William H. Willimon - "The Gothic Spirit" (September 8, 1996)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
(Inspirational organ music) | 0:02 | |
- | Good morning. | 1:07 |
Welcome to the service of worship | 1:08 | |
here at Duke University Chapel. | 1:10 | |
We also welcome those who worship with us | 1:12 | |
on a regular basis. | 1:16 | |
With, from radio station WDNC our service | 1:18 | |
is broadcast live there and then delayed | 1:21 | |
broadcast on the Durham cable channel. | 1:25 | |
This morning our lecturer is the new director | 1:30 | |
of counseling and psychological services | 1:33 | |
here at Duke, Dr. James Clack. | 1:35 | |
Also on this opening Sunday, it's a good time | 1:39 | |
to give thanks for the many talents | 1:41 | |
who make this service possible. | 1:44 | |
Particularly our musicians. | 1:46 | |
Like for them to come forward, those who are up here. | 1:49 | |
A lot of them make this happen every Sunday. | 1:52 | |
First, Donna Sparks, the assistant conductor | 1:56 | |
and she's the director of our various | 2:00 | |
choral activities. | 2:03 | |
Donna's got a big job this year because | 2:05 | |
she is helping with the organization | 2:07 | |
of the choir trip to China. | 2:11 | |
We're going to take 150 choir and choral members | 2:13 | |
to China in January, 10 days. | 2:17 | |
And Donna's a great arranger of that | 2:20 | |
and we thank her for her work. | 2:22 | |
Also, our director of chapel music, | 2:25 | |
Dr. Wynkoop who is leading us again, | 2:30 | |
this year, wide array of choral activity. | 2:35 | |
Our chapel organist, Dr. David Arcus | 2:38 | |
who is the accompanist for the choir | 2:42 | |
and chapel organist throughout the year. | 2:44 | |
At the back at the Flentrop you can see | 2:47 | |
Dr. Robert Parkins who plays during our year, | 2:50 | |
particularly at the Flentrop organ. | 2:54 | |
And our curator of organs is | 2:59 | |
Norman Ryan. | 3:05 | |
I'm not sure where Norman is. | 3:06 | |
We've had some water damage on one of | 3:09 | |
the organs due to the storm. | 3:11 | |
He's been working around the clock on that | 3:13 | |
and we thank Norman Ryan for his work. | 3:16 | |
Our Carillonneur that plays the bells | 3:19 | |
before and after each Sunday service | 3:23 | |
and each afternoon at 5:00 is Samuel Hammond, | 3:25 | |
the University Carillonneur. | 3:30 | |
We thank all of these musicians. | 3:33 | |
You don't see all of them on Sunday but, | 3:35 | |
they make it happen here and make this chapel | 3:37 | |
a very special place to be. | 3:40 | |
And we thank them. | 3:43 | |
And also the returning members of our chapel choir. | 3:44 | |
Thank you. | 3:48 | |
And now, if you would stand for the greeting. | 3:49 | |
Let the sun and the moon and stars | 3:55 | |
praise the Lord. | 3:58 | |
Congregation | Let the Heavens praise the Lord. | 4:00 |
- | Let us praise the name of the Lord. | 4:02 |
Congregation | His glory is upon us. | 4:05 |
(inspirational organ music) | 4:09 | |
(inspirational organ music) | 7:03 | |
(uplifting inspirational music) | 9:09 | |
- | [Female Clergy Member] Let us pray. | 10:25 |
God of glory, as we gather here today | 10:27 | |
at the start of this new academic year, | 10:30 | |
you know that we are all seeking something. | 10:34 | |
You are the God who searches hearts | 10:38 | |
and minds, who knows why we have come. | 10:40 | |
Meet us at our place of greatest need, | 10:45 | |
that we might find restoration and renewal | 10:48 | |
in you. | 10:51 | |
We offer you our burdens and fears, | 10:53 | |
our hopes and desires. | 10:56 | |
Knowing that your love lightens burdens | 10:59 | |
and renews hope. | 11:01 | |
Guide us in the paths that you would | 11:04 | |
have us walk. | 11:05 | |
For we long to lead lives worthy of you. | 11:07 | |
Speak your Word to us once more, | 11:10 | |
that we might hear and obey. | 11:13 | |
In the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, | 11:16 | |
Amen. | 11:19 | |
You may be seated. | 11:21 | |
- | Let us pray the prayer for illumination. | 11:32 |
Open our hearts and minds, oh God, | 11:36 | |
by the power of your Holy Spirit. | 11:40 | |
So that, as the Word is read and proclaimed, | 11:42 | |
we may hear your message with joy this day. | 11:46 | |
Amen. | 11:50 | |
The first reading is from the Apostle Paul's letter | 11:52 | |
to the Romans. | 11:54 | |
Chapter 13, verses eight through 14. | 11:55 | |
Owe no one anything, except to love one another | 12:00 | |
for the one who loves another has fulfilled | 12:05 | |
the law. | 12:07 | |
The commandments, you shall not commit adultery, | 12:09 | |
you shall not murder, you shall not steal, | 12:13 | |
you shall not covet, and any other commandment | 12:16 | |
are summed up in this word: | 12:19 | |
Love your neighbor as yourself. | 12:22 | |
Love does no wrong to a neighbor. | 12:25 | |
Therefore, love is the fulfilling | 12:27 | |
of the law. | 12:30 | |
Besides this, you know what time it is. | 12:31 | |
How it is now the moment, for you to wake | 12:35 | |
from sleep, for salvation is nearer to us now | 12:37 | |
than when we became believers. | 12:42 | |
The night is far gone. | 12:44 | |
The day is near. | 12:46 | |
Let us then lay aside the works of darkness | 12:48 | |
and put on the armor of light. | 12:51 | |
Let us live honorably as in the day, | 12:54 | |
not in reveling in drunkenness. | 12:57 | |
Not in debauchery and licentiousness, | 12:59 | |
not in quarreling and jealousy. | 13:02 | |
Instead, put on the Lord Jesus Christ. | 13:05 | |
Make no provisions for the flesh to gratify | 13:08 | |
its desires. | 13:11 | |
This is the Word of the Lord. | 13:13 | |
Congregation | Thank the good God. | 13:16 |
(inspirational choral music) | 13:19 | |
The second reading is from the Gospel according | 16:14 | |
to Saint Matthew. | 16:17 | |
Chapter 18, verses 15 through 20. | 16:18 | |
If another member of the church | 16:23 | |
sins against you, go and point out | 16:25 | |
the fault when the two of you are alone. | 16:28 | |
If the member listens to you, you have | 16:31 | |
regained that one. | 16:33 | |
But if you are not listened to, | 16:35 | |
take one or two others along with you | 16:37 | |
so that every word may be confirmed | 16:40 | |
by the evidence of two or three witnesses. | 16:42 | |
If the member refuses to listen to them, | 16:45 | |
tell it to the church. | 16:48 | |
And if the offender refuses to listen | 16:50 | |
even to the church, let such a one be | 16:52 | |
to you as a gentile and a tax collector. | 16:56 | |
Truly I tell you, whatever you bind on earth | 16:59 | |
will be bound in Heaven. | 17:03 | |
And whatever you loose on earth | 17:05 | |
will be loosed in Heaven. | 17:07 | |
Again, truly I tell you, if two of you | 17:09 | |
agree on earth about anything you ask, | 17:12 | |
it will be done for you by my Father in Heaven. | 17:15 | |
For where two or three are gathered | 17:18 | |
in my name, I am there among them. | 17:20 | |
This is the Word of the Lord. | 17:24 | |
Congregation | Thank you good God. | 17:26 |
- | This morning's psalm is psalm 139 | 17:35 |
verses one through 18 found on pages | 17:38 | |
854 and 855 in your hymnal. | 17:40 | |
Please stand and sing the psalm | 17:43 | |
and Gloria responsible. | 17:44 | |
♪ Oh Lord you have searched me and known me ♪ | 17:54 | |
♪ You know when I sit, when I rise ♪ | 18:01 | |
♪ All of my moments, my ways and my words ♪ | 18:06 | |
♪ You search out my path and my lying down ♪ | 18:14 | |
♪ And are acquainted with all my ways ♪ | 18:19 | |
♪ Even before a word is on my tongue ♪ | 18:23 | |
♪ Behold, oh Lord, you know it altogether ♪ | 18:30 | |
♪ You pursue me behind and before ♪ | 18:36 | |
♪ And lay your hand upon me ♪ | 18:40 | |
♪ Such knowledge is too wonderful for me ♪ | 18:45 | |
♪ It is high; I cannot attain it ♪ | 18:51 | |
♪ Wither shall I go from your spirit ♪ | 18:57 | |
♪ Or where shall I flee from your presence ♪ | 19:02 | |
♪ If I ascend to Heaven, you are there ♪ | 19:08 | |
♪ If I make my bed in Sheol, you are there ♪ | 19:12 | |
♪ If I take the wings of the morning ♪ | 19:17 | |
♪ And dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea ♪ | 19:23 | |
♪ Even there your hand shall lead me ♪ | 19:28 | |
♪ And your right hand shall hold me ♪ | 19:33 | |
♪ If I say, only let darkness cover me ♪ | 19:38 | |
♪ And the light about me be night ♪ | 19:42 | |
♪ Even the darkness is not dark to you ♪ | 19:46 | |
♪ The night is bright as the day ♪ | 19:51 | |
♪ For darkness is as light with you ♪ | 19:57 | |
♪ For it was you who formed my inward parts ♪ | 20:03 | |
♪ You knitted me together in my mother's womb ♪ | 20:08 | |
♪ I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderful ♪ | 20:15 | |
♪ Wonderful are your works ♪ | 20:20 | |
♪ You know me very well ♪ | 20:25 | |
♪ My frame was not hidden from you ♪ | 20:29 | |
♪ When I was being made in secret ♪ | 20:34 | |
♪ Intricately woven in the depths of the earth ♪ | 20:39 | |
♪ Your eyes beheld my unformed substance ♪ | 20:46 | |
♪ In your book were written, every one of them ♪ | 20:52 | |
♪ The days that were formed for me ♪ | 20:56 | |
♪ When as yet there was none of them ♪ | 21:00 | |
♪ How profound to me are your thoughts, oh God ♪ | 21:07 | |
♪ How vast is the sum of them ♪ | 21:11 | |
♪ If I would count them, they are more than the sand ♪ | 21:16 | |
♪ I awake, and I am still with you ♪ | 21:22 | |
♪ Oh glory be to you, creator ♪ | 21:28 | |
♪ And to Jesus Christ our savior ♪ | 21:32 | |
♪ Bless the holy spirit ♪ | 21:35 | |
♪ Bless the trinity ♪ | 21:39 | |
♪ As it was, a time began ♪ | 21:42 | |
♪ It's now and it's forevermore ♪ | 21:47 | |
- | Please be seated. | 21:57 |
- | Where can I go from your spirit? | 22:11 |
Where can I flee from your presence? | 22:14 | |
If I ascend into Heaven, you are there. | 22:19 | |
If I make my bed in Sheol, | 22:22 | |
thou art there. | 22:28 | |
Things have been busy here this past week. | 22:33 | |
There is the storm. | 22:39 | |
But if you're a student here, things are busy | 22:43 | |
even without the storm. | 22:45 | |
There are classes to get and to drop | 22:47 | |
and books to be bough and bunks to be built. | 22:50 | |
And I find it interesting that with all that you | 22:57 | |
have to do and with all that you could be doing, | 23:03 | |
you're here. | 23:07 | |
I'm impressed with the stark contrast | 23:09 | |
between how I began my day | 23:11 | |
compared with where I am now. | 23:15 | |
I began my day, as many of you standing | 23:16 | |
over a backyard grill trying to heat | 23:19 | |
a pint of water. | 23:21 | |
(attendees laughing) | 23:23 | |
The veneer of civilization is stripped away | 23:26 | |
so quickly. | 23:28 | |
But here we are. | 23:30 | |
There since seats late 20th century you, | 23:32 | |
amid this neo-Gothic grandeur. | 23:39 | |
Practical utilitarian, terrestrial you | 23:45 | |
in this impractical would-be celestial building. | 23:51 | |
You'll note that it is the nature | 24:01 | |
of Gothic architecture that you just can't | 24:03 | |
keep your eyes fixed on the earth. | 24:05 | |
Inexorably, this building leads your gaze upward. | 24:11 | |
Every line in this building rises upward | 24:18 | |
as if to wrench your gaze off the practical, | 24:23 | |
mundane matters and upward towards Heaven. | 24:27 | |
The mind of God thus invades the mind | 24:35 | |
of humanity. | 24:39 | |
The Gothic arch rooted in earth. | 24:42 | |
Those pillars behind, beside which you sit, | 24:47 | |
they bear tremendous weight. | 24:50 | |
They go down two stories into the earth. | 24:52 | |
And yet, with all that weight, | 24:57 | |
see how they soar. | 24:59 | |
How they reach over you as if branches | 25:02 | |
of trees, as if hands, hands formed | 25:05 | |
into prayer, and to praise. | 25:11 | |
Everything goes up. | 25:14 | |
The Gothic architect wants so much | 25:18 | |
to go up inside that it's forced | 25:21 | |
on the outside to put flying buttresses, | 25:23 | |
buttresses out there. | 25:26 | |
These arches just like hands | 25:29 | |
lifted up in prayer. | 25:34 | |
We are rooted in creaturehood. | 25:39 | |
Our roots go down deep, back millennia. | 25:42 | |
Biology teaches us that we are animals. | 25:48 | |
But, still we are animals who reach up. | 25:53 | |
Who reach out. | 25:59 | |
I think it was Voltaire who said that | 26:03 | |
man is an animal who devours and who defecates | 26:05 | |
and who dies. | 26:10 | |
And then I think it was also Voltaire | 26:15 | |
who said, most human triumphs and tragedies | 26:17 | |
can be ascribed to mans inability to stay | 26:21 | |
in his own room. | 26:25 | |
Psychology portrays us as bundles | 26:30 | |
of instinctual drives. | 26:34 | |
Genetic, hormonal, determined animals | 26:37 | |
we are, and yet how does psychology | 26:42 | |
explain that we do, at times, overcome ourselves. | 26:47 | |
We surprise even us. | 26:52 | |
We rise. | 26:56 | |
We are bound by time. | 27:00 | |
Even at 19, in rare moments, | 27:02 | |
you experience finitude, limits, | 27:04 | |
bodily decay. | 27:07 | |
And yet, maybe something within us deep, | 27:10 | |
longing toward eternity. | 27:15 | |
Who has put such reach in our minds? | 27:20 | |
Such yearning in our souls. | 27:24 | |
After, here at the university, | 27:29 | |
you have put us like a cadaver | 27:32 | |
on a table and you have picked us apart | 27:33 | |
after you have labeled our physiology, | 27:37 | |
analyzed our behavior, rendered us into cause, | 27:40 | |
effect, mechanistic predictability. | 27:44 | |
There is still something about us that cannot be | 27:50 | |
contained, explained, solely within the limits | 27:52 | |
of our creatureliness. | 27:57 | |
We share creaturehood with all the animals | 28:01 | |
and yet something deep in the center of us | 28:03 | |
still wants to soar. | 28:06 | |
Now what is that? | 28:09 | |
As a 6th grader, I learned, heir of the kingdom | 28:12 | |
beneath the skies, often he falls but still | 28:17 | |
he will rise, stumbling, bleeding, | 28:20 | |
falling, beating back yet he holds to | 28:23 | |
the upward track, this is humanity. | 28:27 | |
We go about our daily deeds. | 28:34 | |
We become concerned. | 28:37 | |
We become overly concerned | 28:39 | |
with ourselves. | 28:41 | |
Preoccupied with our health. | 28:43 | |
We curl up on ourselves. | 28:47 | |
We feed upon ourselves. | 28:49 | |
We accumulate stuff. | 28:51 | |
We become consumed by a world that can be | 28:54 | |
circumscribed only within our own ego | 28:57 | |
and yet, what, at the clear note of an organ | 29:01 | |
on Sunday. | 29:04 | |
Or the sound of a single bird singing at you | 29:09 | |
from a pine tree as you make your way | 29:12 | |
on Monday over to Gross Chem. | 29:14 | |
You will rise. | 29:18 | |
You throw off your earthbound bodiliness. | 29:20 | |
And you will shout, I know I was meant for more. | 29:25 | |
What is this in some of you? | 29:32 | |
This uneasiness? | 29:34 | |
This restlessness? | 29:37 | |
The rocking back and forth? | 29:39 | |
The tapping of the toes? | 29:40 | |
Now what is that? | 29:42 | |
Ambition? | 29:44 | |
Youthful, hormonal drives? | 29:46 | |
Perhaps. | 29:50 | |
But might that also be bodily testimonial | 29:53 | |
that you're never quite able to get settled | 29:56 | |
in present arrangements? | 30:01 | |
In the worst perplexities of life, | 30:05 | |
watch yourself. | 30:08 | |
You will ask why rather than submit. | 30:10 | |
Now why would you ask why? | 30:17 | |
Unless you expect there to be somewhere | 30:20 | |
some transcendent Answerer. | 30:22 | |
Something, someone is intruding into your psyche. | 30:28 | |
Whose is that voice in the night? | 30:35 | |
Whose, where, from whence comes that prodding | 30:37 | |
of conscience? | 30:41 | |
Could it be, as the psalmist said, | 30:44 | |
when I awake, I'm still with thee. | 30:50 | |
You, hem me in from in front and behind. | 30:53 | |
You're hand is laid on me. | 30:58 | |
After we have described you, psychologically, | 31:02 | |
sociologically, economically, still you would be | 31:05 | |
restless with our definitions. | 31:09 | |
Still this could never fully explain, contain you. | 31:12 | |
On a Sunday afternoon in the 30s, when this chapel | 31:21 | |
was dedicated, the world stood on the brink | 31:25 | |
of war. | 31:30 | |
And Jack-booted soldiers strutted in the streets | 31:31 | |
of Europe. | 31:35 | |
But speakers gathered here on a Sunday afternoon | 31:37 | |
and praised the building of this chapel, | 31:41 | |
not as some nostalgia trip into the neo-Gothic past. | 31:44 | |
But as a kind of protest against | 31:51 | |
classicist neo-classicist fascism. | 31:56 | |
Ugly architecture is always a component | 32:05 | |
of bad government. | 32:08 | |
And there is something about this Gothic | 32:11 | |
which is playful, which is soaring | 32:14 | |
and exuberant, which is a kind of protest | 32:17 | |
against all fascist, neo-classical, | 32:21 | |
Promethean man, the measure of all things | 32:25 | |
definition of what's going on in the world. | 32:29 | |
This building, which many might have thought | 32:33 | |
was some kind of trip into the past | 32:36 | |
was therefore seen as a kind of clinch-fisted | 32:40 | |
protest to the Nazi's. | 32:44 | |
In the Gothic, we move out beyond | 32:50 | |
the earthbound space. | 32:54 | |
Life has reach. | 32:56 | |
It has color and rhythm and verticality | 32:58 | |
asymmetry. | 33:03 | |
There's lots of places to hide. | 33:04 | |
We noticed and we started printing children's | 33:08 | |
bulletins to use along in the service. | 33:12 | |
We started, we printed up enough. | 33:14 | |
We printed up 20. | 33:15 | |
And then we printed up 30 and then 40. | 33:18 | |
And now each Sunday we give out 60 children's bulletins. | 33:20 | |
Some of you have got a children's bulletin | 33:28 | |
and you're thinking, that's why there's so many | 33:29 | |
pictures in my bulletin. | 33:31 | |
No. | 33:32 | |
(attendees laughing) | 33:34 | |
But the surprising thing is, we didn't know | 33:37 | |
we would have children in the service. | 33:40 | |
But more than one parent has said, | 33:42 | |
you know, I like to bring them to Duke Chapel. | 33:44 | |
There's enough stuff going on here to watch. | 33:45 | |
The building is dark and complex and playful. | 33:49 | |
After 40 days in the wilderness, | 33:58 | |
and 40 nights, Jesus was hungry. | 34:01 | |
Satan offered Jesus bread and yet, | 34:07 | |
even though Jesus needed bread. | 34:12 | |
Even in his great 40 days, 40 nights hunger, | 34:17 | |
bread was not enough. | 34:20 | |
We need bread. | 34:24 | |
But isn't it odd how we need more than bread? | 34:27 | |
Now why can't we be satisfied with just | 34:32 | |
the basic this and that of everyday life | 34:34 | |
on this earth? | 34:38 | |
Why isn't it enough? | 34:41 | |
In the institutes, John Calvin notes, | 34:45 | |
that isn't it interesting when God created water, | 34:49 | |
which would be quite enough to sustain us, | 34:54 | |
that God go on and invent wine. | 34:58 | |
Why is that? | 35:02 | |
A building, as unfortunate as the Duke Law School | 35:07 | |
would've been enough to hold all of us here. | 35:11 | |
We could've stopped with that, but wasn't it great | 35:15 | |
Duke went on and built a place | 35:18 | |
as extravagant and playful and difficult to heat | 35:21 | |
as this? | 35:24 | |
(attendees laughing) | 35:26 | |
There's just something about us that yearns. | 35:28 | |
When Dr. Hague took us down a little village, | 35:32 | |
San Marco in Honduras, where the quest | 35:36 | |
for basic necessities like water and bread | 35:41 | |
consume every waking moment of every day, | 35:46 | |
and yet, in a place so pitifully deprived, | 35:50 | |
they had a church and it was elegantly | 35:58 | |
adorned as best they could. | 36:02 | |
Now, why? | 36:06 | |
Amid life's crushing every day burdens | 36:08 | |
did these people gather to sing | 36:11 | |
and to worship. | 36:15 | |
Because like Jesus said, we do not live | 36:18 | |
even by something so necessary and precious as bread. | 36:21 | |
We reach. | 36:27 | |
Something within you reached towards | 36:31 | |
the eternal like the sweep of the Gothic arch, | 36:34 | |
and I am saying, I think you're here out of that hunger. | 36:38 | |
And to you, this graceful building | 36:46 | |
has opened its arms, has drawn | 36:47 | |
you within, and I'm saying you're here. | 36:51 | |
You're here not to escape from the facts of life. | 36:54 | |
But I am saying you're here because | 37:00 | |
the facts of life, as this place | 37:02 | |
tends to privilege them, are not enough | 37:05 | |
to explain what's going in you and in the world. | 37:10 | |
You're here not to evade reality, | 37:15 | |
but you're here further to penetrate reality. | 37:18 | |
To plumb the depths, to venture out | 37:22 | |
beyond the superficialities. | 37:25 | |
As with every line in this building, you rise. | 37:28 | |
Maya Angelou, here last Sunday afternoon | 37:34 | |
speaking to our freshmen. | 37:38 | |
She writes... | 37:41 | |
You may write me down in history with your | 37:45 | |
bitter, twisted lies. | 37:48 | |
You may trod me in the very dirt, | 37:52 | |
but still like dust, I rise. | 37:56 | |
Just like moons and like suns. | 38:02 | |
With a certainty of the tides, | 38:06 | |
just like hopes springing high. | 38:09 | |
Still, I rise. | 38:12 | |
You may shoot me with your words, | 38:15 | |
cut me with your eyes. | 38:18 | |
You may kill me with your hatefulness, | 38:19 | |
but still like air, I rise. | 38:22 | |
Bringing the gifts that the ancestors gave, | 38:26 | |
I am the dream. | 38:30 | |
I am the hope of the slave. | 38:32 | |
I rise. | 38:36 | |
I rise. | 38:38 | |
I rise. | 38:41 | |
And there you sit. | 38:45 | |
You were brought here by friends | 38:47 | |
or by habit or you were seeking | 38:50 | |
air conditioning. | 38:52 | |
Or maybe you know not what. | 38:55 | |
Maybe you didn't even really want to be here. | 38:59 | |
You have questions about all this, | 39:02 | |
you've got doubts. | 39:04 | |
The service was listed in the weekly | 39:07 | |
events calendar, you're a freshman, | 39:08 | |
you thought you had to go to all the stuff. | 39:10 | |
That's why you're here. | 39:12 | |
(audience laughing) | 39:14 | |
And yet, at the notes of the hymn, | 39:16 | |
amid the soaring arches, you rise. | 39:21 | |
Your voice joined others. | 39:28 | |
And then you knew Jesus was right where he said | 39:32 | |
where just two or three are gathered, I am there. | 39:36 | |
Then you were able to say with another psalmist, | 39:42 | |
I was glad when they said unto me. | 39:46 | |
Let us go to the house of the Lord. | 39:48 | |
This seemingly mundane gathering | 39:52 | |
of thoroughly earthbound human beings | 39:54 | |
became opportunity for meeting, | 39:58 | |
for intrusion by God. | 40:01 | |
We rise. | 40:04 | |
On my way back from my usual afternoon visit | 40:09 | |
to the hospital, I decided to take a little | 40:12 | |
detour, and I dropped by the law office | 40:16 | |
of a man who was in my church. | 40:20 | |
I didn't know him very well. | 40:23 | |
I figured his wife sort of took care | 40:24 | |
of the religion for the family. | 40:26 | |
He came, but it was the end of the day, twilight. | 40:28 | |
The door to the law office was still open. | 40:36 | |
I looked in, no one was in the outer office, | 40:38 | |
everybody had gone home, but I could see | 40:40 | |
a light back in the inner office. | 40:42 | |
He said, who is it? | 40:46 | |
I said, it's the preacher. | 40:48 | |
He said, come on back. | 40:51 | |
I went back. | 40:53 | |
And there he was. | 40:56 | |
He looked tired, his tie down | 40:59 | |
below his collar, shirt open. | 41:01 | |
He said, well, I didn't expect to see you here, preacher. | 41:06 | |
Come on in, I was just about to fix myself a drink. | 41:13 | |
You want a drink? | 41:15 | |
I said, sure, if it's caffeine free, diet. | 41:17 | |
He poured out a couple of drinks, | 41:24 | |
he leaned in his chair, he threw his feet | 41:26 | |
up on this cluttered desk. | 41:29 | |
And I, just making conversation, | 41:32 | |
I said, well, what sort of day have you had? | 41:33 | |
He said, a typical day, miserable. | 41:37 | |
Oh, I said. | 41:43 | |
I'm sorry, what was miserable about your day? | 41:44 | |
Oh, he said, my day began as I helped | 41:50 | |
a couple evict their aging father | 41:54 | |
from his house so they could take | 41:57 | |
everything he owns and put him | 42:01 | |
in a nursing home. | 42:03 | |
All legal. | 42:05 | |
Maybe not particularly moral, but legal. | 42:09 | |
By lunchtime, I was helping a client | 42:13 | |
of mine evade his worker's insurance payments. | 42:15 | |
Again, it's legal. | 42:20 | |
And this afternoon, I have been enabling | 42:22 | |
a woman to ruin her husband's life forever | 42:26 | |
with the sweetest little divorce package | 42:30 | |
you ever saw. | 42:32 | |
That's my day. | 42:34 | |
Well, what could I say? | 42:39 | |
Which, he continued, explains | 42:42 | |
why I'm in your church on Sunday. | 42:46 | |
And I said, well, I confess, I'm feeling | 42:51 | |
a bit overwhelmed, I mean, thinking, | 42:54 | |
what on Earth do I have to say | 42:56 | |
in a sermon that could in some way | 42:58 | |
minister to the kind of days you have here? | 43:00 | |
He said, oh, it's not the sermon | 43:04 | |
I come for, preacher. | 43:06 | |
(audience laughing) | 43:08 | |
It's the building. | 43:11 | |
It's the music. | 43:14 | |
I tell ya, preacher, sometimes I'll go an entire week | 43:17 | |
with nothing beautiful, with nothing good | 43:23 | |
until Sunday. | 43:28 | |
And I'll tell ya, sometimes | 43:31 | |
when that little volunteer choir sings, | 43:32 | |
it is, for me, the difference | 43:37 | |
between life and death. | 43:40 | |
Oh Lord, you search me and you know me. | 43:49 | |
I can't get away from your spirit. | 43:53 | |
Where could I flee from your presence? | 43:56 | |
If I ascend to Heaven, you're there. | 44:00 | |
If I make my bed in Hell, | 44:03 | |
you're there. | 44:07 | |
(soft choir music) | 44:23 | |
(inspirational choral music) | 44:56 | |
- | [Female Clergy Member] You may be seated. | 47:16 |
The Lord be with you. | 47:23 | |
Audience | And also with you. | 47:26 |
- | Let us pray. | 47:27 |
In the stillness of this moment, | 47:31 | |
we are aware that we cannot escape your love, oh God. | 47:35 | |
We can find no place to hide from your presence. | 47:41 | |
You search us out wherever we may be. | 47:45 | |
We may ascend to the highest heavens | 47:49 | |
or descend to the deepest seas, | 47:52 | |
but your embracing love is there. | 47:55 | |
We may seek escape in the busyness of the day, | 47:59 | |
or in the darkness of the night. | 48:03 | |
But your bright, persistent love is there. | 48:06 | |
We may fall into the pits of Hell, | 48:10 | |
but your seeking, forgiving love is there. | 48:14 | |
Thank you, oh God, for your steadfast mercy. | 48:20 | |
Thank you for being there, wherever we may be. | 48:24 | |
Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer. | 48:29 | |
Oh God who has planted the seed | 48:33 | |
of eternity within us, be our inspiration | 48:36 | |
as we begin this academic year. | 48:40 | |
Remind us that you have made us | 48:43 | |
in your own image. | 48:45 | |
We are not just a bundle of appetites | 48:47 | |
and desires, for you have put | 48:50 | |
the mark of divinity within each of us. | 48:52 | |
And our souls are restless until they find | 48:55 | |
their rest in you. | 48:58 | |
It is not enough for us to seek our own way. | 49:00 | |
Not because you want to constrain | 49:03 | |
our freedom, but because | 49:06 | |
you have made us for greater things. | 49:08 | |
May this chapel at the center of Duke University | 49:12 | |
be an ever present reminder of your | 49:16 | |
drawing presence, which causes us | 49:18 | |
to aspire for more. | 49:21 | |
Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer. | 49:23 | |
Oh, God, you know the hunger deep within us, | 49:29 | |
which cannot be filled by anything | 49:33 | |
the world has to offer. | 49:35 | |
Keep us from chasing false promises of satisfaction. | 49:38 | |
Lead us in our restless thoughts | 49:41 | |
and our unnamed yearning to seek you | 49:44 | |
in the depths of our hearts. | 49:48 | |
Knowing that you were there waiting | 49:50 | |
to fill us with your love, | 49:52 | |
and to lead us in the ways everlasting. | 49:55 | |
Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer. | 49:58 | |
Oh, God, you are the hope of all | 50:02 | |
the ends of the Earth. | 50:06 | |
In creation, you divided the waters of chaos. | 50:08 | |
In Christ, you stilled storms, | 50:12 | |
raised the dead, and vanquished | 50:15 | |
demonic powers. | 50:18 | |
We believe that you have power over creation, | 50:20 | |
and yet in your wisdom, you have | 50:23 | |
given creation freedom. | 50:26 | |
It is for this reason that we suffer | 50:28 | |
hurricane, earthquake, and flood. | 50:30 | |
Keep us from calling disaster your justice. | 50:34 | |
Help as we recover from Hurricane Fran, | 50:38 | |
to respond to each other's need | 50:41 | |
with compassion, patience, and love. | 50:44 | |
And teach us in good times and in distress | 50:47 | |
to trust your mercy and power. | 50:51 | |
Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer. | 50:54 | |
We carry in our hearts, the names | 50:58 | |
of many who are facing tribulation. | 51:01 | |
Grant them endurance in their suffering | 51:04 | |
and relief from pain. | 51:06 | |
For those who struggle with affliction | 51:09 | |
of the spirit, grant them hope. | 51:11 | |
As you have poured out your love in our hearts, | 51:13 | |
so pour out your compassion. | 51:16 | |
Be present with those who are alone, | 51:19 | |
give peace to those who are troubled, | 51:21 | |
give comfort to those who are dying, | 51:24 | |
and them that mourn. | 51:27 | |
Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer. | 51:29 | |
As deep calls to deep, so do we call | 51:34 | |
to you, oh steadfast God. | 51:38 | |
Hear and answer us, we pray, | 51:42 | |
for we call upon you in the name | 51:45 | |
of Jesus Christ, our Lord. | 51:46 | |
Amen. | 51:49 | |
And now let us present the bounty | 51:52 | |
of our lives to the Lord. | 51:54 | |
(soft organ music) | 51:59 | |
(exuberant instrumental music) | 53:36 | |
(Inspirational choral music) | 54:14 | |
(soft organ music) | 58:54 | |
God of amazing grace, before the gifts | 1:00:43 | |
you have given us, our gifts pale | 1:00:46 | |
into insignificance. | 1:00:49 | |
And yet we know that you accept them | 1:00:51 | |
and us just as we are. | 1:00:54 | |
Increase our vision and enlarge | 1:00:57 | |
our compassion that we might embrace our brothers | 1:00:59 | |
and sisters in need as you have embraced us. | 1:01:03 | |
Receive these gifts and love | 1:01:07 | |
and use them and us to further | 1:01:09 | |
your caring in the world. | 1:01:11 | |
And now let us pray with confidence | 1:01:14 | |
as the children of God. | 1:01:16 | |
All | Our father who art in Heaven, | 1:01:18 |
hallowed be thy name. | 1:01:21 | |
Thy kingdom come, thy will be done | 1:01:23 | |
on Earth as it is in Heaven. | 1:01:26 | |
Give us this day our daily bread. | 1:01:29 | |
And forgive us our trespasses as we forgive | 1:01:31 | |
those who trespass against us. | 1:01:35 | |
Lead us not into temptation, but deliver | 1:01:38 | |
us from evil. | 1:01:41 | |
For thine is the kingdom, and the power, | 1:01:42 | |
and the glory forever. | 1:01:45 | |
Amen. | 1:01:48 | |
(inspirational choir music) | 1:01:53 | |
(Inspirational choral music) | 1:02:50 | |
- | The grace of our Lord and Savior, | 1:08:01 |
Jesus Christ, and the love of God | 1:08:02 | |
and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit | 1:08:04 | |
be with you now and always. | 1:08:06 | |
(Inspirational choral music) | 1:08:12 | |
(energetic organ music) | 1:10:13 |