Anna Mullen’s 2014 Ash Wednesday sermon

Here’s the sermon given at Peace by Harvard Divinity student Anna Mullen.

Compost & Ashes

Ash Wednesday Service, Peace Lutheran Church

March 5, 2014

The ashes we place on our foreheads this evening serve as an outward reminder and sign of our humility. I just learned this, though you may have already know it, that for the early Christians, having dust on the forehead was an indicator that one has bowed her or his head all the way to the ground in prayer before God. I like this idea that having dirty foreheads – with ashes, or dust, or dirt – is a sign that we have been in deep pray, as if in order to most fully lay our lives before God, we must lay our head on the earth. Touching the Earth brings us closer to God.

As I have been thinking about this idea of bowing our heads literally down to the earth in prayer, I remember something I saw when I was living with a group of monks at monastery in France. Whenever a new brother takes his vows in the community, he lays his entire body flat on the ground in front of the alter. This act of total prostration is not unique to this monastery, but what it highlights for me is our incontestable connectedness to the earth within our relationships to God. It is beautiful to me that in the monk’s effort to give his life over to the community, to show his deepest commitment to God, he lays his body down to be in full contact with the earth. To think of it, we do not jump, or stand on ladders, or climb to the top of mountains to be closer to God. We bow. We get closer to the ground. We lay our foreheads in the dirt and the dust of the earth. 

Perhaps we may recognize that this mark of the earth upon our bodies is unifying. On this Ash Wednesday we hear the words, “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” As Genesis 2 says, “Then the Lord God formed man from the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and the man became a living being.” We are creatures of God’s divine creation, a beautiful combination of dust and the breath of life. We are dirt. We are dust. To our deepest core, we are sisters and brothers with all of God’s creation. In our acts of bowing – of laying our heads on the ground – we remind ourselves of our humble unity with all of God’s created cosmos. And, perhaps in this act of remembering what it means to be created by God out of the dust of the earth and with the breath of sustaining life, we can find ourselves in deeper and closer relationship with our Creator.

When I was working on a farm, educating kids about where our food comes from, I always tried to stay away from the word “dirt.” It has a connotation of unclean, lifeless, burdensome  matter. I would always try to give dirt some dignity by calling it soil. And you know what? Soil – the dust and dirt that we are made of – is pretty incredible stuff. We know that it is from the soil that our food is grown. It is in the soil that the trees that build our homes are rooted. It is within the soil that billions of tiny microbiotic communities that we cannot see with our naked eyes live and thrive. But do you know what I think is this the most amazing thing about soil? The best soil – the richest, healthiest, most vibrant soil – is made out of piles of discarded waste. Our trash. It has a fancy name you’ve probably heard of –compost.

The best soil a gardener could ask for is made out of yesterday’s dinner, dead leaves, eggshells, newspaper, animal manure, grass clippings, and vegetable peels. You throw all of this junk, the stuff you don’t want anymore, into a pile, and you mix it about and turn it over every few months, and you eventually get this incredibly beautiful, nutritious fertilizer from which new life will spring forth. My favorite poet and agricultural advocate Wendell Berry has written that, “Soil is the great connector of lives, the source and destination of all. It is the healer and restorer and resurrector, by which disease passes into health, age into youth, death into life.”

For me, compost is a beautiful metaphor for our season of Lent, a time of self-reflection, repentance, and humility. Lent is a time for us to take the things that make us broken, the things in our lives that we know we want to put behind us, and to offer them up to God so that something new can be created. Like the scraps we throw into the compost pile, we can rid ourselves of the things that get in the way of us being in deeper relationships with God. I know that Pastor Jeff has asked us to think of disciplines we would like to adopt for Lent, whether it be giving something up, or maybe adding something to our daily routines that will enrich and deepen our relationships with God. Whatever your discipline may be, I challenge you to see it as an element of the metaphorical compost pile. If you’re giving something up for Lent, throw it in the pile and watch what new life can come from discarded things. If you’re adding something to daily routines, see it as the pitchfork that stirs the scraps of yesterday to create a vibrant tomorrow.

Just as the gardener uses compost to prepare a garden, Lent is a season of preparation to prepare our heart for the coming of the risen Christ. So as we throw our scrap in the compost pile, as we use our acts of humility and self-reflection to help foster deeper and more meaningful relationships between us and both our neighbors and God, may we make an effort to bow down and remind ourselves that we are dust, and to dust we shall return. May we get our hand dirty in this work of preparation, and when we wipe the sweat off of our brows with soil cover hands, may we see that the mark of our Creator is upon us.       

Create in me a clean heart, O God,
and put a new and right spirit within me.
Do not cast me away from your presence,
and do not take your holy spirit from me.
Restore to me the joy of your salvation,
and sustain in me a willing spirit.
— Psalm 51:10-12
 

Amen.

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Sunday of the Transfiguration

Hill Top Farm, Winter
Hill Top Farm in Winter, Maxfield Parrish, 1949. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus ordered them, “Tell no one about the vision until after the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.” Matthew 17:9.Sunday we turn from our winter church-year seasons toward the spring seasons of Lent and Easter. The Sunday of the Transfiguration is the culmination of the Epiphany season and the turning pole that directs us toward Lent.I really hope that at least a few more of you will give some thought to keeping Lent in a way that is right for you. It’s the season of spiritual planting, of devotions and disciplines. In Lent we are called to do Christian things. As you do Christian things, good things might happen.The world may be served by Christ’s love.

You may experience a sense of purpose and peace beyond your job and the expectations of our society.

Your church community will be strengthened. If we were a soccer team (instead of a congregation) and every member of our team came to every game and to every practice, we would become a better soccer team. Same with a congregation. If the members of the church come to worship on Sunday morning and outside of worship try to do Christian things, the congregation grows and becomes strong. It’s as simple as that, really.

As your Lenten discipline you might

come to church every Sunday in Lent.
attend the special services of the season:  Ash Wednesday, healing, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter.
in addition to your weekly offering, give an extra amount to our anniversary campaign.
call your mother every week.
stop drinking soda or eating doughnuts.
start an exercise program.
It’s your life and it’s your Lent. The possibilities are unlimited.
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James Forbes and a reflection on Yale Divinity School

Last night I listened to a lecture from Yale Divinity School by James Forbes, former pastor of Riverside Church in New York City. It’s a sermon, really, not a lecture. As I listened I was reminded how much I was formed by, and am grateful still for the instruction, traditions, graceful scholarship, commitment to parish ministry and ecumenical vision of Yale Divinity School. Studying there was not the recommended path to ordination in the Lutheran church for students of my age–as it is not today–but it was right for me. I have never regretted for one minute my decision to go there, even though most of my colleagues attended one of our Lutheran seminaries. The Yale Institute of Sacred Music, located administratively between the divinity school and the school of music, drew Kirsten to New Haven. We met there.
When I attended YDS, the faculty included a roster of the most distinguished and famously published Lutheran teachers at one place in this country. Historian George Lindbeck was my academic advisor; philosopher Paul Holmer was my primary teacher (Cornell West was hired right after Holmer retired), ethicist Gene Outka, historian Sidney Ahlstrom, New Testament scholar Nihls Alstrup Dahl were all Lutherans. Jaroslav Pelkan was there, working primarily with Ph.D. students. Just before I arrived, Dean Robert C. Johnson (a Presbyterian) began teaching a course on the theology of Martin Luther, which was always fully enrolled, as I recall. Johnson told us that he could not imagine YDS without a core course on Luther’s theology. Roland Bainton, who wrote Here I Stand, the best-selling biography of Martin Luther, was in his late eighties in the first years of my seminary education. At the middle of the day he would peddle his custom-made 16-speed bicycle up the hill from Sterling Library to have lunch with students in the Divinity School refectory.
Unexpected gifts of YDS came to me from teachers who spoke from the other main corners of the Christian church. There were Roman Catholics: Henri Nouwen, Sister Margaret Farley, known for her controversial (and Vatican censured) work on sexual ethics; the great liturgical scholar Aidan Kavanagh, a Benedictine monk who taught the principles of worship. Theologians David Kelsey, Hans Frei and Brevard Childs who came from the Reformed tradition, I believe. There were New England Congregationalists such as Bainton, biblical scholar Davie Napier and Dean Harry Adams; and Episcopalians Rowan Greer, who taught the Early Church Fathers, and Dean Kelly Clark in his seersucker blazer, blue jeans and boat shoes.
Finally (and, I’m thinking tonight, most importantly) there was Yale Divinity School’s solid connection to the historic black churches. During my years at YDS there was always at least one visiting preaching teacher from a black church in New York City. The thought must have been that in order to understand American Christian churches, students needed to become acquainted with, and hear from, that bright and boisterous corner of the Protestant world. James Forbes still represents that powerful branch of Christian thought and practice in America. Here’s the link to the lecture. http://new.livestream.com/yaledivinityschool/forbes Forbes begins about 17 minutes into the video.
Jeff

James Forbes on Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks

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good thoughts and sounds on another snowy day

Earlier this month Jeff Stein took part in a program of music and readings in Arizona. It’s a bit of inspiration on another snowy day.  http://www.meetup.com/thefusionfoundation/events/162764992/

I wrote about the St Olaf College band tour. Here’s a link to a video of their home concert, back in Northfield, Minnesota. http://www.stolaf.edu/multimedia/play/?e=956 Many members of the band hope to go on to careers in music. Others, like Matt, just enjoy playing. The remarkable director, Timothy Mahr, fills the spaces between the pieces with fascinating commentary. The talented flute soloist, Chappy Gibb, has relatives who attend St Mary’s Episcopal Church in Newton Lower Falls, the congregation Kirsten serves as music director.

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February 16, 2014

Love the Lord your God, walk in his ways, observe his commands… Deuteronomy 30:16
Game Night this Saturday at 5:30 pm!  Bring a game, or just come and play games that others brought, and a dessert to share. If you haven’t signed up just send an email to me or to a member of the anniversary committee.

We continue our discussion of the law and the gospel and the distinction between the two. The Protestant Reformers thought that being able to tell the difference between law and gospel (command and promise) was the task of the theologian. Straightening out these lines of thinking is critical to clear understanding of what the Christian faith is, to what Christians believe and teach. So we’ll think about it a little bit more on Sunday. The core idea I am thinking about this week is of the Christian faith-law and gospel-as a life into which one is invited. An invitation given and received could carry all the good things the Christian faith promises: blessing, love, belonging, vocation, instruction, security and peace. The sermon on the mount is our text. In it Jesus sounds strict and stern, as if he is preaching a fiery new law. We’ll try to understand that, and let the words of gospel promise appear through the demands of the law.

The choir rehearses at 8:45 am.

Remember to bring in  food for the Wayland Food Pantry. Let’s fill up our basket in the next couple weeks.

Rejoicing Spirits Sunday at 4 pm.

Remember to sign up to have your photo taken for our directory. You can do this easily by visiting our website. http://www.peacewayland.org

Senior lunch Thursday, February 20 at 12 noon, followed by a presentation by Wayland archeologist Tonya Largy at 12:30 pm.

350MA meeting here Thursday, February 20  at 7 pm. Speak to Ron Riggert for more information.

Next Sunday Anna Mullen will be here to begin our discussion of the ELCA social statement Caring for Creation. I hope many of you will plan to come.

Remember to go to our website and sign up to make an appointment for a family portrait.

Looking ahead to Lent

We’re moving through the season of Epiphany and into the season of Lent. I hope that all of you will begin thinking about a Lenten discipline that is right for you. If you take a moment to reflect on your life you will probably identify your discipline:  what is missing from your life? what would make you healthier, happier, a better father, mother, husband or wife? what is missing from your spiritual life? Lent will be a time for personal self-assessment. I hope that the
church might help you live a more satisfying and fulfilling life by inviting you into a deeper kind of Christian discipleship, whatever that may mean to you.

During Lent children Grade 2 and older will be invited to prepare for their first communion. Our confirmation students will help in the instruction. The meetings will be scheduled for Sunday evenings.

Students in Grades 5 and 6 will be invited to learn about being an acolyte. They will be instructed by our sacristan, Milly Engberg. Following their instruction they will be begin their years of service as acolytes.

We will worship with our friends from Lutheran Church of Framingham and from Church of the Holy Spirit.

Anna Mullen will help us think about Christian care of creation. We’ll make plans for our garden.

50th anniversary events have been scheduled.

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Tonya Largy presentation at Peace

All are welcome to join the members of Peace Lutheran Church in Wayland for a special presentation by local archeologist Tonya Largy, M.A., titled “Archaeological Evidence of Wayland’s First Residents,” to be held on Thursday, February 20 at 12:30pm in the church’s fellowship hall. This presentation will discuss archeological evidence and artifacts found from five different excavation sites in the Wayland area, which include recovered artifacts that represent periods going back to 8,000 years ago. One endangered pre-colonial site, excavated under a state permit from the Massachusetts Historical Commission over a twenty-eight year period, produced radiocarbon dates indicating the Native people continued to live here for thousands of years before the arrival of Europeans. Anyone who has found or inherited Native American artifacts is encouraged to bring them to be identified.

Tonya Largy is an archeological consultant specializing in the analysis of plant and animal remains from archaeological sites. She is also on the staff of the Zooarcheology Laboratory, Peabody Museum, Harvard University. Tonya has been active in Wayland archaeology since the late 1970’s and was a co-founder of the Wayland Archaeology Group, an arm of the Wayland Historical Commission of which she is a member. She has served as a Trustee and President of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society.

This event is part of Peace Lutheran Church’s 50th anniversary celebration. Attendees are welcome to bring a sack lunch to enjoy with church members before the presentation beings. Admission is free and light refreshments will be provided. Peace Lutheran Church is located at 107 Concord Road, Wayland.

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weekend notes 2/15

The members of the anniversary are doing terrific work organizing activities and fun events for us. If you haven’t looked at the facebook page, take a minute to do that. facebook.com/PeaceLutheranWayland    Here are some upcoming anniversary events.
Game night with pizza!  Saturday, February 15. There will be a sign-up sheet at church tomorrow. Bring a game to play with your church friends and a dessert to share.
Church directory sign-ups are underway. Sign up to have your picture taken tomorrow at church.
It was great to have Anna Mullen and Anna Fett with us last week. Anna Mullen took part in an intergenerational forum discussion on the environment. We are going to continue our discussions with Anna on these topics. I believe this is the great cause to which we need to attend, as Christians, in our generation. Thanks to all of you who are joining in.
Anna and I have been working on a schedule for her for the second semester. She will help us with a number of projects related to our gardens and grounds, and will take part in our services as well. I have attached a tentative schedule of Anna’s work with us.
NOTE:  Tomorrow, February 9, Anna arrives on the 9:15 a.m. train at Lincoln station. Would someone be able to pick her up?  Please send me an email or call me. Thank you.
The council meets Monday, February 10 at 7:30 pm.
Tonya Largy pre-colonial agriculture talk here at Peace at 1 pm on Thursday, February 20. Anna Mullen is working with Tonya on this.
Ron Riggert is on the planning group for the local node of 350 Massachusetts, an environmental action effort. There will be a meeting here at Peace on Thursday, February 20 in the evening. More information to follow.
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Ladies Night Out II

Photo: The ladies of PLC enjoyed an evening of socializing at Bertucci's Restaurant this past Thursday.  What a great turn out!  Don't worry, men of PLC, you'll have your turn to get together, too!  Details to follow.

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Ladies’ Night Out

peace-noflower-oneinch  Ladies’ Night Out February 2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Family portrait sign up underway

02-Family_Album_Signup_Button

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