Stuart C. Henry - "Remembering into the Future" (October 1, 1989)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
(organ music) | 0:00 | |
- | Good morning. | 2:18 |
And welcome to this service of worship | 2:18 | |
here at Duke University chapel, | 2:21 | |
on this 20th Sunday after Pentecost. | 2:23 | |
We are delighted to see each of you here, | 2:25 | |
and we extend special greetings | 2:28 | |
to members of the Duke Family Association | 2:29 | |
who are conducting their inaugural meeting | 2:32 | |
on campus this weekend. | 2:34 | |
A special announcement for members | 2:36 | |
of the family who are here; | 2:38 | |
the family picnic originally scheduled | 2:39 | |
to be held at Duke Homestead will be | 2:41 | |
held in Von Cannon Rooms A and B, | 2:44 | |
which is immediately south of the chapel | 2:46 | |
in the Bryan Center. | 2:49 | |
Our preacher for this morning's service | 2:51 | |
is the Revered Dr. Stuart Henry | 2:53 | |
retired professor of American Christianity | 2:55 | |
in the Divinity School here at Duke. | 2:58 | |
Dr. Henry is a much beloved member of this community, | 3:00 | |
having been at Duke for 30 years | 3:04 | |
where he is known as one of the | 3:06 | |
university's most popular professors. | 3:08 | |
He also is in demand as lecturer | 3:11 | |
and preacher around the country. | 3:13 | |
We are greatly indebted to Dr. Henry | 3:15 | |
for standing this morning for Bishop Kenneth Goodson, | 3:17 | |
who is recovering from a recent illness in Duke hospital, | 3:20 | |
and whom we wish a speedy recovery. | 3:24 | |
We also welcome Mr. Benjamin Duke Holloway, | 3:26 | |
a member of the Duke Family Association | 3:29 | |
and one of our university trustees as our lector today. | 3:31 | |
Please note the remaining announcements | 3:36 | |
as they are printed in your bulletins. | 3:39 | |
And now let us stand and praise God with one voice | 3:41 | |
as we join together in singing. | 3:44 | |
(organ playing Praise to the Lord the Almighty) | 3:47 | |
♪ Praise to the Lord, the Almighty ♪ | 4:28 | |
♪ The king of creation ♪ | 4:33 | |
♪ O my soul, praise Him, ♪ | 4:40 | |
♪ For He is thy health and salvation ♪ | 4:43 | |
♪ All ye who hear ♪ | 4:51 | |
♪ Now to His temple draw near ♪ | 4:55 | |
♪ Sing now in glad adoration ♪ | 5:01 | |
♪ Praise to the Lord, who o'er all things ♪ | 5:11 | |
♪ so wondrously reigneth ♪ | 5:17 | |
(singing continues) | 5:24 | |
♪ Praise to the Lord ♪ | 5:55 | |
♪ Who doth prosper thy work ♪ | 5:59 | |
♪ And defend thee ♪ | 6:02 | |
♪ Surely His goodness and mercy ♪ | 6:07 | |
♪ Here daily attend thee ♪ | 6:13 | |
♪ Ponder anew what the Almighty can do ♪ | 6:19 | |
♪ If with His love does befriend thee ♪ | 6:29 | |
♪ Praise to the Lord, ♪ | 6:39 | |
♪ Who doth nourish thy life and restore thee ♪ | 6:42 | |
♪ Fitting thee well for the tasks ♪ | 6:51 | |
♪ That are ever before thee ♪ | 6:56 | |
♪ Then to thy need God as a mother doth speed ♪ | 7:04 | |
♪ Spreading the wings of grace o'er thee ♪ | 7:14 | |
♪ Praise to the Lord ♪ | 7:24 | |
♪ O, let all that is in me adore him ♪ | 7:27 | |
♪ All that has life and breath ♪ | 7:36 | |
♪ Come now with praises before him ♪ | 7:40 | |
♪ Let the Amen sound from his people again ♪ | 7:48 | |
♪ Gladly forever adore him ♪ | 7:59 | |
Nancy | O, God, you declare your almighty power | 8:13 |
chiefly in showing mercy and pity. | 8:17 | |
Grant us the fullness of your grace | 8:21 | |
that we, running to obtain your pormises | 8:24 | |
may become partakers of your heavenly treasure | 8:27 | |
through Jesus Christ, our Lord, | 8:31 | |
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, | 8:33 | |
one God, forever and ever, amen. | 8:36 | |
- | Let us all pray together. | 8:54 |
Open our hearts and minds, oh God, | 8:56 | |
by the power of your Holy Spirit, | 9:00 | |
so that as the word is read and proclaimed | 9:03 | |
we may hear with joy what you say to us this day. | 9:06 | |
The first lesson is taken from the Book of Joel. | 9:15 | |
"Be glad, oh children of Zion, | 9:19 | |
"and rejoice in the Lord, your God, | 9:22 | |
"who has given the early rain for your vindication | 9:26 | |
"and has poured down for you abundant rain, | 9:29 | |
"the early and the latter rain as before. | 9:32 | |
"The threshing floors shall be full of grain. | 9:36 | |
"The vats shall overflow with wine and oil. | 9:40 | |
"I will restore to you the years | 9:43 | |
"which the swarming locust has eaten, | 9:46 | |
"the hopper, the destroyer, and the cutter. | 9:49 | |
"My great army which I sent among you. | 9:52 | |
"You shall eat in plenty and be satisfied | 9:54 | |
"and praise the name of the Lord your God | 9:58 | |
"who has dealt wondrously with you. | 10:00 | |
"And my people shall never again be put to shame. | 10:03 | |
"You shall know that I am in the midst of Israel | 10:08 | |
"and that I, the Lord, am your God and there is none else. | 10:12 | |
"And my people shall never again be put to shame. | 10:17 | |
"And it shall come to pass afterward | 10:21 | |
"that I will pour out my spirit on all flesh. | 10:24 | |
"Your sons and your daughters shall prophesy. | 10:28 | |
"The old shall dream dreams, | 10:32 | |
"and the young shall seek visions. | 10:35 | |
"Even upon the menservants and maidservants | 10:38 | |
"in those days I will pour out my spirit. | 10:40 | |
"And I will give portents in the heavens and on the earth, | 10:44 | |
"blood and fire and columns of smoke." | 10:48 | |
This ends the reading of the first lesson. | 10:53 | |
Nancy | Please stand as we read Psalm 107 responsively, | 11:00 |
beginning with verse 1 and continuing | 11:05 | |
through verses 33 through 43. | 11:07 | |
"O give thanks to the Lord, who is good, | 11:12 | |
"whose steadfast love endures forever. | 11:15 | |
"The Lord turns rivers into a desert, | 11:19 | |
"springs of water into thirsty ground." | 11:21 | |
Congregation | "And fruitful land into a salty waste | 11:24 |
"because of the wickedness of its inhabitants." | 11:28 | |
- | "The Lord turns a desert into pools of water, | 11:31 |
"a parched land into springs of water. | 11:34 | |
Congregation | "The Lord blessed the hungry to go there, | 11:37 |
"and they established a city in which to live." | 11:40 | |
- | "They sow fields and plant vineyards | 11:43 |
"and get a fruitful yield." | 11:46 | |
Congregation | "They multiplied greatly | 11:48 |
"from the blessings of the Lord, | 11:51 | |
"who does not let their cattle decrease." | 11:52 | |
- | "When they are diminshed and brought low | 11:55 |
"through oppression, trouble, and sorrow, | 11:57 | |
"the Lord pours contempt upon princes | 12:00 | |
"and makes them wander in trackless wastes." | 12:03 | |
Congregation | "But the Lord lifts up | 12:07 |
"the needy out of affliction | 12:08 | |
"and makes their families like flocks." | 12:10 | |
Nancy | "The upright see it and are glad, | 12:13 |
"and all wickedness stops its mouth." | 12:16 | |
Congregation | "Whoever is wise will heed these things | 12:18 |
"and consider the steadfast love of the Lord." | 12:22 | |
(organ playing Gloria Patri) | 12:27 | |
♪ Glory be to our creator ♪ | 12:36 | |
♪ Praise to our redeemer Lord ♪ | 12:44 | |
♪ Glory be to our sustainer ♪ | 12:51 | |
♪ Ever three and ever one ♪ | 12:59 | |
♪ As it was in the beginning ♪ | 13:07 | |
♪ Now and ever more shall be ♪ | 13:15 | |
- | The second lesson is taken | 13:35 |
from Paul's first letter to Timothy. | 13:38 | |
"There is great gain in godliness with contentment, | 13:42 | |
"for we brought nothing into the world, | 13:45 | |
"and we cannot take anything out of the world. | 13:48 | |
"But if we have food and clothing, | 13:52 | |
"with these we shall be content. | 13:54 | |
"But those who desire to be rich | 13:57 | |
"fall into temptation, into a snare, | 13:59 | |
"into many senseless and hurtful desires | 14:03 | |
"that plunge people into ruin and destruction. | 14:06 | |
"For the love of money is the root of all evils. | 14:09 | |
"It is through this craving | 14:13 | |
"that some have wandered away from the faith | 14:15 | |
"and pierced their hearts with many pains. | 14:18 | |
"But as for you, o person of God, shun all of this. | 14:21 | |
"Aim at righteousness, godliness, faith, | 14:26 | |
"love, steadfastness, gentleness. | 14:30 | |
"Fight the good fight of the faith. | 14:33 | |
"Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called | 14:35 | |
"when you made the good confession | 14:39 | |
"in the presence of many witnesses, | 14:41 | |
"in the presence of God who gives life to all things, | 14:44 | |
"and of Christ Jesus who in testifying | 14:48 | |
"before Pontious Pilate made the good confession. | 14:51 | |
"I charge you to keep the commandments unstained | 14:54 | |
"and free from reproach | 14:57 | |
"until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ. | 14:59 | |
"And this will be made manifest at the proper time | 15:02 | |
"by the blessed and holy sovereign, | 15:06 | |
"the ruler of rulers and Lord of lords | 15:08 | |
"who alone has immortality | 15:11 | |
"and dwells in unapproachable light, | 15:13 | |
"who no one has ever seen or can see, | 15:16 | |
"to whom be honor and eternal dominion, amen. | 15:21 | |
"As for the rich in this world, | 15:25 | |
"charge them not to be haughty, | 15:28 | |
"nor to set their hopes on uncertain riches, | 15:31 | |
"but on God, who richly furnishes us | 15:34 | |
"with everything to enjoy. | 15:37 | |
"They are to do good, | 15:39 | |
"be rich in good deeds, liberal and generous, | 15:41 | |
"thus laying up for themselves | 15:46 | |
"a good foundation for the future | 15:48 | |
"so that they may take hold of the light | 15:51 | |
"which is life indeed." | 15:53 | |
This ends the reading of the second lesson. | 15:56 | |
Now we'll have a reading | 16:02 | |
from the gospel according to St. Luke. | 16:04 | |
"There was a rich person clothed in purple and fine linen | 16:08 | |
"who feasted sumptuously everyday. | 16:13 | |
"And at the gate lay a poor man named Lazarus, | 16:17 | |
"full of sores, who desired to be fed | 16:19 | |
"with what fell from the rich person's table. | 16:22 | |
"Moreover, the dogs came and licked his sores. | 16:26 | |
"The poor man died and was carried | 16:29 | |
"by the angels to Abraham's bosom. | 16:32 | |
"The rich person also died and was buried, | 16:36 | |
"and being in torment in Hades looked up | 16:39 | |
"and saw Abraham far off and Lazarus in his bosom. | 16:43 | |
"And the rich person called out, | 16:48 | |
""Father Abraham, have mercy upon me and send Lazarus | 16:51 | |
""to dip the end of his finger in water and cool my tongue, | 16:56 | |
""for I am in anguish in this flame." | 17:00 | |
"But Abraham said, "My child, remember | 17:03 | |
""that you in your lifetime received your good things, | 17:07 | |
""and Lazarus in like manner evil things. | 17:11 | |
""But now he is comforted here, and you are in anguish. | 17:14 | |
""And besides all this, between us and you | 17:18 | |
""a great chasm has been fixed | 17:22 | |
""in order that those who would pass | 17:26 | |
""from here to you may not be able, | 17:27 | |
""and none may cross from there to us." | 17:30 | |
"And the rich person said, "then I beg you, father, | 17:34 | |
""send Lazarus to my parents' house, | 17:38 | |
""for I have five brothers, so that he may warn them, | 17:41 | |
""lest they also come to this place of torment." | 17:45 | |
"But Abraham said, "They have Moses and the prophets. | 17:49 | |
""Let them hear them." | 17:54 | |
"And the rich person said, "No, father Abraham. | 17:56 | |
""But if someone goes to them from the dead, | 18:01 | |
""they will repent." | 18:04 | |
"Abraham answered, "If they do not hear Moses | 18:07 | |
""and the prophets, neither will they be convinced | 18:11 | |
""if someone should rise from the dead."" | 18:15 | |
This ends the reading of the gospel. | 18:19 | |
(organ music) | 18:31 | |
- | (choral singing) | 19:45 |
- | Preaching is always a privilege, | 25:32 |
and it is a special honor to stand at this pulpit today, | 25:36 | |
even though substituting for Kenneth Goodson | 25:41 | |
is a challenge that none may meet. | 25:44 | |
In appreciation of the vision | 25:47 | |
and the support of the Duke family, | 25:51 | |
which has nurtured this university | 25:55 | |
and enabled it to come of age, | 25:58 | |
I welcome the opportunity to offer | 26:00 | |
my own sincere, if inadequate gesture of gratitude, | 26:02 | |
reflecting as it surely does your own happiness | 26:08 | |
at the opportunity of participating in this special service | 26:12 | |
and this gathering in the chapel today. | 26:15 | |
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, | 26:22 | |
and of the Holy Ghost, amen. | 26:23 | |
(clears throat) | 26:27 | |
It surely can come as no surprise to you | 26:30 | |
that the world I grew up in is gone. | 26:34 | |
A childhood without radio, let alone television, | 26:37 | |
in a house in which the doors were never locked | 26:42 | |
and a disposition to speak to strangers, | 26:45 | |
these are characteristics of a life that I no longer know, | 26:49 | |
perhaps even of a life no longer known by anyone. | 26:53 | |
And yet there are values from those days | 26:58 | |
which are still guarded and cherished. | 27:01 | |
I am speaking of tradition. | 27:04 | |
Every institution has its traditions, | 27:07 | |
and every family has its quasi-sacred rituals | 27:10 | |
for holidays, for anniversaries, for birthdays, | 27:14 | |
and nowhere do we see the strength | 27:19 | |
and the power of tradition operative | 27:21 | |
and any more binding than in the church, | 27:24 | |
where newcomers and visitors | 27:27 | |
are kindly but firmly reminded, | 27:29 | |
"but we always do it this way." | 27:32 | |
For tradition is information that is passed along. | 27:35 | |
It is belief and custom that is transmitted | 27:38 | |
from one generation to another, | 27:41 | |
not by that which is written down, | 27:44 | |
but by word of mouth and by example. | 27:46 | |
Now tradition is a very special word, | 27:50 | |
and it connotes a very special idea. | 27:54 | |
It is not to be confused with heritage. | 27:57 | |
The heritage is conglomerate and indiscriminate. | 28:00 | |
By inheritance, we are heirs of Attilla the Hun | 28:05 | |
as well as of St. Francis of Assisi. | 28:09 | |
All the past is our heritage, | 28:12 | |
all that lies behind us, | 28:15 | |
all that we have passed through, | 28:17 | |
all that we have known. | 28:19 | |
The tradition, on the other hand, is highly selective. | 28:22 | |
Here is the wisdom of the ages | 28:26 | |
and the values that are passed along, | 28:28 | |
not because they're inscribed upon paper, | 28:31 | |
but because they're written in our hearts | 28:34 | |
and demonstrated by attitude and behavior. | 28:37 | |
Here is information that is the key | 28:40 | |
to understanding who we are. | 28:43 | |
Let me illustrate; our heritage is war, | 28:46 | |
and the sometime bitter strife | 28:50 | |
that divides brother from brother | 28:52 | |
and separates parent from child. | 28:54 | |
Our heritage is war, civil war and international war. | 28:57 | |
But the tradition, our tradition is peace. | 29:02 | |
For it is peace that we believe in | 29:06 | |
even while we are fighting our wars. | 29:08 | |
Or again, our heritage is slavery, | 29:12 | |
but our tradition is freedom. | 29:16 | |
For it is freedom that we recognize as value | 29:18 | |
even while we are rationalizing the slavery | 29:21 | |
which we have affected and which we tried to preserve. | 29:24 | |
So when we begin to look toward the future, | 29:28 | |
we must always sort out the difference | 29:31 | |
between heritage and tradition. | 29:34 | |
And in so doing, we become aware of those special values | 29:36 | |
which we try to recapture, to re-understand, to reaffirm. | 29:41 | |
Now this is a part of what we mean | 29:46 | |
by remembering into the future. | 29:48 | |
Standing as we always do on the razor's edge | 29:51 | |
of possible destruction, we lament the lost world | 29:54 | |
that is gone and behind us | 29:58 | |
and endeavor in remembering what there used to be, | 30:00 | |
try to identify ourselves with | 30:04 | |
that which was good and right in the days now passed | 30:06 | |
and so structure for ourselves a future | 30:09 | |
that is different from the one | 30:13 | |
which seems threatening to overtake us. | 30:14 | |
We are like the captives | 30:18 | |
who sat down by the waters of Babylon | 30:19 | |
and wept when they remembered Jerusalem, | 30:21 | |
that city on a hill which was now desolate and forsaken, | 30:24 | |
overrun with brambles and briars | 30:28 | |
and become the lair of foxes. | 30:31 | |
On special occasions, and this is a special occasion, | 30:33 | |
we remember the lost past. | 30:38 | |
We remember the world that we grew up in. | 30:40 | |
And we long to actualize it again for the future, | 30:43 | |
not in its forms, but in its values. | 30:46 | |
What then is our tradition? | 30:50 | |
We have the right and the necessity to ask. | 30:52 | |
The answer is, I think, simple. | 30:56 | |
Simple, but not easy. | 30:59 | |
The very walls of this sanctuary where we are gathered | 31:01 | |
symbolize and point to the value | 31:04 | |
and the shape of our tradition. | 31:06 | |
The fact that we have come together in this place | 31:09 | |
and at this hour speaks to the vitality | 31:11 | |
and the shape of the tradition that we honor. | 31:14 | |
Our tradition is protestant. | 31:17 | |
That is, it is one of protest. | 31:20 | |
Consider what that word means, | 31:22 | |
or more correctly, what the word at one time meant | 31:25 | |
and what it could mean again. | 31:28 | |
When we speak of protest today, | 31:30 | |
we are likely to think of folk marching with placards, | 31:33 | |
occupying buildings, obstructing procedures, | 31:36 | |
blocking entries, conflicting with discipline, | 31:39 | |
and that is all negative. | 31:43 | |
But that is wrong to think in that way, | 31:45 | |
for the word is actually a positive one. | 31:48 | |
Remember your days in that tedious high school Latin class. | 31:51 | |
The "pro" in "protest" is like the "pro" | 31:55 | |
in "the pros and the cons." | 31:58 | |
It is from protestare, to testify for, | 32:01 | |
to take a stand for, to be in favor of something. | 32:06 | |
And that's where the term came into popular use, | 32:10 | |
because certain German princes protested for, | 32:13 | |
that is they testified for their right | 32:17 | |
to choose their own religion. | 32:20 | |
So in asking what the protestant tradition is, | 32:22 | |
one is asking what were the protestants for? | 32:25 | |
And also asking the implied question, | 32:29 | |
is there then for us any value left | 32:32 | |
in the tradition for which we can be? | 32:34 | |
The answer begins with a statement | 32:38 | |
so disarmingly brief and so old-fashioned, | 32:39 | |
that to many it seems outmoded | 32:43 | |
and of interest only as a novelty. | 32:45 | |
For the protestant tradition begins | 32:48 | |
with an affirmation of the Bible | 32:51 | |
as the authority, the ultimate authority | 32:53 | |
in matters of faith and practice | 32:55 | |
that is a source of knowing | 32:58 | |
what we should believe and what we should do. | 33:00 | |
Is this then what the Bible is, | 33:03 | |
we ask in shocked disbelief, | 33:06 | |
a pharisaic rule book that frustrates self-expression | 33:08 | |
and a creed that takes no account | 33:13 | |
of what has happened in the laboratory and the library | 33:15 | |
in these past 2000 years? | 33:18 | |
Not one bit of it, | 33:20 | |
for the Bible is not a book of science. | 33:22 | |
It is not a book of history. | 33:24 | |
It is not a book of systematic theology, | 33:26 | |
even though all these disciplines | 33:29 | |
are components of the whole. | 33:31 | |
The Bible is a book about people. | 33:34 | |
It is about lost sons and the fathers of lost sons. | 33:36 | |
It is about brave women who resisted the power of tyrants | 33:41 | |
even to the point of killing some of them | 33:45 | |
with their own hands, | 33:47 | |
about Jael driving a tent spike through Sisera's skull, | 33:48 | |
about Judith separating the body of Holofernes | 33:52 | |
from his wicked head. | 33:56 | |
It is about also faithful though frightened women | 33:58 | |
who when they were deserted by craven apostles, | 34:01 | |
waited bravely to see how their wandering teacher | 34:04 | |
would die on a cross. | 34:07 | |
It is a book about men and women | 34:09 | |
who were happy or sad, | 34:12 | |
successful in achievement or miserable in failure. | 34:14 | |
It is a book about the human situation. | 34:17 | |
That is, it is a book about us. | 34:20 | |
For actually, it is a book by and about people | 34:24 | |
who came face-to-face with God, | 34:26 | |
and as a result of that encounter | 34:29 | |
could never, ever be the same again. | 34:31 | |
And when we read their accounts | 34:34 | |
and their reactions to that meeting with the eternal, | 34:36 | |
quite rightly we say, "but this could have happened to me." | 34:39 | |
And then, and then in delayed reaction, | 34:44 | |
we say, "but, dear God, this has happened to me. | 34:49 | |
"This is my story. | 34:52 | |
"I am the prodigal who has wandered | 34:54 | |
"into the far country of my own sinful will. | 34:56 | |
"I'm one of the mob who cried out, "crucify him."" | 34:59 | |
And in the reflective light of the experience | 35:03 | |
of those individuals who have met God, | 35:06 | |
then we understand a little better | 35:09 | |
some chapter of our past, some aspect of the present, | 35:11 | |
some prospect for the future. | 35:16 | |
And so the Bible becomes for us | 35:18 | |
the ultimate authority of faith and practice. | 35:22 | |
For the characters whose stories are written there | 35:25 | |
become for us those who shape our creed. | 35:28 | |
Their actions become our actions. | 35:32 | |
Now no sooner do we understand ourselves | 35:35 | |
then we become of an obligation. | 35:38 | |
And if in the protestant tradition, | 35:41 | |
we have the privilege of reading the Word, | 35:43 | |
then we find in so doing an obligation | 35:46 | |
that is laid up on us. | 35:48 | |
For we not only as protestants believe in the bible, | 35:50 | |
we believe in the priesthood of believers. | 35:53 | |
Again, what this means is simple, but not easy. | 35:56 | |
For it means that I am my neighbor's keeper, | 36:01 | |
and my neighbor must keep me. | 36:04 | |
I am priest to all, and all are priest to me. | 36:06 | |
You see, there is a radical democracy | 36:11 | |
about the kingdom of God, | 36:13 | |
for the ground is always level at the foot of the cross. | 36:15 | |
The most unbelievable thing that I have ever read | 36:19 | |
in the New Testament about Jesus | 36:21 | |
is that he looked upon the multitudes | 36:23 | |
and was moved with compassion. | 36:26 | |
I look upon the multitudes, I am moved, | 36:28 | |
but God forgive me, not always with compassion. | 36:32 | |
People get in our way. | 36:35 | |
They arrive there first. | 36:37 | |
They take the best places. | 36:39 | |
But if every moment of time is equidistant from eternity, | 36:41 | |
then every moment in time and every individual in time | 36:46 | |
is potentially transparent to the everlasting mercy of God. | 36:50 | |
Every individual then is potentially the saint | 36:55 | |
whom I must recognize and assist in escape | 36:59 | |
from the body of this death which holds us all prisoners. | 37:02 | |
I must be priest to everyone, | 37:07 | |
and I must accept the ministry of all. | 37:09 | |
It is for this reason that I must found schools | 37:12 | |
and I must go to school. | 37:15 | |
It is for this reason | 37:17 | |
that I must build shelter for the homeless, | 37:18 | |
and that I must leave the security of my own place | 37:21 | |
to go out and serve and minister to others. | 37:24 | |
It is for this reason that I must open hospitals, | 37:28 | |
and for this reason that I must seek | 37:31 | |
the healing of soul from others. | 37:33 | |
You see, everything that degrades and dishonors human life, | 37:36 | |
degrades and dishonors God. | 37:39 | |
And I must, as priest to all, | 37:42 | |
increase my own capacity to give and to bless, | 37:44 | |
not that I can bring the kingdom of God in or ever shall. | 37:48 | |
That is God's work. | 37:52 | |
But in the priesthood of believers, | 37:54 | |
I must acknowledge that I come from a tradition | 37:56 | |
which believes not simply that God is | 37:58 | |
or that God is somewhere, | 38:02 | |
but that God is everywhere, and I must act accordingly. | 38:04 | |
And then finally there is grace. | 38:08 | |
For protestant stand for not only the authority of the Bible | 38:11 | |
and the priesthood of believers, | 38:15 | |
they stand for salvation by grace. | 38:17 | |
That is another way of saying that they believe | 38:20 | |
not only that God is love, but that God is grace. | 38:22 | |
They believe it quite as much | 38:27 | |
as they believe that God is love. | 38:28 | |
I do not have to save the world, | 38:31 | |
but because God is grace, I am not supposed to. | 38:34 | |
I am not Atlas, that I should take | 38:38 | |
the whole world upon my shoulders. | 38:40 | |
I do not have to support the world alone. | 38:42 | |
But believing in grace says that God will save. | 38:45 | |
For no man had mercy on Cain. | 38:49 | |
God had mercy on Cain. | 38:52 | |
And in the end, the kingdom does come, | 38:55 | |
not through my effort, but because God is grace. | 38:57 | |
Remember a journal entry | 39:02 | |
from a Puritan voyager who was lost at sea. | 39:03 | |
"It is now the fourteenth day since we have seen the sun. | 39:07 | |
"The sails are split. | 39:11 | |
"The masts are broken. | 39:12 | |
"The rudder is washed away. | 39:15 | |
"No man knows where we are, but God knows, so all is well." | 39:17 | |
It is just such a crisis as this | 39:23 | |
in which grace can work and grace does work. | 39:26 | |
For the believer protests his confidence | 39:29 | |
in grace that knows no barrier. | 39:31 | |
Does not history testify to the truth of this? | 39:34 | |
The kingdoms of the caesars | 39:38 | |
have always turned to dust and ashes. | 39:39 | |
Call the roll of them if you can remember their names. | 39:42 | |
Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, Tamerlane. | 39:45 | |
These imperial sealers, caesars, dead and turned to clay | 39:49 | |
can, as the doggerel would have it, | 39:55 | |
stop the chinks and keep the wind away, but no more. | 39:57 | |
For their empires have long since vanished. | 40:01 | |
First-time visitors to Paris | 40:04 | |
usually go to the tomb of Napoleon, | 40:06 | |
and surely it is impressive, the dark sarcophagus, | 40:09 | |
the eternal flame, the monument to a ruthless murderer, | 40:12 | |
but the empire hardly outlasted the emperor himself. | 40:17 | |
It was already splitting at the seams | 40:22 | |
before it was finished. | 40:25 | |
Now a few folk bother to go | 40:27 | |
several hundered yards beyond the Invalides | 40:29 | |
to see the memorial, modest, to Louis Pasteur. | 40:33 | |
Yet I say to you that the sun never sets | 40:37 | |
on the benediction which Pasteur bequeathed | 40:41 | |
to subsequent generations. | 40:43 | |
For in the end it is the fearless daring, | 40:45 | |
the terrible meek who do inherit the Earth. | 40:48 | |
It is the kingdom built on the hot temper of Peter, | 40:51 | |
on the instability of the Magdalene, | 40:54 | |
on the doubt of Thomas, on the dullness of Philip, | 40:57 | |
on the conceit of John, on the arrogance of Paul. | 41:01 | |
It is this kingdom of the Gallilean, | 41:06 | |
built upon human flesh, | 41:08 | |
that has outlasted the best that the caesars can do. | 41:10 | |
The faithful who protest carry no placards, | 41:14 | |
but they bear in their bodies | 41:17 | |
the stigmata of the cross. | 41:18 | |
What we have said is the protestant tradition | 41:21 | |
takes one back to the Bible, | 41:24 | |
and in recognition of the priesthood of believers, | 41:26 | |
sets one to the business of living | 41:29 | |
as if the kingdom had already come. | 41:31 | |
And no amount of frustration | 41:33 | |
can bring the faithful to despair, | 41:35 | |
because the God of grace is grace. | 41:37 | |
And finally it is God's way that will prevail. | 41:40 | |
It was in the 12th century that Peter of Blois | 41:44 | |
pointed out that we are all of us dwarves | 41:47 | |
standing on the shoulders of giants. | 41:49 | |
By their grace, he said, we see further than they. | 41:52 | |
And our memory of the ancients lets us understand | 41:56 | |
and gives us fresh ideas to their life. | 41:59 | |
Some of the weeping captives | 42:02 | |
by the rivers of Babylon were able to project | 42:04 | |
what their prophet said into the future, | 42:07 | |
and those who did indeed remembered into the future, | 42:09 | |
not seeing clearly what was to come to pass, | 42:13 | |
but seeing the light of God | 42:16 | |
shining upon whatever happened, | 42:18 | |
illuminating and transforming, | 42:20 | |
seeing the highway leading back again | 42:23 | |
into the city of David, Jerusalem. | 42:25 | |
The world that we love and that we have lost | 42:28 | |
is not lost nor ever will be, | 42:31 | |
so long as we can take its values | 42:33 | |
and remember them into the future. | 42:36 | |
But all this is utter madness, you say. | 42:39 | |
And we remind ourselves of the dictum of the way | 42:41 | |
who would instruct us that if the meek | 42:45 | |
ever do inherit the Earth, it will be the only way | 42:46 | |
by which they come into possession of it. | 42:49 | |
So let me put it to you this way in an oblique illustration. | 42:52 | |
Upon the possibility of moving into the future | 42:57 | |
with the faith of the past, | 43:00 | |
I give you a bit of legend | 43:02 | |
which comes not in documented form, | 43:04 | |
but which is like the content | 43:09 | |
of many legends, truer than true. | 43:10 | |
The site is the execution of Joan of Arc. | 43:14 | |
The fires have died down. | 43:18 | |
The ashes are cooling. | 43:20 | |
The crowds have dispersed and gone away. | 43:22 | |
And there are left only at the stake two soldiers, | 43:24 | |
one a case-hardened old veteran of many campaigns, | 43:28 | |
the other young, starry-eyed, | 43:31 | |
a dreamy, actually, a dreamy man. | 43:34 | |
And it is he who speaks first. | 43:39 | |
"But there was something about her, | 43:41 | |
"her eyes and her face and her faith in God." | 43:45 | |
"Then you're as mad as she is," said the old man. | 43:51 | |
"Perhaps," said the dreamer, | 43:55 | |
"but the world needs a few madmen now. | 43:59 | |
"See where the sane ones have gotten us." | 44:02 | |
(organ playing Our God, Our Help in Ages Past) | 44:18 | |
- | ♪ Our God, our help in ages past ♪ | 44:45 |
♪ Our hope for years to come ♪ | 44:51 | |
♪ Our shelter from the stormy blast and our eternal home ♪ | 44:58 | |
♪ Under the shadow of thy throne ♪ | 45:13 | |
♪ Thy saints have dwelt secure ♪ | 45:20 | |
♪ Sufficient is thy arm alone and our defense is sure. ♪ | 45:26 | |
♪ Before the hills in order stood ♪ | 45:42 | |
♪ Or Earth received her frame ♪ | 45:48 | |
♪ From everlasting thou art God to endless years the same. ♪ | 45:55 | |
♪ A thousand ages in thy sight are like an evening gone ♪ | 46:11 | |
♪ Short as the watch that ends the night ♪ | 46:24 | |
♪ Before the rising sun. ♪ | 46:31 | |
♪ Time like an ever-rolling stream ♪ | 46:40 | |
♪ Bears all its days away ♪ | 46:47 | |
♪ They fly forgotten as a dream ♪ | 46:53 | |
♪ Dies at the opening day ♪ | 47:01 | |
♪ Our God, our help in ages past ♪ | 47:10 | |
♪ Our hope for years to come ♪ | 47:17 | |
♪ Be thou our guide while life shall last ♪ | 47:24 | |
♪ And our eternal home ♪ | 47:31 | |
Nancy | The Lord be with you. | 47:43 |
Congregation | And also with you. | 47:45 |
- | Let us pray. | 47:47 |
Oh, eternal spirit, the alpha and the omega, | 48:01 | |
creator of the universe, our refuge and our shield, | 48:06 | |
we lift our spirits unto thee. | 48:12 | |
Mysterious indeed is this universe | 48:17 | |
into which without our asking it thou hast ushered us. | 48:19 | |
We stand in awe before the mystery of thy creative powers | 48:25 | |
completely beyond our abilities to master or to comprehend. | 48:29 | |
Thy ways have not been our ways. | 48:35 | |
Neither have thy thoughts been our thoughts. | 48:38 | |
Yet thou hast not forsaken us, | 48:42 | |
even as we have passed through the shadows of unbelief. | 48:46 | |
In thy mercy, grant us thy light and thy truth. | 48:51 | |
Hear us now, gracious God, | 48:57 | |
as we pray for all thy children everywhere, | 48:59 | |
for forgiveness and healing, for courage, for faith, | 49:03 | |
for hope in times of despair, | 49:09 | |
for endurance in the midst of trial, | 49:13 | |
for compassion in the midst of bitterness. | 49:16 | |
Hear our prayers for the needs of others this day, | 49:20 | |
for the homeless, the destitute, | 49:24 | |
the handicapped, the sick, and the dying, | 49:27 | |
especially those patients and families in Duke hospital | 49:32 | |
including our beloved Bishop Goodson | 49:36 | |
and for those who care for them, | 49:38 | |
for Mother Teresa on her road to recovery, | 49:41 | |
for the hungry and for all those who seek to feed them. | 49:45 | |
Let us pray for all victims of violence, | 49:51 | |
even in their own families, | 49:54 | |
and for those who inflict harm upon others. | 49:56 | |
Let us pray for those who govern the nations of the world | 50:00 | |
and for those who seek to bring peace | 50:04 | |
to conflict-ridden peoples. | 50:07 | |
Let us pray for refugees throughout the world, | 50:09 | |
for those families who have been separated | 50:13 | |
because of government intervention or warfare, | 50:16 | |
for all who continue to pray for reunions with loved ones, | 50:19 | |
and for those German families who at long last | 50:24 | |
are being reunited East with West. | 50:27 | |
Let us pray for women and men | 50:31 | |
who suffer for the sake of conscience | 50:33 | |
and for those Chinese students who continue to speak out | 50:36 | |
against human suffering in their own country | 50:40 | |
as they gather at our nation's capital. | 50:42 | |
Let us pray for all who suffer | 50:46 | |
as a result of natural disasters, | 50:48 | |
especially those victims of Hurricane Hugo | 50:51 | |
and for those responsible | 50:54 | |
for providing desperately needed relief. | 50:56 | |
Let us pray for all who live in institutions | 50:59 | |
surrounded by people, yet lonely beyond words. | 51:03 | |
Let us pray for those whom we have known and loved | 51:09 | |
who have died in the faith | 51:13 | |
that they may be a glorious memory to us | 51:14 | |
and a source of renewed communion with all the saints. | 51:18 | |
O ever-living God, thou hast been our refuge | 51:21 | |
from one generation to another. | 51:25 | |
We trust in thy eternal goodness and power to save. | 51:28 | |
Grant us hope which will rise above despair | 51:32 | |
and patience to endure the strain of waiting | 51:35 | |
as we look forward to the day | 51:38 | |
when we shall gather in harmony around thy heavenly throne. | 51:40 | |
For the kingdom, the power, | 51:45 | |
and the glory are yours now and forever, amen. | 51:47 | |
With thanksgiving for the greatness of God's mercy, | 51:54 | |
let us offer our gifts and ourselves unto God. | 51:57 | |
(organ music) | 52:02 | |
- | (choral singing) | 54:16 |
(organ playing Doxology) | 59:46 | |
- | ♪ Praise God from whom all blessings flow ♪ | 1:00:09 |
♪ Praise God all creatures here below ♪ | 1:00:15 | |
♪ Alleluia, alleluia ♪ | 1:00:22 | |
♪ Praise God above ye heavenly hosts ♪ | 1:00:30 | |
♪ Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost ♪ | 1:00:36 | |
♪ Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, alleluia ♪ | 1:00:43 | |
Nancy | O God, the source of all life, | 1:01:10 |
with glad hearts we thank thee | 1:01:13 | |
for thy unwavering goodness and care, | 1:01:15 | |
that the seasons unfold in predictable succession, | 1:01:18 | |
that day follows night, | 1:01:22 | |
that we are born into families and communities | 1:01:24 | |
where tradition helps us know who we are. | 1:01:27 | |
We thank thee for this university | 1:01:30 | |
and for those who laid its foundations, | 1:01:32 | |
and we ask for ourselves that even as we accomplish | 1:01:35 | |
more than they ever envisioned, | 1:01:39 | |
we might be the servant community | 1:01:41 | |
that thou wouldst have us to be. | 1:01:44 | |
This we ask in the name of Jesus Christ, | 1:01:46 | |
who taught us to pray with confidence | 1:01:49 | |
Congregation | Our Father who art in heaven, | 1:01:51 |
hallowed be thy name, | 1:01:54 | |
thy kingdom come, thy will be done | 1:01:56 | |
on Earth as it is in heaven. | 1:01:59 | |
Give us this day our daily bread | 1:02:01 | |
and forgive us our trespasses | 1:02:04 | |
as we forgive those who trespass against us. | 1:02:05 | |
And lead us not into temptation, | 1:02:09 | |
but deliver us from evil. | 1:02:11 | |
For thine is the kingdom, the power, | 1:02:13 | |
the glory forever and ever, amen. | 1:02:15 | |
- | And now go forth in peace and be of good courage, | 1:02:20 |
hold fast that which is good, | 1:02:24 | |
rejoicing in the power of the Holy Spirit, | 1:02:27 | |
and may the blessings of God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, | 1:02:30 | |
be with you all now and forevermore. | 1:02:35 | |
(organ music) | 1:02:38 | |
Choir | ♪ Amen, amen ♪ | 1:02:40 |
(organ playing Rejoice, Ye Pure in Heart) | 1:02:55 | |
♪ Rejoice, ye pure in heart ♪ | 1:03:29 | |
♪ Rejoice, give thanks, and sing ♪ | 1:03:35 | |
♪ Your royal banner wave on high ♪ | 1:03:40 | |
♪ The cross of Christ, your king ♪ | 1:03:46 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice, rejoice give thanks, and sing ♪ | 1:03:51 | |
♪ Your clear hosannas raise and alleluias loud ♪ | 1:04:04 | |
♪ Whilst answering echoes upward float ♪ | 1:04:15 | |
♪ Like wreaths of incense cloud ♪ | 1:04:20 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice, rejoice, give thanks, and sing ♪ | 1:04:26 | |
♪ Yes, on through life's long path ♪ | 1:04:39 | |
♪ Still chanting as ye go ♪ | 1:04:44 | |
♪ From youth to age, by night and day ♪ | 1:04:50 | |
♪ In gladness and in woe ♪ | 1:04:56 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice, rejoice, give thanks, and sing ♪ | 1:05:01 | |
♪ At last the march shall end ♪ | 1:05:14 | |
♪ The wearied ones shall rest ♪ | 1:05:19 | |
♪ The pilgrims find their heavenly home ♪ | 1:05:25 | |
♪ Jerusalem the blessed ♪ | 1:05:30 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice, rejoice, give thanks, and sing ♪ | 1:05:36 | |
♪ Praise God who reigns on high ♪ | 1:05:49 | |
♪ The Lord whom we adore ♪ | 1:05:55 | |
♪ The Father, Son, and Holy Ghost ♪ | 1:06:01 | |
♪ One God forevermore ♪ | 1:06:06 | |
♪ Rejoice, rejoice, rejoice, give thanks, and sing ♪ | 1:06:12 | |
- | (choral singing) | 1:06:33 |
(organ music) | 1:08:23 |