The education I received in my schooling was also idyllic. George Washington chopped down a cherry tree but could not lie. Thomas Jefferson was a great scholar and architect. Betty Ross sewed the first flag for a young nation. Abraham Lincoln saved the nation. But, just like my memories of our Fourth of Julys, we soon learn that they are not quite right. Washington and Jefferson owned slaves, Ross did not make the first flag, and Lincoln might of won a war, but also wiped out a generation of Sioux warriors so that the white population could move west.
My brothers remind me of the things I missed from those celebrations - the adults arguing, my mom getting upset at some perceived slight. We must come to terms with the reality of our own personal history as well as the history of our nation and communities.
I love our country. It gave my parents a new start and allowed my family to thrive. It provided the world with medical and engineering break throughs. But, it is not a perfect nation. Like anything that involves the human race it struggles to do the right thing.
This is also true of the Church. It is easy to fall into the trap of nostalgia and thinking that if we just do it like we did in the past we can save the Church. We have to face the hard truth and stop looking through old church directories for the answers. We need to stop trying to be something that we no longer can be. The reality is that it is God's Church - and God's Church will continue to thrive. The question is whether we can open our selves up to the call of the Holy Spirit to join in.
I love our congregation. It is a place that has brought people closer to God since 1886. This congregation is made up of a group of faithful people who long to help the world heal. This is a place where we have embraced God's beautiful creation in all of its glory. My prayer is one that reminds us that we are not called to our past but into God's wonderful future.
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