|
Home

"Pressing On In Faith: To 40 and Beyond!"
by The Reverend Nancy L. Wilson
INTRODUCTION by Rev. Wilson:
This month, MCC congregations around the world are observing Fellowship
Sunday, marking the 39th anniversary of the founding of Metropolitan
Community Churches.
On October 6, 1968, 12 worshipers gathered in Troy Perry's living room
in the Los Angeles suburb of Huntington Park, California, to worship
God.
The world took little notice that day.
In fact, the local neighborhood in Huntington Park hardly noticed!
But the ancient Hebrew prophet Zechariah was on to something when he
advised, "Do not despise the day of small things." That October Sunday
in 1968 -- a day of "small things" by all outward appearances -- would
grow into the international movement of Metropolitan Community Churches
over the next four decades and challenge the Church Universal with
Jesus' Gospel of radical inclusion.
Anniversaries by their very nature offer us opportunities to honor our
history, to look at the present with fresh eyes, and
to consider our future. In the sermon below, originally
delivered at MCC's General Conference in Scottsdale, Arizona, earlier
this year, I invite us to see where God has brought MCC today and to
consider the opportunities God has yet ahead of us.
But first, let me take just a moment to look back and remember...
1968 was the year I graduated from high school. It was the year that
both Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy were assassinated in the
U.S. Russia invaded Czechoslovakia to crush the reform government there.
John Lennon sang Revolution and student protest movements broke
out across Europe, Japan, and the United States. Melissa Etheridge was
born; Helen Keller and Karl Barth died. I was on my way to college, not
having any idea that I was a lesbian, or that the church movement
founded by Troy Perry -- a movement that would change and consume my
adult life -- was about to be born. I was passionate then about peace,
ending the Vietnam War, about overcoming racism. The word "feminist" was
not yet in vogue, and it still seemed to be impossible for me to become
ordained as a minister. I tried to think about being something else, and
ended up becoming a religion major anyway.
In 1968, Stonewall had not yet happened. The phrase "Marriage Equality"
didn't exist. We didn't protest "hate crimes"(though they happened all
the time). HIV/AIDS was still far off. The Love That Dare Not Speak
Its Name was still in the closet, both politically and spiritually,
39 years ago. We didn't – we couldn't! - imagine that
something such as Metropolitan Community Churches would be blossoming in
Latin America, Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia and the Caribbean, after
having taken root in North America, Europe and Australia and New Zealand
for decades.
We never dreamed that there were so many who were hungry for a Jesus and
a faith that were so radically inclusive.
Though... actually... Someone did dream it.
And here we are.
Happy 39th Anniversary, MCC! May God bless each of you as we enter
into this new, 40th year for MCC. May the fruit of 40 years of love,
work, preaching, healing, changing laws and changing lives be evident
and obvious in us today!
Rev. Nancy L. Wilson
Moderator
Metropolitan Community Churches
SERMON:
Pressing On In Faith: To 40 and Beyond!
BIBLICAL TEXT:
Hebrews 11:1 - "Now, faith is the substance of things hoped for, the
evidence of things not seen."
Sermon originally delivered at MCC General Conference,
Scottsdale, Arizona . July 2, 2007
The Book of Hebrews in the Bible, especially the famous 11th chapter,
reminds of us of the stories and people of faith. It teaches us that
faith is about vision and spiritual imagination; it is more than what we
can see in the present moment.
MCC is on the brink of our 40th year and we have our own stories, don't
we? We have our heroes and our "cloud of witnesses!" -- Joseph Gilbert,
Ivor Holmans, Evelyn Kinser, Bobbi Powell, Jackson Hall, JoNee Shelton,
Jimmi Irving, and so many more.
Here at this General Conference, here in this room tonight, there are so
many stories. You don't get into a room like this without a story! There
are over 1200 stories right here! (If you haven't told your
story to MCC's Oral History Project, we need to hear from you! Write to
AngelCollie@MCCchurch.net
to learn how you can participate.)
What Rev. Elder Don Eastman calls MCC's "Founding Narrative" is the
story of a young man, still in his 20's, who could not wait for the
Church to get over its homophobia, who dared to preach and celebrate the
Eucharist in his home, at a coffee table, with 12 friends -- and who
dared to call it church. No one gave him permission. No one gave him a
map or an insurance policy; he had no guarantees. No one told him it
would be easy. But he did it anyway, the way young people just do it.
Troy Perry had faith and he practiced faith. And for these 39 years,
he's inspired faith!
Today, young LGBT people in Jamaica, some in their teens, many
in their twenties, are risking their lives for justice and freedom and
dignity. Most of you have read the recent stories of homophobic
violence there. I met a young Jamaican man, Gareth, nearly two years
ago. At age 27, all he was trying to do was go to social work school. He
had not aspired to be a gay leader, nor an AIDS activist. But destiny
caught him in its sights and he could not say no to the needs of his own
people. Gareth told me that what they needed most of all is spiritual
community. It is spiritual community that can fuel and inspire a
movement for human rights. It is spiritual community that MCC is
uniquely gifted to offer.
Sunshine Cathedral MCC has partnered with MCC's Global Justice Team and
Regions 3 and 7 to hold worship services and training events in Jamaica
-- they have seen firsthand the suffering, the fear and the despair. The
young man who led the choir during the very first MCC service Jamaica in
December of 2006, was murdered in early 2007. Every time we go there --
every time! -- there are those who have been killed, or who are missing,
or who have been beaten just for being gay or lesbian, bisexual or
transgender. We struggle to find allies on the ground and we work to
confront the familiar patterns of police brutality. We partner with
Human Rights Watch to bring this to the attention of the world.
Their story is our story -- their desperate need, their great
faith -- it is our story, too.
In Pakistan, an underground church of 200 men and women
shelter LGBT teens who are threatened with death by their families.
In our hearts, we know they are MCC; their story is our story,
too.
Today, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, our church partners with the
Rainbow Railroad, helping refugees from virulently homophobic
countries find asylum in the country that was the first to permit gay
marriage. Over 50 people gather for a support group at MCC Toronto.
Their story is our story, too.
Young people from the SoulForce Equality Ride, including our own
Angel Collie, walk by faith right onto the campuses of
conservative Christian colleges to talk about the spiritual violence
done against God's LGBT children. They walked right into the office of
Albert Mohler, the president of the Southern Baptist Seminary of
Louisville, Kentucky, demanding a conversation about his idea to
eliminate gay babies in the womb by tampering with their DNA. They are
filled with a God-given passion for justice. Their faith, their
story, is our story, too.
Mother of Peace Orphanage in Africa shelters children
whose lives have been challenged by HIV/AIDS, is a place of hope and
healing whose partnership has enriched MCC these past two years.
Their stories are our stories, too.
Teenagers gather this year in Abilene Texas, to pilot a
new MCC curriculum for teens, authored by Beth Stroud,
a defrocked lesbian Methodist minister. Their story is our
story, too.
Homeless queer youth who find shelter at MCC
New York are putting their lives back together. Their
stories of faith are our stories, too!
Tom Hanks, a gay man, a Bible scholar and a friend of MCC, wrote the
commentary on the Book of Hebrews in the new Queer Commentary. How great
to be able to go the Queer Commentary for this sermon! He quotes the
late John Boswell, professor of history at Yale University, who said
that homophobia and religious intolerance always go
together. It was the Southern Baptist Convention (which, by the
way, only recently apologized for slavery), said 20 years ago that "God
does not hear the prayers of a Jew," and that now proposes a 21st
century version of a Final Solution for LGBT people by altering our
genes in-utero. Rev. Dee Dale, who also lives in Louisville where Dr.
Mohler lives, said she is grateful that she knows the "God who made all
my genes, including the gay ones!" And I loved the comment from
Rev. Chip Carson, who said, "I wish they would spend more time
looking for the hypocrisy gene!" What would we do without
humor? If there is a "gay" gene, it and the humor gene must be connected
somehow!
Young people see hypocrisy with a kind of sharp radar that sometimes
still surprises and embarrasses those of us who are older and who grew
up in a culture more used to living with hypocrisy. Sometimes things
just wear us down after a while, and we resign ourselves until some
young voice asks, "Why?" Or, "Why Not?"
The Book of Hebrews says that God's Word is a sword. It is "not a club
to bash the weak," says Tom Hanks, "but a 'sword' to pierce the
conscience of the oppressors and call them to repentance, As a sword,
God's Word does not load us with false guilt, but unmasks real guilt of
the oppressor as well as the failures of the oppressed..."
What Tom calls the "inquisitional violence" of the church has to
stop! It is killing people, it is killing the church, and it is killing
Jesus, I am sure! The voices that want to put down LGBT people
in the church are the same voices that reject women's call to ministry,
and that fail to acknowledge diversity as an inherent, intricate,
beautiful part of God's pattern of creation. When we see vestiges of
inquisitional violence that we inherited from our churches of origin, we
must heal it; we must overcome it in ourselves. We must allow truth and
freedom to breathe in us. We must find the ways to live as Christians in
a religiously pluralistic world, and to live in peace and mutual
respect.
Hanks continues: "Jesus freed us from the fear of death --and from all
lesser fears as well..." For those of us within Metropolitan
Community Churches, that means a range of fears about the future: of
turning 40, fear of failure, fear of coming out of the closet again and
again, fears of what others may think about what I believe.
He notes that the root sin, according to Hebrews, is not listening to
the liberating voice of God and not having faith in that voice and in
God's power to liberate: "At the age of 40, Moses finally decided to be
true to himself, and to the God who created him: he refused to be called
'the son of Pharaoh's daughter' -- his safe, comfortable closet was
shattered! He opted to share the lot of oppressed slaves, God's chosen
people, and lead them to freedom."
Hanks says that faith operates in making visible our faith
in the future: MCC has mostly been below the radar, doing
our work and building our communities for these past 39 years. While
HIV/AIDS threatened to destroy us, at the same time, the Internet has
made communication of our message possible as never before; and it has
enabled emerging LGBT communities all over the world to be connected
into a global community. Our future is about serving those
young, emerging communities with all the passion of the early church,
with all the passion of a Moses finding himself at
40! Life begins at 40, the old adage says, and there
is so much life in us, and so much liberating work to be done!
There are LGBT people with HIV/AIDS who won't live to be 40 unless we
step up to the plate and reach out. The work we do in partnership around
the world can only strengthen us locally, at home. Those of you who know
that, must testify to the others who think we cannot do both.
Our calling is to "Make visible the values" that Jesus preached
and lived and died and rose for so long ago: Justice, love, freedom and
truth! We must be the face, and hands and feet of a Jesus who cares
about justice, who risks for inclusion, who still dares to say "You will
know the truth and the truth will set you free." The world is
hungry for that Jesus.
While we are gathered here this week, I urge us to do several things
about our faith:
Allow yourself to experience the "Great Cloud of Witnesses" that
surrounds us every time we are together like this at an MCC General
Conference. When we are gathered, they gather too --those
who died too young, those who longed to see what we see, those who could
never have imagined MCC in Romania or Eureka Springs, Arkansas; or a
conference on fighting homophobia in Turkey. Those who could not have
imagined legal marriage being achieved, or a virtual church. These
witnesses are part of our gatherings; they pray for us, they inspire us
-- sometimes they haunt us. Always they remind us to remember who we are
and to have faith in the God who created and called each one of
us. They are that great communion of saints: Jim Sandmire!
Edith Perry! Michael Mank! Call out their names!
Hebrews 12 urges us to "Lay aside every weight and sin that clings so
close." This week, here in this place, let us have the faith
to get rid of burdens and fears and to let go once more; let us have
faith to put our ministries, our churches, our people, our future, our
values into God's hands. Let us allow the Holy Spirit to
cleanse and heal and renew us for the years ahead, so that whatever
might be holding us back gets identified and offered up.
Sometimes ministry gets to us. Sometimes we end up carrying in our
hearts and bodies and minds more than our share of pain, or despair,
more than we can reasonably bear. You know, it's really not our church,
it's God's. Let something go: some burden, some pain,
something that has overwhelmed you, something that is so big you have
stopped praying about it. This is a Holy Place, it is Holy Ground; it is
big enough and near enough to the heart of God to handle anything! Jesus
is here, even when he makes us uncomfortable! Get something done
inside of you, that will open up the future for you, that will give you
space and peace and hope in a new way. It takes faith to
do that and we can do it together! We must be open to all that the Holy
Spirit wants to do in us and through us.
Finally, Hebrews admonishes us to "run the race with patience, looking
to Jesus." Hebrews doesn't say this, but I think of it as a relay race.
And at nearly 40, MCC, it is time for some of us to be passing the
baton. Time for others of us to be sprinting to the finish line. Time
for still others of us to be taking up a new baton in new ways.
We do what we do not only for those who are in our churches
now, but for those who are waiting – waiting to hear we exist,
waiting to hear MCC's message and ministry, waiting to find the door, or
waiting for us to make the door wider and more visible and
accessible. MCC's Executive Director, Rev. Dr. Cindi Love,
taught me a phrase this year -- "leveraging our assets." Well, faith is
an asset, and our young people are our assets! Let's find the ways to
leverage that faith and the energy of those young activists!
It takes faith to run this race. The author of Hebrews' called Jesus a
pioneer, a leader of that faith. That same Jesus is here today
among the thousands and ten of thousands and millions, especially young
people, who need to know us and who need to find us, on the margins, in
the shadows, keeping faith that we will have the courage to reach them
with the radically inclusive love of God. I know we will.
Amen and amen.
+ Nancy
The Reverend Nancy L. Wilson
Moderator
Metropolitan Community Churches
www.MCCchurch.org
| Fellowship Sunday, sermon, nancy wilson, 40 |
|