All Saints, Year C--
A Sermon Preached at the Cathedral Church of St. Mark
All Saints, Year C
The
Very Reverend Tyler B. Doherty, Dean & Rector
Sometimes,
I think that when we hear the word “saint” our first impulse is to think of the
spiritual superstars of our tradition—the Mother Teresa, Francis, Benedict,
John of the Cross, and most recently John Henry Newman. Saints seem to present
a rather extraordinary example of holiness that none of us regular folks can
live up to. Saints can seem otherworldly to the extreme as they glide a few
inches above the earth existing solely on manna from heaven and tiny sips of
holy water.
When we’re stuck with that kind of picture of
saintliness, when that picture “holds us captive” as St. Ludwig Wittgenstein
would say, we miss, I think, an important aspect of what it means to be a
saint, and that is their very ordinary humanness. This time of year, if you
come into the Church early in the morning you’ll see the sun’s early rays
lighting up the Resurrection window. And on the opposite wall of the knave is a
kind of splash of reds, blues, yellows, greens that slowly journeys up the
plaster. If human beings are like windows, then saints are those people who let
the light of God shine through them. They are not lights unto to themselves,
they are ordinary folks who’ve been opened up by God to the light and are just
crazy enough to let that light shine through them.
So saints aren’t so much the spiritual
superheroes who have taken heaven by storm by their feats of ascetism, but
those who have let the light shine through them as one unique, unrepeatable
instance of what the love of God looks like when it shines through the lineaments
of a life, this particular life. And like any window, there will be things that
smudge up the glass, that get in the way of the shining of the lights. But that
doesn’t diminish the light that does shine through in any way. There’s no
checklist for saints, as if if irritability, depression, or extra-marital
affairs in the case of Martin Luther King are present they are automatic
disqualifiers for sainthood.
No, saints are saints precisely because they
are sinners. Saints are saints because in embracing their fragile human nature
in all its foibled humanness, they open themselves up be places, instances,
where the light shines through, where God happens. You could say that saints
are people who stand where Jesus stands and breathe the air He breathes. Jesus,
of course, is the one who is utterly transparent to the light of God coming
through his life. And saints are the ones who make the half-mad gamble of
letting Jesus’ utter transparency to the Father find a home in their hearts. Saints
are those people who let God get at them, who prop open the door with their
“yes” consenting to God’s presence and action in their lives that God can slip
in like a thief in the night and take up residence, living God’s life in and
through lineaments of that person’s circumstances.
Rowan Williams in discussing the great
nineteenth-century prelate Cardinal Manning remarks on how one commentator
objected to Cardinal Manning being referred to as “saintly”; surely he was a
manipulative, ambitious, even unscrupulous figure. But Williams points out that
the miracle wasn’t that a saint could be manipulative, ambitious etc., but that
a man with a temperament like that could still in some sense be a saint. The
undeniable fact is that he let God’s light through for countless people,
especially in his selfless work for the poorest workers in Victorian London. That
certainly makes his less attractive temperamental qualities very evident by
contrast. But what matters is that at some level of his being he was knocked
off balance by the reality of God’s love and justice, and that reality was
simply there in his life, never mind the intrigues and the rivalries of the
church politics he was involved in.
That’s why, in the wake of the Reformation, we
speak of the priesthood of all believers, or on this day, the sainthood of all
believers. You’ll sometimes hear grumbling in some circles that all Martin
Luther did was lower the bar when he proclaimed the priesthood, or the
sainthood of all believers, as if he opened the floodgates to a kind of bland
mediocrity where the high standards of the Tradition were thrown out and now
everyone is a saint. And I suppose, if that is what you understand Luther to be
saying there is a risk. But I’m not certain that’s what Luther was really getting
at. Luther was trying to remind us of the profound destiny of every human being
as created in the image and likeness of God. Call it putting on the mind of
Christ, call it union and communion with God, call it theosis or divinization… he
was trying to recapture for the Church the great adventure of the life of
Christian discipleship, the breath-taking drama of the spiritual journey in
which we are made, day by day, a little more like the one we follow after down
the way of love and call “Lord.”
In the Letter to the Ephesians, Paul’s
way of putting this is that we “may know what is the hope to which he has
called you, what are the riches of his glorious inheritance.” Paul is trying to
remind the Ephesians of the grand sweep of what it means to be a Christian, of
the promise of glory, of the immeasurable greatness of a life made a little
more transparent to the light of God. Through turning to God as the source of
all beauty, truth and goodness, through learning about who God is particularly
as revealed in the person of Jesus in the Gospels, through daily encounter with
God in prayer, through weekly worship in community, through crossing
human-erected boundaries and proclaiming the belovedness of all of creatures,
through taking time to waste time gracefully with God—we stand where Jesus
stands, we breathe the air he breathes, we make ourselves a little more
transparent to that light that is always shining that no darkness can overcome.
I’ve used this metaphor before, but I remember
when our middle daughter was born with jaundice and the recommended treatment
was to simply make sure she got some directly sunlight for a certain amount of
time each day. We’d unswaddle her, move her to the swath of sun that traced its
way across the apartment’s hardwood floor and the light would do all the work
of healing, getting those toxins out of her system. That, I think, is what
Church is. It’s a kind of light therapy where we open ourselves to the light of
Christ that those things that hinder the light from coming through, that hinder
God from coming through might be healed. Prayer, reading the scriptures, weekly
worship, serving others, giving of our time, talent, and treasure—all the
various things that Church patterns in us are ways of finding that little patch
of sun as it tracks across the floor.
One of
the really beautiful things about All Saints Day is that it’s one of the four
official times each year we baptize people into the Body of Christ. And even
when there’s no squawking baby, we recite the Baptismal Covenant as a faith
community, to remind ourselves of what all this grand talk of becoming
transmitters of the light looks like in real life. The Baptismal Covenant gives
us, in broad strokes, both a glimpse of the path to saintliness and the end
towards which that path points. The Baptismal Covenant gives a picture of what
saints do, of what Jesus’ life when it’s lived out through our ordinary lives
of carpooling, cribbage, and changing catheters looks like.
And what is that life? It’s continuing in the
apostles’ teaching and meeting regularly for worship, reception of the
sacraments, and persisting in the life of prayer. It’s recognizing when we mess
up and admitting our mistakes, and asking God to forgive us. It’s being bearers
of light for others—proclaiming belovedness by word and example to all those
who have been declared unfit, unclean, unhinged, or unsavory. It’s doing the
work of seeing past labels and stereotypes and seeking Christ in people we’ve
written off, and doing everything we can to water those Christ seeds in the
soil of their hearts. It’s about seeing every person—no matter their sexual
orientation, their country of origin, the color of their skin, their creed,
their class, their gender—as inherently dignified, as worthy of our attention,
our love, our efforts to strive for a more just and peaceful world.
How
each of us lives that out will, of course look different. I think of four
parishioners whom we’ve recently lost—Liz Keller, Ron Allison, Meredith Simmons,
and Lily Verschoor. You couldn’t find a more diverse cast of Christians! And
yet, each one in her or his own way was an instance of a place where God came
through. Each one in her or his own way can rightly be called a saint, a ray of
infinite love that illuminated a particular place in a particular time and
showed us who and whose we are, and who we are called to be.
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