Sunday, December 15, 2013

Sermon for Advent 3, Emmanuel, Mercer Island

Today I want to talk about grief during the holiday season.

We have had lots of funerals this year,
            and there are too many new widows and widowers in the congregation.

This is a time of the year
            when grief comes more readily to the surface,
            when dark thoughts of impermanence, death and loss
come more to mind.

For one thing, the days keep getting shorter, less and less light;
            and “seasonal affect disorder” can set in.

And then there is Christmas,
            a time of the year associated with rosy family scenes,
                        depicted as happy and comforting, full of expectation.

But if you have just lost a loved one,
or if there is nothing to look forward to,
            Christmas cheer may seem like a cruel taunt,
            something hopelessly out of reach,
            a painful reminder of your isolation and loneliness,
                                                                                                of how bereft you are.

Year after year during Advent
I would preached what I called the December sermon.

This came out of past experiences of innumerable Decembers
in which pastoral care situations would present themselves,
and it became obvious
that December was a particularly difficult month
for more people than you would expect.

It seems to me that for many people the month of December
                        can be a real personal wilderness.
As we look around the pews this morning,
the one you are sitting near could be facing grief
                        or some other bleak aspect of December right now,
or it might be you yourself.

What is the personal wilderness that you may be in at the moment?

Is this a time of facing illness, disability, or the death of a loved one,
            or the memory or anniversary of a death?

Is it some other form of personal loss?

Is loneliness, isolation, or “spiritual dryness” familiar to you,
an arid spirit to match the arid desert?

Perhaps you have been struggling with uncertainty about the future,
                        fear of transition, the pain of self doubt.

Or economic hardship,

or the various ways we can become paralyzed and imprisoned through sin,
            psychologically, emotionally, and spiritually.

Or take your pick of addictions,
where there are attachments that bind and imprison us.

Or relationship issues.

In the spiritual geography of our lives,
wilderness wanderings and desert times might be seen as in-between times:
            slumps or 'valleys' between the 'mountain top' experiences.

We like the mountain tops, the emotional highs of these times,           
We have a wonderful experience of God,
but then those lovely experiences tend to dry up and disappear.

I say all of this simply to acknowledge
something of the major dynamics of December
and the fact that everything is not all rosy with joyful expectation.

Having this opened up in the conversation, put on the table,
may, in some cases, be enough – all it takes - 
         to take the pressure off of unrealistic expectations about Christmas.

So if it looks like everyone around us is so together,
            so blest with family and friends,
then we may think we are silently alone.
But - we observe - pain and grief are universal experiences
            affecting each one of us in varying degrees.

Now, in the news the last few days,
            there have been remembrances of Sandy Hook Elementary,
                        on the one year anniversary yesterday,
but the residents of Newtown CT chose not to hold a public commemoration
            but instead to initiate a “Year of Service.” 
Its purpose is to encourage “small acts or large”
            that will bring out “the best in each other
                                                                        through repeated acts of service.” 

Newtown resident and psychiatrist John Woodall
            explained the town’s decision.  He said:
“We thought, really, what grief is
                       is a form of love, but with the loved one gone,
            so it’s really the heartbreak of separation from the loved one. 

So the work of grief is to find a new form for that love,
            to find a new expression for it,
            a new commitment,
            a way to honor the love. . . .
We came back to this idea that a commitment to transform that anguish
                        into a commitment to compassion and kindness,
            that’s where we wanted to keep the focus.”

Grief is a form of love
            so we need to find a new articulation of love, new expressions for it;
            we need to find new ways to love.

This is tremendously powerful.
And that is what the discipleship of Jesus is – new articulation of love.
            That’s the way to find Jesus in the middle of your life,
                                    in the middle of your grief,
                        by this affirmation and exercise of healing love.
This is the way that grief is dealt with.

Actually the resurrection of Jesus removes all grief
            because it is empowerment to love.
That’s what the Holy Spirit is for:
            to carry out that discipleship of loving one another as Jesus has loved us.

In this there is tremendous hope,
            but we’ve got to make that hope real.
You’ve got to find within yourself the strength
                        to do that healing work of love in the family and in the world.

Our hope is based in God's love for us,
            a love so profound that God became one of us,
                        and was born in Bethlehem
            just so that the times of grief and loss,
                        the wilderness experiences of pain and isolation
could be overcome through and dissolve away in
the love of God
present here and now in the Spirit of the Resurrection Jesus.
John the Baptist sent disciples to Jesus to ask,
            “Are you the One who is coming?”
And Jesus said, “Go and tell John what you see -
            the blind receive their sight, the lame walk,
            the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised,
            and the poor have good news brought to them.”

The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand and has come in Jesus.
            And so we are empowered to find a new articulation of love
                                                            and new ways to love.

Don’t lose hope.  Help has already arrived.

Isaiah 35:10
And the ransomed of the LORD shall return, and come to Zion with singing;
everlasting joy shall be upon their heads; they shall obtain joy and gladness,

and sorrow and sighing shall flee away.