Sunday, November 3, 2019

What makes a saint?


A Sermon preached on Nov. 3, 2019, All Saints and All Souls at St. Augustine’s, Wiesbaden


Daniel 7:1-3, 15-18, Ephesians 1:11-23, Luke 6:20-31

It is not unusual for us to do more than one thing at a time on a Sunday here at St. Augustine’s. This week, we are doing at least four. We have our regular Sunday Eucharist on what is also the 21st Sunday after Pentecost. We are celebrating both the feasts of All Saints and All Souls, and we have our Stewardship Ingathering. In our church the regular Sunday readings usually take precedence. This goes back to the English Reformation. In his preface to the 1552 BCP, Thomas Cranmer writes that in olden times it was “so ordered, that all the whole Bible (or the greatest part thereof) should be read over once in the year” but that lately “this godly and decent order of the ancient fathers hath been so altered, broken, and neglected, by planting in uncertain Stories, Legends, Responses, Verses, vain repetitions, and Commemorations…  that commonly when any book of the Bible was begun, before three or four Chapters were read out, all the rest were unread.” To avoid this, the then new lectionary limited the number of feast days and of them, only a few were allowed to be moved to a Sunday. All Saints the day for commemorating all saints, known and unknown, is one of them. All Souls – aka the Commemoration of All Faithful Departed - did not appear in an American Prayer Book until 1979. We tend to put them together and commemorate all the faithful departed together, whether officially a saint or not.

What is a saint, what makes someone a saint you might ask? Well, it is not dependent on you pledging or on the amount of your pledge. That is not why we put those two events together! [But “God still loves a cheerful giver” (2 Cor. 9:7)] There is no mention of saints in the gospels and when Paul uses the word it in his letters, it mostly refers simply to all the other Christians, and to living ones! Only later, in the early church, did the idea develop of raising up individuals considered worthy of great honour to use them as models for the faithful. The example of the many who died as martyrs for their faith was considered too important for them to be forgotten. The Roman Catholic Church has a proper process of canonization, St. John Henry Newman was a recent instance, the Eastern Orthodox Church has a process of glorification. And in our church, we have committees and conventions to decide these things …. 

Actually, Anglicans can’t really decide what to do with saints. While some actively venerate them, others hold positions building on the Reformation desires to reform or abolish the cults of saints. That probably explains why we have had found it so difficult to revise our book of saints. Originally called Lesser Feasts and Fasts (the major saints’ days are already listed in the BCP), it became Holy Women, Holy Men and then A Great Cloud of Witnesses (still an optional resource) before turning back – at the last General Convention – into Lesser Feasts and Fasts again. 

What’s a saint? Well according to that book, “Christians have since ancient times honored men and women whose lives represent heroic commitment to Christ and who have borne witness to their faith even at the cost of their lives.” “What we celebrate in the lives of the saints is the presence of Christ expressing itself in and through particular lives …. In the saints we are not dealing primarily with absolutes of perfection but human lives … open to the motions of the Holy Spirit. Many a holy life, when carefully examined, will reveal flaws or the bias of a particular moment in history or ecclesial perspective.” [Just think of the colonial era missionaries – we have misogynist saints, intolerant saints … ] “It should encourage us to realize that the saints, like us, are first and foremost redeemed sinners in whom the risen Christ’s words to St. Paul come to fulfillment, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”[1] Or to use a quote I found recently in another sermon: “A saint is a dead sinner, revised and edited.”[2]

What’s a saint according to the Bible? Our first reading, from the Book of Daniel, says nothing about who they are, just what they can expect: “But the holy ones of the Most High shall receive the kingdom and possess the kingdom for ever – for ever and ever.” (Daniel 7:18) Actually it does say something about them – they are people for whom earthly kingdoms and power are not important, only God’s kingdom. The Ephesian Christians are also accounted among the saints – the holy ones. First they heard the word of truth, the gospel of salvation, then they believed in Christ, and finally were “marked with the seal of the promised Holy Spirit; as the pledge of their inheritance toward redemption as God's own people.” (Eph. 1:13-14) Which is what we might call the Baptismal sequence: we hear the word, it takes root, it becomes faith, we are baptized as a sign of that faith and our becoming part of the family of God. For that reason, All Saints Day is a day considered especially suitable for baptism. We don’t have one today but will still renew our Baptismal Covenant together.  

Then in the Gospel, Luke’s sermon on the plain – similar to but not identical with Matthew’s sermon on the mount –Daniel’s promise of the inheritance of the kingdom of God for those considered blessed is repeated, while those who rely too much on their current earthly wealth and power, especially if it is coming from exploiting and taking advantage of the weak and the powerless, are warned. It will not last, God likes turning things upside down. The kingdom that the poor, the hungry, those who weep, those who are hated and persecuted are promised, is meant as an encouragement. We look to that glorious future as we act in the present. We draw our strength from this promise, from the knowledge of “the hope to which (God) has called you, what are the riches of his glorious inheritance among the saints, and what is the immeasurable greatness of his power for us who believe.” (Eph. 1:18-19)

And we need that hope and that assurance if we are to act as Jesus tells his disciples to act, radically opposed to the values of the world. Loving even our enemies, doing good even to those who hate you, blessing even those who curse you, praying even for those who abuse you. Sometimes we are called to give seemingly beyond our means. And most difficult of all not to respond to persecution and hate and violence with more of the same. Jesus does not say, do to others as they do to you, but do to others as you would have them do to you – even if they don’t and even if the chances of them doing so are slim to say the least. If you do that, you certainly count as a saint in all definitions. This is not about accepting abuse for the sake of abuse, not about tolerating violence. This is Jesus saying, when you preach and live the gospel, when you try and change the world into what it is intended to be, you will meet significant resistance, you will be reviled and defamed. Don’t become like those you want to change. That is the easy option, that is the evil one’s way. Instead remember that God’s great power, the same power God put to work in Christ when God raised him from the dead is working in you. 

In the end though, the question is not, what makes a saint but who makes a saint. Our behavior, our witness is important. But God makes us saints; God sets us apart. What makes someone a saint is not that they are holy, but that the God they love and live for is holy.
Amen.


[1] Preface of Revised Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018
[2] Ambrose Bierce

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