Robert M. Blackburn - "Linked Lives" (December 10, 1978)
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Transcript
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- | Duke University Chapel, | 0:05 |
the University Service of Worship. | 0:07 | |
Second Sunday in Advent, | 0:09 | |
Founder's Day celebration. | 0:10 | |
Sunday morning, December 10th, | 0:12 | |
1978, 11 o'clock. | 0:14 | |
- | Now the opportunity for health | 0:18 |
and wholeness in the future. | 0:19 | |
Hear our words of thanksgiving | 0:22 | |
which we offer in the name and in the spirit | 0:25 | |
of Jesus Christ our Lord, amen. | 0:27 | |
(congregation buzzing) | 0:51 | |
(light organ music) | 1:17 | |
(light music) | 5:10 | |
("Oh Taste And See That The Lord Is Good") | 10:26 | |
♪ Oh taste and see ♪ | 10:28 | |
♪ How gracious the Lord is ♪ | 10:32 | |
♪ Blessed is the man ♪ | 10:38 | |
♪ That trusteth in him ♪ | 10:44 | |
♪ Oh taste and see ♪ | 10:51 | |
♪ How gracious the Lord is ♪ | 10:55 | |
♪ How gracious the Lord is ♪ | 11:01 | |
♪ And blessed is he ♪ | 11:05 | |
♪ Blessed is the man ♪ | 11:17 | |
♪ That trusteth in Him ♪ | 11:23 | |
♪ Blessed is the man that ♪ | 11:27 | |
♪ Trusteth in Him ♪ | 11:43 | |
("Oh Come, Oh Come, Emmanuel") | 11:59 | |
♪ Oh come, oh come, Emmanuel ♪ | 12:44 | |
♪ And ransom captive Israel ♪ | 12:51 | |
♪ That mourns in lonely exile here ♪ | 12:58 | |
♪ Until the Son of God appear ♪ | 13:06 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice ♪ | 13:14 | |
♪ Emmanuel shall come to thee, oh Israel ♪ | 13:19 | |
(choral music) | 13:33 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice ♪ | 14:03 | |
♪ Emmanuel shall come to thee, oh Israel ♪ | 14:08 | |
(choral music) | 14:22 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice ♪ | 14:53 | |
♪ Emmanuel shall come to thee, oh Israel ♪ | 14:58 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice ♪ | 15:43 | |
♪ Emmanuel shall come to thee, oh Israel ♪ | 15:49 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice ♪ | 16:33 | |
♪ Emmanuel shall come to thee, oh Israel ♪ | 16:38 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 16:54 | |
- | In the name and in the spirit of Christ Jesus our Lord, | 17:14 |
I greet you. | 17:19 | |
Because we have not made ourselves, | 17:23 | |
because we do not sustain ourselves, | 17:27 | |
because we cannot forgive ourselves, | 17:32 | |
our hearts indeed reach out to the Lord our God | 17:37 | |
who will hear and receive our prayers, | 17:41 | |
will receive even us. | 17:45 | |
And so together, let us confess our sin to Almighty God. | 17:48 | |
Let us pray. | 17:54 | |
Oh Lord, creator of all things and source of all truth, | 17:56 | |
we ask your forgiveness for the sins of the mind, | 18:02 | |
the pride of thinking that we are masters | 18:06 | |
of all creation and history, | 18:09 | |
our slackness or compulsion in our work in this university, | 18:12 | |
our doubts about your power to make all things new. | 18:17 | |
We ask your forgiveness for our lack of a sense of history, | 18:22 | |
for thinking all the world begins and ends with us, | 18:27 | |
for our too easy acceptance of our heritage, | 18:31 | |
for those who will suffer because of our unconcern | 18:35 | |
about the future. | 18:39 | |
Help us as we worship you | 18:41 | |
to come to a truer knowledge of ourselves, | 18:43 | |
knowing that we cannot hide from you. | 18:47 | |
God be merciful to us for we are sinners. | 18:51 | |
This is the message we have heard from him | 19:11 | |
and proclaim to you | 19:13 | |
that God is light | 19:16 | |
and in him is no darkness at all. | 19:18 | |
If we walk in the light as he is in the light, | 19:22 | |
we have fellowship with one another. | 19:26 | |
And the blood of Jesus Christ his Son | 19:29 | |
cleanses us from all our sin, amen. | 19:31 | |
Let us give thanks | 19:39 | |
for God is good and God's love is everlasting. | 19:41 | |
Congregation | Thanks be to God in all things. | 19:47 |
Thanks be to God. | 19:52 | |
Thanks be to God. | 19:56 | |
- | May I welcome you this morning | 20:04 |
to this Founder's Day service of worship | 20:07 | |
and to this service of worship on the second Sunday | 20:11 | |
in the holy season of Advent. | 20:14 | |
This is a very special day for us | 20:17 | |
in the Duke University community for a number of reasons. | 20:19 | |
This afternoon at two o'clock, | 20:24 | |
we will have a memorial service | 20:27 | |
in memory of Dean James T. Cleland, | 20:31 | |
dean of the chapel emeritus, | 20:35 | |
and professor of preaching emeritus in the Divinity School. | 20:37 | |
You and others, friends of his, | 20:41 | |
and friends of this university | 20:44 | |
are invited to come and share in that very special moment. | 20:46 | |
At 3:30 this afternoon, | 20:50 | |
Professor Fenner Douglas will play | 20:52 | |
on the Flentrop organ, | 20:55 | |
the Benjamin N. Duke Memorial Organ, | 20:57 | |
and at his annual Founder's Day concert. | 21:00 | |
That concert will begin at 3:30 this afternoon. | 21:04 | |
Those of you seated in the pews will find behind each pew | 21:11 | |
some forms that you may be interested in filling out. | 21:15 | |
We have had for some three years now | 21:19 | |
an organization known as the Friends of Duke Chapel. | 21:21 | |
We invite others, | 21:25 | |
those of you this morning, | 21:26 | |
and any others who might like to become | 21:27 | |
a member of the Friends of Duke Chapel | 21:30 | |
to fill out one of those cards | 21:32 | |
and indicate your desire to become one with us. | 21:34 | |
In the bulletin this morning, | 21:38 | |
there is a leaflet describing Christmas house | 21:39 | |
at the Edgemont Community Center. | 21:42 | |
Duke University and Edgemont Community Center | 21:45 | |
have had a working, helpful relationship with each other | 21:47 | |
for some 30 years or more. | 21:50 | |
I invite you to read this leaflet. | 21:54 | |
There are a number of children | 21:58 | |
and families in the Edgemont Community | 21:59 | |
who will have little or no Christmas | 22:01 | |
unless some of us respond | 22:03 | |
and share of our goodness with them. | 22:05 | |
You will note that we will be pleased to have toys, | 22:09 | |
gifts, clothes, | 22:11 | |
books, or even money. | 22:13 | |
Will you please respond and share with them | 22:17 | |
through the chapel | 22:21 | |
by bringing your gifts to the chapel | 22:22 | |
prior to December the 20th. | 22:24 | |
I've been asked to announce that in February | 22:28 | |
there will be a bioethics conference here | 22:30 | |
sponsored by Duke students and others in the Duke community. | 22:33 | |
It will be a nationwide conference. | 22:37 | |
The plea now is for those students at Duke | 22:40 | |
who wish to present papers dealing | 22:46 | |
with bioethical themes and issues | 22:47 | |
to come by the third floor of Flowers building, | 22:51 | |
express your interest, | 22:54 | |
and let them know that you will be interested in writing | 22:55 | |
and presenting a paper | 22:57 | |
which may be read at that conference. | 22:59 | |
Our time together today | 23:03 | |
will be blessed by the presence and the preaching | 23:06 | |
of Bishop Robert Blackburn, | 23:10 | |
presently the resident and presiding bishop | 23:13 | |
of the Raleigh area of the United Methodist Church. | 23:17 | |
Known widely, beloved, and respected | 23:21 | |
as a pastor, | 23:26 | |
as an administrator, | 23:28 | |
as one deeply concerned | 23:30 | |
about the causes of higher education, | 23:32 | |
we are pleased to have him here on this day. | 23:35 | |
His daughter Frances is a junior at Duke, | 23:39 | |
so I know he has a very special interest, | 23:42 | |
and a personal interest in the life and welfare | 23:45 | |
of this university. | 23:48 | |
We welcome Bishop Blackburn and Mrs. Blackburn to this day, | 23:50 | |
and we will hear him at the appropriate time in the service. | 23:54 | |
May God's spirit speak to you | 23:58 | |
and bless you during our time together is my prayer. | 24:03 | |
(light organ and choral music) | 24:14 | |
(singing in foreign language) | 25:26 | |
- | Prepare our hearts oh Lord to accept your word. | 27:55 |
Silence in us any voice but your own | 28:00 | |
that hearing we may also obey your will | 28:03 | |
through Jesus Christ our Lord, amen. | 28:08 | |
The New Testament lesson | 28:12 | |
is from the 12th chapter of Hebrews. | 28:14 | |
Therefore, since we are surrounded | 28:17 | |
by so great a cloud of witnesses, | 28:20 | |
let us also lay aside every weight, | 28:23 | |
and every sin which clings so closely. | 28:26 | |
And let us run with perseverance | 28:30 | |
the race that is set before us, | 28:32 | |
looking to Jesus, | 28:35 | |
the pioneer and perfecter of our faith, | 28:37 | |
who for the joy that was set before him | 28:41 | |
endured the cross despising the shame | 28:44 | |
and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God. | 28:47 | |
Here ends the reading from the New Testament. | 28:51 | |
All praise and glory be to God, amen. | 28:55 | |
(light organ and choral music) | 29:00 | |
- | Dr. Sanford, Mr. Young, | 30:14 |
and dear friends | 30:16 | |
of Duke University, | 30:18 | |
this is an opportunity that no one would want to miss | 30:20 | |
and I am deeply grateful for it. | 30:24 | |
Couple of years ago we had as our speaker | 30:27 | |
at the Methodist conference in Eastern North Carolina, | 30:29 | |
Dr. Earnest Campbell who at that time was the pastor | 30:33 | |
of the Riverside Church in New York City. | 30:37 | |
And he told about a man who got on a train in London | 30:40 | |
to go up to the little town of Rosedale. | 30:44 | |
The conductor came by to pick up his ticket | 30:48 | |
and said to the man, I'm very sorry sir, | 30:50 | |
but this train doesn't stop in Rosedale on a Friday night. | 30:53 | |
Oh, but the man says, I must get off. | 30:58 | |
It's very important. | 31:00 | |
I have a very exacting appointment that I must keep | 31:01 | |
and you must let me off. | 31:05 | |
And the conductor said, I'm sorry. | 31:07 | |
But this train doesn't stop in Rosedale on a Friday night. | 31:09 | |
And they had quite a tiff there. | 31:12 | |
And finally he asked the conductor | 31:14 | |
would he go up and talk to the engineer | 31:16 | |
and see if this one time on a Friday night | 31:17 | |
he would stop the train. | 31:20 | |
And so the conductor went all the way up to the engine. | 31:22 | |
After a long while he came back and he said to the man, | 31:24 | |
the engineer said to tell you sir | 31:27 | |
that he's very sorry. | 31:30 | |
He cannot stop this train. | 31:31 | |
Company rules forbid him stopping it in Rosedale | 31:32 | |
on a Friday night. | 31:35 | |
However, he as agree to do this. | 31:36 | |
As the train comes up, | 31:39 | |
he comes into the town, | 31:40 | |
he will slow it down very slowly. | 31:41 | |
And when it gets to the platform, | 31:44 | |
all you have to do is jump off | 31:46 | |
and run in the direction the train is moving. | 31:49 | |
He said, now don't jump the other way. | 31:51 | |
You'll fall and break your head. | 31:52 | |
But you run the way the train's moving | 31:54 | |
and I think you'll make it. | 31:55 | |
So sure enough the train came into Rosedale, | 31:58 | |
slowed down to a crawl. | 32:01 | |
The man jumped out and he ran with all the speed he had. | 32:04 | |
So much so that he passed up the car in front of him. | 32:07 | |
And there was a man there reached down | 32:11 | |
and pulled him back on the train. | 32:13 | |
(congregation laughing) | 32:15 | |
And he said to him, | 32:18 | |
you don't know how fortunate you are. | 32:18 | |
This train never stops in Rosedale on a Friday night. | 32:20 | |
(congregation laughing) | 32:24 | |
Well I want to say to you, | 32:26 | |
I know how fortunate I am. | 32:28 | |
I'm deeply grateful to Dr. Sanford and to others | 32:31 | |
who have been instrumental in inviting me to share | 32:34 | |
in this very significant day on Founder's Day | 32:37 | |
at Duke University. | 32:40 | |
It gives us an opportunity I think to reflect upon the past, | 32:42 | |
to evaluate our present, where we are now, | 32:47 | |
and to anticipate the future and where we need to be going. | 32:51 | |
We're reminded as we come here of a great heritage, | 32:56 | |
a wonderful, splendid past. | 33:00 | |
We're mindful of a stewardship | 33:03 | |
that grew out of generous hearts. | 33:05 | |
And we are here now to give thanks for that. | 33:07 | |
Recently I had read Dr. Robert Durden's book | 33:11 | |
entitled the Dukes of Durham. | 33:15 | |
And in this fascinating book, | 33:17 | |
he tells the story of Washington Duke, | 33:19 | |
and Benjamin Newton Duke, | 33:21 | |
and James Buchanan Duke. | 33:23 | |
In fact, on the introductory page, | 33:25 | |
he tells that's who the book is about. | 33:26 | |
Paralleling it is the story of North Carolina | 33:30 | |
in the latter part of the 19th century | 33:33 | |
and the early part of this century. | 33:36 | |
Also it runs a rather interesting parallel | 33:39 | |
to the history of our church | 33:41 | |
here in Eastern North Carolina, | 33:43 | |
particularly this portion of it in Durham. | 33:44 | |
And I have found it very interesting, | 33:47 | |
among the things that Dr. Durden tells us is | 33:49 | |
that outside his family, | 33:52 | |
the greatest influence upon Washington Duke was the church. | 33:55 | |
Served by circuit riding preachers who made up in zeal | 34:00 | |
what they lacked in formal education, | 34:04 | |
the church had an influence upon him | 34:07 | |
likened unto nothing else except his family. | 34:12 | |
Again, Dr. Durden writes, | 34:15 | |
Washington Duke came to philanthropy | 34:17 | |
by way of the Methodist church. | 34:20 | |
His children follow the same route | 34:22 | |
and their multi-million dollar giving in the 1920s | 34:24 | |
followed clearly the lines that had been established | 34:28 | |
in the 1890s. | 34:32 | |
And then when there came the great endowment, | 34:35 | |
the indenture which was filed in 1924, | 34:38 | |
Dr. William P. Few, | 34:42 | |
at that time the president of Trinity College, | 34:43 | |
spoke to the students in the chapel. | 34:47 | |
And they wrote to Mr. Benjamin Duke about this experience. | 34:48 | |
And he said, | 34:51 | |
I told them if they or their successors in the long future | 34:54 | |
ever allowed themselves to forget all this, | 35:00 | |
then they would be unworthy of their great heritage. | 35:03 | |
But they will never forget in this | 35:08 | |
or any other generation. | 35:11 | |
And that among other reasons is why we are here today. | 35:15 | |
To say that we do not forget | 35:19 | |
the achievements that came a long time ago | 35:21 | |
when little Trinity College, | 35:26 | |
situated in Randolph County, North Carolina | 35:27 | |
was moved here to Durham, | 35:30 | |
struggled through years of trying to establish | 35:33 | |
an institution here. | 35:36 | |
And then those glorious years of achievement | 35:38 | |
which culminated in the building of this great university. | 35:40 | |
It was a thrilling story. | 35:45 | |
A story of people devoted to higher education. | 35:47 | |
A story of people who had a keen sense of stewardship. | 35:51 | |
A story of people who had a vital religion. | 35:55 | |
Some years ago, | 36:01 | |
Halford Lucock at Yale University, | 36:02 | |
wrote a little book about the history | 36:05 | |
of our particular branch of Christendom, | 36:06 | |
the Methodist church. | 36:08 | |
And he titled it Endless Line of Splendor. | 36:10 | |
And in it he has offered some 200 little vignettes | 36:14 | |
telling the story of the history | 36:17 | |
of our particular denomination, | 36:19 | |
a history which I'm sure could be | 36:21 | |
followed and duplicated by many of our denominations. | 36:24 | |
But here in this story he tells about | 36:27 | |
the early circuit riders | 36:30 | |
and those who established institutions | 36:31 | |
throughout our land. | 36:33 | |
And he entitled it Endless Line of Splendor, | 36:35 | |
taken from Vachel Lindsay's great poem. | 36:38 | |
That could be a good title applied to | 36:42 | |
the great institutions of our nation, such as Duke. | 36:45 | |
It could be applied to the history of our denominations, | 36:49 | |
the great movements which have influenced our lives, | 36:52 | |
an endless line of splendor. | 36:55 | |
Now with that as background, | 36:58 | |
let me remind you of the text | 36:59 | |
which was read here this morning, | 37:01 | |
taken from the letter to the Hebrews. | 37:03 | |
The 11th chapter of that particular epistle | 37:06 | |
deals with the heroes of the faith. | 37:08 | |
And the author goes all the way back to Abraham | 37:11 | |
where God commissioned him to establish his people, | 37:14 | |
traces down through the preaching of the prophets, | 37:18 | |
and down to the time of Christ. | 37:21 | |
And then summing it up he says, | 37:24 | |
all these, | 37:25 | |
they without us | 37:27 | |
should not be made perfect. | 37:30 | |
Wherefore, seeing we're compassed about | 37:34 | |
by so great a cloud of witnesses, | 37:37 | |
let us run with patience | 37:40 | |
the race that is set before us. | 37:43 | |
They without us | 37:48 | |
should not be a part of perfection, | 37:51 | |
of all the completeness of life. | 37:54 | |
And there is a kind of reminder there | 37:56 | |
that we are part of seeing | 37:58 | |
that all who have gone before us, | 38:00 | |
the prophets of old, | 38:02 | |
the apostles of the New Testament days, | 38:04 | |
the preachers of the Reformation, | 38:08 | |
the artists of the Renaissance, | 38:10 | |
those who pushed back the frontiers of America, | 38:13 | |
those who established this institution, | 38:17 | |
the Dukes, and the Kilgos, and the Bassets, | 38:19 | |
and the Fews, and the rest, | 38:23 | |
they depend upon us to be a part | 38:24 | |
of the whole completing process of life. | 38:27 | |
Some years ago, Dr. Ralph Sockman told of | 38:33 | |
an experience that he had at the Olympic games | 38:36 | |
when they were played in England. | 38:38 | |
Came to the afternoon of the relay race, | 38:41 | |
which is perhaps the most exciting climax of the Olympics. | 38:43 | |
He said a momentous thing happened there | 38:46 | |
as the third French runner came around | 38:48 | |
to hand the baton to the fourth French runner. | 38:52 | |
He stumbled and he fell and he disqualified the French team, | 38:56 | |
after which he laid there on the cinder track | 39:01 | |
and cried like a baby | 39:03 | |
until finally his teammates had to come up | 39:05 | |
and literally lift him off. | 39:06 | |
Commenting upon this Dr. Sockman said, | 39:09 | |
you can understand the pathos of this young man. | 39:11 | |
He had come to the climax of his athletic career. | 39:14 | |
He had disciplined himself. | 39:18 | |
He had trained. | 39:20 | |
He had prepared. | 39:21 | |
And to be able to run in the Olympic games | 39:22 | |
was the high mark in his life. | 39:24 | |
And now it lay in shame about him. | 39:26 | |
But he said more than that was involved. | 39:30 | |
Up in the stand where hundreds of French compatriots | 39:33 | |
had come there to cheer their team on, | 39:35 | |
and he had let them down. | 39:38 | |
But then he said there were others involved. | 39:41 | |
There were the two runners who had run before him. | 39:44 | |
They too had prepared, and they had trained, | 39:47 | |
and they had disciplined themselves. | 39:51 | |
And this was their great opportunity in life. | 39:52 | |
And all that they had done, they had run well. | 39:55 | |
And all their running was in vain. | 39:58 | |
But then someone else was involved, said Dr. Sockman. | 40:01 | |
The fourth runner. | 40:05 | |
He too had prepared, | 40:07 | |
and he too looked forward to this high moment in his life. | 40:09 | |
And all that now would not be granted to him. | 40:14 | |
Why? Because the third French runner | 40:16 | |
had failed. | 40:20 | |
And so, said Dr. Sockman, | 40:22 | |
we live like that. | 40:24 | |
Linked lives. | 40:26 | |
Wherefore, seeing we are encompassed by | 40:29 | |
so great a cloud of witnesses, | 40:31 | |
let us run with patience the race that is set | 40:34 | |
before us. | 40:38 | |
We have a link with the past, don't we? | 40:41 | |
Human life is like a landscape. | 40:43 | |
On the foreground is our present life as we live it here, | 40:48 | |
hurrying to and fro, | 40:51 | |
busy as we are. | 40:53 | |
But in the background like mountains, | 40:56 | |
above us and behind us, | 40:58 | |
sometimes not aware of them, | 40:59 | |
is our past, | 41:01 | |
and a glorious part of our landscape. | 41:03 | |
Our traditions, | 41:06 | |
and our values, | 41:08 | |
and our roots, | 41:10 | |
and our ideals, | 41:11 | |
and our families, | 41:12 | |
and our heritages. | 41:12 | |
All these are in the background | 41:14 | |
of the landscape where we live. | 41:16 | |
And the plain fact is | 41:18 | |
that the biggest part of our lives is our heritage. | 41:20 | |
It's easy to tear something down, isn't it? | 41:26 | |
I remember a few years ago | 41:29 | |
when in the heart of Durham here on a Sunday morning, | 41:31 | |
with a bit of explosives, | 41:36 | |
they tore a whole building down in a few moments' time. | 41:37 | |
In a few more days and weeks, | 41:42 | |
all of it was hauled away. | 41:44 | |
You remember that many of you. | 41:45 | |
It's easy to tear a building down, | 41:47 | |
but it takes a long time to build one. | 41:50 | |
It's easy to tear down a past too, | 41:53 | |
all that has gone before us | 41:56 | |
with our rich and our glorious heritage. | 41:57 | |
Ancient Greece is an example of this. | 42:01 | |
Back in the 5th century BC, | 42:04 | |
Greece had risen to its finest flower. | 42:07 | |
They had driven the Persians back, you recall. | 42:10 | |
And now the continent of Europe was safe | 42:14 | |
and Greece was the flower of it all. | 42:16 | |
And democracy had obtained a kind of | 42:19 | |
status that it was never to have again | 42:23 | |
until many, many centuries later. | 42:25 | |
The idea of God as taught by Plato and Aristotle | 42:28 | |
had reached a level | 42:31 | |
that was not to be resumed | 42:33 | |
until the coming of Christ himself. | 42:34 | |
Here was Greece at the glorious time | 42:37 | |
of the 5th century BC. | 42:38 | |
There with a great and wondrous past. | 42:41 | |
But they wasted it | 42:44 | |
because Sparta and Athens engaged in an endless kind of war | 42:46 | |
for dominance and preeminence, wasting the past. | 42:52 | |
In a real sense, we find ourselves then | 42:56 | |
caught up in our own little petty affairs, | 42:59 | |
involved as someone has said, | 43:02 | |
in the cult of the contemporary. | 43:03 | |
Which says that if it's new, it's better. | 43:06 | |
And only if it's new is it worthwhile to us. | 43:08 | |
They without us should not be made perfect. | 43:14 | |
Seeing we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses. | 43:19 | |
There's a beautiful story | 43:23 | |
back in the Old Testament in 2 Kings. | 43:24 | |
It's the story of a man named Naboth. | 43:27 | |
Naboth lived next door to the wicked king Ahab. | 43:30 | |
He had a lovely vineyard there. | 43:33 | |
His father had tilled the soil before him, | 43:35 | |
and his father before him. | 43:37 | |
And Ahab looked over and saw this vineyard of Naboth | 43:40 | |
and desired it for his palatial grounds. | 43:43 | |
And so he sent over his emissaries | 43:45 | |
to tell Naboth that he wanted to buy it. | 43:47 | |
And Naboth said, no, it's not for sale. | 43:49 | |
And then Ahab became angry | 43:52 | |
and he sent over soldiers this time and said, | 43:53 | |
I will take it by force. | 43:55 | |
And Naboth stood with shoulders erect and said, | 43:57 | |
the Lord forgiveth me | 44:03 | |
that I should give thee the inheritance of my fathers. | 44:05 | |
Ah what courage. | 44:10 | |
What sense of the past he had. | 44:13 | |
The Lord forgiveth me | 44:15 | |
that I should give thee the inheritance of my fathers. | 44:18 | |
You know, in our automobiles we have a little instrument | 44:22 | |
that's a very valuable one. | 44:24 | |
It doesn't cost much. | 44:25 | |
But it's that little rear view mirror up there, | 44:27 | |
or maybe down on the door. | 44:29 | |
And you dare not try to drive a car safely forward, | 44:32 | |
not on our highways today you don't, | 44:35 | |
without the use of that little rear view mirror | 44:38 | |
to see what's behind you. | 44:41 | |
And we dare not try to move very forward today | 44:44 | |
without being aware of what's behind us | 44:46 | |
in our heritage and our past. | 44:50 | |
We have a link with it. | 44:51 | |
But then let me say hastily we also have a link | 44:54 | |
with the present. | 44:57 | |
And this is a vital link | 44:58 | |
for which you and I are responsible. | 44:59 | |
Entrusted as we are with all the glories of the past. | 45:03 | |
And I'm sure the administrators of this great university, | 45:07 | |
aware of its impact upon the world, | 45:11 | |
aware of those whose stewardship, | 45:14 | |
and whose dedication has brought it to pass | 45:16 | |
are mindful to sit back and let it just sit | 45:20 | |
isn't going to be enough. | 45:23 | |
We have our contribution to make today. | 45:25 | |
We've been chosen whether we wanted or not | 45:29 | |
to live in the latter part of the 20th century. | 45:31 | |
For some of you, most of the 20th century. | 45:34 | |
We did not really make that choice, but we're here. | 45:38 | |
And maybe it's not the kind of world that | 45:43 | |
we would have chosen if we'd had the choice. | 45:45 | |
I'm not sure. | 45:47 | |
When I look back upon the years | 45:49 | |
in which my father lived, | 45:51 | |
and some of the kind of pondering life he lived | 45:52 | |
as a Methodist preacher in Florida, | 45:55 | |
sometimes I long for it. | 45:57 | |
But though most of our geographical frontiers | 45:59 | |
are taken up in our nation, | 46:01 | |
we have some tremendous frontiers of ideas, | 46:05 | |
and the social patterns that we need to change, | 46:09 | |
and some things we need to accomplish. | 46:13 | |
It takes a kind of fortitude and a courage | 46:14 | |
that's greater than that of the past. | 46:16 | |
And we have been chosen to live now, | 46:19 | |
and to be here, | 46:22 | |
and to be that link. | 46:23 | |
Charles Wesley, the great hymn writer of our | 46:26 | |
particular branch of Christendom says, | 46:29 | |
to serve the present age, | 46:31 | |
my calling to fulfill, | 46:32 | |
oh may it all my powers engage | 46:35 | |
to do my master's will. | 46:38 | |
And that's precisely where we are now friends. | 46:42 | |
To serve the present age. | 46:46 | |
Here to be what God has called us to be | 46:49 | |
the finest and the best that we know. | 46:52 | |
To fill up if necessary some of the vacuums | 46:56 | |
that have been created in the past decade, | 46:58 | |
vacuums that have confused us and divided us, | 47:01 | |
and created some of our cultism, | 47:04 | |
and created our confusion. | 47:07 | |
To bring to this age some certainty | 47:09 | |
and a new understanding of the truth, | 47:13 | |
a new appreciation of the centrality of God in our lives. | 47:16 | |
It is something that I think God has called us to be. | 47:19 | |
Miriam Teichner wrote that poem, God let me be aware. | 47:24 | |
Let me not stumble blindly down the ways | 47:28 | |
getting somehow safely through the days, | 47:32 | |
not even wondering why it all was planned, | 47:36 | |
not even offering a helping hand. | 47:39 | |
God let me be aware. | 47:42 | |
Aware of who I am, | 47:46 | |
and where I am in the whole scheme of history. | 47:47 | |
There's another lovely story in the Old Testament, | 47:52 | |
the story of Esther, | 47:54 | |
who many times was challenged because of her faith. | 47:56 | |
And her mentor and leader had been | 48:00 | |
her uncle Mordecai, if you recall. | 48:01 | |
And there are times when the pagan king | 48:05 | |
to whom she was married | 48:07 | |
would challenge her to give up her faith | 48:08 | |
and to renounce her past, | 48:11 | |
her great heritage, her Jewish heritage. | 48:13 | |
And Mordecai would come to her in those moments | 48:16 | |
and he would say to her, Esther, | 48:19 | |
who knows but what you were born | 48:23 | |
to live in just such a time as this? | 48:26 | |
Ah, to be able to have that said to us. | 48:31 | |
Who knows but what you and I were born | 48:34 | |
for just such a time as this? | 48:39 | |
A link with the past then, | 48:43 | |
and a link with the present. | 48:44 | |
And certainly we are linked to the future. | 48:46 | |
We are the third runner. | 48:49 | |
And the fourth is yet to come. | 48:52 | |
And that runner deserves the very best and finest | 48:55 | |
that we can pass on. | 48:58 | |
And our ideas, and our values, | 49:00 | |
and our qualities of life | 49:02 | |
which we seek to instill within ourselves | 49:04 | |
in such a place as this. | 49:07 | |
Have you ever thought what it would be | 49:09 | |
to have a whole generation without Mozart or Beethoven? | 49:11 | |
A whole generation without Plato, | 49:16 | |
or Aristotle, or Shakespeare? | 49:18 | |
A whole generation without the Bible? | 49:21 | |
Close it, nothing mentioned about the whole ministry | 49:23 | |
and the life of Jesus Christ? | 49:26 | |
What would happen to us and what would happen to the world? | 49:28 | |
We are the ones to see that that link to the future | 49:33 | |
is carried on. | 49:36 | |
I'm on the committee of the United Methodist Church | 49:39 | |
to observe the bicentennial in 1984 | 49:41 | |
of the birth of our church in America. | 49:45 | |
It was started at the Christmas conference in 1784. | 49:48 | |
And the theme we are presently working under is the theme | 49:52 | |
memories and visions. | 49:55 | |
And if we dwelt only upon the memories, | 49:59 | |
we could revel in that and enjoy it I'm sure. | 50:01 | |
But the thing we are concentrating upon now are the visions. | 50:05 | |
Where do we want to see the Christian faith move | 50:10 | |
in the 3rd century of our particular history? | 50:13 | |
Where do we want to see ourselves go | 50:17 | |
as we bring out of the past | 50:19 | |
this glorious and wonderful heritage? | 50:21 | |
Thomas Huxley came to America in 1876, | 50:26 | |
over 100 years ago now. | 50:30 | |
He came to try to understand more about this | 50:32 | |
great and beautiful new industrial empire. | 50:36 | |
And he went from coast to coast | 50:39 | |
and it was quite a thing to go all the way out to the coast | 50:40 | |
back in those days. | 50:42 | |
And when he came back, | 50:44 | |
he was asked to speak at | 50:45 | |
an assembly at Johns Hopkins University. | 50:47 | |
And he stood up before them and told them | 50:51 | |
how he'd been impressed about the new America | 50:53 | |
and all that he'd seen, | 50:55 | |
all of its resources, | 50:57 | |
all of its skills, | 51:00 | |
and powers, and the energies of its people. | 51:01 | |
And after he had done that, | 51:04 | |
he says, I want to leave you with one question. | 51:05 | |
And that is, | 51:09 | |
what do you intend to do with it all? | 51:11 | |
They without us | 51:18 | |
should not be made be perfect. | 51:21 | |
Seeing we are encompassed by so great a cloud of witnesses, | 51:23 | |
let us then run the race | 51:27 | |
that is set before us. | 51:31 | |
Let us pray. | 51:33 | |
Even so, our Heavenly Father, | 51:36 | |
make us mindful of the past, | 51:37 | |
and all who have given for us. | 51:40 | |
Make us aware of the challenge of the present | 51:42 | |
and the promise of the future. | 51:44 | |
We humbly pray in thy name, amen. | 51:47 | |
- | Let us pray responsively | 52:02 |
the litany of commemoration. | 52:05 | |
Almighty and eternal God | 52:10 | |
in whom our parents trusted, | 52:13 | |
we, their children, | 52:16 | |
on this day of remembrance | 52:17 | |
offer unto you our litany of commemoration. | 52:19 | |
Congregation | Hear us oh Lord. | 52:23 |
- | For the Duke family, | 52:26 |
father, daughter, | 52:28 | |
sons and their wives, | 52:29 | |
grandchildren and continuing generations, | 52:30 | |
who with wonder and surprise, | 52:34 | |
bewilderment and tenacity, | 52:36 | |
laid a good foundation, | 52:39 | |
built a worthy school, | 52:41 | |
and provided for exciting growth | 52:43 | |
beyond their kin in years unseen. | 52:45 | |
Congregation | We give You thanks and praise. | 52:49 |
- | For the men and women of the state, | 52:53 |
Methodist, and Quakers, | 52:55 | |
farmers, and merchants, | 52:57 | |
teachers and administrators, | 52:58 | |
who believed in education and made their belief prevail. | 53:00 | |
Congregation | We give You thanks and praise. | 53:05 |
- | For the embodiment of their dreams, | 53:08 |
private school, academy, | 53:11 | |
college, university, | 53:13 | |
founded in hope, | 53:16 | |
continued with perseverance, | 53:17 | |
growing in outreach, | 53:20 | |
established in assurance. | 53:21 | |
Congregation | We give You thanks and praise. | 53:25 |
- | For educators whose vision | 53:27 |
was matched by their courage, | 53:29 | |
whose patience was tempered by their indignation, | 53:32 | |
whose idealism was moderated by their awareness of sin. | 53:35 | |
Congregation | We give You thanks and praise. | 53:39 |
- | For the continuance of good ideas, | 53:43 |
the union of truth and reverence, | 53:46 | |
the freedom of responsible academic thought, | 53:49 | |
and the right of public concern, | 53:52 | |
the joint care of the body and spirit, | 53:55 | |
the linking of science and humanities, | 53:58 | |
the realization that the old order changes. | 54:01 | |
Congregation | We give You thanks and praise. | 54:06 |
- | For the future of our university, | 54:09 |
established to Your glory | 54:12 | |
and for the relief of the human condition. | 54:14 | |
For the consecration of the discontent of the young, | 54:17 | |
for wisdom of the conservatism of the middle aged, | 54:21 | |
for resiliency in the obstinacy of the old, | 54:24 | |
for understanding, cooperation, | 54:29 | |
and a sense of humor within our community. | 54:31 | |
Congregation | Hear us, our prayer oh Lord. | 54:35 |
- | And to you we shall ascribe, | 54:38 |
as is most due, | 54:40 | |
all praise and glory, | 54:42 | |
world without end, amen. | 54:44 | |
("Of The Father's Love Begotten") | 54:54 | |
♪ Of the Father's love begotten ♪ | 55:32 | |
♪ Ere the worlds began to be ♪ | 55:37 | |
♪ He is Alpha and Omega ♪ | 55:43 | |
♪ He the source, the ending He ♪ | 55:48 | |
♪ Of the things that are, that have been ♪ | 55:54 | |
♪ And that future years shall see ♪ | 56:01 | |
♪ Evermore and evermore ♪ | 56:06 | |
♪ Oh ye heights of heaven adore Him ♪ | 56:13 | |
♪ Angel hosts, His praises sing ♪ | 56:19 | |
♪ Powers, dominions, bow before Him ♪ | 56:24 | |
♪ And extol our God and King ♪ | 56:30 | |
♪ Let no tongue on earth be silent ♪ | 56:35 | |
♪ Every voice in concert ring ♪ | 56:42 | |
♪ Evermore and evermore ♪ | 56:47 | |
♪ Christ to Thee with God the Father ♪ | 56:56 | |
♪ And oh Holy Ghost to Thee ♪ | 57:01 | |
♪ Hymn and chant with high thanksgiving ♪ | 57:07 | |
♪ And unwearied praises be ♪ | 57:13 | |
♪ Honor, glory, and dominion ♪ | 57:19 | |
♪ And eternal victory ♪ | 57:26 | |
♪ Evermore and evermore ♪ | 57:32 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 57:40 | |
- | With one voice, let us affirm what we believe. | 57:49 |
Congregation | We believe in God, | 57:53 |
who has created and is creating, | 57:55 | |
who has come in the truly human Jesus | 57:58 | |
to reconcile and make new. | 58:02 | |
Who works in us and others by the spirit. | 58:05 | |
We trust God | 58:09 | |
who calls us to be the church, | 58:11 | |
to celebrate life and its fullness, | 58:13 | |
to love and serve others, | 58:17 | |
to seek justice and resist evil, | 58:19 | |
to proclaim Jesus crucified and risen, | 58:23 | |
our judge and our hope. | 58:26 | |
In life, in death, | 58:29 | |
in life beyond death. | 58:32 | |
God is with us. | 58:34 | |
We are not alone. | 58:36 | |
Thanks be to God. | 58:38 | |
- | Be seated please. | 58:40 |
Since last we gathered here, | 58:50 | |
there are two persons | 58:55 | |
who have meant very much to Duke Chapel | 58:57 | |
who have died. | 59:03 | |
And I would like for us to remember them at this time. | 59:05 | |
Last Sunday evening, | 59:10 | |
after the third performance of the Messiah, | 59:13 | |
for that weekend, | 59:16 | |
one of our choir members, | 59:18 | |
Mr. Robert Pierson, | 59:20 | |
who was a tenor in the choir, | 59:23 | |
died unexpectedly at his home in Raleigh | 59:26 | |
at the age of 42. | 59:30 | |
His wife and three children survive him. | 59:32 | |
His service and his contributions | 59:36 | |
to the ministry of this chapel mean much to us. | 59:38 | |
And for him we are deeply grateful. | 59:42 | |
Thursday evening, | 59:48 | |
Miss Shirley O'Neil, | 59:50 | |
who had to retire last spring | 59:52 | |
from her position as administrative assistant | 59:56 | |
in the Divinity School died. | 59:59 | |
She was a friend to countless numbers | 1:00:03 | |
of Divinity School students, | 1:00:07 | |
alumni, colleagues, | 1:00:09 | |
and to many, many others in this university. | 1:00:11 | |
As we begin our pastoral prayer this morning, | 1:00:16 | |
I ask you to join with me | 1:00:18 | |
in a moment of remembrance and thanksgiving | 1:00:21 | |
for Bob and Shirley. | 1:00:25 | |
The Lord be with you. | 1:00:28 | |
Congregation | And with your spirit. | 1:00:31 |
- | Let us pray. | 1:00:32 |
Hear these petitions of our hearts oh Lord we pray. | 1:00:48 | |
We find this holy Sunday Advent, | 1:00:55 | |
your name upon our lips oh God. | 1:01:00 | |
For you have placed it in our very hearts. | 1:01:03 | |
However much we twist and turn, | 1:01:08 | |
and run to flee from your great love, | 1:01:10 | |
we sense somehow deep within that we have no future, | 1:01:14 | |
save the future that we find in you, | 1:01:18 | |
and you give to us. | 1:01:21 | |
Thus for minds that can think, | 1:01:26 | |
for hearts that can feel, | 1:01:28 | |
for hands and feet that can do. | 1:01:30 | |
We give our thanks to you. | 1:01:33 | |
Oh God, ever loving, | 1:01:37 | |
ever forgiving, | 1:01:39 | |
ever merciful, ever present, | 1:01:40 | |
we give you thanks for the fullness, | 1:01:43 | |
the goodness, the joy, | 1:01:45 | |
the presence, and the promise of life. | 1:01:47 | |
And yes oh God we give you thanks | 1:01:51 | |
for the assurance of life, | 1:01:53 | |
even more abundant than we now know. | 1:01:56 | |
As this fall semester comes to a close in this university, | 1:02:01 | |
we ask oh God that you would bless those | 1:02:06 | |
who are soon to stand examination in this place. | 1:02:09 | |
Bless those who conceive and give the tests, | 1:02:14 | |
those who will evaluate and grade them. | 1:02:17 | |
May their intentions be right, | 1:02:21 | |
their objectives fair, | 1:02:23 | |
and their judgements true. | 1:02:25 | |
Bless those who receive and respond to testing oh Lord. | 1:02:28 | |
Keep their minds clear and open as they study. | 1:02:32 | |
May they be relaxed and alert in their testing. | 1:02:36 | |
May they show forth true growth | 1:02:39 | |
and maturity in learning which have come to them. | 1:02:43 | |
Here oh Lord in this place, | 1:02:48 | |
we pray not only for closeness, | 1:02:49 | |
but for real community. | 1:02:52 | |
Help us to care for one another | 1:02:55 | |
as our Lord Jesus cares for us. | 1:02:56 | |
We know indeed that you do will for us | 1:03:00 | |
life and not death. | 1:03:04 | |
Therefore may it be our joy and our intention | 1:03:07 | |
to commune with you, | 1:03:11 | |
to rest in you, | 1:03:13 | |
to serve for you, | 1:03:15 | |
to become like you this day, | 1:03:18 | |
and every day of our lives, | 1:03:21 | |
through Jesus Christ our Lord, | 1:03:24 | |
who taught us to pray as we pray together. | 1:03:27 | |
Congregation | Our Father who art in heaven, | 1:03:30 |
hallowed be thy name. | 1:03:33 | |
Thy kingdom come. | 1:03:36 | |
Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. | 1:03:38 | |
Give us this day our daily bread, | 1:03:42 | |
and forgive us our trespasses, | 1:03:45 | |
as we forgive those who trespass against us, | 1:03:48 | |
and lead us not into temptation, | 1:03:51 | |
but deliver us from evil. | 1:03:54 | |
For thine is the kingdom, | 1:03:56 | |
power, and the glory forever, amen. | 1:03:58 | |
(lively organ and choral music) | 1:04:22 | |
("Doxology") | 1:08:46 | |
♪ Praise God from whom all blessings flow ♪ | 1:09:07 | |
♪ Praise Him all creatures here below ♪ | 1:09:13 | |
♪ Hallelujah, hallelujah ♪ | 1:09:18 | |
♪ Praise Him above ye heavenly host ♪ | 1:09:26 | |
♪ Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost ♪ | 1:09:32 | |
♪ Hallelujah, hallelujah ♪ | 1:09:38 | |
♪ Hallelujah, hallelujah ♪ | 1:09:43 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:09:50 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:09:58 | |
- | Oh God we come now to give and to commit. | 1:10:10 |
If we find it hard to love, help us. | 1:10:15 | |
If we find it hard to give, free us. | 1:10:19 | |
If we find it hard to sacrifice, | 1:10:22 | |
remind us of the way you have shown, | 1:10:26 | |
through Jesus Christ our Lord, amen. | 1:10:30 | |
(lively organ music) | 1:10:38 | |
♪ All praise to thee ♪ | 1:11:12 | |
♪ For thou our King divine ♪ | 1:11:15 | |
♪ Didst yield the glory that of right was thine ♪ | 1:11:20 | |
♪ That in our troubled hearts thy grace might shine ♪ | 1:11:29 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:11:36 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:11:41 | |
♪ Thou cam'st to us in lowliness of thought ♪ | 1:11:48 | |
♪ By thee the outcast ♪ | 1:11:56 | |
♪ And the poor were sought ♪ | 1:12:00 | |
♪ And by thy death ♪ | 1:12:05 | |
♪ Was God's salvation wrought ♪ | 1:12:09 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:12:12 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:12:17 | |
♪ Let this mind be in us which was in thee ♪ | 1:12:24 | |
♪ Who wast a servant ♪ | 1:12:32 | |
♪ That we might be free ♪ | 1:12:37 | |
♪ Humbling thyself to death on Calvary ♪ | 1:12:41 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:12:49 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:12:54 | |
♪ Wherefore, by God's eternal purpose ♪ | 1:13:01 | |
♪ Thou art high exalted ♪ | 1:13:09 | |
♪ O'er all creatures now ♪ | 1:13:13 | |
♪ And given the name to which all knees shall bow ♪ | 1:13:18 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:13:25 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:13:30 | |
♪ Let every tongue confess with one accord ♪ | 1:13:37 | |
♪ In heaven and earth that Jesus Christ is Lord ♪ | 1:13:45 | |
♪ And God eternal be by all adored ♪ | 1:13:54 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:14:02 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 1:14:08 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:14:15 | |
- | Let us pray. | 1:14:25 |
Now oh God we come to the close | 1:14:28 | |
of this very special service, | 1:14:30 | |
and this good time together. | 1:14:32 | |
For good words spoken, | 1:14:35 | |
good memories recalled, | 1:14:36 | |
and good thoughts shared, | 1:14:38 | |
we give you thanks and praise. | 1:14:39 | |
And now oh blessed and gracious God, | 1:14:42 | |
pour forth your blessing on this university | 1:14:45 | |
and all who love it. | 1:14:48 | |
For oh God there is memory here. | 1:14:50 | |
There are roots here. | 1:14:53 | |
There is history here. | 1:14:56 | |
There is faith here. | 1:14:58 | |
There is love here. | 1:15:01 | |
There is hope here. | 1:15:04 | |
Give us an expectancy about our future | 1:15:08 | |
that will match our appreciation of the past. | 1:15:12 | |
And now may the love of God, | 1:15:17 | |
the grace of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, | 1:15:19 | |
and the fellowship and communion of the Holy Spirit | 1:15:23 | |
be with you and those whom you love | 1:15:27 | |
this day, and forever. | 1:15:30 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:15:38 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:15:45 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:15:51 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:16:00 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:16:07 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:16:16 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:16:29 | |
(energetic organ music) | 1:16:45 | |
(congregation buzzing) | 1:16:54 |