An Advent Prayer: God, You Exist... (Advent 3, 2022)

An Advent Prayer... 

God, You exist… in the voice of one crying out — calling — 

in the wilderness, as Scripture tells us…

You exist, 
like the raging wind of December’s winter,
like a power outage in every village,
like the power outside of human control and convenience.

God, You exist…
Like the flickering flame of the candle-light in each house, disconnected electrically,
where family and friends rely on the little light they have, which is beautiful and enough.
In that moment, You exist … 
as a welcome and warm assurance of safety.


God, You exist.
in the inner strength of our embodied self,
when we withdraw into the deep and the hidden
and find the pearl and the treasure, unburied and priceless.

(The joy of the Creator is in us and among us,
and it shall never dry up.)

God, You exist.
In the joy of wordless communication,
the space between the lines,
the silence, the darkness,
in the subtle dance of our emotions…

God, You exist.
In our enjoyment of the familiar, of beloved family and Church traditions…

God, You also exist, in a different kind of joy,
The joyful discovery and development of new traditions and new friendships…
The happiness that comes when we open ourselves to new learning, exploring the separate origin and the common story of two different people, two different communities…

God, You exist.
When we intentionally displace our comfort zone
to build meaningful relationship with our neighbours.

Your joy abides in friendship, and for this reason, we pray:
we pray that, with all those who are treated as if they are in the background of society, the under-loved, the underserved, and those who are estranged from family, friends, and faith, due to their social status or identity, we may be able to “reconstruct" a Christmas experience to hold the pain and offer hope, acceptance, encouragement, and love in this Christmas season.
God, You exist in community.
Mary sings in her Magnificat:
“My soul rejoices. My spirit magnifies my Lord.
My Joy is not an isolated sentiment I keep to myself.
I sing the collective joy God calls us into. Lord, you exist in community!”

God, You exist, in embracing and being embraced, in the times of grief.
May we never deny the suddenness of loss and oppression, and at the same time,
may we never give away the power in us to still feel joy…, which is a gift from YOU.

God, Your People exist.
We pray for the places and the people where and for whom, after the news Headlines fade, the emergency and unimaginable humanitarian crises remain and are still experienced.

God, All Creation exist.
In this Advent season, may we strengthen our relationship with the Earth, and learn to live with the rhythm of it, slowing down, and not being afraid of going deep…
Especially as we move towards the birth of Immanuel — God being with us --, Immanuel — God being with all creation, 
and being born among them —. 
May Truth and Reconciliation, and the recovery of our communion with the Earth in right relations, be good news to us… for learning, humility, joy and transformation.

Blue Christmas Reflection: Exist, God says... Dec 18th, 2022

Luke 2:27, 34-38

Guided by the Spirit, Simeon came into the temple; and when the parents brought in the child Jesus, … Simeon blessed them and said to his mother Mary, “This child is destined for the falling and the rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be opposed 35so that the inner thoughts of many will be revealed—and a sword will pierce your own soul too.” 36There was also a prophet, Anna the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher. She was of a great age, having lived with her husband seven years after her marriage, 37then as a widow to the age of eighty-four. She never left the temple but worshiped there with fasting and prayer night and day. 38At that moment she came, and began to praise God and to speak about the child to all who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem.

 

For those who are feeling overwhelmed in this Christmas season


This month, in this season, this week, even today, you might feel like Mary. Mary, the mother of Jesus, just had this beautiful child, Immanuel, the assurance and loving whisper from God that God is with her, with her child, as God is with all creation; the child, bone from her own bone, flesh from her own flesh, Word from God’s own Word, with a face that radiates and reflects the exact beauty of God’s face. Mary looks at her baby, Jesus, in her arms, his brown eyes astonished by all that surrounds him; this small body, cradled in her bosom. Mary enters the temple with Immanuel and then, unprepared, hears the prophet Simeon, saying, her child will be falling and rising as many would do the same in Israel. Her child will be a sign that will be opposed. Witnessing, journeying with, carrying the faith all the years while being part of the Immanuel’s path on earth, will be painful, difficult and so overwhelming that it might feel like “A sword pierces her own soul too.” Anna prophesies that the path of the child is destined to the redemption of Jerusalem, and therefore, in the end, the story will be one of glory, resurrection, and restoration. But- oh, no, Mary might whisper to herself, hoping that the prophecy may never come true. That can’t be the future for the life of my child, she silently prays … Why must there be pain? 

 

You might feel as well, this month, in this season, this week, even today, that you are like the child, Immanuel, whose heart is pierced through by a sword, who is being hurt by an overwhelming avalanche of agony, deep sorrow, loneliness, betrayal, exhaustion, grief. I mean, grief after grief after grief unending, loss after loss after limitless loss… so much that you feel as if the heavens are breaking, countless burdens fall on you, the weight almost compressing you flat, almost squeezing you out of existence, erasing you from the cosmos… “Yourself down into near nothingness” 

 

Friends, hear this. Here is the voice of God (telling you from the start of Eternity and whispering to you until the end of the story that has no end)

 

Exist… God says, 

 

Exist, just the same as I exist. Immanuel says. 

See the cosmos, and learn how I exist. Eternity says. 

 

(The following is An Advent poem by Avery Arden)

 

As a child packs a snowball 

tight and firm and 

cold seeping even through their mittens 

into palms 

 

So You

once packed the Universe 

into a ball scarce larger than 

the pomegranates that had yet to burst 

into being…

 

But still a greater miracle awaited! 

— a denser packing of Infinity 

into small single atoms — 

 

You! You

 

curled Your endless Being up 

into an embryo 

 

oh! You who grew 

the cosmos on a particle of Breath

 

You packed Yourself down into 

near nothingness — and waited. 

 

You waited there 

in warm dark roundness till 

the time had come for Her to birth you, 

wet and bloody, into an uncaring world. 

 

Somehow the Being who could wear the galaxy 

like a bangle nursed and grew and toddled, 

walked among

us tiny beings of the frail bones…

 

i’ll never, 

ever ever fathom it. 

 

Divinity! if i could hold YOU now 

as Mary held you, in my quaking arms 

i think i might just know why You sustain

 

each instant — now, and now, and now again — 

all of existence. 

 

Seed upon the palm 

tucked lovingly into a rich dark soil 

 

infant on the breast 

fed lovingly from one’s own aching flesh 

 

— but not yet. Not yet — 

already yes — and still 

not yet. 

 

with Earth i wait for You 

with bated breath. 

 

Friends of the Child, you might feel overwhelmed, as if a sword is piercing your heart… The outside noises and even inner thoughts from your mind might shout at you the wrong message — each instant erasing you, working against your true identity, against the bright core of your being. But in the midst of all of these hostilities, dare to

 

exist. 

Friends of Immanuel, 

friends of the Child whom the pierced-heart-Mary holds, exist. 

Exist, you child of God… Exist just as the divinity exists, 

just as the Earth waits. 

Just as each instant is sustained by the densely packed Pomegranate Eternity. Exist.





Sermon: Mary, Martha, and Male Space (Luke 10:38-42), Nov 13th, 2022

Sermon: Mary, Martha, and Male Space 

(The Extension of Love)

Text: Luke 10:38-42


In Korea, I was Mary. I was born Mary, grew up as Mary, and later, in my university years, in marriage and at church, I insisted upon claiming myself as Mary. Growing up, in my small world, I felt like I was surrounded by Marthas, indeed, many Marthas, … They were my friends, relatives, mothers and grandmothers, neighbours, church deaconesses, and so on.

 

My mother was a high school teacher when she met my father. She was an English teacher; an accomplished professional. After she had me, she stayed at home. She was quite happy about it. Staying at home after marriage or after the first child was born was common among the women in her generation. It was my mother’s great joy to give all of her time and energy to feed and care for her two children, me and my one-year-younger brother. My Mom didn’t mind being a full-time Martha for me. She was Martha, happily Martha, and yet she wanted her daughter to be 100 percent Mary. I, her child, played, studied, learned, explored the world with her full support. Mom wanted me to achieve the full 100 percent of my potential. In the meantime, my aunts, my big mother (my father’s older brother’s wife, so, the highest-ranking auntie), my paternal grandmother, considered me to be different from the other female children in the family. They didn’t know exactly how to treat me, because I wasn’t being raised in the same servant-Martha mold as most of the other girls. 


During Korean holidays, Lunar New Years Day and Thanksgiving Day, my paternal family gathered for two to three days at my Big Mother’s home. The typical scene you would see in an ordinary Korean home is that all adult women — aunts, mothers, grandmother, and daughters-in-law — are in the kitchen, with their respective roles: food prep, cooking, tasting, ordering, directing, cleaning, serving those in the living room – the men. All male adults and their sons are sitting, talking, laughing, enjoying the plentiful food and liquor on the tables, with no obligation or expectation to help or even enter the kitchen. Most Korean foods require lots of prepping, constant attention and busy hands. It’s like Christmas or Thanksgiving, without a turkey, but twice as many side dishes that have to be cooked and ready to serve.



In the living room, sometimes my boy cousins would be invited to sit at the table and join the adult conversation. I was the only female child, among my cousins, and what I did was, rather than waiting for an invitation which would not be given to me, I would “intrude” on the male space and sit beside my father for a bit. I was a child Mary in the male space, and I insisted on it. I needed to feel that I was not subordinate or expected to only belong in Martha’s place of servitude.

 

My story of being a child Mary, figuring out where to place myself between Martha’s place and the male space influences how I read and hear the story of Mary and Martha in the Gospel. I would ask what ‘better portion, better choice’ Mary would have actually looked for… What was she claiming? Sitting quietly at the feet of Jesus and listening, or actively figuring out her place in the world to know and hold herself as the child of God, God’s word and wisdom flaming like fire in her heart?

 

It would be interesting to imagine and figure out where Lazarus, the brother of Mary and Martha, might have been at the dinner. Among Marthas, my grandmother, who never showed any enthusiasm for being in the kitchen, was raised in a society which preferred and elevated males and sons. She had not known any alternative understanding about equality. She projected and practiced the only values she had been taught and learned herself — girls need to know that they are worth less than their brothers and male cousins, and women are worth less than fathers and husbands. One year, when the family gathered again for the Lunar New Year holiday, all my cousins and I were given a ‘blessing’ envelope with money, very traditional, and when I found out that I was only given half the amount my younger brother and male cousins got, I was furious. Unhappy and frustrated, I made a complaint. I was in grade 6. 


Every holiday, as many Korean families still do, we had the ritual of remembering and honouring our ancestors. It was painful to me to stand in the line of Marthas — my mother, aunts, female children — and watch my boy cousins and my younger brother come to the front to light the incense and pour the liquor for our ancestors, one after another.

 

One more story about being Mary. After the wedding, Min-Goo and I, newlyweds, started our first home in the makeshift house the church built for their assistant ministers’ family, on the roof of the four-story church building. Min-Goo, newly ordained, became the new assistant minister of the church … The birth of a new prince in the church, while I was recruited as a silent, smiling angel. I remember one lunch at church, so vividly. I was a new bride, and that day, I got a phone call from a lay deaconess who was hired full-time to cook and take care of the kitchen at church. With great delight, she asked me to come down to the kitchen and have lunch together. “Lunch is ready.” All the ministers were called too. I knew that joining the lunch was not an option to accept or turn down – it was mandatory. I went downstairs. In the warm, small room beside the kitchen a wonderful Korean lunch was set up for everyone. About the time when everyone had finished eating, someone lifted their jaw up, like this (show the gesture – its arrogance cuts across cultural barriers). An indication, more than a hint. Looking at me, then, looking at the kitchen sink, messaging me to get up. Start cleaning. What are you waiting for? Many Marthas prepared this table. Are you not one of them? Do your job.

 

Over the years, I met many Marthas, and they all had something to tell me. Comments, advice, criticism, questions, complaints… “What’s your plan after graduating from theological school? (Meaning, the wife of a minister is not supposed to become the minister.)” Mocking me, “You have been educated so much, but look at yourself. You are just a mother with a child, living in this shabby house.” To sum up, why are you trying to be so Mary, when you are, and should be, Martha.

 

I confess that, even after many years, I worked hard to not move from the place of Mary. I was afraid of my “better portion” being taken away, and being placed in Martha’s position, involuntarily, in the patriarchal hierarchy. Partly, “struggling to be the Sun again”, taking the path of ordination, being ordained, preaching, organizing new projects, looking for and initiating new possibilities with those who spark my desire for learning and teaching, has been the way I continue to claim myself as Mary in traditionally male or culturally White spaces. 


Then, over time, especially as I grow older, and the Marthas in my life get older too, “us” verses “them” reversed… Mary versus Martha and Martha versus Mary reverse…

 

I have become more willing to understand and care for the Marthas in my life. I now see their weakness and their strength, their fragility and their perseverance in making their lives work for themselves. I started to forgive them for trying to force me into their own mold; I started to accept them as who they were, as resilient people whose actions lived in the context of their generation and culture. On her passing away, in the last moment of her peaceful leaving, I got a phone call from an aunt to come quickly and visit my grandmother and greet her. My grandmother was not able to move any part of her body, her face unable to make any expression or words. And yet, in the last moment, my heart saw her quickly smiling, perhaps an illusion, but I saw her greeting and her smile that accepted my complicated feelings. Mutual forgiveness didn’t need words, and exchanging the words was impossible anyways, but the extension, the reaching out of love was present.

 

This past summer, my family made a long-overdue visit to Korea. All of my paternal-side family members gathered again for the anniversary of my grandmother’s death. My uncles, fathers, boy cousins, all sat in the living room and exchanged lots of conversation over the Korean delicacies my Marthas prepared in the kitchen. Meanwhile, the Marthas were happy to cook, sitting around their kitchen table and chatting pleasantly. There was a difference from my childhood. My older relatives, now in their seventies, did not hide that they were tired. Their energy, their hands and feet were not the same as when they were in their forties or fifties. I changed too. Over the years, I learned to value how serving others in love, feeding the hungry, caring for children and the elderly, sustains the family and community. On my grandmother’s anniversary, I took the job of Martha, making myself busier than my aunts and mother. I learned the “better portion, better choice” for Mary includes solidarity, holding our sister’s hands, learning to be resilient, loving and revolutionary. Intergenerationally. Interculturally.

 

So, this Sunday, I may not be standing here to present to you a sermon-smart, preaching-powerful “message”, or a lesson. I take this prestigious opportunity to share my story with you and how I approached this Gospel story, based on my lived experience. We bring ourselves, when we engage each story. I love this phrase from T.S. Eliot, “The purpose of literature is to turn blood into ink.” If blood means life, I find my life’s story, my lived experience, the journey of struggling to be the Sun again, in the ink of the Bible. If I had a magic wand, a Gospel wand, and could make the story end with an open-ended question, I would ask Martha and Jesus, (who represents the “male space” in the Bible) to sit with me, somewhere that is neutral, not the kitchen or the living room — creating a third, brave space — , and actively wonder what truly the “best portion, the best choice” for Mary can be; whether we can create a space of “trinity”, not “pyramid (hierarchy)”. The trinity acceptance of Mary, Martha and Jesus to co-create and co-facilitate the empowering love that seeks understanding, solidarity, and transformation of all three parties, like a “family” of God, who is not male, nor female… and which has no segregated corner of what Martha’s task is and what Mary’s better portion is.

 

Extend the love that flows through generations and across cultures; us versus them is outmoded thinking. Mary versus Martha, Martha and Mary versus Male Space… If we intend to seek one another in faith and understanding, all spaces, of service and learning and teaching, need to flow into each other – no separation, no barriers, a community of all, for all.

 

“We have not known You as You should be known.” (Rumi)

 

Extend your love…


Sermon: The Creation of We (The story of Mary and Martha, Luke 10:38-42), Nov 6th, 2022

Sermon: The Creation of We

Text: Mary and Martha (Luke 10:38-42)

It’s my first November in Victoria, and as a few people have told me/warned me… It means a lot of rain! I am also discovering it can mean a lot of wind as well, along with power outages. Even with the quick change of seasons this year, we will stay consistent by continuing to follow our theme… “Telling Our Story, Sharing Our Faith” with a new story: Mary and Martha. When the staff met for the first time and thought about the theme and stories, one of the hopes we shared was, Let’s present each story with an open-ended question… What if God gave us a magic pen, magic wand, and we can change how the story will end… the conclusion part of the story, the last chapter of the story… into an open-ended question? Among the many stories we had to choose from, Mary and Martha stood out. 

So, what do we mean by if you are given a magic wand, how can you change the Gospel story, making a new question, an open-ended one? This picture, A Nail Salon by Chris Buck featured in Oprah Magazine is a good example of creating an open-ended question. 



Intentionally, some things have been flipped. 




Because I am an Asian person, I tend to notice more when I see other Asian women. I see how they are treated, what they do, how many of them appear in a Movie or a Netflix show, and what their roles are, and whether “we” see them at the table for decision-making or forget to even invite them. And when I say “we”, it addresses another interesting question: who “we” are. When I say “we”, in my daily casual conversation, and when we say “we”, in a sermon or prayers during worship, who is assumed to be included, or excluded? For a very subtle example, if we prayed… “We pray for those who are hungry…” “We welcome newcomers….” Who are we? 

It is interesting and challenging work to be mindful and reflect on how we use “we”; those who are assumed as “we” and those who are not. 

Two Sundays ago, Michael E, the testimony giver that Sunday, with the Testimony with Question Mark (“Testimony?”), was going out after service and said to me… “You know, ‘queering’ is what artists often do in their art studio. To see if each part is in balance, they flip the canvas upside down. When you look at the same picture in the same angle all the time, you cannot really find it. When all parts are in good balance even when flipped, the job is done.” 

The key is that when something is not right, something is missing, if something makes you, us, me, uncomfortable or sad, God gives you a new question… A magic, new, Gospel wand to flip the canvas upside down… for imagination. 

When the need for creating a greater, inclusive “we” emerges… When there’s a message, even if it is not spoken, and even if nobody in the room is actually thinking it in the moment, in certain social settings, there are some of us hearing the message:

“You are not from here.” 

“You don’t matter as much as me.” 

“You are less than, not wanted, not as valuable.” 

It is a tremendous burden for those who hear it. 

Barriers adds to the burden. (Language, racism, disability or differing abilities, or gender) 

The magic wand as “rigorous wonder” (Michael E and the philosopher he mentioned), and the creation of “we” will assist us to rewrite the story of our city, church, Canada, Korea, World… Everyhwere.

In today’s story, Mary and Martha play their roles in their places, respectively. There are accepted norms. Martha is in the kitchen. Mary is sitting at the feet of Jesus, learning, and yet in the depiction of the Gospel writer Luke, Mary is so silent. Definitely, Mary is given unusual permission or acceptance at that time, “Crossing the gender-threshold into male space”, the learning, theological education, designated for male disciples. Mary, in the near future, would form the core of Jesus’ female disciples, and yet Luke, the Gospel writer of this story, gives no words to Mary. Mary is silent and passively listening to Jesus while Martha is fussing and distracted in her service. Jesus chides Martha, as if Martha is a little child, and these two sisters are not connected… Luke does not give space in the story for these two sisters, these two women, to talk to each other and figure out a solution together. 

In contrast, in the Gospel of John, Mary challenges Jesus and accompanies him to the tomb of his brother, Lazarus. Martha emerges and “comes out” in the crowd from her hometown and confesses Jesus as Messiah. In Gospel stories, the action of confession is significant, a risky act, therefore, it is proclamation… it’s a kind of coming out. And Martha is doing it. Mary and Martha, with agency in their hearts, alive, undiminished, work together to bring Jesus’ attention to their brother’s death, lead him to mourn with them, and then, Jesus re-writes the story of the life of Lazarus, as the result. The magic wand of a resurrection story, preceding Jesus’ own. 

So, how is the greater, more inclusive, WE, created, with every actor’s agency and joy?


Here, I would like to introduce a concept, called Ren/Yin. It’s from Confucianism, and this letter/character is used in a lot of words in Korean and I am quite sure, in a variety of East Asian languages. As you see, the letter is constructed with two parts. I hope you can find the figure on the left side that looks like a human being standing. Yes, that figure signifies a human being. Now, the two lines above and below signify the number two. It’s about how human community works. It needs more than two people, more than two hearts, more than two stacks, to be built upon. The principal definition of Ren means ‘benevolence’. It also means ‘consideration, compassion, humanity, charity.’ Human feelings of joy, anger, sorrow, happiness arise because every human being has ren as their human nature, as the deeper foundation of all feelings. If there is not the capacity to love as the deeper foundation in the first place, we would not be able to mourn, be disappointed, angry, or joyful. So, Ren is fundamentally about our innate nature and capacity to “feel” and respond, in compassion and benevolence. East Asian religions generally acknowledge and teach about our human capacity to feel and to respond to the other’s needs, other’s suffering, other’s joy, and the universe. It’s not just a religious concept; it’s a societal foundation. The key to building, establishing a community. To feel and respond is called Kameung. Because every being, every human being, everything in the universe, is connected in chi (energy). When we feel, we are moved by the other and move the other. To establish others first in order to establish ourselves is called the art of ren

Here, we live in a society that is built on colonization, and the most problematic structure of colonization is keeping the frame of valuing one over the other. One kind must be better and valued more, and the other must be less than and valued less. Martha in the story represents diakonia. Diakonia does not specify domestic service. Martha is not distracted with kitchen duties as traditionally preached, but with her responsibilities that included care for Jesus’ followers and community.

If I were given a magic Gospel wand to re-write the story, I would insert the art of ren into how these three actors engage, Jesus, Mary and Martha. Us versus them occurs (show the picture of A Nail Salon) when we consider the other, the other’s situation, the others’ feelings, as having no bearing on our lives. We have nothing to do with them. What they feel has nothing to do with our lives, our present, our group. Their problems are not ours; we have no responsibility. This is the frame of us versus them, and the structure that enables this disconnection is the frame of spiritual, racial, gender and cultural hierarchy. One is more valuable than the other. 

In today’s Gospel story, when Jesus says, “Martha, Martha, Mary has chosen the better part.” The better portion is not sitting passively and listening quietly. The better portion we are called to choose is reserving room in our heart for taking a deep breath, pausing, looking, really looking at the other, being able to feel the other’s feeling,

To do so, we need to flip the canvas, actively listen, and paint the next chapter of the story with our Gospel magic wand, "the multi-coloured wisdom of God. (Ephesians 3:10)"

We are able to overcome ‘us’ versus ‘them’ and create and recreate who “we” are … when we say, we! 

It is helpful to remember that, even though we are not the same, and even if we cannot talk about us, assuming we are the same, we feel the same. When we are seen, valued, respected, honoured, included, recognized, Martha, Jesus, Mary, all of us, feel the same. “I am with friends. I could hang out for long time.” “I belong.” “I feel equal.”

Martha, Jesus, Mary, all of us, are connected in ren, the capacity to love and grow connection, seeking faith in understanding. The biggest magic, good news, Gospel wand is that in this universe, the blessings of chi flows rigorously, “God as vast flowing energy” like a stream, living water, enabling us to connect, touch, feel and respond, constantly challenging and changing our perception of who “we” are when we say “we”, in the new creation of “We”… 

So, today, flip your canvas — ‘us’ versus ‘them’ — upside down, and take another look to see the beauty of we.

Sermon: The Images of God in the Reversed World (Matthew 22:15-22), Oct 23rd, 2022

Sermon: The Images of God in the Reversed World   

(Scripture: Matthew 22:15-22)

After the ConXion service, Oct 23rd, 2022,
celebrating the Matty's Birthday at Broad View United, Victoria 

“The Images of God in the Reversed World” Doesn’t it sound like a fiction title, something like my teenager would read from his favourite Japanese animation? ...


... What are the images of God for, and in, the Reversed World... the Kingdom of God? ... The world Jesus was proposing, “A community resistant to the programme of Rome”? 

The images of God in and for a community resistant to the dominant power, that counters the normalization of oppression. ...

... This world in reverse would also encompass Jesus’ eschatological vision (which means the end of the world of as it is now, anticipating the alternative world to come). In this vision, in this world of reversal, the last becomes first and the least and the lost are not only found, but lifted up. What are the images of God that we are called to lift up?

Some years ago, I had the pleasure of leading a youth group, and one high school kid, Kelly, said the Kingdom of God almost sounds like an “inverted” world. He liked the word a lot, inversion. He said he learned it from Physics class. So, in our discussion on Sunday morning, myself and a handful of young people were journeying towards insight… We caught something about the character of the Kingdom of God… It is different from the power and order of here and now, of the present world… or of the past. It’s at least inverted. It’s a world in reverse. The key principles about life, the definition of abundant life, is turned upside down. The table of the Roman Empire is flipped.

Some years ago, I met Marie at church. (I changed the name. The person gave me the permission to write this story in sermon.) She came to a Sunday morning service just after New Year’s Day. Her hair was handsome and short in a two-block cut, just as mine is now. Her eyes sparkled with intense interest, looking forward to something. She was looking for something. After worship, I approached her and asked, “Tell me one thing about you and one thing you are most interested in today.” She said, she has been reading Kwok Pui-lan’s book, (Pui-lan is a super-renowned scholar, known globally for her Asian American women’s theology). I knew right away we could be friends. To get to know each other as clergy and parishioner, and also as friends, one spring day, we walked beside the river at the Forks (where “the two rivers meet” in Winnipeg), and she told me a story about something that sustained her through the most difficult time in her life. 

When she was in school, a professor brought up a question… What if? … Or Imagine … Or just LIVE as if, and not just as if, but truly as if the world is in reverse. Even here and now. As if the world has been turned upside down. A world in reverse.

The world upside down or backwards or as it could be.

Marie told me, in that moment when her professor put the question forward, she thought of a world where all of us were queer, or most people whom she met were queer… and then, that reversed reality would change her life and her engagement with the world. She understood, then, that even in the world of now, she can live “the As-If-World”, with confidence, authenticity, and trust and love about herself and others.

Have you ever been in a lake, or on a river, and seen another world reflected on the surface of the water? (Show the picture). The forest above, and the forest in the water. And you stand on the horizon in between, looking at the two forests. It also could look like the water holds two kinds of heavens above and below, when the water is a mirror for them. I love Emily Dickinson’s poems; in one poem, she illustrated that sitting under her favourite tree, she realized that she was in the middle of the two kinds of tree: The tree above her and the roots under her and under the ground, which must be the size of the tree above. The world is full and filled with two BIG trees. Leaning against her tree, Emily Dickinson sits and composes herself between the two trees, the two worlds. The three worlds: The skyworld, the rootworld, and her poem. (I use these three images from the Call to Worship this Sunday).

That’s one image of God… The Root. The image of God in the reversed world. It is specific, concrete, but at the same time it requires us to imagine with the power of wonder. The image of God is not something you can inscribe on coins permanently; you can only touch it through who you are, through your struggles and your pursuit of justice. Touching our strength is constant work. That’s the image of God I am suggesting… The image of God, in the world, reversed in order. The order of who is the last, first, lost, and found. 

Then, the next question for you, and for me: How specific can an image of God be? It’s our theme question this Sunday. How specific can an image of God be, in and for the world of radical reversal? What is the Root Image that would enable the tree of hope, love, justice, to grow with vigrour, above the ground? 

When I first encountered the term, or the phrase, or the image, “Gay God” in “Radical Love: An Introduction to Queer Theology”, written by Patrick Cheng, I was shocked. Quote: “For example, the September 1972 issue of the Gay Christian, a newsletter of the Metropolitan Community Church of New York, featured a number of articles about “gay theology”. Howard Wells, the pastor of MCC New York at the time, wrote a provocative piece called “Gay God, Gay Theology” in which he described how the gay community has the right to refer to God — whom he called “our liberator, our redeemer” as our “Gay God”.”

I was shocked because the concept of God, the image of the Resurrected One, was, in my mind, too specific. That was my first response. Can an image of God be so specific, such as Gay God? Hadn’t I learned over the years in Theological School, and also at church, that God’s love is Universal, and God is Universal for ALL? Is this very specific image of God as Gay God or any other specific image, able to, even is it legitimate, serve the world? I will leave the answer to you, to your own power of wonder. 

How about Father God? Isn’t that image also very specific? What kind of specific and alternative image of God can empower the “disenfranchised” in the world? A new understanding of God has the power to change how we engage with the world, how we live in and for the world in reverse, the Kingdom of God. When God’s image is too abstract and distant from our life, here at the grassroots, it might serve, without being questioned, the agenda of the powerful.

Wonder is one way to practice queering religion, queering faith, queering the world. Jose Munoz, the deceased queer theory scholar in Cuba, said, in Cruising Utopia, 


“Utopia lets us imagine a space outside of _________ (for him, heteronormativity). It permits us to conceptualize new worlds and activities that are not constrained by ________ (please add your reflection here).” 


Try imagining, in that blank space, a Kingdom that is not constrained by, “on-going colonization” “racism” “fossil companies and banks that fund a climate emergency” and see what they feel like. 

 

Munoz continues, “More important, utopia offers us a critique of the present of what is, by casting a picture of what can and perhaps will be.”

 

One more Munoz quote: “Queerness is … not simply a being but a doing for and toward the future. 

Queerness is essentially about ___rejecting_____ (he said “rejection”. You can use other wording.) the here and now and an insistence on the concrete possibility of another world.”

 

Could this be inviting us to get closer to the fuller definition of the Kingdom of God? Just like when Kelly in the youth group wondered if, perhaps, the Kingdom of God is like the world, inverted by the radical love of a Queering, anti-normalizing God. God who empowers the disenfranchised, lifting up the lost, least, last first and loving them first. Loving all first.

 

This is for now. Today, I shared with you just a few examples of the images of God in and for the reversed world.

We can look for more, search more, find more, celebrate more, because we have lots of time. Advent. Lent. Easter. Pentecost. Today, with the spirit of stewardship, let us invest in the images of God in the reversed world. Let us turn the table of _________ (your words here, for Empire) upside down in faith and wonder. 


Sermon: The Image of God We are Grateful For (Matthew 22:15-22), Thanksgiving Sunday, 2022

Sermon: The Image of God We are Grateful For 

 

In today’s story, Jesus is stuck! He is put in a very tricky spot. The Pharisees and the Herodians, two groups which normally have little to do with each other — The Herodians, who derive their power from the Roman occupiers, and the Pharisees, who align more closely with the occupied and oppressed commoners — declare a temporary truce in order to work together to trap Jesus. These two groups are deeply unhappy about Jesus, this upstart rabbi, and what he has been doing over the previous day, the previous week – even the previous month. What inspired these two different, powerful groups to collaborate? Some time ago, Jesus made a visit to Jerusalem, entered the Temple and overthrew the tables of the money changers. He challenged both the political and religious powers with that dramatic action. ...


Scripture: Matthew 22:15-22


So, in today’s story, the Pharisees and the Herodians compose the perfect question to entrap Jesus, asking Jesus whether it is lawful to pay the imperial tax that funds the Roman occupation. 

 

Should Jesus answer in the affirmative, the adoration of the crowds would likely not only evaporate; it could violently whiplash into opposition. Should Jesus answer negatively, however, then he will have openly positioned himself as opposing the Roman occupation, which is never a wise thing to do. So, they’ve got Jesus trapped.

 

Or as least that’s what they think. Now Jesus, “Wise like a serpent, gentle like a dove” (Matthew 10:16), makes an interesting, ingenious breakthrough… 

 

I have two kids, aged 16 and 11. Their schools start at 8:30 am, and some days, they are still at the kitchen table, fallen into an argument at 8:15 or 8:20! I remind them… “Guys, there’s no end to this debate, because it started with the wrong question!” The questions that tend to cause conflict and hurt are not put on the table for the benefit of the other person. It’s wise sometimes just to let go and to not fall in the direction that the questioner wants to take. I commend that Jesus uses a better strategy. Rather than being distracted by the limited answers that Jesus’ foes have assumed will hurt him, Jesus gets away from the trap like a shrewd serpent, and instead responds by asking a harmless question in return. “Show me the coin used for the tax.” And they brought him a denarius. Then, Jesus asks them, “Whose head [Greek: image ikon] is this, and whose title?”

 

It’s the coin of the Empire — the only coin that could be used to pay the tax in question.  Roman coins with their images of the emperor on them were not permitted to be used in the Jerusalem temple for offerings. The denarius is the specific coin that is required to be used to pay the Roman tax. It is a Roman coin. And on that coin is the image of the Roman Emperor, and his title is printed, for example, “Tiberius, Emperor, son of God”. Thus, the coin violates the Jewish commandment to have no other Gods except for Yahweh. It was a violation of the core faith of the Hebrew people. 

 

Jesus asks whose image is on it. 

 

And the Pharisees and the Herodians answer “The Emperor’s.” 

 

They are holding a coin with an engraved confession of Caesar’s divinity, the declaration of the ultimate authority and the rights to govern and control the far-flung empire, asserting Rome’s power over every town and city and person in the known world. But not their souls, and not their Gods.

There are many good ways to look at today’s story — different understandings and interpretive focus, all of which can be valid; the diversity inspires us in a variety of ways, helping us to learn about each other’s context in life and ministry. 

 

And, today is Thanksgiving Sunday - the first Sunday for us to start thinking about the meaning of stewardship and relevant ways to practice it in our life’s context, and in our present, complex times.

 

So, I have decided to present to you a question, inspired by Jesus’s breakthrough declaration: ”Give, therefore, to Caesar, the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” 

 

What is the Image of God you are grateful for? 

 

If you are asked to think about the counter-cultural one, theological one, the living image of God that would inspire us to nurture hopes, share dreams, build gratitude, spread the vision for God’s world and for ourselves, would it be one of those? How are they different from the image or the images of the Empire… The images of excessive capitalism or excessive individualism, White supremacy, classism, the Doctrine of Discovery, heterosexual patriarchal normativity, ableism, — you name it —… What are the counter-cultural images you find in the world, alternative visions, concepts, ideas, things, arts, poems, that inspire a different worldview? And how can we preserve or change the world, with the Imago Dei (the image of God) in such visions, as the new currency of God’s realm, creatively, collaboratively, collectively, as children of God? Can this be what a church can do?

 

The opening chapter of Genesis shares the verse that we can relate to, as we ask these questions: “Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness.” 

 

‘Likeness’ in Genesis — ikon — is the same Greek word used in Jesus’s question in today’s story, ““Whose head [ ikon] is this, and whose title?” So, Jesus is really asking, “Whose likeness is this on this coin, and what title?” Jesus‘ word choice reminds us of God’s initial pronouncement and promise: We bear, and we must bear God’s likeness, something that inspires closeness to God, kinship to God, and we are therefore, made to be more than we might realize… The image of God is stamped not on coins… but on us… the whole of ourselves… We, all of us, (ALL is important) are created from, and grow into, the Imago Dei…


Broad View United, the banners

Therefore, we are also called to ceaselessly, effortfully, courageously, look for, seek, discover, find, recognize, acknowledge, affirm and spread the images (not just one image, but many) of God in the world. It is an act of stewardship; it is an act of extending, to all, the abundant life God wishes for ALL. Perhaps, we might not always be able to discern the image of Empire vs the image of God, because, in real life, many things are a mix of both — in different ratios. But we can try, in faith, to tug on the strands of idealism, to pull the sincerity and the integrity of God’s image from the complex matrix… We can do the hard work to find the language, the poem, and the lyrics of our faith, our stewardship. 

 

Let’s take a moment, a few minutes of quiet centering, to think about what are the image or images of God, that we are grateful for… What if we were called, employed in God’s Mint, and we were going to make a new coin that God’s realm would use for its future currency, what image would you choose to be on the face of the coin? Would you be willing, open, even excited to invite one another to pull our resources together to create larger possibilities for the images of God in the world to grow, take root, and flourish? First things first: before the garden work, we would need to open our hands, and look for, discover, acknowledge, affirm the seeds… Choose what we will plant on ‘God’s soil… You and I…’ (the title of the next song), as the images of God in the world. The diversity. The sincerity. We need to choose what we are going to plan, to imagine, to design and build such a garden… 

 

The first Sunday in September when Min-Goo and I joined you for our first worship at Broad View was such a fun and engaging experience for both of us. There was, of course, energetic music, hymn-singing in a circle, great coffee, and so on, but what made the one hour fly past as if it were 10 minutes, were the stories that we shared with one another on the three questions… So, let’s make that wonderful time again. 

 

Please find a group of two or three people, next to you, and share the images of God that you are grateful for today… Not just family and friends, even though they are so important, our treasure and blessings… But, in this moment, let’s approach this a bit more theologically or even poetically. Let’s try! What are the images of God, the image of God you are grateful for today, or in the world. What if we were called, employed in God’s Mint, and we were going to make a new coin that God’s realm would use for its future currency, what image would you choose to be on the face of the coin? 


... 

 

Look for the images of God in the world. 

Invest in the images of God to grow, 

take root, and flourish… 

 

Last but not least, remember… the image of God is not for the coin… right? The image of God is not stamped on the coin… God’s image is stamped on us. ALL. Not just as individuals, but the whole of God’s image is on the whole of interconnectedness of everyone’s history, story, identity, their political and spiritual power. ALL includes rocks, soil, earth, air, sea, climate, worms, and bees. Serpents and doves. Not just humans. But “The glory of God is all creatures fully alive”. 


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Sermon: The Images of God in the Reversed World (Matthew 22:15-22), Oct 23rd, 2022

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