Margaret B. Via - "Endings and Beginnings" (May 10, 1987)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
(organ music) | 0:04 | |
- | Grace and peace to you from God, our Father | 12:31 |
and our Lord, Jesus Christ. | 12:35 | |
Welcome to this service of worship at Duke Chapel. | 12:37 | |
This is a special day at Duke | 12:41 | |
and I greet all of you | 12:44 | |
graduates, parents, relatives, friends, visitors, | 12:46 | |
and members of the Duke Chapel congregation. | 12:51 | |
(organ music) | 13:01 | |
- | Let us confess our sins together, before God. | 17:49 |
Oh merciful God, | 17:55 | |
We confess to thee that we have been sinful servants | 17:57 | |
We have not lived in Christ's image. | 18:02 | |
We have loved the old, | 18:05 | |
when we should have left it behind. | 18:07 | |
Release us from our sins of deceit and fear | 18:10 | |
and open us to new beginnings, | 18:14 | |
through your son, Jesus Christ, our Lord. | 18:17 | |
Amen. | 18:21 | |
Hear the good news: | 18:22 | |
Christ died for us, while we were yet sinners. | 18:24 | |
That is God's own proof | 18:27 | |
of his love for us. | 18:30 | |
In the name of Jesus Christ, | 18:32 | |
we are forgiven. | 18:34 | |
- | Let us pray. | 18:47 |
Open our hearts and minds, O God, | 18:50 | |
by the power of your Holy Spirit. | 18:53 | |
So that as the word is read and proclaimed, | 18:56 | |
we might hear with joy | 18:59 | |
what you say to us this day. | 19:00 | |
Amen. | 19:03 | |
The first lesson is from Ecclesiastes. | 19:05 | |
I have seen the business that God has given | 19:09 | |
to the sons and daughters to be busy with. | 19:12 | |
God has made everything beautiful in its time. | 19:15 | |
Also God has put eternity into the human heart, | 19:19 | |
yet so that they cannot find out | 19:24 | |
what God has done from beginning to end. | 19:26 | |
I know that there is nothing better for them | 19:30 | |
than to be happy | 19:32 | |
and enjoy themselves as long as they live | 19:34 | |
Also that it is God's gift to all | 19:38 | |
that every one should eat and drink | 19:42 | |
and take pleasure in all his toil. | 19:43 | |
I know that whatever God does endures forever, | 19:47 | |
nothing can be added to it, | 19:52 | |
nor anything taken from it. | 19:54 | |
God has made it | 19:57 | |
has made it so, | 19:59 | |
in order that they should fear before him. | 20:01 | |
That which is, already has been. | 20:04 | |
That which is to be, already has been, | 20:09 | |
and God seeks what has been driven away. | 20:14 | |
This ends the reading of the first lesson. | 20:18 | |
Would you please stand for the reading of this alter, | 20:22 | |
which as you will see in your bulletin, | 20:24 | |
is portions of Psalm 103. | 20:26 | |
Let us read in unison: | 20:31 | |
Bless the Lord, O my soul, | 20:34 | |
and all that is within me, | 20:37 | |
bless his holy name. | 20:39 | |
Bless the Lord, O my soul, | 20:41 | |
and forget not all his benefits, | 20:44 | |
who forgives all your iniquity, | 20:46 | |
who heals all your diseases, | 20:49 | |
who redeems your life from the pit, | 20:52 | |
who crowns you with steadfast love and mercy, | 20:55 | |
who satisfies you with good as long as you live, | 20:58 | |
so that your youth is renewed like the eagle's. | 21:02 | |
The Lord is merciful and gracious, | 21:06 | |
slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love. | 21:09 | |
Bless the Lord, O my soul. | 21:13 | |
Please be seated. | 21:16 | |
The gospel reading is from Mark. | 21:29 | |
And a great crowd followed him and thronged about him. | 21:33 | |
And there was a woman | 21:37 | |
who had had a flow of blood for twelve years, | 21:38 | |
and who had suffered much under many physicians, | 21:42 | |
and had spent all that she had, | 21:45 | |
and was no better, but rather grew worse. | 21:47 | |
She had heard the reports about Jesus, | 21:51 | |
and came up behind him in the crowd | 21:53 | |
and touched his garment. | 21:56 | |
For she said, "If I touch even his garments, | 21:58 | |
"I shall be made well." | 22:01 | |
And immediately the hemorrhage ceased | 22:04 | |
and she felt in her body that she was healed of disease. | 22:07 | |
And Jesus, perceiving in himself | 22:11 | |
that power had gone forth from him, | 22:13 | |
immediately turned about in the crowd, and said, | 22:16 | |
"Who touched my garments?" | 22:19 | |
And his disciples said to him, | 22:21 | |
"You see the crowd pressing around you, | 22:23 | |
and yet you say, 'Who touched me?'" | 22:25 | |
And he looked around to see who had done it. | 22:28 | |
But the woman, knowing what had been done to her, | 22:31 | |
came in fear and trembling and fell down before him, | 22:34 | |
and told him the whole truth. | 22:39 | |
And he said to her, | 22:42 | |
"Daughter, your faith has made you well. | 22:44 | |
"Go in peace, and be healed of your disease." | 22:47 | |
Mrs. Lennox, the queer, lumpy cheeked cook | 23:00 | |
was lying dead on the floor. | 23:04 | |
During his rage, her heart had stopped. | 23:08 | |
He stared at her, dead. | 23:12 | |
So this is it? | 23:14 | |
The end? | 23:16 | |
Farewell. | 23:17 | |
These days and weeks the wintry garden | 23:19 | |
had been speaking to him | 23:22 | |
of this fact and to no other. | 23:24 | |
The gray, white bark, the snow, | 23:27 | |
the twigs had been telling him | 23:31 | |
Oh crying shame, how can we, why do we allow ourselves, | 23:34 | |
what are we doing for god sake? | 23:38 | |
Make a move, Henderson. | 23:41 | |
Put forth effort. | 23:43 | |
You, too, will die of his pestilence. | 23:44 | |
Death will annihilate you and nothing will remain. | 23:47 | |
So while something still is, | 23:50 | |
now, for the sake of it all, get out. | 23:53 | |
Whiskey could not coat the terrible fact. | 23:58 | |
Saul Bellow's affluent, middle-aged, Henderson, | 24:03 | |
tells us that we are human beings, | 24:06 | |
trapped in time, | 24:09 | |
between the tick of birth | 24:11 | |
and the tock of death. | 24:13 | |
Confronting death at its highest level | 24:16 | |
can be an empowering thing. | 24:18 | |
For the reality of physical death, | 24:22 | |
as it presses upon us daily, | 24:24 | |
invites us more than any other human reality, | 24:27 | |
to sharpen our wits about what it means to be human | 24:31 | |
and to live in this world | 24:35 | |
as responsible human beings. | 24:37 | |
The author of Ecclesiastes is baffled by the riddles of life | 24:41 | |
and describes the world as fixed and closed, | 24:45 | |
yet there is an urgency within the human heart | 24:50 | |
to burst out of restricted determinism | 24:53 | |
and delight in the splendors of freedom and mystery. | 24:57 | |
We're drawn to the boundlessness of eternity | 25:03 | |
it stirs and haunts us. | 25:06 | |
It demands us to deal with the finite and the infinite. | 25:10 | |
It matters what we are and what we do | 25:14 | |
and how we go about doing it. | 25:18 | |
Because there is a God, | 25:21 | |
we are challenged, like Henderson, | 25:23 | |
to get on with it. | 25:26 | |
The choices are difficult. | 25:29 | |
God's will is often obscure. | 25:31 | |
T.S. Elliot puts it like this, | 25:35 | |
there will always be the church and the world | 25:38 | |
and the human heart, shivering and fluttering between them | 25:41 | |
choosing and chosen. | 25:46 | |
Valiant, ignoble, dark and full of light. | 25:49 | |
Swinging between hell gate and heaven gate. | 25:52 | |
In the brief passage of time called our life, | 25:57 | |
we may be caught living a death instead of a life. | 26:01 | |
Breaks, interruptions that separate, and divide | 26:05 | |
life from death, | 26:10 | |
the former from the latter, | 26:11 | |
crack the time process into endings and beginnings. | 26:13 | |
Which make possible a way of life | 26:18 | |
from a way of death. | 26:21 | |
Such times of stops and starts and twists and turns | 26:24 | |
are births and deaths | 26:28 | |
and marriages and divorces | 26:30 | |
and moves and illnesses and losses. | 26:33 | |
In these times of jolts and changes, | 26:38 | |
we are offered the chance to make new departures | 26:41 | |
to follow new directions | 26:45 | |
and to let go and to take up | 26:47 | |
and to die a little and live again. | 26:49 | |
Duke graduation is a time of endings and beginnings | 26:54 | |
proceedings are continuing at this moment | 26:58 | |
in Wallace Wade Stadium. | 27:01 | |
Let us borrow from the preacher, | 27:04 | |
some of his poetic words in Ecclesiastes | 27:06 | |
in describing this time. | 27:09 | |
It's a time of gladness, degrees have been earned, | 27:12 | |
work has been accomplished. | 27:15 | |
New opportunities are on the horizon. | 27:17 | |
It's a time to keep and cherish | 27:20 | |
the good memories of the past. | 27:22 | |
It's a time to castaway that which needs to die. | 27:25 | |
It's a time to love the truth | 27:29 | |
and to hate the evil in our world. | 27:32 | |
It's a time to make peace | 27:35 | |
in a world plagued by some 40 wars. | 27:37 | |
Most of us in this chapel | 27:43 | |
are not in the Duke graduating class of '87, | 27:44 | |
but we are quaint ed with the seasons of life | 27:48 | |
with death times and life times. | 27:51 | |
We know about hanging onto the old was safe, | 27:54 | |
when the old has become death. | 27:57 | |
We know about the opportunities missed | 28:00 | |
because we did not have the courage | 28:03 | |
to move beyond what was only meant to be a beginning. | 28:05 | |
In a memorable passage in Wind, Sand and Stars, | 28:12 | |
Antoine de Exupéry speaks of those who hide in safe places. | 28:16 | |
You, like a termite, built your peace | 28:22 | |
by blocking up with cement | 28:25 | |
every chink and cranny through which the light might pierce. | 28:27 | |
You rolled yourself up into a ball in your genteel security, | 28:32 | |
in routine, in the stifling conventions of provincial life, | 28:36 | |
Now the clay | 28:42 | |
of which you were shaped has dried and hardened, | 28:43 | |
and naught in you will ever awaken | 28:47 | |
the sleeping musician, the poet, the astronomer | 28:49 | |
that possibly inhabited you in the beginning. | 28:54 | |
The Easter season is a time of awakening. | 29:00 | |
A time of proclaiming the good news of the resurrection, | 29:04 | |
the living presence of Christ, | 29:07 | |
and the promises that it brings to us. | 29:10 | |
Yet, we live in the tension between death and resurrection | 29:14 | |
between faith and unfaith, | 29:19 | |
between the yet and the not yet, | 29:22 | |
between certainty and uncertainty. | 29:25 | |
A young, contemporary German poet | 29:30 | |
has caught something of a predicament | 29:32 | |
in which we find ourselves. | 29:35 | |
Smash the shop windows of our archaic civilization | 29:38 | |
with the stones given us when we ask for bread. | 29:42 | |
We want back our blood drawn from us, | 29:47 | |
our language denied us, | 29:49 | |
our love stolen from us. | 29:50 | |
We want to see again with our eyes | 29:52 | |
that have been blindfolded. | 29:55 | |
We want back our peace ripped from us, | 29:57 | |
our song silenced, | 30:00 | |
our youth taken away. | 30:02 | |
It's a tough time to be alive. | 30:06 | |
In this nuclear age, we fear for our lives | 30:09 | |
and for those of the next generations. | 30:13 | |
Perhaps our greatest challenge | 30:17 | |
is to be open to the future which God | 30:19 | |
will give us. | 30:24 | |
For if there is a future, | 30:26 | |
it will be given to us | 30:28 | |
only by the grace and by the mercy of God. | 30:31 | |
Another shocking story tells us of this truth. | 30:36 | |
This one, from the gospel of Mark. | 30:40 | |
There was a woman, namely she is, | 30:43 | |
though tradition has given her two names, | 30:45 | |
Veronica and Bernice. | 30:48 | |
Like Henderson, she was trapped in her own private hell. | 30:50 | |
Her world was a terrible mess. | 30:54 | |
The smooth face of youth | 30:56 | |
had turned into the lined face of misery. | 30:58 | |
For 12 long years, | 31:02 | |
she had suffered from severe hemorrhaging. | 31:03 | |
The symptoms of such a case | 31:07 | |
are described in a first century work on gynecology. | 31:09 | |
She is pale, wastes away, | 31:15 | |
lacks appetite, breathless, with swollen feet. | 31:18 | |
Those years had taken their toll. | 31:24 | |
Her purse was empty, | 31:26 | |
her medical bills had drained her account. | 31:27 | |
She was not better, she was worse. | 31:30 | |
What was she to do? | 31:33 | |
What would become of her? | 31:35 | |
If she were Jewish, and most scholars think that she was, | 31:38 | |
she had been denied community because of her condition. | 31:42 | |
She was castaway from all | 31:48 | |
that had once been meaningful to her. | 31:50 | |
Did God really make those laws which required them to do so? | 31:54 | |
Which had come down from so long ago, | 31:58 | |
ritual uncleanness meant excluding people | 32:03 | |
from worship and community | 32:06 | |
on the basis of physical conditions. | 32:09 | |
Surely, a loving God | 32:12 | |
would not have dealt with her so harshly. | 32:14 | |
Why should her biological difference be a curse? | 32:18 | |
God had made her a woman. | 32:21 | |
Did that warrant being shut out because of her illness? | 32:23 | |
The Psalm of so long ago had said, | 32:30 | |
"the Lord healeth the broken in heart | 32:32 | |
"and bindeth up their wounds." | 32:35 | |
She had heard of him. | 32:39 | |
Could it be true? | 32:40 | |
The stories of his acts of power. | 32:42 | |
This man, Jesus, | 32:47 | |
had treated women with gentleness and kindness, | 32:48 | |
but then he treated all persons that way, | 32:52 | |
so the rumors say. | 32:55 | |
You know the story. | 32:58 | |
She painstakingly made her way down the crowded street, | 32:59 | |
where he was passing. | 33:03 | |
Could she get to him? | 33:04 | |
If so, she knew that he could somehow help her, | 33:06 | |
do something for her, | 33:10 | |
make her well, | 33:12 | |
the text says. | 33:13 | |
She came up behind him and reached for him | 33:16 | |
and she caught his robe for a second. | 33:19 | |
It was like lightning. | 33:25 | |
She knew and he knew that something had happened. | 33:26 | |
But no one else knew. | 33:31 | |
And then he spoke, "Who touched my garments?" | 33:34 | |
Timidly, she came forward and fell before him. | 33:38 | |
Her bottled up emotions | 33:41 | |
were released from her trembling lips. | 33:42 | |
It all tumbled out, the whole truth. | 33:46 | |
She was awed and overwhelmed | 33:49 | |
by his amazing power. | 33:52 | |
The tender, wondrous words of Jesus | 33:57 | |
gave her permission to enter into a new existence. | 34:00 | |
My daughter, your faith has made you well. | 34:06 | |
Go in peace and be healed of your trouble. | 34:12 | |
The new communities from which Mark, Matthew, and Luke wrote | 34:18 | |
all recorded her story. | 34:22 | |
They wanted everyone to know what kind of a man Jesus was. | 34:25 | |
The man who ate, the man who cried, the man who loved, | 34:29 | |
the man who died. | 34:35 | |
Yet, who was the son of God | 34:38 | |
who lived and who cared | 34:41 | |
that people hurt, that people bleed, | 34:44 | |
that people need. | 34:48 | |
The stories of Henderson and the unknown woman | 34:52 | |
have one thing in common, | 34:55 | |
the openness to a new life. | 34:58 | |
A new beginning, a new future. | 35:01 | |
Lives, which are hopeless, become lives full of promise. | 35:06 | |
God is the giver of such a gift. | 35:14 | |
Thanks be to God. | 35:19 | |
(organ music) | 35:27 | |
The Lord be with you | 37:37 | |
- | And also with you. | 37:39 |
- | Let us pray. | 37:40 |
O gracious, God. | 37:44 | |
You have shown us your healing love | 37:45 | |
in your son, Jesus Christ, | 37:48 | |
who stopped to speak to an unknown woman | 37:50 | |
in a crowded street. | 37:53 | |
And in her distress, saved her from a living death. | 37:56 | |
Grant us the grace to turn to you, | 38:01 | |
even as she did, | 38:04 | |
in all of our miseries and heartbreaks, | 38:05 | |
trusting that you will be faithful | 38:09 | |
to offer us healing and a new beginning. | 38:11 | |
Today, we remember the women of the world. | 38:16 | |
To those who have known the joys of being a mother | 38:19 | |
give them the strength and the grace | 38:22 | |
to guide and love their children | 38:25 | |
so that they may become your sons and daughters. | 38:27 | |
To those who are loveless and lonely, | 38:32 | |
we ask your comfort and peace. | 38:35 | |
To the graduates here, | 38:39 | |
and in college and universities across the land, | 38:40 | |
grant the courage they need to apply the truth | 38:44 | |
in the practice of their new professions. | 38:48 | |
May they dedicate themselves to bringing good will | 38:51 | |
and peace to this world. | 38:54 | |
We pray for our nation, | 38:58 | |
which has been besieged with reports | 38:59 | |
of intrigue, unfaithfulness, corruption, and deceit. | 39:01 | |
Help us not to become self-righteous, | 39:07 | |
but neither let us become unconscious | 39:10 | |
of our responsibilities to live as becoming a Christian. | 39:12 | |
We pray for people everywhere, | 39:19 | |
in all of their needs, | 39:21 | |
the sick, the hungry, the dying. | 39:23 | |
May they be upheld by your redeeming love. | 39:26 | |
Through Christ, our Lord. | 39:31 | |
Amen. | 39:33 | |
In gratitude, for the wondrous gifts | 39:35 | |
which God has given to us, | 39:38 | |
let us offer ourselves and our gifts to God. | 39:40 | |
(soft music) | 39:47 | |
- | We give you thanks and praise for who you are, O God. | 45:26 |
For this day of joy and celebration we are grateful | 45:30 | |
and express to you now | 45:35 | |
our love and appreciation for the bounty | 45:37 | |
which has been given to us, | 45:40 | |
in Christ's name we pray, Amen. | 45:42 | |
(upbeat organ music) | 45:48 |
(Organ music playing) | 0:02 | |
(Organ music continues) | 1:42 | |
- | And now may the grace of our | 2:18 |
lord Jesus Christ. | 2:20 | |
The love of god. | 2:21 | |
And the communion of the holy spirit. | 2:23 | |
Rest and abide with us now and forever. | 2:25 | |
Amen. | 2:29 | |
(Organ music playing) | 2:33 | |
(Music ends) | 6:11 | |
(Crowd chatters and slowly leaves) | 6:15 |