Celebration of Full Communion
The Episcopal Church in the USA : Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Sermon by The Most Reverend Frank T Griswold, Presiding Bishop and Primate, The Episcopal Church in the USA. Delivered at Washington National Cathedral, Epiphany, January 6, 2001
We have come together this morning as Lutheran
and Anglican Christians, along with members of other households of faith, to
celebrate the fact that, through baptism into the death and resurrection of
Christ, we are limbs and members of Christ's risen body, the Church. Knit
together in the communion of the Holy Spirit, which is to share God's own
Trinitarian life, we are as unable to say to one another, as an eye is to say to
a hand, "I have no need of you" (1 Corinthians 12:21), without doing
violence to the integrity of the body.
"In the communion of saints we are all
brothers and sisters so closely united that a closer relationship cannot be
conceived. For in this fellowship we have one baptism, one sacrament, one food,
one gospel, one faith, one Spirit, one spiritual body; and each of us is a
member one on another. No other society is so deeply rooted, so closely
knit." Lutherans will doubtless recognize these words as those of Martin
Luther.
As we are rooted and knit together by the Spirit
in fellowship and full communion, we are called to common mission; and the
mission we share is none other than the mission of Christ and the mission of
Christ's body, the Church. According to the Catechism in the Book of Common
Prayer, "The mission of the Church is to restore all people to unity with
God and each other in Christ." (Here I would point out that for
Episcopalians the Prayer Book is a compendium of doctrine cast in the form of
doxology: of prayer and praise.) "How does the Church pursue its
mission?" the Catechism continues, "It does so as it prays and
worships, proclaims the Gospel, and promotes justice, peace and love. Through
whom does the Church carry out its mission? Through the ministry of all its
members," all who have been baptized into Christ.
How easy it is, particularly as activist North
Americans, focusing our pursuit of mission on the promotion of justice, peace
and love, to overlook the centrality of prayer and worship, and to see the
proclamation of the Gospel as directed toward others and fully accomplished with
respect to ourselves. And yet we all stand in constant need of evangelization
both personally and as ecclesial households. Reformation is not a past event,
but a continual process whereby the Church is conformed in her members to the
paschal pattern of Christ's dying and rising over and over again. Reformation
implies an ongoing encounter with the risen and living One in word and sacrament
and common prayer which so grounds its members that, as they "grow up in
every way into him who is the head" (Ephesians 4:15), they are able to act
and to speak with the mind of Christ. Ecclesia semper reformanda means life long
conversion, life long repentance: making room for "the boundless riches of
Christ" (Ephesians 3:8) and "the wisdom of God in all its rich
variety"(Ephesians 3:10) which, because of our stony, fearful and defensive
hearts strain and stretch us to the breaking point, in order that the word of
Christ may dwell in us richly in all its fresh and freedom-giving truth.
How right it is that as we come together to
affirm our call to common mission as two households of faith within the One,
Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, we do so within the context of the
Eucharist. "In partaking of this sacrament, all self-seeking love is rooted
out. It gives place to that love which seeks the common good…In the sacrament
we become united with Christ, and are made one body with all the saints,"
observes Luther. All self-seeking love is rooted out. Is it? Or do we tend to
emphasize our singularities in order to define ourselves over against one
another - thereby feeding our ecclesiastical self-love - and cry out with
the tax-collector in the Gospel, "God, I thank you that I am not like other
people, other traditions." Christ in the Eucharist says, "No," as
we "all partake of the one bread" and drink from the "cup of
blessing,"(1 Corinthians 10: 16-17) which are the signs of Christ's
boundless and deathless, reconciling love.
"God's word is a sacrament, no less than the
sacrament his word," declares Luther. Are we ready to hear what Christ, the
lord of the Eucharist is saying to the churches as he meets us again and again
in Bread and Wine: "This is my body ... this is my blood ... given and poured
out for you and for all for the forgiveness of sins?" Pondering the
Eucharist as word, the apostle Paul hears the Eucharist speak of reconciliation:
"Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all
partake of the one bread" (1 Corinthians 10:17).
If baptism is the sacrament of our justification
and conveys, according to Luther, "the grace of God, Christ in all his
fullness, and the Holy Spirit with all his gifts," then the Eucharist is
the sacrament of our sanctification. In the Eucharist, we as churches and
members of Christ's body, are drawn ever more deeply into union with the One who
is the Bread of Life "from whom the whole body, joined and knit together by
every ligament with which it is equipped, as each part is working properly,
promotes the body's growth in building itself up in love" (Ephesians 4:16).
On this occasion, the Eucharist in conjunction
with the renewal of our baptismal identity is not just an adjunct - an
appropriate ceremonial addition to our call to common mission - but rather it
is the ground of the communion we share. The Eucharist both summons us and
sustains us as we face the future in all its challenge and complexity as well as
its possibility.
This brings me to today's feast, the feast of the
Epiphany: one of the great days in the Church's liturgical year. Epiphany, which
comes from the Greek, Epiphania, means appearance or manifestation. In classical
mythology the word was used to describe the visible manifestation of otherwise
hidden divinity, either in the form of a personal appearance or through some
powerful act by which it made its presence known. In this sense Paul in the
Second Letter to Timothy speaks of "the appearing of our Savior Jesus
Christ" (2 Timothy 1:10).
As a feast, the Epiphany can be traced back to
Alexandria in Egypt in the third century. In time it was taken up into the
calendar of the Great Church of the East where it became a celebration of
Christ's nativity: the appearance in our flesh of God's eternal Word. Eventually
the church of the East and the church of the West appropriated one another's
feasts. In the process, December 25 became the celebration of Christ's birth.
January 6 then became the celebration of Jesus' baptism - the manifestation of
Jesus' divine sonship - in the East, and the coming of the wise men, the
manifestation of Christ to the Gentiles, in the west. Yet in the West, the
baptism of Jesus, along with changing water into wine, the first of Jesus' signs
in Cana of Galilee, whereby he "revealed his glory," remained part of
the Epiphany celebration.
These moments of manifestation involving water
harken back to pagan water rites observed in ancient Alexandria on January 6,
which were then taken up into the life of the early Church and associated with
the life of Christ. Early homilies, antiphons and indeed several hymns common to
the Lutheran Book of Worship and the current Episcopal hymnal bear witness to
this fuller and ancient complex of themes associated with the Epiphany:
"Songs of thankfulness and praise, Jesus, Lord, to thee we raise,
Manifested by a star to the sages from afar…Manifest in Jordan's stream,
Prophet, Priest and King Supreme…Manifest in power divine, changing water into
wine"(Lutheran Book of Worship, 90; Hymnal 1982, 135). Our lectionaries as
well proclaim this "triple mystery" of divine self-disclosure, as does
the Epiphany blessing which will be given at the end of today's liturgy.
Why do I set all this before you? Simply to point
out that while Lutherans and Anglicans and many other communities of believers
subsist within the western tradition and have much of our inheritance from the
Church of Rome. We do not stand apart from the ancient churches of the East
either, from which so much of our life and tradition have come, as the feast of
the Epiphany makes plain.
It is, therefore, my prayer and earnest hope that
full communion between the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the
Episcopal Church in the United States will lead to ever widening and deepening
relationships of shared life and mission with other churches of the Reformation
as well as the Church of Rome and the churches of the East.
But let us return to today's feast and, in the
light of the Gospel we have just heard proclaimed, ask ourselves what word is
being addressed to us as we formally enter into full communion. The first thing
to note is that the wise men, the Magi, "a learned class in ancient
Persia," according to a footnote in the New Oxford Annotated Bible, are
drawn away from all that is safe and familiar - their studies, their
manuscripts, their instruments of observation - by a star. As in the case of
the Patriarch Abraham, fidelity requires that they leave home and undertake a
journey the destination of which is unclear and unknown and exists solely in the
mind of God. What gives them the courage to venture forth is a deep restlessness
and yearning worked in them by grace, an unsettlement provoked by sacred mystery
which passes all understanding which we know as God.
Is our entering into full communion an act of
expediency or is it a response to a yearning and a restlessness worked in us by
the Spirit who, in our polarized and divided world, not to mention our own
nation, seeks to reconcile us to God in Christ and to one another? If the Church
in its many parts is to be an active sign and minister of reconciliation, it
must live as a reconciled community; otherwise its preaching will be totally in
vain. And so it is that we must leave home and follow the star. To be sure there
is room in our saddlebags for the Augsburg Confession and the Book of Common
Prayer, but a great deal will have to be left behind, particularly attitudes and
self-perceptions which keep us from joyfully welcoming one another as brothers
and sisters in the communion of the Holy Spirit, and from opening ourselves to
the gifts of grace and truth to be found in one another's church.
Our formal declaration of full communion is just
the beginning of the journey. Where we will be led God alone knows. There must
have been times along the way when the wise men rued the day they had left home
and yearned for the familiarity of their libraries, just as the costliness of
full communion as we live it in all its concreteness and incarnate awkwardness,
along with the various anomalies and contradictions that attend every human
venture, no matter how inspired, may make us yearn for the safety of our old
singularities. And yet the star led the wise men on, on to Jerusalem, the
"city of the great King"(Psalm 48:2), the logical conclusion of the
journey. All reasonableness and good sense pointed them to the court of King
Herod, but they had not gone far enough: God's ways are not our ways, nor are
God's thoughts our thoughts (cf. Isaiah 55:8). The divine imagination exceeds
all our efforts to comprehend and contain it, and what use God will ultimately
make of our ecclesiastical arrangements or where they will take us, or require
of us in the days ahead, may surprise us all.
It is the word of the Prophet Micah confirmed by
the star that orients the wise men toward Bethlehem. Christ who is the Word is
also the Way. Christ leads them on beyond themselves; beyond their comprehension
into the very heart of the "mystery hidden for ages in God"(Ephesians
3:9): the mystery of God's profligate, unbounded and ever amazing grace.
And so it is that the wise men, overwhelmed with
joy, kneel and pay homage and present not only their gifts, but also their very
selves to the One "who became for us wisdom from God, and righteousness and
sanctification and redemption"(1 Corinthians 1:30). In the sea of
technicalities we have to navigate as we live into the reality of full
communion, we may find ourselves in danger of losing our focus who is always the
risen Christ. How important it is, therefore, at the beginning of this journey
to kneel together with the wise men and offer all that we are, including our
sins and failures, our fears as well as our hopes, to the risen and living One
in whom all things are reconciled, healed and made whole.
"Having been warned in a dream not to return
to Herod," we are told that the wise men "left for their own country
by another way" (Matthew 2:12). "By another way." Monastic
preachers of an earlier age pondered this phrase and saw in it a reference not
simply to another route, but to an altered and transformed consciousness. The
wise men were changed by their encounter with the Word made flesh: They were, in
the words of the Anglican poet, T.S. Eliot, "no longer at ease ... in the old
dispensation."
It is my further hope and prayer that as we
follow the star, attending to the word that is sacrament, and the sacrament that
is word, we will grow beyond a pleasant parallel existence with moments of
interchangeableness, and find that the grace and gift of full communion
transforms us both as Lutherans and Episcopalians. I pray also that we have the
courage to make the journey that leads beyond the logic of Jerusalem to the
mystery and truth of Bethlehem where, in the words of Martin Luther, "we
can still open to Christ our treasures and present them to Him, as the wise men
did. And how? Behold, His word is written (Matthew xxv.40): 'Inasmuch as ye have
done unto the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me'."
May our full communion so stretch and transform
us that we become an epiphany, a manifestation of reconciling love and service
to the least as well as the greatest, remembering always that "whoever
serves must do so with the strength that God supplies, so that God may be
glorified in all things through Jesus Christ. To him belong the glory and the
power for ever and ever. Amen (1 Peter 4:11).
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