Monday, June 17, 2019

Ministry Never Stops: How Trinity Sunday Is Not the Last Day of School

The most exciting day of the school year growing up was, of course, the last day. Everyone was excited, nobody payed attention to anything, and once we got out the door and headed into vacation we turned  that part of brains that had been subjected to all that book-learnin’ clean off. In a way, this past Sunday, the Feast of the Most Holy Trinity (commonly called Trinity Sunday) day,  is like the last day of school but for churches. It’s the last major feast day we celebrate on Sunday morning until All Saints Day in November, and many of us headed out the door on Sunday and went straight into vacation, or at least they did in my church.  Admittedly, when church years are structured like academic years, this pretty much always happens; it doesn’t happen in monasteries, for example.  In some places that structure is so strong that churches suspend some or all of their services for the entire summer.  It’s not uncommon, then, to find folks on Trinity Sunday sitting on pins and needles anticipating the dismissal like 10 years olds who can’t wait to hear the school bell ring them into the summertime. 

To be fair, though, we all need rest.  Our choirs, formation leaders, and clergy all need a chance to recoup.  The extreme opposite of those churches that suspend services in the summertime is one parish in which I served where the priest wanted ALL programs to continue into the summer, for fear that folks would think that we were being lazy  "The church does not take breaks," this priest said 

Well, that’s both true and untrue.  It’s untrue because church folk, especially folk working in churches like clergy and program directors, need to honor the commandment to observe a sabbath rest because we’re usually bad at it. But it is also true that the church does not take breaks insomuch as what we are called to do in our baptism—break bread, pray, seek and serve Christ in all persons, love our neighbor as ourselves, proclaim by word and action the Good News of God, strive for justice and peace, and respect the dignity of every human being—does not have an offseason.  The church is not a school where we fill our brains to the brim with work and then take a long break just as we’re reaching our boiling-point, nor is it a job that we begrudgingly come to week after week, waiting for vacation time to come and rescue us from the monotony.  The church, instead, is the gathered body of the faithful, saints and sinners of all sorts, who are engaged not so much in work but in ministry, and ministry does not stop. 

That's because ministry is about relationship.  It’s about connecting with each other and connecting each other to God.  This past weekend was all about relationship at our church, Good Shepherd in Asheboro, NC. I got to connect with several of our youth on Friday night at our annual lock-in, talking about how God is our anchor, about the abundance of God’s love for us, and about the gratitude we feel for all God gives us, especially our relationships. And on Trinity Sunday we raised up the new folks in our midst, welcoming 30 folks to our community during the two morning liturgies and honoring those new connections with a light reception in their honor. 

Building relationships and making connections with one another and God is what we do each week when we gather in our places of worship, certainly, but it’s what we do when we go to the coffee shop or brewery during the week.  It’s what we do when we see someone on the street hurting and feel compelled to help in some small way.   It’s what we do because it’s who we are, and it’s who God is! 

Christianity is unlike any other religion—the anti-religion, as one theologian calls it—because it’s not predicated on rules, dogma, or discipline.  That's not what Jesus came to show us and not what the earliest followers of the Way were about. Christianity was not founded upon the idea that our goal was doing a certain number of tasks, performing a required amount of work, and then calling it a day, patting ourselves on the back in congratulations for what we accomplished.  No, Christianity was founded upon the principle of transforming one’s life and the lives of others through relationship. At its heart our faith is rooted in Jesus’ relationship with the God whom he called Father and the Spirit of truth who came from God on that day of Pentecost to fill the people with the fire of God’s love, and she has never left since.  God, you see, is the very action of relationship; God is more of a verb than a noun.  Remember the name God declare when speaking to Moses:  YAHWEH, the great I AM, THE ONE WHO IS BEING.  Trinity Sunday is the day that we remember that YAHWEH’s whole being is about relationship with Godself in the dance between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, which is why God creates us to be in relationship with one another and with God.  In many ways, Trinity Sunday is the perfect high holy day to celebrate at this time of year. 

For as we head to the beach or the mountains and take our breaks from church programming, Trinity Sunday launches us into our so-called Ordinary Time (as if there really is such a thing!), with relationship at the forefront of our minds; authentic relationships with our sisters and brothers, both newcomer and oldcomer, both inside our church buildings and outside among the Church in the world. These relationships are grounded in those baptismal vows, which themselves are grounded in our relationship with the great I AM. And that does not stop, whether we take breaks in our church programming or not, whether we go out of town in the summer or not, whether we understand the complexities of the theology of the Holy Trinity or not.  What Trinity Sunday teaches us is not doctrinal, it’s relational:  God in Trinity exists in the love expressed between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and we exist to ground the love we have in that relationship which is the very foundation of all being. This relational ministry is the call of every Christian at all times and in all places.

So maybe most of my parishioners will show up next week, or maybe the won't.  Maybe your own churches will be a bit sparse in the coming weeks. Regardless, may we all remember that, though we may take our rest from time to time, our call to love God and neighbor, and to put that love into action, does not stop; it is as eternal as the Divine Dance between the Persons Most HolyTrinity.  Bind unto yourselves this week, brothers and sisters, the relationship, the love, the strong name of the Trinity.




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