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<title>An Unexpected Sermon</title>
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<description>Reformation Sunday 1995 Stanley Hauerwas Via Pat Madrid I must begin by telling you that I do not like to preach on Reformation Sunday. Actually I have to put it more strongly than that. I do not like Reformation Sunday,...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: justify;">Reformation Sunday 1995</p><p style="text-align: justify;">Stanley Hauerwas</p><p style="text-align: justify;">Via <a href="http://http://patrickmadrid.blogspot.com/2009/10/protestant-ministers-unusual-sermon-on.html">Pat Madrid</a></p><p style="text-align: justify;">I must begin by telling you that I do
not like to preach on Reformation Sunday. Actually I have to put it
more strongly than that. I do not like Reformation Sunday, period. I do
not understand why it is part of the church year. Reformation Sunday
does not name a happy event for the Church Catholic; on the contrary,
it names failure. Of course, the church rightly names failure, or at
least horror, as part of our church year. We do, after all, go through
crucifixion as part of Holy Week. Certainly if the Reformation is to be
narrated rightly, it is to be narrated as part of those dark days.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Reformation names the disunity in which
we currently stand. We who remain in the Protestant tradition want to
say that Reformation was a success. But when we make Reformation a
success, it only ends up killing us. After all, the very name
‘Protestantism’ is meant to denote a reform movement of protest within
the Church Catholic. When Protestantism becomes an end in itself, which
it certainly has through the mainstream denominations in America, it
becomes anathema. If we no longer have broken hearts at the church’s
division, then we cannot help but unfaithfully celebrate Reformation
Sunday.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">For example, note what the Reformation
has done for our reading texts like that which we hear from Luke this
morning. We Protestants automatically assume that the Pharisees are the
Catholics. They are the self-righteous people who have made
Christianity a form of legalistic religion, thereby destroying the free
grace of the Gospel. We Protestants are the tax collectors, knowing
that we are sinners and that our lives depend upon God’s free grace.
And therefore we are better than the Catholics because we know they are
sinners. What an odd irony that the Reformation made such readings
possible. As Protestants we now take pride in the acknowledgment of our
sinfulness in order to distinguish ourselves from Catholics who
allegedly believe in works-righteousness.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Unfortunately, the Catholics are right.
Christian salvation consists in works. To be saved is to be made holy.
To be saved requires our being made part of a people separated from the
world so that we can be united in spite of — or perhaps better, because
of — the world’s fragmentation and divisions. Unity, after all, is what
God has given us through Christ’s death and resurrection. For in that
death and resurrection we have been made part of God’s salvation for
the world so that the world may know it has been freed from the powers
that would compel us to kill one another in the name of false
loyalties. All that is about the works necessary to save us.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">For example, I often point out that at
least Catholics have the magisterial office of the Bishop of Rome to
remind them that disunity is a sin. You should not overlook the
significance that in several important documents of late, John Paul II
has confessed the Catholic sin for the Reformation. Where are the
Protestants capable of doing likewise? We Protestants feel no sin for
the disunity of the Reformation. We would not know how to confess our
sin for the continuing disunity of the Reformation. We would not know
how to do that because we have no experience of unity.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The magisterial office — we Protestants
often forget — is not a matter of constraining or limiting diversity in
the name of unity. The office of the Bishop of Rome is to ensure that
when Christians move from Durham, North Carolina to Syracuse, New York,
they have some confidence when they go to church that they will be
worshiping the same God. Because Catholics have an office of unity,
they do not need to restrain the gifts of the Spirit. As I oftentimes
point out, it is extraordinary that Catholicism is able to keep the
Irish and the Italians in the same church. What an achievement! Perhaps
equally amazing is their ability to keep within the same church
Jesuits, Dominicans, and Franciscans.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I think Catholics are able to do that
because they know that their unity does not depend upon everyone
agreeing. Indeed, they can celebrate their disagreements because they
understand that our unity is founded upon the cross and resurrection of
Jesus of Nazareth that makes the Eucharist possible. They do not
presume, therefore, that unity requires that we all read Scripture the
same way.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">This creates a quite different attitude
among Catholics about their relation to Christian tradition and the
wider world. Protestants look over to Christian tradition and say, ‘How
much of this do we have to believe in order to remain identifiably
Christian?’ That’s the reason why Protestants are always tempted to
rationalism: we think that Christianity is to be identified with sets
of beliefs more than with the unity of the Spirit occasioned through
sacrament.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Moreover, once Christianity becomes
reduced to a matter of belief, as it clearly has for Protestants, we
cannot resist questions of whether those beliefs are as true or useful
as other beliefs we also entertain. Once such questions are raised, it
does not matter what the answer turns out in a given case. As James
Edwards observes, “Once religious beliefs start to compete with other
beliefs, then religious believers are — and will know themselves to be
— mongerers of values. They too are denizens of the mall, selling and
shopping and buying along with the rest of us.”</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In contrast, Catholics do not begin
with the question of “How much do we need to believe?” but with the
attitude “Look at all the wonderful stuff we get to believe!” Isn’t it
wonderful to know that Mary was immaculately conceived in order to be
the faithful servant of God’s new creation in Jesus Christ! She
therefore becomes the firstborn of God’s new creation, our mother, the
first member of God’s new community we call church. Isn’t it wonderful
that God continued to act in the world through the appearances of Mary
at Guadalupe! Mary must know something because she seems to always
appear to peasants and, in particular, to peasant women who have the
ability to see her. Most of us would not have the ability to see Mary
because we’d be far too embarrassed by our vision.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Therefore Catholics understand the
church’s unity as grounded in reality more determinative than our good
feelings for one another. The office of Rome matters. For at least that
office is a judgment on the church for our disunity. Surely it is the
clear indication of the sin of the Reformation that we Protestants have
not been able to resist nationalistic identifications. So we become
German Lutherans, American Lutherans, Norwegian Lutherans. You are
Dutch Calvinist, American Presbyterians, Church of Scotland. I am an
American Methodist, which has precious little to do with my sisters and
brothers in English Methodism. And so we Protestant Christians go to
war killing one another in the name of being American, German,
Japanese, and so on.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">At least it becomes the sin of Rome
when Italian Catholics think they can kill Irish Catholics in the name
of being Italian. Such divisions distort the unity of the Gospel found
in the Eucharist and, thus, become judgments against the church of
Rome. Of course, the Papacy has often been unfaithful and corrupt, but
at least Catholics preserved an office God can use to remind us that we
have been and may yet prove unfaithful. In contrast, Protestants don’t
even know we’re being judged for our disunity.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I realize that this perspective on
Reformation Sunday is not the usual perspective. The usual perspective
is to tell us what a wonderful thing happened at the Reformation. The
Reformation struck a blow for freedom. No longer would we be held in
medieval captivity to law and arbitrary authority. The Reformation was
the beginning of enlightenment, of progressive civilizations, of
democracy, that have come to fruition in this wonderful country called
America. What a destructive story.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">You can tell the destructive character
of that narrative by what it has done to the Jews. The way we
Protestants read history, and in particular our Bible, has been nothing
but disastrous for the Jews. For we turned the Jews into Catholics by
suggesting that the Jews had sunk into legalistic and sacramental
religion after the prophets and had therefore become moribund and dead.
In order to make Jesus explicable (in order to make Jesus look like
Luther — at least the Luther of our democratic projections), we had to
make Judaism look like our characterization of Catholicism. Yet Jesus
did not free us from Israel; rather, he engrafted us into the promise
of Israel so that we might be a people called to the same holiness of
the law.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I realize that the suggestion that
salvation is to be part of a holy people constituted by the law seems
to deny the Reformation principle of justification by faith through
grace. I do not believe that to be the case, particularly as Calvin
understood that Reformation theme. After all, Calvin (and Luther)
assumed that justification by faith through grace is a claim about
God’s presence in Jesus of Nazareth. So justification by faith through
grace is not some general truth about our need for acceptance; but
rather justification by faith through grace is a claim about the
salvation wrought by God through Jesus to make us a holy people capable
of remembering that God’s salvation comes through the Jews. When the
church loses that memory, we lose the source of our unity. For unity is
finally a matter of memory, of how we tell the story of the
Reformation. How can we tell this story of the church truthfully as
Protestants and Catholics so that we might look forward to being in
union with one another and thus share a common story of our mutual
failure?</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">We know, after all, that the prophecy
of Joel has been fulfilled. The portents of heaven, the blood and fire,
the darkness of the sun, the bloody moon have come to pass in the cross
of our Savior Jesus Christ. Now all who call on that name will be
saved. We believe that we who stand in the Reformation churches are
survivors. But to survive we need to recover the unity that God has
given us as survivors. So on this Reformation Sunday long for, pray
for, our ability to remember the Reformation – not as a celebratory
moment, not as a blow for freedom, but as the sin of the church. Pray
for God to heal our disunity, not the disunity simply between
Protestant and Catholic, but the disunity in our midst between classes,
between races, between nations. Pray that on Reformation Sunday we may
as tax collectors confess our sin and ask God to make us a new people
joined together in one might prayer that the world may be saved from
its divisions.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">(<em><a href="http://www.divinity.duke.edu/portal_memberdata/shauerwas" onclick="javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(&#39;/outgoing/www.divinity.duke.edu/portal_memberdata/shauerwas&#39;);" target="_blank">Stanley Hauerwas</a> is the Gilbert T. Rowe Professor of Theological Ethics at Duke Divinity School.</em>)</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/BiblicalBabylon/~4/8DFzE11uE68" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>



<dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Sat, 31 Oct 2009 19:41:39 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>Going to War, Again.</title>
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<description>Matt is headed back to Iraq again, making this his 4th deployment. Far too much time spent in that hell-hole. But he is good at his job, and will make short work of the people that get in his way....</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<a href="http://tmason47.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834540a4069e20120a615cf79970b-popup" onclick="window.open( this.href, &#39;_blank&#39;, &#39;width=640,height=480,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0&#39; ); return false" style="display: inline;"><img alt="L_d71531cf5672b71af0d20955f2bdfe8_2" border="0" class="asset asset-image at-xid-6a00d834540a4069e20120a615cf79970b image-full " src="http://tmason47.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834540a4069e20120a615cf79970b-800wi" title="L_d71531cf5672b71af0d20955f2bdfe8_2" /></a> <br /> <p>Matt is headed back to Iraq again, making this his 4th deployment. Far too much time spent in that hell-hole. But he is good at his job, and will make short work of the people that get in his way. Thank goodness it isn&#39;t Afghanistan this time.</p><p>Stay safe and shoot straight.</p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/BiblicalBabylon/~4/Yc3lxyDjJdc" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>



<dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Thu, 22 Oct 2009 20:53:45 -0400</pubDate>

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