on 2000 census data was still quite striking.

Saint Louis Map, by race and density

As always, I wonder what it means for us to claim that racial reconciliation is part of what it means to be Mennonite, Christian, and generally good people, and to end up with such striking divides in where we live and who we interact with on a regular basis.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

How Facts Get us in Trouble

I found this article in the Boston Globe this week, and I thought it was very interesting.

How facts backfire

It explains how human beings are likely to disbelieve or ignore facts that contradict their currently held beliefs, ignoring things like 'there weapons of mass destruction in Iraq' or 'immigration is on balance economically helpful to native born citizens' which seem to be completely true.  As someone who considers himself open minded and politically aware, its got me thinking about the spiritual discipline of humility-
It is quite likely that I am wrong about many things that I believe to be true, and that I am resistant to correction when I am informed about my error.

Here's as test-see if you can find something this week where you are wrong, and change your mind.  If you tend to lean liberal, here's a Wall Street Journal article with some economic claims it suggests are true that liberals are likely to disagree with (I confess, I'm liberal enough that I disagree with some, but not all of their conclusions, so I may pick one for my own spiritual discipline).
If you lean conservative, the current senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell believes that the Bush tax cuts did not decrease revenue, because of the supply side effects of the program. This chart begs to differ.

But what I'm really interested in is the ways this might influence me as a Mennonite in particular.  My most radical belief is a deep skepticism in the power of violence to solve problems. I think that wars are a poor use of human resources, that diplomacy is grossly neglected in our society, and that saber rattling is dangerous and counter-productive.  I have talked with Mennonite friends who discuss how counter-productive it is to have guns in the home for self-defense (they are more likely to be used on family members than intruders), that the death penalty does not deter violent crime, and that war always inspires more violence.

I think many of these things are true.  But I also think that to some extent, if I rely on these arguments, I'm likely to end up looking silly when the facts, which at the very least suggest that violence can save innocent lives in the long run, and at the very least is necessary for a civilized society such as we enjoy in the western world in the form of police if not military, turn against me.  I wonder if I believe some of  my more prosaic arguments for pacifism exist more because I am looking for things to buttress my beliefs than a clear exploration of reality.

I think its worth asking, would you believe in non-violence, even if you were in a situation where violence would be practically wise, simply because it is the sacrificial path of the prince of peace.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

sermon

Here is my sermon for this Sunday. It did not receive the care and attention I usually give sermons, since it was a pretty intense week. I like the second half alright though.


Sermon:
Woman washing Jesus’ feet
Luke 7-8
Good morning. It is good to gather in worship with you outside here at the Sprunger’s land, celebrating in nature. Looking around us, we see the glory of God’s creation, and at least for me, looking at nature reminds me of the patterns of life and death in the world, which are particularly poignant as we remember Mary Elise’s life this morning.
I think it is appropriate, as we mark her passing, to have as our scripture text Luke 7, the story of an unnamed woman washing Jesus’ feet at the home of Simon the Pharisee.

funeral sermon

I thought I'd include my reflections at the funeral of Mary Elise Baer, a church member who died last week.

Psalm 23-Ashley Lynch
2 Timothy 4:1-8-Kathy Lynch
Sermon-Samuel Voth Schrag
After the end of life, it is right and proper to gather together in honor of the one who has gone before, and today we gather to remember Mary Elise Baer. We are a gathered body, drawn together because of Mary’s well lived life, because she touched our hearts as family and friends and brethren in faith. As we gather, we celebrate and honor who she was and what she did in the world. We mourn her death, and grieve together, taking what consolation we may in the love and support of those around us. We gather with the church throughout history, the great cloud of witnesses which Mary Elise has now joined, remembering God’s work through history.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

In the Newspaper

Look-SLMF is famous!
Its always a fascinating thing to try and sum up Mennonites in a brief interview. How do you think I did?
here is an article in the suburban journal of the St. Louis Post Dispatch.

Small Fellowship continues Mennonite Tradition

I'm kind of pleased about the publicity.

Monday, June 7, 2010

June 6th Sermon

Here is this week’s sermon.
To go along with it-consider this video on time perspective.
It points out that people are often past oriented, present oriented, or future oriented, and that we are raising children to be present oriented, while we have a society that rewards future oriented people who plan carefully. Thinking about caring, (the topic of the sermon) one thing I notice is its often easier for me to care in the immediate sense-care for the people in front of me who need help-than to care in the future sense-notice who is being neglected, who might like a pastoral call, planning ahead so that everyone is well served. Do you notice how your time sense changes you?

Elijah and the Widow of Zarapheth
Good morning, God be with you today. I hope that you are feeling God’s spirit with you this morning.
I wanted to start out this morning by thanking you for renewing my call to minister here for another three year term on Friday night. I am pleased to continue serving as your pastor. As part of this process, everyone was invited to fill out a pastoral review, and I have received the collated results from the surveys that were returned from the LCG, and after looking them over, I agree wholeheartedly that my office could use more organization, and I will work on it. More importantly, I want you to know that I take feedback very seriously, and those of you who revealed more personal concerns are in my thoughts and prayers as I envision what it means to be pastor here. I would welcome anyone who expressed these types of criticism to talk with me, or with members of the LCG, in person, because I would like to have a better understanding as to how I might better serve you and this congregation. Now, to something completely different.
You may wonder how the people who construct the lectionary arrived at these texts this week-these scriptures are not the most famous stories from the Bible, by any stretch of the imagination. You might recognize the widow of Zarephath , because whenever we focus on Jesus’ first sermon in Luke, where he explains that there were many widows in Israel, and Elijah came only to the widow of Zarephath (a moral for the story that the Old Testament does not even begin to engage), but I think its worth thinking a little more specifically about these stories of resuscitation (I prefer the term to resurrection in cases like this, where the time of death was short, and there is no sense that there was a fundamental transformation in being after the person came back to life). These are the most extreme example of the healing story genre that are so common throughout the Biblical text.
For me, these stories are always somewhat difficult, particularly in times of grief, or when talking with people who are suffering, since most people don’t receive these types of miraculous healings, and the constant pattern of life and death in the world has gone on uninterrupted despite these stories of temporary deviations from inexorable mortality. Because of this, I wrestle with what exactly I’m supposed to do with this. So I want to acknowledge that at the beginning of this meditation.
However, I think, difficulties aside, there are all sorts of things going on in these stories. You have God’s plans within plans, sending Elijah to a widow that supposedly has been warned of his coming, but clearly has no idea she is going to host him, you have this sense that the presence of God is both something to be celebrated, and something to be feared, because if God is close by there is both the chance to be blessed, but also the chance that your sins will be remembered, and punishment ensue, we can remember that while we usually think of raising people from the dead like this as evidence of Jesus’ divinity, Luke tells us that the people claimed him as a prophet, in the tradition of Elijah.
But what I really want to talk about is that in these stories, we learn something more about what God is doing in the world, which should be of particular concern to those of us who claim ‘thy kingdom come, thy will be done’ in the Lord’s prayer, and who have voluntarily chosen to follow the path that Jesus set before us.
These stories very much are stories of God’s mercy and new life breaking into broken situations. It goes without saying that in almost all cases human beings would rather that death might be delayed, all things being equal, and even in those rare times when we might consider saying ‘it was time’ there remains deep grief in the hearts of those left behind. But in this case, there is something more going on. In ancient Israel, the position of widow without children was one of the most vulnerable in all of society. As a result of entrenched patriarchy, women were largely dependent on men for income and status. Your husband defined both your wealth and power. If you lost your husband, your status dropped dramatically, and someone else would need to take care of you. Usually, this would be your children, who hopefully were old enough to take over the work of the family farm. If you were childless, however, you would lose control of your land, and then other, less close relatives would be expected to keep you alive. This would leave you without a secure home, or firm ties to the community.
In addition to the immediate and severe economic challenges there was a theological struggle for childless widows-so much of the promise of life was tied up in progeny. Children were your heirs, your promise, your connection to God’s promise of the land and descendents for Abraham. If you look at Deuteronomy 25, there is a law concerning Levirate marriage, where if a married man died without a child, his brother was supposed to marry his widow, and Deuteronomy says “And it shall be, that the first-born that she bears shall succeed in the name of his brother that is dead, that his name be not blotted out of Israel.” So to have a son, and see them pass away before bearing children, and to know that you will never have another child was in a deep way to be cut off from the community-to be quite literally blotted out. You can get a sense of this despair, when Naomi, in the book of Ruth, returns home to Bethlehem, and tells the people there "Don't call me Naomi, [b] " she told them. "Call me Mara, [c] because the Almighty [d] has made my life very bitter. 21 I went away full, but the LORD has brought me back empty.” (Ruth 1:20).
So, these miracles, to have a son who was lost brought back is a story not only of grief undone, these are also stories of people woven back into the fabric of community, whose futures no longer would be defined by desperate poverty, who found themselves once again with hope.
And this I think is where these stories have something to offer us. Because if we are called to be the loving face of God in the world, then I these stories should shape how we offer love and care and support and encouragement, such that people who face suffering, and poverty, and loss of community, and even deep grief feel that they have a place to go, and a people to care for them.
Now, that’s a pretty high calling-there is a lot we cannot do, and there are a lot of people that we are not going to be able to help, but the story of the Widow of Zarephath in particular gets me thinking about how we participate over time in the lives of people we love and create beautiful things with one another.
And the thing I’d like to call out in particular here is the repeated need for miracles. The widow is in need every single day. Every day she uses the last of her oil, and the last of her flour, and every day there is a little more left. This is living on the edge, and it is a daily reality for many people in this world. And like many people on the edge, sometimes it feels like the whole world is against you. She has braced herself for the worst, to starve to death with her son, only to discover a miraculous salvation in the person of Elijah. Then, when the drought breaks, and things finally seem to be getting better, another catastrophe, and she is back, worse off, maybe than when she had started.
Our lives are like that sometimes, and we have the old sayings to prove it-bad things come in threes, when it rains it pours, why is it always, always me, things of that nature. We face a world where it can feel like there is never a horizon or a break in the clouds. So we as a church have to both be ready to help people over time-to be present again and again when people face long term illnesses, or poverty, or other life struggles there are rarely quick fixes, and to help people in the moment, when they face a one-time problem or crisis.
So I want to celebrate the ways in which we claim this roll of loving presence, doing what we can to be the face of God in the world, whether its visiting Mary Elise in the hospital, making sure that people without transportation get to church every week, supporting MCC’s efforts at relief work in Haiti, or longer term educational ministry through school kits, not to mention the very personal, even private ways that we offer communities of love and care to our friends and family who find themselves in need of both sustained support and crisis intervention, because I think it is in these places where brokenness is restored and people find new life that God is at work today.
We can hear these Biblical stories and wonder about the mystery of miracles, or our own inability to transform the world, but what I would invite you to consider instead are the ways in which we participate in resurrection, helping individuals, families, whole communities transform through our love, our advocacy, and our persistent patience offering what we have to those in need.
One of the most beautiful images of this resurrection, of our renewal and transformation is the way that seeds grow into flowers, in the way that living things pass on and still create the next generation. You may have noticed the Coneflowers up at front, which Jane has been so kind as to provide this morning. They are not just for decoration. What I’d invite you to do is after I’m done here, to come up while Sheila plays, and take a small envelope, and fill it with a few coneflower seeds. They should be ready to plant if you’d like. If getting up is difficult, don’t worry we’ve got some envelopes ready to go for you as well. As you take them, think about the ways that God is inviting you to participate in the world, to be resurrected, to celebrate community, to love those around you so that the world might reflect your care, and may you again and again be reminded that you are a people of God, and may the word of God be always in your mouths.
Amen.