Christ's Episcopal Church, Calumet Michigan

Christ's Episcopal Church, Calumet Michigan Join us every Sunday at 10 am. All are welcome! We are a group of Christians gathered.

We believe that every person is made in the image of God--beautiful, unique and beloved.

Please join us today (February 22) at 5:30pm for the service of Ash Wednesday and the imposition of ashes. ALL are welco...
02/22/2023

Please join us today (February 22) at 5:30pm for the service of Ash Wednesday and the imposition of ashes. ALL are welcome.

Please join us and UP Wild!
10/08/2022

Please join us and UP Wild!

08/13/2022

Tomorrow's Gospel lesson is Luke 12:49-56. Take a look. It is one of those hard messages from Jesus that kinda makes you want to stay home from church! But please come. Let's look at it in context and leave feeling glad we took the time. See you at 10:00 am.

A Message for this week: We Are His, Epiphany 4 (C) “When they heard this, all in the synagogue were filled with rage. T...
01/30/2022

A Message for this week: We Are His, Epiphany 4 (C)

“When they heard this, all in the synagogue were filled with rage. They got up, drove him out of the town, and led him to the brow of the hill on which their town was built, so that they might hurl him off the cliff. But he passed through the midst of them and went on his way.” – Luke 4:28-30

This is how it ends, the story that began last Sunday: it is Jesus’ first sermon in his hometown synagogue. Word had spread of all the amazing things he had been doing all over the place. We can imagine the headlines, “Hometown Boy Makes Good!” But how quickly things can turn—and turn bad. Ugly and very bad. They want to hurl him over a cliff and be done with him. And why? All because they wanted a piece of him and his power—which seems fair enough. They wanted to see water turned into wine, the lame healed, recovery of sight to the blind, the whole nine yards. They wanted to see it and experience it right here in Nazareth and right now, thank you very much.

And so do we. That is all they wanted. That is all we want. We are members of his community. We are his people. We are faithful. We want a piece of the action right here, right now, just like the good people of Nazareth.

They felt they deserved at least that much. Didn’t they contribute to his upbringing? Didn’t they put up with his unusual parentage? Didn’t they go to synagogue faithfully every week? Didn’t they study God’s word every day? And pray morning, noon, and night? Didn’t they feel proud when hearing accounts of his marvelous deeds that he had come from Nazareth? He’s one of us, they say! He is ours, they say! Isn’t that why we keep coming back Sunday after Sunday ourselves to eat his body and drink his blood? To claim him as our own? Isn’t he ours?

But listen to his unsympathetic response. He knows what they are thinking before they even say it. He goes to great pains to remind them that our God works in mysterious ways. That God’s power is often focused on strangers far outside the friendly confines of our cozy little communities of faith. He reminds them that Elijah was sent to a foreign widow in Zarephath; that Elisha cleansed a dreaded Syrian. A Syrian! There were people in need right here in our own community. Yet, he reminds them, God has always looked out for those in need beyond the community of faith, beyond the boundaries of our towns, our countries. God’s power is not ours. God is not ours. Rather, we are his.

They don’t want to be reminded of the Biblical story, the story of the community of faith. They want to run him out of town on the proverbial rail, tarred and feathered, and leave him for dead at the bottom of the cliff—just as the people had done when they heard the young prophet Jeremiah, hurling him to the bottom of a well, so they could be done with his constant proclaiming of the Word of the Lord! And you should see the bottom of those town cliffs in Israel. Often, they are garbage dumps. They want to hurl him into the garbage dump, amongst the fires and the ashes that are always burning down there. Yet somehow, he manages to get away. He escapes like his people had escaped from Egypt so long, long ago in that first Exodus, after that first Passover.

All this because they really did not hear him in the first place. Our lectionary suspects we have missed it as well. This must be why we get this story two weeks in a row. He says, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” “This scripture” is the 61st chapter of the Isaiah, where the prophet proclaims God’s care and reversals of fortune for all those in need. The operant word, as always, is “all.” They did not want to share God or God’s care with “all.” God’s care is ours. This Jesus is ours. They do not want to hear about a God who cares about Syrians and Zarephathians and all those foreigners. We want God’s power and care right here in Nazareth and in Nazareth only. He is one of us. He is ours.

They miss what he says. “This scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” Our hearing ought to result in our participating in welcoming strangers, even Syrians and Zarephatians and gentiles of all kinds from all over the world. Our hearing this Word ought to result in our doing the work Jesus does, and, he will tell them later at his Last Supper, those who hear God’s Word will do even greater things than these – greater things than Jesus did (John 14:12).

Jesus reminds them that as covenant partners with God, going all the way back to the wilderness, the Exodus, and the Ten Commandments, that they were the people appointed and anointed by God to live their lives in such a way so as to be God’s demonstration community of faith, hope, and charity for all people—or, as Paul would have it, God’s community of Love (cf. 1 Corinthians 13).

What he is saying with all these stories and proverbs is, in effect, “Get with it. Turn water into wine yourselves. Bind up the brokenhearted. Give hope to those without vision. Liberate the oppressed. Release people from their debts. God has given you the vision of the Year of the Lord’s Favor. Live that kind of life. You don’t need me around here. You are already God’s people called to do God’s work, just like me.”

He is also saying, “Do not think that just because you are faithful and in covenant with God that you have some kind of lock on God’s power. You do only in the sense that you give that power to others. Real others. Really other others, like Syrians and Zarephathians and all manner of strange other people outside of Nazareth—outside of our little demonstration community.”

That is, our God is not a God who lives only in Israel, our country, the Christian tradition, the Church, our denomination, our parish, or whatever boundaries we wish to set. God is not ours. Jesus is not ours. We are his. And we are to go beyond the boundaries we set just as Elijah, Elisha, and Jeremiah did. Jesus, Paul and all those who have truly heard the Word of God in their hearing, in their hearts, and in their lives, know this and live this.

God calls us to work where and when God pleases. If the scripture is to be fulfilled, it must be in our hearing it, our embodying it, our acting upon it – literally, our being it. And to become the fulfillment of the Word of God, we need to let go of all notions that Jesus, the hometown kid, is ours, and begin to figure out what it means that “we are his.” He has a special claim on us, not we on him.

What he said that day in Nazareth is just as true today: Live the life Isaiah proclaimed and God will see to it that all your water is wine—and not just any wine, but good wine, wonderfully good wine that will warm your hearts and make you glad that the Spirit of the Lord has anointed you to do these things and more. All these things and more. Our cups will be filled to overflowing, and all the world will see that the Good News of Christ shines through all that we say and all that we do. This is how we will become a community of Love, a people of faith, hope, and charity – a people who know that we are his people and the sheep of his pasture. Amen.

This sermon, written by the Rev. Kirk Alan Kubicek, originally ran for Epiphany 4 (C) in 2019. (Source: episcopalchurch.org)

Thinking about this week's Gospel: Luke 4:14-21Luke’s account of the beginning of Jesus’ ministry makes a passage from I...
01/29/2022

Thinking about this week's Gospel: Luke 4:14-21
Luke’s account of the beginning of Jesus’ ministry makes a passage from Isaiah (61:1-2) the focal point. Jesus has just been tempted and survived. He had been filled with the Holy Spirit. The Spirit then empowered him to enter his hometown and read this passage aloud. Here, Luke is showing us what has already been made clear in his Gospel account: Jesus has come for the poor and oppressed, those excluded from society. The song that Mary sang (Luke 1:46-55) when she found out she would bear God’s son made clear that this was a Son of God who came to bring good news to the poor. Now, Jesus is telling us, using the scriptures, what the rest of his life will be about. However, Jesus only includes half of the final verse he quoted from Isaiah. The full verse of Isaiah 61:2 is: “to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor, and the day of vengeance of our God; to comfort all who mourn.” God’s favor also includes God’s wrath.

Thinking Questions:
Who are those currently excluded, who you can bring the Good News of Jesus to?
What does the year of the Lord’s favor mean to you? Do you think of favor as including wrath?

(Source: episcopalchurch.org)

Thinking about this week's Readings: Epistle1 Corinthians 12:12-31aThis letter was written by Paul to an early Jesus-bel...
01/27/2022

Thinking about this week's Readings: Epistle
1 Corinthians 12:12-31a
This letter was written by Paul to an early Jesus-believing community in the city of Corinth. In this section of the letter, Paul is promoting egalitarianism despite differences. He uses a metaphor that was often used by the Romans in their political arguments. They would argue, unlike Paul, that certain parts of the body were more important than other parts. They used the body to prove that some people were more valuable than others. Paul uses their own metaphor to exalt the lowly and show the community of Jesus-followers that they needed to be different than the Romans. Growing up in the church, I have heard this passage many times, and it has become very familiar. But now that I realize that Paul was trying to use a familiar metaphor to do something new: to disturb the powerful assumptions about hierarchy.

Thinging Questions:
Do you believe that all parts of the body are equally important? How would you demonstrate it?
What are current metaphors that you believe need to be reinterpreted, like Paul reinterpreted the Roman metaphor of the body?

(source: episcopalchurch.org)

Thinking about this week's Psalm: Psalm 19This psalm is divided into two distinct parts. In verses 1-6, the text tells u...
01/26/2022

Thinking about this week's Psalm: Psalm 19
This psalm is divided into two distinct parts. In verses 1-6, the text tells us that God is revealed and shown through the nature that God has ordained and created to show how powerful God is. Nature does not need words to tell of God’s power, which can be seen in the rising and the setting of the sun every day. Verses 7-13 tell how wonderful God’s law is, and that living according to God’s law will bring joy and “light to the eyes.” It also reminds us that God’s law is more precious than gold. The things that we think are valuable in our society do not compare to a life lived following God; in verse 14, we hear the oft-quoted line: “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, my strength and my redeemer.” Many priests choose this prayer to open their sermons. This line reminds us that it is both our words and our thoughts that God knows and discerns.

Thinking Questions:
Where do you see the power and glory of God in nature? Where have you been able to discern God’s power by observing the natural world?
When have you experienced God’s love and joy as being more important than gold?
How has God’s work in your life made your heart rejoice?
Do you believe that the words of your mouth and the meditations of your heart are acceptable to God? Why or why not?

(source: episcopalchurch.org)

Thinking about this week's readings: Old TestamentNehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10The book of Nehemiah is a continuation of the...
01/24/2022

Thinking about this week's readings: Old Testament
Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10
The book of Nehemiah is a continuation of the story found in the book of Ezra. These two books tell the story of the return of the Israelites to Jerusalem after exile. It is in these two books that they rebuild the Temple and the wall of Jerusalem. Ezra oversees the rebuilding of the Temple and Nehemiah, the wall. After rebuilding both of these important symbols of the religious power of God and the political power of God, the people gather. That is where our portion of the reading today picks up the story.

We are told that all the people (men, women, and anyone who can hear with understanding) gather together to hear the Torah read. What is significant is that this is the first public reading and teaching of scripture for the Hebrew people. Nehemiah is bearing witness to the first service of the word. The tradition of reading scripture and interpreting it begins in this passage. Although this group is celebrating the completion of the temple and the wall, by reading the Torah aloud to all people, they are also recognizing that the people share in God’s power by understanding God’s word. Their interpretation of the scripture focuses on the joy of God, not on the demands of God’s law.

Thinking Questions:
Are there traditions that you are starting that could continue for 3,000 years? How do you think they might change over that time?
When you interpret scripture, do you focus on the demands of God? Or the joy of God?
Where do you see God’s joy in your life?

(source: episcopalchurch.org)

Thinking about this week's Gospel:Mark 7:24-37The gospel today locates Jesus away from Jerusalem in Tyre. He attempts to...
09/04/2021

Thinking about this week's Gospel:
Mark 7:24-37
The gospel today locates Jesus away from Jerusalem in Tyre. He attempts to be unnoticed and wants to keep a low profile. However, his presence is discovered and a Syrophoenician woman seeks an exorcism for her daughter. Jesus seems dismissive as they banter about food for the children and scraps that fall from the table for the dogs to eat. Jesus understands his ministry first to the children of Israel, not to the Gentiles. The Gentiles are to participate in the new creation, but that would only follow after the message had been spread in Israel. Matthew’s account of this encounter records Jesus’ response as acknowledging her great faith. Jesus, recognizing her faith, heals her daughter.

The second miracle, the deaf man with a speech impediment, is one that takes place privately. Jesus wishes to continue his work in anonymity. He heals the deaf man and instructs him tell no one. But as Jesus insists on silence, the man and others who are aware of what has happened go out and tell everyone they meet. The people’s excitement concerning Jesus’ power takes precedence over his demand for secrecy; the accounts of Jesus’ healing ministry are spreading beyond Jerusalem.

Thinking Questions:
The exorcism is performed at a distance, but in the second healing, Jesus touches the man’s ear, spits, and touches his tongue. Do you attach any significance to the difference – that is, from a distance or up-close and personal?
Why might Jesus desire privacy and silence regarding the healing in the second miracle?

source: episcopalchurch.org

Thinking about this week's Readings: EpistleJames 2: 1-10, (11-13), 14-17The epistle reading goes to the heart of the be...
09/03/2021

Thinking about this week's Readings: Epistle
James 2: 1-10, (11-13), 14-17
The epistle reading goes to the heart of the behavior of the community. It seems that there is a problem with the rich being welcomed and treated favorably at the assembly while the poor are not as welcome. James tells them that they are making “distinctions” damaging to the faith community. The reading echoes Jesus’ teaching and that of the Torah: to love God and your neighbor as yourself. The reading today ends with James advising the community that to be a credible witness, they need to express faith in action.

Thinking Questions:
Do you agree with James that we are to be a welcoming community?
How does the reading from James relate to the Proverbs reading and to Psalm 125?

source: episcopalchurch.org

Check our image source, the Gordon Jewish Community Center in Nashville TN, for more images that depict welcoming the stranger:https://www.nashvillejcc.org/clientuploads/Participant_Booklet_2018_PROOF4.pdf

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Calumet, MI
49913

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