Peter J. Gomes - "Opportunity and Obstacles" Baccalaureate Service 3:00 pm (May 4, 1986)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| (upbeat music) | 0:03 | |
| (peppy music) | 9:23 | |
| ♪ Beautiful Savior ♪ | 21:44 | |
| ♪ Lord of all nations ♪ | 21:51 | |
| ♪ Son of God ♪ | 21:58 | |
| ♪ And Son of man ♪ | 22:03 | |
| ♪ Glory and honor ♪ | 22:12 | |
| ♪ Grace adoration ♪ | 22:19 | |
| ♪ Now and forever ♪ | 22:25 | |
| ♪ More be Thine ♪ | 22:30 | |
| ♪ Now and forever ♪ | 22:37 | |
| ♪ More be Thine ♪ | 22:46 | |
| (upbeat music) | 22:59 | |
| (lyrics drowned out by organ) | 23:38 | |
| - | As a forgiven people, we recognize that it is only | 27:27 |
| the love of God that can save us and not we ourselves. | 27:30 | |
| Therefore, let us confess our sins to | 27:36 | |
| Almighty God that we may be reconciled | 27:38 | |
| unto our Maker who redeems and sustains us. | 27:42 | |
| Please be seated. | 27:46 | |
| Most merciful God, we confess that we have | 28:06 | |
| sinned against You in thought, word and deed, | 28:10 | |
| by what we have done, and by what we have left undone. | 28:14 | |
| We have not loved You with our whole heart. | 28:19 | |
| We have not loved our neighbors as ourselves. | 28:22 | |
| We are truly sorry, and we humbly repent. | 28:26 | |
| For the sake of Your Son, Jesus Christ, have mercy | 28:30 | |
| on us and forgive us that we may delight in | 28:33 | |
| Your will and walk in Your ways to the glory of Your name. | 28:37 | |
| Amen. | 28:43 | |
| For as the heavens are high above the earth, | 28:45 | |
| so great is His steadfast love toward those who fear Him. | 28:48 | |
| As far as the east is from the west, | 28:53 | |
| so far does he remove our transgressions from us. | 28:57 | |
| Amen. | 29:01 | |
| - | As minister to the university, it is my pleasure | 29:10 |
| to welcome you to this baccalaureate service. | 29:12 | |
| And also to welcome back to the pulpit of Duke Chapel, | 29:16 | |
| our guest preacher, the Reverend Dr. Peter Gomes, | 29:20 | |
| minister to Memorial Church and | 29:25 | |
| Plummer professor at Harvard University. | 29:27 | |
| We are pleased to have him back today and we welcome him. | 29:32 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 29:46 |
| Open our hearts and minds, oh God, by the power of Your | 29:48 | |
| Holy Spirit, so that as the Word is read and proclaimed, | 29:52 | |
| we might hear with joy what You say to us this day. | 29:56 | |
| Amen. | 30:01 | |
| The first lesson is taken from Acts. | 30:03 | |
| But some men came down from Judea and were | 30:07 | |
| teaching the brethren, unless you are circumcised | 30:10 | |
| according to custom of Moses, you cannot be saved. | 30:14 | |
| And when Paul and Barnabas had no small dissension | 30:18 | |
| and debate with them, Paul and Barnabas and some | 30:21 | |
| of the others were appointed to go up to Jerusalem | 30:25 | |
| to the apostles and the elders about this question. | 30:28 | |
| Then it seemed good to the apostles and the elders | 30:33 | |
| with the whole church, to choose men from among them | 30:35 | |
| and send them to Antioch with Paul and with Barnabas. | 30:40 | |
| And they sent Judas called Barsabbas, and Silas, | 30:45 | |
| leading men among the brethren, with the following letter. | 30:49 | |
| The brethren, both the apostles and the elders, | 30:54 | |
| to the brethren who are the Gentiles | 30:58 | |
| in Antioch and Syria and Cilicia, greeting. | 31:00 | |
| Since we have heard that some persons from us | 31:06 | |
| have troubled you with words, unsettling your minds, | 31:08 | |
| although we gave them no instructions, | 31:13 | |
| it has seemed good to us, having come to | 31:15 | |
| one accord to choose men and send them to you | 31:18 | |
| with our beloved Barnabas and Paul, men who have | 31:22 | |
| risked their lives for the sake of our Lord Jesus Christ. | 31:26 | |
| We have therefore sent Judas and Silas, who themselves | 31:31 | |
| will tell you the same things by word of mouth. | 31:35 | |
| For it has seemed good to the Holy Spirit, and to us, to lay | 31:38 | |
| upon you no greater burden than these necessary things. | 31:44 | |
| That you abstain from what has been | 31:48 | |
| sacrificed to idols, and from blood, | 31:50 | |
| and from what is strangled, and from unchastity. | 31:54 | |
| If you keep yourselves from these, you will do well. | 31:58 | |
| Farewell. | 32:05 | |
| This ends the reading of the first lesson. | 32:07 | |
| (serene music) | 32:14 | |
| (lyrics drowned out by the music) | 32:28 | |
| - | The congregation will please rise | 35:53 |
| for the reading of the Gospel. | 35:55 | |
| The Gospel lesson is taken from St. John. | 36:02 | |
| Jesus answered him, if a man loves Me, he will keep My Word. | 36:06 | |
| And my Father will love him. | 36:11 | |
| And We will come to him and make Our home with him. | 36:14 | |
| He who does not love Me, does not keep my Words. | 36:18 | |
| And the Word which you hear is not Mine, | 36:22 | |
| but the Father's who sent Me. | 36:25 | |
| These things I have spoken to you while I am still with you. | 36:28 | |
| But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, | 36:32 | |
| whom the Father will send in My name, He will | 36:35 | |
| teach you all things, and bring to you remembrance. | 36:39 | |
| All that I have said to you, peace I leave with you. | 36:43 | |
| My peace I give to you, | 36:48 | |
| not as the world gives do I give to you. | 36:50 | |
| Let not your hearts be troubled. | 36:53 | |
| Neither let them be afraid. | 36:56 | |
| You heard Me say to you, I go away, and I will come to you. | 36:58 | |
| If you loved Me, you would have rejoiced, because I | 37:03 | |
| go to the Father, for the Father is greater than I. | 37:07 | |
| And now, I have told you before it takes place, | 37:12 | |
| so that when it does take place, you may believe. | 37:16 | |
| This ends the reading of the Gospel. | 37:20 | |
| (upbeat music) | 37:23 | |
| (lyrics drowned out by music) | 37:32 | |
| - | The Epistle is written in the 16th chapter | 38:47 |
| of St. Paul's first letter to the Corinthians, | 38:51 | |
| beginning at the first verse. | 38:56 | |
| Now, concerning the contribution for the saints, | 39:03 | |
| as I directed the church of Galatia, so you also are to do. | 39:08 | |
| On the first day of every week, each of you is to | 39:15 | |
| put something aside and store it up as he may prosper, | 39:20 | |
| so that contributions need not be made when I come. | 39:25 | |
| And when I arrive, I will send those whom you | 39:30 | |
| accredit by letter to carry your gift to Jerusalem. | 39:34 | |
| If it seems advisable that I should | 39:39 | |
| go also, they will accompany me. | 39:41 | |
| I will visit you after passing through Macedonia, | 39:45 | |
| for I intend to pass through Macedonia, | 39:49 | |
| and perhaps I will stay with you, or even spend the winter, | 39:52 | |
| so that you may speed me on my journey wherever I go. | 39:57 | |
| For I do not want to see you now just in passing. | 40:02 | |
| I hope to spend some time with you if the Lord permits. | 40:06 | |
| But, I will stay in Ephesus until Pentecost. | 40:11 | |
| For a wide door for effective work has opened | 40:16 | |
| to me and there are many adversaries. | 40:20 | |
| When Timothy comes, see that you put him at ease among you, | 40:26 | |
| for he is doing the work of the Lord as I am. | 40:30 | |
| So, let no one despise him. | 40:34 | |
| Speed him on his way in peace, that he may return to me, | 40:37 | |
| for I am expecting him with the brethren. | 40:42 | |
| Here ends the reading from the Epistle. | 40:48 | |
| Let us pray. | 40:53 | |
| Help us, Lord, to become masters of ourselves, | 40:57 | |
| that we may become the servants of others. | 41:01 | |
| Take our hands and work through them. | 41:05 | |
| Take our minds and think through them. | 41:08 | |
| Take our lips and speak through them. | 41:12 | |
| And take our hearts and set them on fire. | 41:15 | |
| For Christ's sake, amen. | 41:20 | |
| I take as my text the ninth verse | 41:30 | |
| from this chapter from 1 Corinthians, | 41:35 | |
| which you have just heard | 41:38 | |
| these words of the apostle Paul. | 41:41 | |
| For a wide door for effective work | 41:46 | |
| has opened to me | 41:52 | |
| and there are many adversaries. | 41:55 | |
| For hundreds of years, | 42:02 | |
| the old have assembled the young before them, | 42:06 | |
| very much in scenes like this. | 42:11 | |
| And the old have inflicted upon the young, | 42:15 | |
| such as you are, | 42:19 | |
| one last bit of unsolicited advice. | 42:22 | |
| This is the season of the year when that ritual takes place | 42:28 | |
| across the land with painful | 42:33 | |
| regularity and frequency. | 42:36 | |
| The formula for the advice that we | 42:40 | |
| give to you is something like this; | 42:44 | |
| the world is in terrible shape, | 42:49 | |
| but you can handle it. | 42:53 | |
| Or, the world is in very good shape | 42:57 | |
| and you're very lucky to be going out into it. | 43:00 | |
| Or, the world is in terrible shape, and so are you. | 43:05 | |
| (audience laughing) | 43:10 | |
| Now, given this advice, with it's mixed signals, | 43:13 | |
| is it no wonder that many students, perhaps some of you, | 43:18 | |
| have initiated demands for | 43:23 | |
| some sort of student tenure. | 43:26 | |
| It was George Plimpton, who in a class day speech | 43:30 | |
| at Harvard some years ago, put this sentiment | 43:34 | |
| very clearly when addressing the seniors about to depart. | 43:37 | |
| George Plimpton said to them, I have just | 43:41 | |
| one word of advice to you seniors, who are | 43:43 | |
| about to go out into the world; don't go. | 43:47 | |
| (audience laughing) | 43:52 | |
| It's hell out there. | 43:54 | |
| But you must go. | 43:57 | |
| You've hired these robes, you've got to go. | 43:59 | |
| Your parents can't afford to keep you here any longer. | 44:03 | |
| (audience laughing and clapping) | 44:07 | |
| Duke University cannot afford to have you around | 44:15 | |
| any longer, because now you all know too much. | 44:19 | |
| You see, the university is really in | 44:25 | |
| the business of ignorance, not of knowledge. | 44:27 | |
| That is why when you know too much, you are graduated, | 44:31 | |
| given a degree, certified, | 44:36 | |
| and sent away like Adam and Eve, | 44:39 | |
| expelled or graduated from the Garden of Eden. | 44:42 | |
| They were expelled not because they were stupid, | 44:47 | |
| but because they knew too much, and not for their own good. | 44:51 | |
| (audience laughing) | 44:56 | |
| The preachers task on an occasion | 44:58 | |
| such as this is to try to make sense of this expulsion, | 45:01 | |
| to attempt a sorting out. | 45:06 | |
| Both to speed you on your way, to get you out of here | 45:09 | |
| as quickly as possible with all decency. | 45:12 | |
| And to do so without imposing too much upon | 45:16 | |
| your good time, your good humor, or your good sense. | 45:20 | |
| I take this task seriously, for I have a | 45:26 | |
| healthy regard for what transpires here at Duke. | 45:29 | |
| I take this task seriously because I care for | 45:34 | |
| the world into which you are now about to enter. | 45:37 | |
| And I take this task seriously because | 45:42 | |
| I have high hope and confidence in you, | 45:45 | |
| in your character, in your mind, and in your souls. | 45:49 | |
| It would be an easy temptation to use this sermon | 45:56 | |
| and this occasion as an opportunity to compliment | 46:00 | |
| you all on all of those skills and abilities | 46:03 | |
| that have sustained you here in your days at Duke. | 46:08 | |
| But you already know how clever you are, | 46:12 | |
| how attractive you are, how bright you are. | 46:16 | |
| You know, better than I, how hard you have worked. | 46:20 | |
| Some, to make the system work for you. | 46:25 | |
| Others of you, to avoid all work at all. | 46:29 | |
| Not a few of you are here today solely by the grace of God. | 46:33 | |
| (audience laughing) | 46:38 | |
| You, more than most, should attend | 46:41 | |
| all three of these baccalaureate services. | 46:43 | |
| But the task before us is just that, | 46:49 | |
| it is before us out there. | 46:53 | |
| It will not do to rehearse the past, | 46:56 | |
| no matter how glorious or how difficult it was. | 46:59 | |
| It is not the point to try to | 47:04 | |
| recall back the days that have been. | 47:07 | |
| We are now called to celebrate the moment | 47:12 | |
| before the next. | 47:17 | |
| As Adam said to Eve on the eve of their | 47:19 | |
| first commencement, | 47:24 | |
| my dear, we live in an age of transition. | 47:25 |
| - | And that is the subject for another sermon. | 0:03 |
| (laughter) | 0:07 | |
| The presumption that we live in a very unique age | 0:08 | |
| which therefore, requires some very unique counsel | 0:11 | |
| because we are very unique people, | 0:15 | |
| it's simply put, | 0:18 | |
| not a very unique presumption. | 0:20 | |
| To help us frame this then | 0:23 | |
| I've taken as my text, | 0:26 | |
| a modest bit of enigmatic prose | 0:28 | |
| from Saint Paul's first letter | 0:32 | |
| to the Corinthians. | 0:35 | |
| These words. | 0:36 | |
| For a wide door for effective work | 0:38 | |
| has been opened to me | 0:43 | |
| and there are many adversaries. | 0:45 | |
| That is not the sort of verse you would memorize | 0:50 | |
| in Sunday school | 0:54 | |
| nor is it so a verse that would be inscribed in Bibles | 0:55 | |
| presented to you, | 1:00 | |
| or written even in religious calendar art. | 1:01 | |
| It is rather obscure, | 1:06 | |
| enigmatic, eminently forgettable, | 1:10 | |
| the ideal subject for a sermon | 1:14 | |
| on occasion such as this. | 1:16 | |
| (laughter) | 1:19 | |
| Now if you can remember | 1:20 | |
| a few minutes ago, back to that chapter | 1:22 | |
| from Corinthians which | 1:24 | |
| I read to you, you may have wondered | 1:26 | |
| what on Earth is going on? | 1:29 | |
| And why here and why now? | 1:32 | |
| It seems one of those little business notes | 1:35 | |
| that Paul is always jotting off to his constituents | 1:38 | |
| a combination of homily, gossip, | 1:43 | |
| scolding, advice, and preaching | 1:46 | |
| much more like a collage of messages | 1:50 | |
| taped to the refrigerator door | 1:53 | |
| than a philosophical essay or a reasoned discourse. | 1:56 | |
| Well I ask you to forget the travel, | 2:02 | |
| forget about Macedonia, | 2:05 | |
| forget about the offering for the Saints | 2:07 | |
| at Jerusalem and even the advice | 2:10 | |
| concerning Timothy. | 2:12 | |
| Focus for a moment on that almost | 2:15 | |
| parenthetical statement that talks about a | 2:17 | |
| wide door for effective work. | 2:21 | |
| A wide door that the apostle believes has opened to him. | 2:26 | |
| And perhaps the most important word | 2:32 | |
| in the passage, and there are many | 2:35 | |
| adversaries. | 2:40 | |
| Note that the apostle says, | 2:42 | |
| "And there are many adversaries," | 2:44 | |
| rather than, "But there are many adversaries," | 2:46 | |
| or, "Unfortunately, there are many adversaries," | 2:50 | |
| or, "It's too bad that there are many adversaries." | 2:53 | |
| He doesn't say any of that. | 2:57 | |
| He says, "A wide door for effective work, | 2:59 | |
| "opportunity, has opened for me | 3:02 | |
| "and there are many adversaries," | 3:05 | |
| or obstacles, or difficulties. | 3:09 | |
| There are by definition, | 3:14 | |
| adversaries at the point of every opportunity. | 3:18 | |
| With every opportunity | 3:23 | |
| there comes adversity | 3:26 | |
| and if this is so, so to is the opposite. | 3:29 | |
| With adversity, there comes a necessity, | 3:33 | |
| opportunity. | 3:39 | |
| Saint Paul recognized that in some sense | 3:41 | |
| adversity was not the opposite of opportunity, | 3:45 | |
| it was the consequence of opportunity. | 3:50 | |
| He understood as so many of us do not that both opportunity | 3:55 | |
| and adversity are seasons of grace. | 4:00 | |
| They are together, a part of the normal | 4:05 | |
| ordinary business of living. | 4:09 | |
| And the university community | 4:14 | |
| especially as privileged University community | 4:15 | |
| as this one is, | 4:18 | |
| one frequently is brought up with the view | 4:20 | |
| that one has a ticket only | 4:24 | |
| to opportunity and a first class ticket at that. | 4:26 | |
| Somehow here, we the sifted few | 4:32 | |
| in Henry James' deliciously cynical phrase, | 4:36 | |
| "Pay these exorbitant fees, | 4:41 | |
| "and those of us who teach | 4:44 | |
| "are paid these pitiful salaries | 4:45 | |
| (laughter) | 4:48 | |
| "to be protected from adversity | 4:49 | |
| "of any sort." | 4:52 | |
| We are subsidized in the view | 4:55 | |
| that a carefree opportunity | 4:58 | |
| belongs to us as a right | 5:02 | |
| and that anything less than this | 5:05 | |
| is in the academic equivalent | 5:07 | |
| of sin, unfair. | 5:10 | |
| It is unfair, say some of you | 5:14 | |
| that your generation should inherit the threat | 5:18 | |
| of nuclear annihilation, | 5:22 | |
| thus, raining on your parade. | 5:24 | |
| It is unfair that the nations | 5:28 | |
| of the economy will make it likely | 5:31 | |
| that your standard of living | 5:34 | |
| will be lower than that of your parents. | 5:36 | |
| It is unfair that we cannot resolve | 5:39 | |
| the wrongs in Latin America, | 5:43 | |
| South Africa, the Middle East, | 5:46 | |
| or Northern Ireland, or downtown | 5:48 | |
| without undo inconvenience to ourselves. | 5:52 | |
| It is unfair that we should be kicked out of Duke | 5:57 | |
| just when we got to figure out how the place ran | 6:01 | |
| and could almost do it by ourselves. | 6:05 | |
| Indeed, the University education | 6:09 | |
| ought to teach one how to make the most of one's | 6:11 | |
| opportunities, but it is also engaged | 6:15 | |
| at it's best in the business | 6:19 | |
| of dealing with the adversity | 6:22 | |
| that comes with it. | 6:24 | |
| For nothing less than life itself | 6:27 | |
| is the business of learning. | 6:30 | |
| It was (mumbles) who in criticism | 6:34 | |
| of Hegel said, | 6:36 | |
| "He teaches you everything | 6:38 | |
| "you need to know in the world | 6:41 | |
| "except how to live your life | 6:44 | |
| "and die your death." | 6:47 | |
| What a sad verdict | 6:50 | |
| on such a wise man. | 6:52 | |
| There will probably still be commencement orators | 6:57 | |
| across the land, | 7:02 | |
| who will continue to sound the trumpets | 7:04 | |
| of opportunity in technological terms. | 7:07 | |
| And will tell you that we are | 7:11 | |
| the able now to make better mouse traps, | 7:14 | |
| than we were last year. | 7:17 | |
| They will tell us we can do anything | 7:20 | |
| we want to do. | 7:23 | |
| They will give audiences such as you | 7:25 | |
| license to sing that grammar school taunt, | 7:28 | |
| anything you can do, I can do better. | 7:32 | |
| And because so many of you have been here | 7:36 | |
| so long, worked so hard, | 7:39 | |
| and paid out so much | 7:42 | |
| you will be tempted to believe | 7:44 | |
| these easy profits of easy progress. | 7:48 | |
| Now don't get me wrong, | 7:53 | |
| I do not despise progress, | 7:55 | |
| I am not a Luddite. | 7:58 | |
| I am not a member of the Amish community. | 8:01 | |
| I do not hold the view | 8:05 | |
| of the little ole lady from Dubuque | 8:06 | |
| who said that if God had intended man to fly | 8:09 | |
| he would not have invented the railroad. | 8:12 | |
| (laughter) | 8:15 | |
| No, I like my microwaves. | 8:16 | |
| I like the internal combustion engine. | 8:20 | |
| I like digital clocks | 8:25 | |
| and all the other marvelous products | 8:27 | |
| from Japan. | 8:30 | |
| (laughter) | 8:31 | |
| But I hope that neither you | 8:34 | |
| nor I will mistake these achievements | 8:36 | |
| and wonders for any thing more than | 8:40 | |
| what they really are. | 8:44 | |
| Means and diversions. | 8:46 | |
| Perhaps we need to remember Pharaoh's words, | 8:50 | |
| When in voting against the extension of the telegraph lines | 8:53 | |
| from Concord to Boston in 1847, | 8:58 | |
| he said, "All our progress | 9:01 | |
| "is but improved means to unimproved ends." | 9:04 | |
| We don't need to be chastened by anything | 9:11 | |
| quite so modest as the extension | 9:15 | |
| of the telegraph | 9:18 | |
| from Concord to Boston. | 9:19 | |
| The Challenger disaster in January may have | 9:23 | |
| delayed the exploration of outer space, | 9:27 | |
| but it may as well in that enigmatic way | 9:31 | |
| have accelerated the exploration | 9:36 | |
| of inner space. | 9:39 | |
| When the disaster revealed itself | 9:42 | |
| before our eyes, | 9:45 | |
| we were assured first that it was | 9:47 | |
| a terrible thing but some kind of technical | 9:50 | |
| or technological answer | 9:55 | |
| surely could be found to correct | 9:57 | |
| a technical or technological error. | 10:00 | |
| And once this had been detected, | 10:04 | |
| once we had found out | 10:06 | |
| what was wrong, | 10:08 | |
| we could correct the matter | 10:10 | |
| and there would be no loss to progress | 10:13 | |
| or to science despite the regrettable human loss. | 10:16 | |
| Our commentators were concerned | 10:22 | |
| for our children who watched this disaster | 10:24 | |
| on television. | 10:27 | |
| Concerned not that the children would be traumatized | 10:29 | |
| by death, they see that all of the time. | 10:32 | |
| That was nothing new. | 10:37 | |
| What they feared was that | 10:40 | |
| children would be traumatized | 10:42 | |
| by the failure of technology. | 10:44 | |
| Not the loss of life | 10:48 | |
| but the imperfection of the machine. | 10:50 | |
| And that was new. | 10:54 | |
| But now we are sadder and wiser. | 10:58 | |
| We know that at the heart of the shuttle failure | 11:03 | |
| was not technology as such, | 11:07 | |
| but as in all human things, | 11:10 | |
| there was at the heart of the enterprise, | 11:15 | |
| human failure. | 11:18 | |
| A lie here, a cover up there. | 11:21 | |
| The desire for NASA to push things through | 11:25 | |
| as quickly as possible. | 11:29 | |
| The need for the appearance of success | 11:31 | |
| at any cost. | 11:34 | |
| The unwillingness to entertain even | 11:37 | |
| the hypothesis of failure. | 11:39 | |
| The unwillingness to entertain adversity | 11:43 | |
| as a colleague of opportunity. | 11:47 | |
| Human error, not ignorance, | 11:51 | |
| not evil, but error, | 11:54 | |
| seems to be the culprit here | 11:56 | |
| and ambition for achievement at any cost. | 12:00 | |
| Fame, distinction, power, all of those things | 12:05 | |
| you have been taught to grab for | 12:10 | |
| so quickly, all of those things that | 12:12 | |
| from time in memorial, | 12:15 | |
| have deluded us into thinking ourselves | 12:18 | |
| wiser, and better than we are or can be. | 12:21 | |
| The opportunity for wide | 12:27 | |
| and effective work is great | 12:30 | |
| but often, more often then not, | 12:33 | |
| the adversaries that always accompany it | 12:36 | |
| are not only out there, | 12:40 | |
| and beyond, but rather within | 12:42 | |
| and very near indeed. | 12:47 | |
| There is an arrogance | 12:52 | |
| that comes with knowledge | 12:54 | |
| such as you and I posses | 12:57 | |
| and that arrogance my dear friends, | 13:01 | |
| is just as dangerous as ignorance | 13:04 | |
| and even moreso. | 13:08 | |
| There is also an arrogance that comes | 13:11 | |
| with virtue as well. | 13:13 | |
| And you who would be virtuous | 13:16 | |
| ought to pay heed to that danger. | 13:19 | |
| There is an aphorism that says, | 13:23 | |
| "A surplus of virtue is more dangerous | 13:26 | |
| "than a surplus of vice. | 13:30 | |
| "For a surplus of virtue is not subject | 13:33 | |
| to the constraints of conscience." | 13:37 | |
| Think of it, | 13:42 | |
| how much harm is done in the name of good? | 13:43 | |
| How much real wickedness | 13:48 | |
| is done by those who in the name | 13:51 | |
| or what they believe to be a just cause, | 13:55 | |
| will stop at nothing. | 13:58 | |
| University men and women | 14:01 | |
| are subject as few others are | 14:03 | |
| to the arrogance of knowledge | 14:06 | |
| and virtue. | 14:09 | |
| Thinking that all who disagree | 14:11 | |
| with you, are either stupid | 14:12 | |
| or wicked or both. | 14:14 | |
| One of the virtues of the world beyond these walls, | 14:17 | |
| is that you will not be permitted | 14:23 | |
| the uncontested luxury | 14:25 | |
| of either of these options for long. | 14:27 | |
| It will be tempting even seductive | 14:33 | |
| to believe that the world today | 14:37 | |
| is now a very different place | 14:39 | |
| from what it was 25 or 50 | 14:42 | |
| or 100 years ago. | 14:46 | |
| And certainly there is no comparison | 14:49 | |
| with the world of Adam and Eve | 14:52 | |
| or even of Saint Paul. | 14:55 | |
| Happily we say, we are freed from all of those | 14:58 | |
| anxieties and ignorances. | 15:03 | |
| Our medieval academic costume | 15:06 | |
| and our medieval Ecclesiastical architecture | 15:10 | |
| and our Wesleyan piety | 15:14 | |
| are simply on a mental props | 15:17 | |
| for a brave show, | 15:20 | |
| for a brave new people and a brave new world. | 15:22 | |
| I rather think that this is a false | 15:28 | |
| even dangerous view. | 15:32 | |
| The world, I suggest, | 15:35 | |
| nuclear threat and all, | 15:37 | |
| is fundamentally the same | 15:40 | |
| as it is always been and so to | 15:42 | |
| for better or worse, are men and women. | 15:46 | |
| The same fears, hopes, | 15:50 | |
| weaknesses, and ambitions | 15:53 | |
| confront us as confronted our mothers | 15:55 | |
| and fathers, we are not so much different than they. | 15:59 | |
| Is it then not a source of some profound | 16:05 | |
| reassurance that the God who cared for them | 16:09 | |
| continues to care for us | 16:14 | |
| and that the gospel which was true | 16:18 | |
| for them continues to be true for you | 16:20 | |
| and for me as well. | 16:25 | |
| In the midst of all the discontinuities | 16:29 | |
| of life, that is the only continuity | 16:32 | |
| worth holding on to. | 16:37 | |
| And if that is true | 16:40 | |
| is it not one of the hopeful ironies | 16:42 | |
| of our time, that we should be prepared | 16:45 | |
| to enter a secular and crazy world | 16:48 | |
| by a service of prayers, | 16:53 | |
| hymns, and thanksgiving | 16:56 | |
| before the the altar of the living God. | 17:00 | |
| Not in the laboratory, | 17:05 | |
| not in the library, | 17:07 | |
| not on the fields of endeavor | 17:09 | |
| not in the rooms in which you have spent many hours, | 17:12 | |
| but in this place | 17:16 | |
| the temple of the living God. | 17:18 | |
| What encouraged Saint Paul | 17:23 | |
| to pass through that wide door for effective work, | 17:25 | |
| and to embrace the adversaries | 17:30 | |
| within and without, | 17:33 | |
| was the conviction that God | 17:35 | |
| in Jesus Christ was the same yesterday, | 17:38 | |
| today, and forever. | 17:43 | |
| No less a conviction than this | 17:46 | |
| would enable or empower him | 17:49 | |
| in the face of his own arrogance, | 17:52 | |
| and weakness, | 17:54 | |
| in the face of his own abysmal ignorance | 17:55 | |
| and profound temptation. | 17:59 | |
| Not only those adversaries within, | 18:02 | |
| but the opposition of many without and beyond. | 18:06 | |
| If there is continuity in the sin | 18:12 | |
| of the world, there is also continuity | 18:15 | |
| in the hope of the world | 18:18 | |
| and you now are part of that hope. | 18:20 | |
| You cannot act the part alone, | 18:25 | |
| and that is why all of you, | 18:28 | |
| scholars old and young | 18:30 | |
| find yourselves here today | 18:33 | |
| to receive the prayers and the blessings | 18:36 | |
| of the church. | 18:40 | |
| For some of you, this may seem just one more pious | 18:42 | |
| archaism in the midst of a Gothic quadrangle | 18:47 | |
| translated from 15th century Europe, | 18:52 | |
| to the glades of North Carolina. | 18:55 | |
| That, what has this you might well say, | 18:59 | |
| to do with me? | 19:03 | |
| Well a great deal. | 19:06 | |
| For the power of the Christian faith, | 19:07 | |
| the power of the faith that sustains you | 19:12 | |
| and nurtures you, | 19:14 | |
| does not depend upon whether you believe in God | 19:16 | |
| or not, but rather, it depends upon | 19:22 | |
| the glorious fact that God | 19:25 | |
| believes in you. | 19:28 | |
| Upon such a bold premise, | 19:31 | |
| is our church founded | 19:34 | |
| this University nourished | 19:36 | |
| and the hope of the world in you maintained. | 19:39 | |
| So are we asking you to be heroes, | 19:48 | |
| dare to be a Daniel, | 19:52 | |
| dare to be a Paul, | 19:54 | |
| as the old pious Sunday school song goes. | 19:55 | |
| Are we asking you to join the saints | 19:59 | |
| and the martyrs, the brightest and the best | 20:02 | |
| in the field of endeavor | 20:05 | |
| or in Wall Street, or wherever you hope | 20:07 | |
| you will be taken. | 20:10 | |
| I suggest not, | 20:13 | |
| with all due respect to you | 20:15 | |
| and to the heroic, | 20:18 | |
| we don't need one more heroic figure. | 20:19 | |
| Our prayer is that a Browning's Paracelsus | 20:26 | |
| who asks, "Make no more giants Lord, | 20:29 | |
| "but elevate the race." | 20:34 | |
| There is now open to each of you | 20:38 | |
| a wide and great door for effectual work, | 20:41 | |
| working in the world. | 20:47 | |
| And there are many adversaries | 20:51 | |
| as well, known and unknown to you. | 20:54 | |
| You cannot stay here. | 20:59 | |
| You cannot stay in this chapel. | 21:02 | |
| You must go and in the words | 21:04 | |
| of the spiritual, "I will go. | 21:07 | |
| "I shall go, | 21:10 | |
| "to see what the end will be." | 21:12 | |
| And as you go, may God go before you, | 21:16 | |
| behind you, within you, | 21:21 | |
| and forever with you. | 21:25 | |
| Amen. | 21:28 | |
| (organ plays) | 21:37 | |
| (choir sings) | 22:33 | |
| - | Let us unite in this historic confession | 25:20 |
| of the Christian faith, | 25:23 | |
| I believe in God the Father Almighty, | 25:26 | |
| maker of Heaven and Earth, | 25:29 | |
| and in Jesus Christ his only Son | 25:32 | |
| our Lord who is conceived by the Holy Ghost, | 25:34 | |
| born of the Virgin Mary, | 25:38 | |
| suffered unto Pontius Pilate, | 25:40 | |
| was crucified, | 25:43 | |
| dead, and buried. | 25:44 | |
| He descended into Hell, | 25:46 | |
| the third day he rose again from the dead. | 25:48 | |
| He ascended into Heaven | 25:51 | |
| and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty | 25:53 | |
| from thence he shall come to judge the | 25:57 | |
| quick and the dead. | 25:59 | |
| I believe in the Holy Ghost, | 26:01 | |
| the Holy Catholic Church, | 26:03 | |
| the communion of Saints, | 26:06 | |
| the forgiveness of sins, | 26:08 | |
| the Resurrection of the body | 26:10 | |
| and the life everlasting, Amen. | 26:12 | |
| The Lord be with you. | 26:16 | |
| (congregation responds) | 26:19 | |
| Let us pray. | 26:20 | |
| Be seated. | 26:21 | |
| Gracious God, | 26:31 | |
| source of all truth and wisdom | 26:34 | |
| all knowledge and love | 26:37 | |
| without your guidance and inspiration | 26:40 | |
| this day would not be possible. | 26:43 | |
| For these, our graduating students | 26:47 | |
| we pray that they might be blessed | 26:51 | |
| with self confidence and determination | 26:52 | |
| to use their lives | 26:55 | |
| and what they've learned here in the service | 26:57 | |
| of causes which benefit humanity. | 27:00 | |
| We are conscious oh, God, | 27:05 | |
| of the many needs present within our world. | 27:08 | |
| Humanity has made progress | 27:12 | |
| but there is still hunger, | 27:14 | |
| ignorance, prejudice and fear. | 27:17 | |
| We pray that these young people may go forth | 27:22 | |
| into a new, into our world, | 27:24 | |
| with a burning desire | 27:27 | |
| to rectify these wrongs. | 27:30 | |
| We pray for fellow students | 27:34 | |
| and teachers in places where freedom | 27:36 | |
| and truth are being tested. | 27:39 | |
| Particularly those in universities | 27:42 | |
| and colleges of South Africa. | 27:45 | |
| We pray for fellow students and teachers | 27:50 | |
| in countries where there is war | 27:52 | |
| or civil strife. | 27:53 | |
| Particularly those who work and study | 27:56 | |
| in Lebanon, Northern Ireland, | 27:58 | |
| Afghanistan, Nicaragua, | 28:02 | |
| may they persevere in spite of the terrors around them | 28:06 | |
| and be strengthened in their search | 28:10 | |
| for the knowledge that brings peace. | 28:12 | |
| We pray for those who are engaged | 28:17 | |
| in the work of research | 28:18 | |
| and discovery, | 28:20 | |
| that their minds may be continually enlightened | 28:22 | |
| to see more of your glory. | 28:25 | |
| We pray for those who teach, | 28:29 | |
| that their love of learning | 28:32 | |
| may never grow cold | 28:33 | |
| and their respect for the wonder | 28:36 | |
| of developing young minds | 28:38 | |
| never be dulled. | 28:40 | |
| We pray for all those who by economic adversity | 28:44 | |
| or lack of natural ability | 28:48 | |
| are denied educational opportunity. | 28:50 | |
| We pray for those in the class | 28:55 | |
| of 1986 who have died since this journey began. | 28:58 | |
| Louise, Molly, Allison, Ted, | 29:04 | |
| and remember them with thanks. | 29:08 | |
| For all seekers after truth | 29:13 | |
| that their minds maybe opened to new revelation | 29:16 | |
| and their will, strength | 29:19 | |
| and to follow the truth disclosed. | 29:21 | |
| This we pray expectant of your grace | 29:25 | |
| and care, Amen. | 29:29 | |
| (organ plays) | 29:46 | |
| (choir sings) | 30:29 | |
| Please stand for the responsive prayer. | 35:06 | |
| (rustling) | 35:11 | |
| Let us pray. | 35:13 | |
| Almighty God, as you have granted us a place | 35:16 | |
| in this University, | 35:19 | |
| hallow to us this day | 35:21 | |
| when we dedicate ourselves to the life and work | 35:24 | |
| to which you have called us, | 35:27 | |
| that we may remember with gratitude | 35:30 | |
| the families and friends who have cared for us. | 35:32 | |
| (congregation responds) | 35:36 | |
| That in the life ahead, | 35:39 | |
| that we may keep faith | 35:40 | |
| with those who loved us | 35:42 | |
| and trusted us and whose hopes follow us. | 35:43 | |
| (congregation responds) | 35:48 | |
| That we may enter with good encourage | 35:50 | |
| and constant purpose upon a task which await us. | 35:52 | |
| (congregation responds) | 35:57 | |
| From all vanity and pride | 35:59 | |
| as if our accomplishments were of our soul creation. | 36:02 | |
| (congregation responds) | 36:06 | |
| From neglect to the opportunities which are all about us | 36:08 | |
| and from distrust of our ability | 36:12 | |
| to meet the duties of each dawning day. | 36:14 | |
| (congregation responds) | 36:18 | |
| That the example of lies and generous people | 36:20 | |
| who have gone before us | 36:24 | |
| and our families and here in this University | 36:25 | |
| may save us from folly and self indulgence. | 36:29 | |
| (congregation responds) | 36:33 | |
| More especially that you would show us | 36:35 | |
| to your way of love | 36:39 | |
| in all that we do or say | 36:41 | |
| that we should come to love the Lord our God | 36:44 | |
| with our soul and mind and strength | 36:46 | |
| and our neighbor as ourselves. | 36:49 | |
| (congregation responds) | 36:53 | |
| These things and whatever else | 36:55 | |
| you see needful and right for us, | 36:56 | |
| we ask in your Holy name, Amen. | 36:59 | |
| (organ plays) | 37:06 | |
| (choir sings) | 37:53 | |
| And now class of 1986, | 41:39 | |
| may the grace, power and love of God | 41:42 | |
| go with you now, | 41:45 | |
| and always. | 41:47 | |
| (choir sings) | 41:51 | |
| ♪ Amen, amen, amen, amen, amen ♪ | 41:52 | |
| ♪ Amen, amen ♪ | 42:30 | |
| (organ plays) | 43:00 |
Item Info
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