Donald Coggan - "The Sermon Preached in Duke University Chapel" (June 3, 1984)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| (church organ playing softly) | 0:03 | |
| (crowd chattering distantly) | ||
| - | Choir, president of Duke, President Sanford, | 6:07 |
| don't clap, don't clap. | 6:10 | |
| - | So glad to see you. | 6:13 |
| I won't speak either except to say welcome, | 6:14 | |
| we're just delighted to have you at Newcomb, | 6:17 | |
| appreciate so much you taking a part in the program. | 6:20 | |
| (harp playing softly) | 6:23 | |
| (crowd chattering distantly) | ||
| (choir singing gently) | 11:02 | |
| (church organ playing gently) | 12:14 | |
| (choir singing) | 12:56 | |
| (church organ continuing) | ||
| (church organ continuing) | 15:46 | |
| (choir singing) | 19:15 | |
| (church organ continuing) | ||
| (church organ concluding) | 19:58 | |
| - | God, whom we gather to worship, | 20:15 |
| loved into being Abraham and Sarah, | 20:18 | |
| Peter and Andrew and Mary, | 20:22 | |
| placed into our midst that we hear God's call | 20:26 | |
| to do justice and be merciful | 20:29 | |
| Jeremiah and Isaiah and Micah and Amos, | 20:32 | |
| visited us in the persons of John Knox and John Wesley, | 20:39 | |
| Martin Luther and John Cranmer, | 20:43 | |
| Pope John the 23rd and Martin Luther King, | 20:47 | |
| Saint Columba and Mother Theresa, | 20:52 | |
| was word become flesh in Jesus of Nazareth, | 20:56 | |
| yearns to be word become flesh in you and in me. | 21:01 | |
| This same God challenges us to know our traditions, | 21:07 | |
| that our vision be expanded, our faith deepened, | 21:12 | |
| our discipleship made more lively. | 21:17 | |
| Come, let us respond to God's bidding | 21:21 | |
| to worship in the spirit of joy and truth, | 21:23 | |
| and to God, let us make our confession. | 21:27 | |
| Oh majestic, gracing God, | 21:50 | |
| Lord of all seasons, hear now our confession. | 21:53 | |
| We declare our sin and seek your pardon, our need is great. | 21:58 | |
| We are a disobedient people. | 22:04 | |
| The gods of this age claim our loyalty. | 22:07 | |
| The values of this age have become the tenets of our faith. | 22:10 | |
| Afraid of death, we are yet careless with life. | 22:15 | |
| War is tolerated, people become but a means to an end. | 22:19 | |
| Your creation, we neglect and abuse. | 22:25 | |
| Oh Yahweh, we regret our sin. | 22:28 | |
| Startle us now by your divine foolishness. | 22:32 | |
| By your outrageous grace, redeem us. | 22:35 | |
| Make us to know our oneness with your created order. | 22:39 | |
| In saving us, cause us to hunger for what is right, | 22:43 | |
| to be merciful indeed | 22:48 | |
| and to bring shalom to this, your world, | 22:50 | |
| through Jesus Christ our Lord, amen. | 22:54 | |
| My sisters, my brothers, hear. | 23:18 | |
| Believe the good news. | 23:21 | |
| There is no power, no person, | 23:24 | |
| no thing that can separate us from the love of God | 23:26 | |
| come to each of us in Christ Jesus, our Lord | 23:30 | |
| in him we are saved, made whole, brought to life again. | 23:35 | |
| On this new morning, | 23:42 | |
| experience God's presence, savor God's grace. | 23:43 | |
| You are forgiven, you are free, | 23:49 | |
| free to live life afresh and with hope. | 23:54 | |
| Let us give thanks, for God is good, | 24:01 | |
| and God's love is everlasting. | 24:04 | |
| Thanks be to God, whose love creates us. | 24:07 | |
| Thanks be to God, whose mercy redeems us. | 24:11 | |
| Thanks be to God, whose grace leads us into the future. | 24:15 | |
| It is a delight, a pleasure to welcome each of you | 24:24 | |
| to Duke Chapel on this very special occasion | 24:27 | |
| as we celebrate those things which bring us together, | 24:31 | |
| the bonds that tie us together as a people | 24:36 | |
| and as a people of faith. | 24:40 | |
| This is indeed an ecumenical occasion. | 24:45 | |
| What else could it be | 24:50 | |
| when we celebrate 400 years of British American heritage, | 24:51 | |
| how at one we are, | 24:56 | |
| and yet how many are the traditions, | 24:59 | |
| political and literary and social and religious among them | 25:03 | |
| all so rich in their diversity | 25:08 | |
| that are born out of this oneness. | 25:12 | |
| To help us honor this day, | 25:15 | |
| we have several distinguished guests this morning, | 25:19 | |
| each representing his or her denomination. | 25:22 | |
| Dr. Dennis Campbell is here | 25:27 | |
| representing the United Methodist Church. | 25:29 | |
| James Chesky, minister of operations and support | 25:33 | |
| for the Lutheran Church in America | 25:37 | |
| is here representing that denomination. | 25:39 | |
| Mr. William Marsh, | 25:43 | |
| who is secretary to the Judicial Council of the AME Church, | 25:45 | |
| is here representing | 25:49 | |
| each of the congregations of that denomination. | 25:50 | |
| Senior Warden John Thomas has been designated | 25:54 | |
| by Bishop Robert Estel | 25:57 | |
| to represent the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina, | 25:59 | |
| and ruling elder Peggy Witherspoon | 26:03 | |
| is here to represent the Presbyterian church USA. | 26:05 | |
| Peggy is a member of the staff | 26:11 | |
| of the Presbyterian Senate of North Carolina. | 26:14 | |
| We are grateful to each of you for being here this morning, | 26:18 | |
| and we will hope that you will return | 26:21 | |
| to your various denominations and adjudicatories | 26:22 | |
| with the assurance of continuing friendship | 26:27 | |
| and the assurance of our prayers. | 26:30 | |
| This morning's guest preacher is a gentle priest | 26:38 | |
| who can and has spoken a tough and prophetic word. | 26:44 | |
| He is, at heart, a pastor, | 26:49 | |
| a man whose ministry is born out of an understanding | 26:52 | |
| of the human condition | 26:55 | |
| and a sense of compassion for the human family. | 26:57 | |
| His is a Catholic spirit, realizing as he does | 27:02 | |
| that there is but one God whom we worship and serve | 27:06 | |
| out of our several and diverse traditions. | 27:10 | |
| He is a scholar pursuing God's truth | 27:15 | |
| from within the disciplines of the academy. | 27:20 | |
| Indeed, it was each of these qualities | 27:24 | |
| that Lord Donald Coggan took with him | 27:26 | |
| into the office and work of Archbishop of Canterbury, | 27:29 | |
| the 101st person to occupy that office | 27:33 | |
| since its creation in the year 597. | 27:38 | |
| Augustine and Selma, Beckett, Cranmer, William Temple. | 27:45 | |
| These are but some of Lord Coggan's predecessors, | 27:56 | |
| each of them leaders of the Anglican communion | 28:00 | |
| wherever it exists throughout the world. | 28:03 | |
| On this occasion, when we celebrate those things | 28:08 | |
| of our faith and our culture that do wed us together, | 28:12 | |
| it is most appropriate that Lord Coggan be our guest | 28:17 | |
| and our preacher, for he personifies, I think, | 28:20 | |
| the spirit that these moments of worship represent. | 28:24 | |
| Lord Coggan, it is a pleasure to welcome you | 28:31 | |
| to Durham and to this university. | 28:34 | |
| It is an honor to welcome you to the pulpit of Duke Chapel, | 28:38 | |
| and we look forward to your proclamation of the gospel. | 28:42 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 29:06 |
| Fulfill now, oh Lord, we pray you, | 29:09 | |
| your gracious promise that your word | 29:12 | |
| shall not return to you empty, | 29:14 | |
| but shall accomplish that which you purpose and prosper | 29:17 | |
| toward the end for which you have sent it. | 29:22 | |
| For your name's sake, amen. | 29:25 | |
| The Old Testament lesson is from Psalm chapter 68, | 29:33 | |
| verses 1 through 10. | 29:38 | |
| "God arises and his enemies are scattered. | 29:43 | |
| Those who hate him flee before him, | 29:47 | |
| driven away like smoke in the wind | 29:50 | |
| Like wax melting at the fire, | 29:53 | |
| the wicked perish at the presence of God, | 29:56 | |
| but the righteous are joyful. | 30:00 | |
| They exalt before God. | 30:02 | |
| They are jubilant and shout for joy. | 30:05 | |
| Sing the praises of God. Raise a psalm to his name. | 30:10 | |
| Extol him who rides across the desert plains. | 30:15 | |
| Be joyful and exalt before him, | 30:19 | |
| father of the fatherless, the widow's champion, | 30:22 | |
| God in his holy dwelling place. | 30:27 | |
| God gives the friendless a home | 30:31 | |
| and brings out the prisoner safe and sound, | 30:33 | |
| but rebels must live in the scorching desert. | 30:36 | |
| Oh God, when thou does go forth before thy people | 30:43 | |
| marching across the wilderness, earth trembled. | 30:46 | |
| The very heavens quake before God, the Lord of Sinai, | 30:51 | |
| before God, the God of Israel. | 30:57 | |
| Of thy bounty, oh God, | 31:01 | |
| thou does refresh with rain thy own land in its weariness, | 31:03 | |
| the land which thou thyself did provide, | 31:07 | |
| where thy own people make their home, which thou, oh God, | 31:11 | |
| in thy goodness provide us for the poor." | 31:17 | |
| Here it ends the reading from the Old Testament. | 31:23 | |
| The epistle lesson is from First Peter chapter four, | 31:30 | |
| verses 12 through 14, and chapter 5, verses 6 through 11. | 31:34 | |
| "My dear friends, do not be bewildered | 31:44 | |
| by the fiery ordeal that is upon you | 31:47 | |
| as though it was something extraordinary. | 31:50 | |
| It gives you a share in Christ's sufferings, | 31:54 | |
| and that is called for joy. | 31:58 | |
| And when his glory is revealed, your joy will be triumphant. | 32:01 | |
| If Christ's name is flung at your teeth as an insult, | 32:06 | |
| count yourselves happy | 32:10 | |
| because then that glorious spirit which is the spirit of God | 32:12 | |
| is resting upon you. | 32:18 | |
| Humble yourselves then under God's mighty hand, | 32:21 | |
| and he will lift you up in due time. | 32:26 | |
| Cast all your cares on him, for you are his charge. | 32:29 | |
| Awake, be on the alert. | 32:35 | |
| Your enemy, the devil, like a roaring lion prowls around | 32:39 | |
| looking for someone to devour. | 32:44 | |
| Stand up to him firm in faith, | 32:47 | |
| and remember that your brother Christians | 32:50 | |
| are going through the same kinds of suffering | 32:52 | |
| while they are in this world. | 32:55 | |
| And the Lord of all grace, | 32:59 | |
| who called you into his eternal glory in Christ, | 33:01 | |
| will himself, after your brief suffering, | 33:05 | |
| restore, establish and strengthen you on a firm foundation. | 33:08 | |
| He holds dominion forever and ever, amen." | 33:14 | |
| Here ends the reading from the epistle lesson. | 33:23 | |
| (symphony playing brightly) | 33:49 | |
| Would the congregation stand | 38:03 | |
| for the reading of the gospel lesson? | 38:06 | |
| The gospel lesson is from John chapter 17, | 38:17 | |
| verses 1 through 11. | 38:21 | |
| "After these words, Jesus looked up to heaven and said, | 38:26 | |
| Father, the hour has come. | 38:31 | |
| Glorify thy son that the son may glorify thee, | 38:34 | |
| for thou has made him sovereign over all mankind | 38:40 | |
| to give eternal life to all whom thou has given him. | 38:44 | |
| This is eternal life, to know thee, who alone are truly God, | 38:48 | |
| and Jesus Christ, whom thou has sent. | 38:55 | |
| I have glorified thee on earth | 39:00 | |
| by completing the work which thou gavest me to do. | 39:02 | |
| And now, Father, glorify me in thy presence | 39:06 | |
| with the glory which I had with thee | 39:10 | |
| before the world began. | 39:13 | |
| I have made thy name known to men | 39:16 | |
| who thou did give me out of the world. | 39:19 | |
| They were thine, thou gavest them to me, | 39:23 | |
| and they have obeyed my command. | 39:26 | |
| Now they know that all thy gifts have come to me from thee, | 39:30 | |
| for I have taught them all that I learned from thee, | 39:36 | |
| and they have received it. | 39:40 | |
| They know with certainty that I came from thee. | 39:43 | |
| They have faith to believe that thou did send me. | 39:46 | |
| I pray for them. | 39:52 | |
| I am not praying for the world, | 39:55 | |
| but for those whom thou has given me, | 39:57 | |
| because they belong to thee. | 40:01 | |
| All that is mine is thine, and all that is thine is mine, | 40:04 | |
| and through them has my glory shown. | 40:11 | |
| I am to stay no longer in this world, | 40:17 | |
| but they are still in the world, | 40:21 | |
| and I am on my way to thee. | 40:23 | |
| Holy Father, protect by the power of thy name | 40:27 | |
| those whom thou has given me | 40:33 | |
| that they may be one as we are one." | 40:35 | |
| Here ends the reading from the gospel lesson, amen. | 40:41 | |
| (church organ playing softly) | 40:49 | |
| (choir singing gently) | 40:57 | |
| May my words and our thoughts be acceptable in thy sight. | 41:50 | |
| Oh Lord, our strength and our edema. | 41:56 | |
| It is surely a mark of great grace | 42:12 | |
| on the part of those who planned this festival | 42:16 | |
| that an Englishman should be invited to preach the service, | 42:21 | |
| the sermon at its openings service. | 42:26 | |
| I take this as a symbolic act. | 42:30 | |
| I think that America is saying to the old country, | 42:34 | |
| "All is forgiven, welcome." | 42:38 | |
| I accept the invitation with warmth and gratitude, | 42:45 | |
| even if with trembling | 42:50 | |
| in the face of the opportunity given me | 42:51 | |
| to speak to this great congregation. | 42:54 | |
| From many visits to this country | 42:59 | |
| and from years spent in Canada, | 43:01 | |
| I know something of the generosity of hospitality | 43:05 | |
| of the peoples of North America, | 43:09 | |
| and I sense it here again this morning. | 43:11 | |
| I want to congratulate those responsible | 43:16 | |
| for the conceiving and bringing to birth of this festival, | 43:19 | |
| for the creative imagination | 43:25 | |
| which has gone into its planning, | 43:28 | |
| the fruits of which we shall enjoy in rich measure | 43:30 | |
| during this week. | 43:34 | |
| Even if I were an historian, which I'm not, | 43:38 | |
| this would not be the occasion | 43:42 | |
| nor would a pulpit be the place for me to tell in any detail | 43:44 | |
| the story which, four centuries ago, | 43:49 | |
| provided the events we now commemorate. | 43:52 | |
| But perhaps you will allow me to share with you | 43:57 | |
| some thoughts which have exhilarated me and saddened me | 44:00 | |
| as I pondered the events themselves | 44:06 | |
| and the happenings which have occurred | 44:10 | |
| between 1584 and 1984. | 44:13 | |
| As a minister of the gospel, | 44:18 | |
| I've tried to set these events against the background | 44:21 | |
| of the revelation of himself that God has given us | 44:25 | |
| in the face of Jesus Christ. | 44:29 | |
| All great discoveries, | 44:34 | |
| all ventures into the unknown seem to be made at great cost. | 44:38 | |
| Man seeks to explore Everest, man learns to fly, | 44:46 | |
| man ventures into space, | 44:54 | |
| but not without initial setbacks and even disasters. | 44:58 | |
| It was so with the adventurers, | 45:04 | |
| so many of them from the county of Devon, | 45:07 | |
| who sought to find out | 45:11 | |
| and eventually to colonize the new world. | 45:13 | |
| Rally himself must have looked back | 45:17 | |
| with a sense of profound disappointment | 45:19 | |
| at what seemed to him the failure of a vision | 45:23 | |
| which he shared with his sovereign lady, Queen Elizabeth. | 45:27 | |
| The unmapped world beyond the ocean | 45:32 | |
| seemed an archipelago of fairy islands, | 45:36 | |
| each waiting to be discovered by some adventurous knight | 45:41 | |
| vowed to leave his bones far away | 45:45 | |
| or to come back rich and tell his tail in the tavern. | 45:48 | |
| But there was many a grief and many a loss of men and ships | 45:56 | |
| before the vision of a new England beyond the seas | 46:00 | |
| gained a semblance of reality. | 46:04 | |
| Perhaps Rally, as he looked back on his intention | 46:08 | |
| peacefully to settle the land | 46:11 | |
| and bring the advantages of England to the native people, | 46:13 | |
| thought of the words of Jesus about a grain of wheat | 46:18 | |
| falling to the ground and dying | 46:21 | |
| before ever it could bring forth a rich harvest. | 46:25 | |
| Four centuries later and with a perspective | 46:32 | |
| which only the passage of years can give, we look back, | 46:36 | |
| and it is a very mixed story that we see. | 46:43 | |
| On the one hand, there is venture enough | 46:49 | |
| to stir the blood of any reader. | 46:52 | |
| There was a good intent. | 46:55 | |
| According to their lights, many of the adventurers | 46:58 | |
| thought less of making private fortunes | 47:02 | |
| than of rendering service to their loyal mistress | 47:05 | |
| and of upholding true religion against hope and Spaniard. | 47:09 | |
| I'm not quite sure that was true of Drake, but let that go. | 47:14 | |
| But all human endeavor is marked and marred by sin, | 47:19 | |
| personal greed, acquisitiveness, and a desire for glory. | 47:27 | |
| These things led to inhuman treatment of natives, | 47:34 | |
| and again and again, history has shown glaring instances | 47:39 | |
| in its sometimes beneficent, | 47:45 | |
| often shameful story of colonization. | 47:47 | |
| Glory and shame are inextricably mixed, one with the other, | 47:53 | |
| but in the long run, | 48:03 | |
| out of the midst of the blood and the sweat and the tears, | 48:06 | |
| where you see the emergence of certain factors | 48:11 | |
| which have proved of immense benefit. | 48:13 |
| - | In the 17th century, this newly discovered land | 0:05 |
| was to prove a place of freedom | 0:11 | |
| for the pilgrim fathers and their descendants. | 0:14 | |
| And later, after conflicts which we would like to forget | 0:18 | |
| if history allowed us, | 0:23 | |
| we see the emergence of an alliance | 0:26 | |
| of two great peoples, | 0:28 | |
| which was to ensure through two world wars | 0:31 | |
| the triumph of justice over tyranny. | 0:36 | |
| Now, | 0:41 | |
| against that very sketchy background, | 0:43 | |
| there are two matters which I want to share with you today. | 0:45 | |
| First, the immense importance | 0:52 | |
| of maintaining and strengthening the alliance | 0:57 | |
| between America and Europe, | 1:01 | |
| and more particularly between America and Britain. | 1:04 | |
| And in stressing this, I refer not merely to matters | 1:10 | |
| of defense, important as these are, | 1:15 | |
| but to cultural ties, | 1:19 | |
| the things of the mind and of the spirit. | 1:21 | |
| Down these centuries we have learned much from one another | 1:27 | |
| in the spheres of science, literature, music, | 1:32 | |
| the arts, craftsmanship. | 1:36 | |
| We have much to learn today. | 1:40 | |
| We have much to learn this week. | 1:42 | |
| We have much to learn in the coming years. | 1:46 | |
| The stretch of water that separates us, | 1:51 | |
| is steadily growing narrower. | 1:55 | |
| The Atlantic is little more now than a pond. | 1:58 | |
| If you think I exaggerate, very well, have it your own way, | 2:03 | |
| but consider the journey which involved Raleigh | 2:08 | |
| and Drake and the others. | 2:11 | |
| In weary weeks and dangerous months of travel, | 2:13 | |
| and which now is accomplished, as I know well, | 2:18 | |
| in luxury and comfort in little over three hours. | 2:22 | |
| This you may say constitute a danger, | 2:28 | |
| for willy nilly, America is thereby implicated | 2:31 | |
| in the follies created by a mounting arms race. | 2:35 | |
| Itself surely the example | 2:40 | |
| of scientific man's lack of wisdom | 2:45 | |
| in spite of his ever increasing knowledge | 2:49 | |
| and the two things are very different. | 2:52 | |
| That is true and it's a sobering thought, | 2:55 | |
| but the proximity of America to Britain | 3:00 | |
| and of Britain to America affords both of us | 3:03 | |
| vast opportunities for mutual friendship, | 3:08 | |
| mutual care, mutual enrichment, | 3:12 | |
| and I see this festival as an example | 3:17 | |
| of what I'm now stressing. | 3:20 | |
| We learn from one another, we two peoples, | 3:22 | |
| we share with one another. | 3:26 | |
| And secondly, I wish to urge the importance | 3:33 | |
| of sharing our joint inheritance | 3:38 | |
| and our abundance with others across the world. | 3:41 | |
| In doing so, I think particularly | 3:48 | |
| of the so-called third world, | 3:51 | |
| more accurately called two-thirds world | 3:55 | |
| or as Willie Brandt in his two reports | 4:00 | |
| has taught us to think of it the south, | 4:04 | |
| the underprivileged south | 4:08 | |
| against the privileged north. | 4:10 | |
| In addressing ourselves | 4:14 | |
| with this huge section of our one world, | 4:15 | |
| we speak from a position of privilege and wealth, | 4:19 | |
| which may or may not be thereby | 4:24 | |
| a position of advantage, | 4:28 | |
| for there are alarming signs | 4:31 | |
| on both sides of the Atlantic | 4:35 | |
| that the rich are growing richer | 4:38 | |
| and the poor are growing poorer. | 4:41 | |
| And when that is so, the seeds are being sown, | 4:45 | |
| necessarily so of strife, | 4:50 | |
| of war, of devastation, | 4:54 | |
| And when that is so, as it undoubtedly is, | 4:59 | |
| men and women of conscience are forced | 5:04 | |
| to ask awkward questions. | 5:07 | |
| How long can a nation go on | 5:11 | |
| increasing its own wealth, | 5:14 | |
| careless of the starvation and deprivation of others? | 5:17 | |
| What sort of nation produces a government | 5:24 | |
| which allows this to happen? | 5:27 | |
| What sort of people prefers physical ease to moral decline? | 5:32 | |
| How long can we go on harping on the theme | 5:39 | |
| of raising our standards of living, heaven help us, | 5:43 | |
| when millions only a few flight hours from us starve? | 5:48 | |
| One world, yes, | 5:56 | |
| but a world riven down the middle | 6:00 | |
| by the divide of famine and illiteracy on the one hand | 6:04 | |
| and luxury and carelessness on the other. | 6:10 | |
| We that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak | 6:15 | |
| and not to please ourselves. | 6:20 | |
| The words of St. Paul are uncomfortable in their directness, | 6:22 | |
| but they are neglected not only at the peril | 6:27 | |
| of the underprivileged, | 6:32 | |
| but also at the peril of the poor little rich men | 6:35 | |
| and women of the north. | 6:39 | |
| Now, I'm fully aware that in sharing our wealth, | 6:46 | |
| be it of material goods | 6:51 | |
| or of things of mind and spirit, | 6:53 | |
| we are engaging in a task | 6:56 | |
| of considerable difficulty and delicacy. | 6:58 | |
| To go to the nations of the south in a spirit of superiority | 7:03 | |
| is to invite disaster. | 7:08 | |
| India and China to take but two examples | 7:11 | |
| had high civilizations before we were so much as thought of, | 7:15 | |
| and we shall do well to bear this in mind, | 7:22 | |
| not least in regard to China | 7:25 | |
| now that that one fifth of the world population | 7:28 | |
| is opening up again. | 7:34 | |
| That warning, however, taken with all seriousness | 7:38 | |
| must not hinder us from offering all we have | 7:42 | |
| while at the same time it makes us aware | 7:46 | |
| of how much we need the insights | 7:49 | |
| which these nations alone can give us. | 7:52 | |
| Africa has much to offer us and Asia too | 7:57 | |
| and Latin America also if we are humble enough | 8:03 | |
| to receive at their hands and to learn from them. | 8:08 | |
| Do I need to say more this morning about the millions | 8:16 | |
| of starving people including children? | 8:19 | |
| Do I need to stress the pathos of illiterate multitudes | 8:23 | |
| who cannot read the instructions on a medicine bottle | 8:29 | |
| or the headings of a newspaper | 8:34 | |
| or the peril of the millions of adults as well as children | 8:38 | |
| who in a given year learn to read, | 8:42 | |
| but because we do not provide them | 8:46 | |
| with the good news of life in Christ, | 8:50 | |
| fall victims to creeds which can only degrade. | 8:54 | |
| We complain if we have to wait half an hour for the doctor | 9:00 | |
| or half a week for an operation. | 9:06 | |
| My daughter living in Pakistan | 9:11 | |
| ministers every day | 9:15 | |
| to patients who have traveled on foot | 9:18 | |
| or on donkey for many days | 9:20 | |
| before they can receive her help, | 9:24 | |
| and then it often comes to late | 9:27 | |
| for the baby is dead and the mother is dying. | 9:31 | |
| But the most precious part | 9:40 | |
| of our joint inheritance | 9:44 | |
| is the gospel | 9:47 | |
| of the grace of God, | 9:49 | |
| the lineaments of whose face | 9:53 | |
| were partially seen by the prophets | 9:56 | |
| and the fullness of whose revelation | 10:00 | |
| is seen in Jesus Christ our Lord. | 10:03 | |
| God forgive us, | 10:08 | |
| we've grown so accustomed to this, | 10:11 | |
| the greatest story in the world, | 10:14 | |
| so used to the ministry of Word and sacrament, | 10:17 | |
| so deafened by custom to the message of the Bible | 10:22 | |
| that we've ceased to marvel | 10:27 | |
| at the miracle of Bethlehem and Nazareth | 10:30 | |
| and Calvary and the empty tomb | 10:35 | |
| and even more. | 10:40 | |
| More of us | 10:41 | |
| have ceased to care deeply about the spreading of the gospel | 10:44 | |
| intended for the whole of mankind. | 10:49 | |
| Now this carelessness, I believe, | 10:55 | |
| has arisen in part because we confuse two concepts: | 10:58 | |
| that of proselytizing and that of evangelizing. | 11:04 | |
| Proselytizing has about it, | 11:10 | |
| at least in its present day usage, a note of coercion, | 11:12 | |
| of pressurizing someone probably against his will | 11:17 | |
| to believe as you do, | 11:21 | |
| to convert him to your religious position | 11:24 | |
| so that he swallows whole your religious faith. | 11:26 | |
| And so far as that's a true definition, | 11:30 | |
| there must remain to that word a very sinister connotation. | 11:33 | |
| But evangelism on the contrary | 11:41 | |
| is essentially something positive | 11:45 | |
| and non-coercive. | 11:48 | |
| It is sharing with others | 11:52 | |
| something you have found almost unbelievably good. | 11:54 | |
| And precisely because you love the person | 12:01 | |
| with whom you are in contact, | 12:05 | |
| you long to share that good thing | 12:07 | |
| or as the Christian would put it, | 12:11 | |
| that supremely good person, | 12:13 | |
| and so you engage in evangelism. | 12:16 | |
| Now, it is true that sometimes evangelism appears | 12:21 | |
| on the scene of history in very distorted forms. | 12:25 | |
| At the worst it becomes proselytism | 12:30 | |
| and at its very worst, it has appeared in history, | 12:33 | |
| in the form of forced baptisms and similar horrors. | 12:36 | |
| But at its best, the church has gone on its mission | 12:42 | |
| to preach the gospel, to baptize, to teach, | 12:47 | |
| to make disciples, sharing of faith, hope, and love, | 12:51 | |
| which are the hallmarks of genuine Christianity. | 12:57 | |
| Holding forth the word of life, | 13:01 | |
| Bible and sacraments in one hand, | 13:04 | |
| the instruments of compassion, medicine, | 13:07 | |
| literacy, education in the other. | 13:10 | |
| Today, the nations of the world | 13:16 | |
| are heaving with unrest | 13:20 | |
| and the map of the world will look very different | 13:24 | |
| at the end of the century from what it did at its beginning. | 13:27 | |
| It may well be that the powers of this century | 13:32 | |
| will give way to new forces, | 13:37 | |
| for it is the lot of all civilizations to crumble and fall. | 13:39 | |
| But the kingdom of God remains, | 13:46 | |
| sure, unshakeable, | 13:50 | |
| and I believe | 13:54 | |
| that if we are humble enough | 13:56 | |
| and penitent enough to go to the world | 13:59 | |
| holding in our hand the light of the eternal gospel | 14:04 | |
| centered in Christ and Him crucified and risen, | 14:08 | |
| God in his mercy | 14:14 | |
| may yet have a work for us | 14:17 | |
| on both sides of the Atlantic to do | 14:20 | |
| and perhaps by a miracle of his great goodness, | 14:25 | |
| he may allow us, even us | 14:31 | |
| to have a share in it, | 14:36 | |
| and that would be to enter our destiny | 14:39 | |
| together, | 14:44 | |
| one with another, | 14:45 | |
| and together with God, | 14:49 | |
| so be it. | 14:57 | |
| Amen. | 14:59 | |
| (solemn organ music) | 15:05 | |
| ♪ A charge to keep I have ♪ | 15:29 | |
| ♪ A God to glorify ♪ | 15:35 | |
| ♪ A never-dying soul to save ♪ | 15:41 | |
| ♪ And fit it for the sky ♪ | 15:47 | |
| ♪ To serve the present age ♪ | 15:54 | |
| ♪ My calling to fulfill ♪ | 16:00 | |
| ♪ O may it all my powers engage ♪ | 16:06 | |
| ♪ To do my Master's will ♪ | 16:11 | |
| ♪ Arm me with watchful care ♪ | 16:19 | |
| ♪ As in Thy sight to live ♪ | 16:25 | |
| ♪ And now Thy servant, Lord ♪ | 16:31 | |
| ♪ Prepare a strict account to give ♪ | 16:35 | |
| ♪ Help me to watch and pray ♪ | 16:44 | |
| ♪ And on Thyself rely ♪ | 16:50 | |
| ♪ Assured if I my trust betray ♪ | 16:56 | |
| ♪ I shall forever die ♪ | 17:02 | |
| - | Let us now affirm what we believe. | 17:15 |
| We believe in God who has created and is creating, | 17:20 | |
| who has come in the truly human Jesus | 17:25 | |
| to reconcile and make new, | 17:28 | |
| who works in us and others by the Spirit. | 17:31 | |
| We trust God who calls us to be the church, | 17:35 | |
| to celebrate life and its fullness, | 17:39 | |
| to love and serve others, | 17:43 | |
| to seek justice and resist evil, | 17:45 | |
| proclaim Jesus, crucified and risen, | 17:49 | |
| our judge and our hope | 17:53 | |
| in life, in death, in life beyond death, | 17:55 | |
| God is with us. | 18:00 | |
| We are not alone. | 18:02 | |
| Thanks be to God. | 18:05 | |
| - | The Lord be with you. | 18:07 |
| - | And also with you. | 18:09 |
| - | Let us pray. | 18:11 |
| Almighty God, creator, | 18:23 | |
| this morning is Yours rising to fullness. | 18:27 | |
| The spring is Yours dipping into summer. | 18:31 | |
| Eternity is Yours dipping into time. | 18:36 | |
| The vibrant grasses, the scent of flowers, | 18:40 | |
| the lichen on the rocks, the tang of seaweed, | 18:44 | |
| all are Yours. | 18:48 | |
| Here in this world, we live in a garden | 18:51 | |
| of Your creating and we are Yours. | 18:54 | |
| Generous Lord, who brings us again | 18:59 | |
| to the warm days of dreaming, | 19:01 | |
| who sets us free in the green pastures, | 19:05 | |
| and beside the still waters, | 19:07 | |
| who allows the lolling sun for a season | 19:10 | |
| and lends us the miracle of trees, | 19:14 | |
| find in us now a rejoicing among the tastes and the sounds, | 19:18 | |
| the flights of the imagination and the returnings, | 19:23 | |
| the music and the poetry, | 19:28 | |
| and encourage in us those gestures | 19:31 | |
| of the mind and soul and flesh. | 19:33 | |
| Whereby over and over we make the days of thanksgiving | 19:37 | |
| and the years of constant praise. | 19:43 | |
| Oh Lord God, | 19:49 | |
| we praise Your name for the rich variety | 19:51 | |
| that is found in the human family, your children. | 19:54 | |
| We thank you for the different songs | 19:59 | |
| by which we sing our joys and sorrows to one another, | 20:01 | |
| for the different languages | 20:06 | |
| in which we speak our hopes and hungers, | 20:07 | |
| for the contrasts of color | 20:12 | |
| and stature and sex that catch our eye | 20:14 | |
| and make us want to know each other. | 20:18 | |
| Glory be to you for the many faces and voices of our family, | 20:22 | |
| now teach us to treasure our differences, | 20:27 | |
| Great God, as evidence, | 20:30 | |
| evidence of the unending richness | 20:33 | |
| of your love for the world. | 20:35 | |
| We pray in the name of our Lord, | 20:39 | |
| the Jew who praised a Samaritan, | 20:41 | |
| who interceded for an adulteress, | 20:44 | |
| who ministered alike to Jew and to gentile, | 20:47 | |
| female and male, | 20:51 | |
| and feared not your love and its requirements | 20:53 | |
| Merciful God who bears the suffering of your creation, | 21:00 | |
| by your power our Lord Jesus healed the sick, | 21:06 | |
| gave new hope to hopeless people | 21:10 | |
| that we cannot command or possess your power. | 21:13 | |
| We pray for those who desire to be healed, | 21:17 | |
| close their wounds, cure their sickness, | 21:21 | |
| make broken people whole again, | 21:26 | |
| and where healing cannot occur, | 21:29 | |
| grant them strength to bear their burdens and not despair, | 21:32 | |
| mindful that your love does not fail, | 21:38 | |
| and that you are the destination of each of us | 21:41 | |
| through Jesus, the Christ, our risen redeeming Lord, | 21:47 | |
| the one who gives us the gift of this prayer | 21:52 | |
| to pray together. | 21:56 | |
| - | Our Father who art in heaven, | 21:59 |
| hallowed be Thy name, | 22:02 | |
| Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done | 22:05 | |
| on earth as it is in heaven. | 22:09 | |
| Give us this day our daily bread | 22:12 | |
| and forgive us our trespasses | 22:15 | |
| as we forgive those who trespass against us. | 22:17 | |
| And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, | 22:21 | |
| for Thine is the kingdom and the power | 22:26 | |
| and the glory forever, amen | 22:30 | |
| (gentle organ music) | 22:35 | |
| (gentle organ music continues) | 23:05 | |
| (gentle organ music continues) | 23:34 | |
| (gentle organ music continues) | 24:04 | |
| (gentle organ music continues) | 24:34 | |
| (gentle organ music continues) | 25:04 | |
| (hopeful brass music) | 25:22 | |
| (hopeful music brightens) | 25:44 | |
| (moves to triumphant music) | 26:00 | |
| ♪ Praise the Lord ye heavens adore Him ♪ | 26:21 | |
| ♪ Praise Him, angels, in the height ♪ | 26:29 | |
| ♪ Sun and Moon, rejoice before Him ♪ | 26:38 | |
| ♪ Praise Him, all ye stars of light ♪ | 26:46 | |
| ♪ Praise the Lord, for He has spoken ♪ | 26:54 | |
| ♪ Worlds His mighty voice obeyed ♪ | 27:03 | |
| ♪ Laws which never shall be broken ♪ | 27:11 | |
| ♪ For their guidance He hath made ♪ | 27:19 | |
| ♪ Praise the Lord, for He is glorious ♪ | 27:31 | |
| ♪ Never shall His promise fail ♪ | 27:39 | |
| ♪ God has made His saints victorious ♪ | 27:47 | |
| ♪ Sin and death shall not prevail ♪ | 27:56 | |
| ♪ Praise the God of our salvation ♪ | 28:05 | |
| ♪ Hosts on high His power proclaim ♪ | 28:14 | |
| ♪ Heaven and Earth and all creation ♪ | 28:24 | |
| ♪ Laud and magnify His name ♪ | 28:33 | |
| (stirring organ music) | 28:55 | |
| (stirring organ music continues) | 29:25 | |
| (stirring organ music continues) | 29:54 | |
| (stirring organ music continues) | 30:24 | |
| ♪ Praise God, from Whom all blessings flow ♪ | 30:39 | |
| ♪ Praise Him, all creatures here below ♪ | 30:45 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, alleluia ♪ | 30:52 | |
| ♪ Praise Him above, ye heavenly host ♪ | 31:00 | |
| ♪ Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost ♪ | 31:07 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, alleluia ♪ | 31:13 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, alleluia ♪ | 31:20 | |
| ♪ Alleluia ♪ | 31:27 | |
| ♪ Alleluia ♪ | 31:36 | |
| Forbid, oh Lord, that our giving should flow from duty, | 31:51 | |
| but rather let our gifts fulfill our dreams | 31:57 | |
| and reflect Your will, | 32:00 | |
| and teach us to follow our gifts with our love, | 32:03 | |
| our prayers, our lives, | 32:07 | |
| through Jesus the Christ, amen. | 32:11 | |
| (triumphant brass music) | 32:17 | |
| ♪ Rejoice, the Lord is King ♪ | 32:40 | |
| ♪ Your Lord and King adore ♪ | 32:46 | |
| ♪ Rejoice, give thanks and sing ♪ | 32:51 | |
| ♪ And triumph evermore ♪ | 32:55 | |
| ♪ Lift up your heart ♪ | 33:02 | |
| ♪ Lift up your voice ♪ | 33:07 | |
| ♪ Rejoice, again I say, rejoice ♪ | 33:10 | |
| ♪ Jesus, the Savior, reigns ♪ | 33:19 | |
| ♪ The God of truth and love ♪ | 33:24 | |
| ♪ When He has purged our stains ♪ | 33:29 | |
| ♪ He took His seat above ♪ | 33:34 | |
| ♪ Lift up your heart ♪ | 33:40 | |
| ♪ Lift up your voice ♪ | 33:45 | |
| ♪ Rejoice, again I say, rejoice ♪ | 33:48 | |
| ♪ His kingdom cannot fail ♪ | 33:57 | |
| ♪ He rules o'er earth and heaven ♪ | 34:02 | |
| ♪ The keys of death and hell ♪ | 34:07 | |
| ♪ Are to our Jesus given ♪ | 34:12 | |
| ♪ Lift up your heart ♪ | 34:18 | |
| ♪ Lift up your voice ♪ | 34:23 | |
| ♪ Rejoice, again I say, rejoice ♪ | 34:26 | |
| ♪ Rejoice in glorious hope ♪ | 34:36 | |
| ♪ Our Lord and judge shall come ♪ | 34:41 | |
| ♪ And take His servants up ♪ | 34:46 | |
| ♪ To their eternal home ♪ | 34:50 | |
| ♪ Lift up your heart ♪ | 34:57 | |
| ♪ Lift up your voice ♪ | 35:02 | |
| ♪ Rejoice, again I say, rejoice ♪ | 35:05 | |
| (triumphant brass music) | 35:18 | |
| Our deepest appreciation to the five choirs | 35:35 | |
| that have come together this morning | 35:38 | |
| and brought with them their magnificent voices and song. | 35:40 | |
| And now deep peace of the running wave to you. | 35:46 | |
| Deep peace of the quiet earth to you. | 35:52 | |
| Deep peace of the flowing air to you. | 35:55 | |
| Deep peace of the shining stars to you, | 35:59 | |
| deep and abiding peace of the Prince of Peace | 36:03 | |
| to each of you this day and forever. | 36:08 | |
| Amen. | 36:12 | |
| (gentle organ chord ringing) | 36:13 | |
| ♪ Amen, amen ♪ | 36:18 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 36:27 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 36:35 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 36:41 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 36:49 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 37:00 | |
| (hopeful organ music) | 37:17 | |
| (hopeful organ music continues) | 37:47 | |
| (hopeful organ music continues) | 38:16 | |
| (moves to bright organ music) | 38:43 | |
| (bright music continues) | 39:22 | |
| (bright music continues) | 39:52 | |
| (bright music continues) | 40:21 | |
| (bright music continues) | 40:43 | |
| (bright music continues) | 41:22 | |
| (congregation chatting) | 41:52 | |
| (congregation continues chatting) | 42:22 | |
| (congregation continues chatting) | 42:49 |
Item Info
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