{"id":6512,"date":"2025-01-19T08:47:00","date_gmt":"2025-01-19T13:47:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/livingaholyadventure\/?p=6512"},"modified":"2025-01-19T08:49:39","modified_gmt":"2025-01-19T13:49:39","slug":"delighting-in-gods-vision-epiphany-3-january-26","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/livingaholyadventure\/2025\/01\/delighting-in-gods-vision-epiphany-3-january-26\/","title":{"rendered":"Delighting in God&#8217;s Vision &#8211; Epiphany 3 &#8211; January 26"},"content":{"rendered":"<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<html><head><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><\/head><body><p>The Third Sunday after the Epiphany \u2013 January 26, 2025<br>\nNehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10<br>\nPsalm 19<br>\nI Corinthians 12:12b-31<br>\nLuke 4:14-21<\/p>\n<p>Epiphany is the season of divine inspiration \u2013 in scripture, in the praises of the heavens and the non-human world, in our unique and diverse personal gifts, in the laws of the universe and the inner law of our hearts, and in the life of the church as Christ\u2019s body, and in the prophetic call to healing. Epiphany stretches revelation beyond the church building and Christianity to embrace the Whole Earth. Revelation is relational and not just private. God speaks in our hearts and in all creation. Though we may experience God\u2019s presence in the depths of our hearts, we are also part of an intricate fabric of relatedness, which binds us to all creation. Mysticism leads to action. Inspiration inspires responsibility to others.<\/p>\n<p>Today\u2019s readings orient us toward God\u2019s many and diverse revelations in our lives and in the world. God\u2019s law, embedded in our hearts and in the universe, may take many forms. Following God\u2019s law, written in our hearts and in scripture \u2013 dynamic, intimate, and communal \u2013 enables us to experience and share grace in daily life. Divine revelation is found in the depths of our being and awaits our response. Divine revelation is also aimed at our communal lives. Saying \u201cyes\u201d to God\u2019s revelation in our lives binds us to divine inspiration in our congregational, community, and planetary journeys.\u00a0 Revelation is not about an individual and private relationship to God or a transaction to ensure salvation but an encounter that invites us to become healers and companions\u00a0\u00a0 in enacting God\u2019s vision of Shalom.<\/p>\n<p>For many of us, there is little joy in hearing about rules or law. We see law as inflexible and limiting and standing in the way of joy and freedom. It evokes judgment, penalty, threat, and the need to hide one\u2019s true identity and behavior to avoid punishment. In contrast, the Law of Moses is the source of celebration for those who hear Ezra\u2019s words. After years in exile in which the nation\u2019s culture and customs were curtailed and almost lost, the reading of the Law is met with tears of joy. Law is a source of identity and the inspiration to the better angels of our nature. The re-discovery of the books of Law re-defined the people as God\u2019s beloved children and gave them a renewed sense of identity. Remembering the inspiration given to Moses, they were able to rediscover their own center as persons and as a community. The recovery of the Law, as a manifestation of divine providence and care, allowed the people to make a new beginning in relationship with their creator. Law is not external or self-willed but involves the alignment of our spirits and behaviors with God\u2019s vision, and thus is the source of fulfillment.\u00a0 Though the law may seem external, the law of God is inscribed on our hearts and in fulfilling the law of our being, we experience happiness and joy.<\/p>\n<p>While this passage may not resonate with congregant\u2019s experience, it invites preacher and congregant alike to consider what documents of faith shape our identities as Christians. In contrast to the Jews of Nehemiah and Ezra\u2019s time, we don\u2019t typically feel ourselves set apart and this may be a problem in our pluralistic age. (Although we may feel that we are now at the margins in the era of Trump.) In mainstream and progressive churches, we don\u2019t often see ourselves as \u201cother.\u201d North American Christians reap the benefits of our privileged status. Consequently, the boundary between church and culture, church and social values and expectations, is often barely existent. Christians reflect their political persuasions and vision of American identity as much, if not more so, than their Christian faith. Many conservative Christians, especially these days, identify God, guns, private property, success, individualism, and patriotism as interdependent, when a creative distance between God and politics might enable our faith to shape our politics rather than the other way around. To these Christians, the flag on the chancel identifies our faith as much as the presence of the Cross and the Bible.\u00a0 Yet, in the age of Trump, progressive Christians may have to see themselves as \u201cother,\u201d as living by an alternative set of values in the body politic.<\/p>\n<p>Does our faith as Christians serve as a type of \u201claw\u201d that enables us to have a critical relationship to both culture and government? Can our faith define us on Christ\u2019s terms rather than the liberal, conservative, or capitalist agendas? This is an important question as many social and political commentators worry that we as a nation have lost any pretense of a moral compass. While there has never been a \u201cgolden age,\u201d utterly unambiguous morally or politically, in American history, these days bullying, polarization, scorn of science, public lies and exaggerations, and inhospitality have been normalized at the highest level of government. Leaders intentionally choose the worse rather than better angels of our nature, and the ties that bind us as Americans are fraying, and will continue to fray as Christians seek the love of power over the power of love, of demagogues and oligarchs over Jesus. Can we as Christians come up with some sort of common values regarding honesty, civility, and hospitality despite our political differences? Can we put truth and community above individualism and power?<\/p>\n<p>Psalm 19 describes the interdependence of personal and cosmic law. The Psalmist lives in a God-filled world in which all creation shouts God\u2019s existence and reveals God\u2019s love. The divine harmonies of the heavens are reflected in harmonies of the spirit and revealed in our congruence with God\u2019s inner law. The law within and among us sets our spiritual GPS and enables us to be in harmony with the cosmos and faithful to God in our daily interactions. In harmony with the orderly cosmos, we discover order in our personal and community lives. These passages cry out for a mystic vision to guide our relationships and political lives. While we cannot expect everyone \u2013 most especially our politicians \u2013 to be mystics, we can demand that their policies are grounded in reverence for life, both human and non-human, in their use of power.\u00a0 We must challenge self-proclaimed Christians whose politics promote poverty, destruction of the planet, and persecution of undocumented residents, the LGBTQ+ community, and other marginalized people.<\/p>\n<p>The passage from I Corinthians 12 continues last week\u2019s meditation on the body of Christ. We are all part of an intricate fabric of relationships. The well-being of the parts and whole are interconnected. A healthy body depends on each person discovering and living out her or his vocation. This requires that each member receive the nourishment of the whole to which it contributes. We are made for relationship. Our joys and sorrows are one. Out of relatedness emerge the unique gifts of each member of the community.\u00a0 This is true for nations as well as congregations.<\/p>\n<p>A Jewish story relates Rabbi Zusya\u2019s proclamation: if the Messiah comes, the Messiah will not ask, \u201cWere you David, but were you Zusya?\u201d Our vocations are unique, contextual, and always evolving. As we \u201clisten to our lives\u201d (Frederick Buechner), we can \u201clet our lives speak.\u201d (Parker Palmer) Healthy community enables us to discover our vocations in congruence with God\u2019s vision and, thus, in discovering our gifts find ways to share these gifts with others. Accordingly, the church should be a laboratory of vocation, generous in supporting our diverse gifts.<\/p>\n<p>The adventurous preacher needs to remind his or congregants that within the body of Christ:<br>\n\u2022 Our lives are part of a dynamic fabric of interconnectedness.<br>\n\u2022 Each of us emerges from our relationships.<br>\n\u2022 There are no self-made persons, but persons in relationship, actualizing their gifts through a creative synthesis of personal giftedness, community support and influence, mentoring, and divine inspiration.<br>\n\u2022 Every gift and, thus, every person matters in community.<br>\n\u2022 There are many possible vocations within a community, all of which are necessary to its<br>\nflourishing.<br>\n\u2022 Our own gifts evolve all the time.<br>\n\u2022 Our gifts are meant to serve the community.<\/p>\n<p>This image of the body of Christ, while aimed at the church, is not restricted to the church. Responsible Christians must support social structures that enable every child to have the opportunity to realize their vocation. We cannot live in siloes, immune to the pain of the world, but must remember that in the interdependence of life, the successes and failures of others, the joys and sorrows of others, contributes to our own well-being. No one can be left behind either in the congregation as body of Christ or the body politic if God\u2019s Shalom is to be achieved on earth as it is in heaven.<\/p>\n<p>Mark 4 describes Jesus\u2019 first public presentation. Jesus shares the good news of God\u2019s realm as it grows in our world. God\u2019s realm of Shalom reflects the divinely-grounded interdependence of life and involves healing, hospitality, and hope. Invoking the prophet Isaiah, Jesus\u2019 message is profoundly political. God\u2019s presence will bring good news to humankind and this good news is the result of divine initiative and human response. The promise of God\u2019s spirit is that we can become partners in our Creator\u2019s world healing process. God\u2019s realm involves body, mind, spirit, and relationships. As God\u2019s companions, we can feed the poor, visit the prisoner, and heal the afflicted. In the death-full culture of Rome and our own time, followers of Jesus can be rays of hope, revealing a different set of values, guided by loving affirmation.<\/p>\n<p>Our congregations are challenged to be places where good news is proclaimed and lived out, and where humans can experience abundant life. This may mean advocacy for human rights, equality of opportunity, good schools, gun safety, and care for the earth. Accordingly, we need to be intentional in revealing the good news in our lives and our communities. God\u2019s good news nurtures our souls and cells and also the souls and cells of others. We cannot, as Martin Luther King asserts, be what we our intended to be unless our brothers and sisters, locally and globally, are who they are intended to be, living out their gifts as God\u2019s beloved children.\u00a0 In this uncertain time, the church\u2019s countercultural calling to see God\u2019s beloved everywhere, nurture God\u2019s beloved in their diversity, and go beyond our borders to help every person of every nation reach their God-intended vocation.<\/p>\n<p>+++<\/p>\n<p>Bruce Epperly is Theologian in Residence at Westmoreland Congregational United Church of Christ, Bethesda, MD (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.westmorelanducc.org\/\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">https:\/\/www.westmorelanducc.org\/<\/a>) and a professor in theology and spirituality at Wesley Theological Seminary. He is the author of over 80 books including: \u201cHomegrown Mystics: Restoring the Soul of Our Nation through the Healing Wisdom of America\u2019s Mystics\u201d (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Homegrown-Mystics-Restoring-Americas-Visionaries\/dp\/1625249144\/ref=sr_1_1?crid=24U2NPS1MASQ0&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.tYQavWRBjpxUwB2MQahnmeFw69YV-pmgYQLWiYINz-B2fBzXC_yYZlqQ5oNnns0wt8BUsnzpCiCDdZ7zrQcvAdShI5uFhvLpnsHiGRcBTgxVrCtkZGJqXoFivw6nO-3NCc5vbJQB7yRibZBR89QZkXdEFrwyRyhUMNQUxhz2y5ufT8uLMfY96aEEyEgIpS8oBTiuQUmWa4DITuZeXvvrEU2mwtyGA98KLaEXEYH5OLntDuwszIHMZc8vHwqpXl-2V0kVseJxR2Y92vsDZrg38TBzegxk0IH5qNaDKdLE1bxfApR9CpFZ2nD5FpepreSgz0mkUjfbRu5V04TgLB3osEalYgrWjgt-wcLpPGHHuqxnhRceobKcZdSFtktPlS3MOEpCrdGayasb76sdrwTsDqRNTlOLOakdGSuRPtE3jGoJJVfHf5eRQ6vSIFTn4TST.QoiWh1pXiHCzpryccuDcTfi8Xm66hRuY-zGkeHH_IgI&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=Bruce+Epperly&amp;qid=1736944594&amp;sprefix=bruce+epperly%2Caps%2C124&amp;sr=8-1\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Amazon.com: Homegrown Mystics: Restoring Our Nation with the Healing Wisdom of America\u2019s Visionaries: 9781625249142: Epperly, Bruce: Books<\/a>) \u201cJesus: Mystic, Healer, and Prophet \u201c(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Jesus-Mystic-Prophet-Bruce-Epperly\/dp\/1625248733\/ref=sr_1_16?crid=24U2NPS1MASQ0&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.tYQavWRBjpxUwB2MQahnmUaLSSx1pwROcggCiug_8lwwZFZ0GjccxZ3_QiSpjWhzYtRnDcNV64e8PajVgj3igJrAqqOzOCGD9DYJyQNoYENidxbaMi8QcBN1wpVK8s-AF8gKocWAqGS_iKcMN88j9XF8DXug355odxo9eFqmr3Jsks79GJBkmX-vHodhcRNQbpsJOonTyDggpa6zRStnS5_UGFQSC7Eg4xqrUyI5bpJmthKEYwePDBkEnP4OJZcXNmu6lhUclEYrX0dQDHKnOKF5n5xoh8ZJiDfFljr_bZseYY-l4N67yeT9eO6UIHwCIB4YFME9gpHk7TJZzJ7IHfJcaJ14vQy_gZxcCjjE6o78MVg9gpBWt-skEZPF7uJch69PQl4FCjKC3kRf8o08rQDpi0aLevF2ohOjksr_Dua1hkOVo3mHV0qQUw0wC1-q.pq7WOPoYjTGpeVBP9oO1-zmqImzmMnFqXIA954FiL7A&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;keywords=Bruce+Epperly&amp;qid=1736944680&amp;sprefix=bruce+epperly%2Caps%2C124&amp;sr=8-16\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Jesus: Mystic, Healer, and Prophet: Epperly, Bruce: 9781625248732: Amazon.com: Books<\/a>), Saving Progressive Christianity to Save the Planet\u201d( <a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Saving-Progressive-Christianity-Save-Planet\/dp\/1631999214\/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&amp;dib_tag=se&amp;dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Izeq4X0ys4_Tl_sFmG51S9S4a01o3Xuk_s5Dg_lRMhUF3xFhCW-lXRY69uyaA72K7jaW9EC0WAqSq9nvTjBSpSnS9CjOxPSdmWrx5--iK_-YXL6RCCqy5OL6DGWMo6Da.DEEnbId1j6WEOKZNitqAXNRPT_oIzCo-j46lsXAEy6Q&amp;qid=1729933885&amp;sr=8-1\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Saving Progressive Christianity to Save the Planet: Epperly, Bruce G: 9781631999215: Amazon.com: Books<\/a>), and his upcoming book, due out in February, \u201cGod of the Growing Edge: Whitehead and Thurman on Theology, Spirituality and Social Change.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/body><\/html>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Third Sunday after the Epiphany \u2013 January 26, 2025 Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10 Psalm 19 I Corinthians 12:12b-31 Luke 4:14-21 Epiphany is the season of divine inspiration \u2013 in scripture, in the praises of the heavens and the non-human world, in our unique and diverse personal gifts, in the laws of the universe and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":213,"featured_media":6469,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1700,676,190,1679],"class_list":["post-6512","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-body-of-christ","tag-divine-law","tag-justice","tag-shalom"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.1 - 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Bruce Epperly, Ph.D., serves as Pastor at South Congregational Church, United Church of Christ, Centerville, MA. Prior to coming to Cape Cod in 2013, he served on the faculties and often in administrative and chaplaincy roles at Georgetown University, Claremont School of Theology, Wesley Theological Seminary, and Lancaster Theological Seminary. Bruce is currently a professor in spirituality, ministry, and theology in the doctoral program at Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington D.C. He has served as pastor or interim pastor of congregations in Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. 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