5th
Sunday of Easter; Yr. C, April 28, 2013
Acts 11:1-18; Psalm 148;
Revelation 21:1-6; John 13:31-35
Sermon
preached at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church
Today we will begin reading Richard
Rohr’s book called “Falling Upward”. In it Rohr talks about what he calls the two
halves of the spiritual life. The first
half being the time when we build what he calls, “the proper container” for our
lives. We answer such questions as “what
will I do”, “who am I”, “how do I support myself”? That first half of life is primarily
concerned with issues of life, success and security … externals. The second half of life, he says, is more
concerned with what fills us. It takes
into account the fact that we are part of a community. We’re concerned about what feeds us, but also
about how our life affects others. We
acknowledge ourselves as part of a community.
In Revelation, God says, “I am the
Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end.” God sees all time in one fell swoop, not in
halves. God sees us as a baby at our
mother’s breast and lying in our bed close to death … all in the same instant …
in all its completeness. We see in
linear time, and so beginnings and endings are discreet events, like the gun
shot at the start of a race, and the checkered flag at the finish; alpha and
omega exist at two ends of the spectrum.
We can only live one moment at a time even if our minds jump ahead to
the future or get stuck in the past.