All Saints, 2024
Wisdom of Solomon 3:1-9
Psalm 24
Revelation 21:1-6a
John 11:32-44
In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Since this is the feast of all saints, we will once again renew our Baptismal covenant. Because it is the feast of ALL saints. And if you are bothered by anything I’m about to say, I encourage you to think deeply about why you are bothered. And then I strongly encourage you to come and talk to me about it. My door is always open.
There is no denying that the past decade has coarsened our rhetoric, expanded our divisions, and heightened our worst impulses. In the past week, we’ve witnessed profoundly hateful campaign rhetoric, which—as usual—was then retrofitted to be called "jokes." And these are not even funny jokes. And these not-funny jokes are especially not funny for the people on the other end of what are very real threats to their personal safety.
So today we will affirm our faith using the Baptismal covenant, because it is the feast of ALL saints.
Together, we will promise to respect the dignity of every human being, Every person is made in the image of God. And—in case it’s not obvious—human beings, made in the image of God, are not vermin. Human beings, made in the image of God, do not poison our blood. And Americans who vote differently than you do are still human beings made in the image of God, and they are not enemies.
The dystopian hellscape we keep hearing about is not there. When you pull back the curtain, what you find is . . . people. Just people. Fellow Americans. People like my immigrant great grandfather who came to this country because it is a good place, and is not the world’s garbage can. People. Beloved children of God. People in whom we have sworn to seek and serve Christ. People whose dignity we have promised to respect.
Whatever your politics, calling other people animals and vermin and poison and enemies is not the language of our baptismal covenant. It’s just not. Every single person is created by God, made in the image of God. A beloved child of God. And when you call people—who are made in the image of God—anything other than made in the image of God, you are blaspheming the God who created them. Since every person is made in the image of God, whatever you say about them, you are saying about God. Whatever you say, you are saying about God.
Way back in 2020, we put a sign in our own private yard endorsing a particular candidate we favored for office. People left this church over that sign. Not because we had A sign, but because of whose name was on that sign. It wasn’t the sign; it was the name. I will not make that mistake again, because our congregation is already a mere remnant of what we were before the pandemic. But if a sign in my yard makes you leave your church . . . . well, I don’t know what to say.
Today, we will affirm our faith using the Baptismal covenant, because it is the feast of ALL saints.
We are going to need to start looking for unity no matter who wins this election. And—in some outcomes—there are people who will need extra protecting in the days and months ahead. The LGBTQ people whose dignity you have promised to respect. The people of color you have promised to seek and serve Christ in. The immigrants and strangers and widows and orphans whom God tells us over and over are God’s FAVORED children will need extra protecting. And, to be completely honest about it . . . so will women.
When the flames are burning this hot, it is our Christian duty to turn down the gas, and to shelter those the fires are aimed at. We are a sanctuary from politics, not an accelerant for it. We are a place of shelter for the needy, not a fortress against the world. As Episcopalians, we are people who are held together by our baptismal covenant, and we make very specific promises . . . with God’s help.
On this feast of all saints, we will once again affirm our Baptismal covenant. Because it is the feast of ALL saints.
We make these promises with God’s help. And if you have trouble keeping the promises you are about to make with God’s help, ask God for help. Because with God’s help, we can do better. With God’s help, we must do better. With God’s help, we will respect the dignity of every human being. With God’s help we will seek and serve Christ in every single person, known and unknown. Because with God’s help we are the body of Christ in this world.
On this feast of all saints, we will once again affirm our Baptismal covenant. Because it is the feast of ALL saints. And with God’s help we will make good on the promises we make.
Amen.