Category: Kairos


Luke 12:49-56

49“I came to bring fire to the earth, and how I wish it were already
kindled! 50I have a baptism with which to be baptized, and what stress
I am under until it is completed! 51Do you think that I have come to
bring peace to the earth? No, I tell you, but rather division! 52From
now on five in one household will be divided, three against two and two
against three; 53they will be divided: father against son and son
against father, mother against daughter and daughter against mother,
mother-in-law against her daughter-in-law and daughter-in-law against
mother-in-law.”

54He also said to the crowds, “When you see a cloud rising in the west,
you immediately say, ‘It is going to rain’; and so it happens. 55And
when you see the south wind blowing, you say, ‘There will be scorching
heat’; and it happens. 56You hypocrites! You know how to interpret the
appearance of earth and sky, but why do you not know how to interpret
the present time.”

You, I, and the entire Church have attempted in every age to make
of Jesus the most comfortable figure that we are able to conjure up.
That image rarely coincides with the full Gospel portrayal of the Son
of God who was sent to set the world on fire and to make peace by
clearing away all that which might impair our vision of him and all
which may impede the power of the Holy Spirit with which he endows us.
We have often so watered down the radical, life-transforming message of
the Gospel that we have lost sight of what God is seeking to do through
the Church and in our lives for the salvation of his creation. Like
the author of the letter to the Hebrews said, “Our God is a consuming
fire.”

The image of fire is the symbol of God’s holy activity. It is the
symbol of his powerful, all-consuming entry into his created order; it
is the evidence of God’s will breaking into the priorities of the
world; and a sign of the presence of the Holy Spirit. Jesus came not
to anesthetize us into a complacent, passive contentment, but to call
us into radical commitment. He came to make a difference and to change
our lives. He came to conquer evil and to break us out of the prisons
of self and society. Jesus came to bring fire to the earth to separate
us from our idols and false gods so that we might discover the only
true God and our true selves. Fire is power and energy. Fire is the
light of the Gospel. Fire is God with us who transforms our life by
the gift of the Holy Spirit.?

Donald Krickbaum, Dean Emeritus, Trinity Cathedral, Miami

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When my third wristwatch in 6 months died a while back, I quit wearing one altogether. No, this isn’t a reflection on being liberated from the tyranny of time-keeping. In fact, I simply realized that my cell-phone worked as a techy little pocket watch, which I’ve learned to check at least as discretely as I ever could sneak peeks at my wrist during conversations and meetings.

This is what first came to mind when I listened to David Tiede, the President Emeritus of Luther Seminary, recently working with a group that was groping towards some serious strategic planning. Given that it was an organization that caters specifically to religious groups, David obviously felt it not inappropriate, even surrounded by corporate execs and other “professional leaders” in their fields, to open up his well-thumbed New Testament, and in a way that no member of my religious tribe, the Episcopalians, can every do, to read us his own favorite biblical text about strategic planning from the Gospel of Matthew:

“The Pharisees and Sadducees came, and to test Jesus* they asked him to show them a sign from heaven. He answered them, ‘When it is evening, you say, “It will be fair weather, for the sky is red.” And in the morning, “It will be stormy today, for the sky is red and threatening.” You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times.* An evil and adulterous generation asks for a sign, but no sign will be given to it except the sign of Jonah.’ Then he left them and went away.”

The most important thing about planning, he was telling us, is to be able to discern God’s movement in the world about us — to be as wise at reading the signs of God’s presence and work in the world as we are at reading market indicators and planning marketing strategies. I thought of the quirky pop-song lyrics by the 1970s rock group, Chicago: “Does anybody really know what time it is? Does anybody really care?” And given the vagaries of middle-aged memory, one lyric was followed by another, this time Bob Dylan’s words of advice to my parents’ generation about the world we, their children, now inhabited as teenagers: “The times, they are a changin’.”

Every generation thinks, I suppose, that the changes in it’s moment in time are the changes that really matter or will endure. Leaving aside the part about “the sign of Johah,” I don’t think David Tiede was asking us a scary, apocalyptic, fundamentalist question like, “is the end at hand?!” (Although even rational Episcopalians can’t be faulted for wondering that question at least twice a day most weeks!) Rather he was reminding us that change happens, over and over, and when it happens, wisdom comes in knowing what needs to be made secure, and what needs to be put at risk.

What time is it? Tiede challenged us. Where is God moving, and where are people finding God and being found by God in these times, our times, the only times we’ve got? And what would it mean to plan my evening, or my day at work tomorrow, or the future of an organization, or the future of the world, by starting with the question, “Where is God in all this, right now, at this time, our time?” And in God’s eyes, what is it time that we do, as followers of Christ?

Does anybody really know what time it is? It seems to me this is a time when there are people who really care. But how do we discern “the signs of the times,” and how do we possibly claim to be able to identify God’s work, and to distinguish it from our own pretensions and claims of entitlement?

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23rd June, A.D. 2006
A Pastoral Letter from the Moderator

TO ALL THE BELOVED OF THE ANGLICAN COMMUNION NETWORK:
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.

A new day is dawning. It is a new day for all of us who understand ourselves to be faithful and orthodox Anglicans, whether within the Episcopal Church or gone out from it.

It is with sadness, but also with anticipation, that I write to you now that the General Convention of the Episcopal Church has provided the clarity for which we have long prayed. By almost every assessment the General Convention has embraced the course of “walking apart.”

I have often said to you that the decisive moment in contemporary Episcopal Church and Anglican Communion history occurred at General Convention 2003. At that time, in the words of the Primates, the Episcopal Church took action that would “tear the fabric of our Communion at its deepest level.”

Since that time, the tear has widened. While we had hoped that this Church would repent and return to received Faith and Order, General Convention 2006 clearly failed to submit to the call, the spirit or the requirements of the Windsor Report. The middle has collapsed. For that part of the Network working constitutionally within ECUSA as over against the dioceses represented by the thirty progressive bishops who issued their Statement of Conscience, we are two churches under one roof.

Even before the close of Convention, Network and Windsor bishops began disassociating themselves from the inadequate Windsor resolution, and thus far one Network diocese has formally requested alternative primatial oversight.

More initiatives are underway. Pastoral and apostolic care has been promised without regard to geography. All I can tell you is that the shape of this care will depend on a very near-range international meeting. Other actions will follow upon continuing conversations with those at the highest levels of the Anglican Communion. Over the course of the month of July, many of the things we have longed for will, I believe, come to pass or be clearly in view for all.

The Anglican Communion Network has never been more united. We are gaining strength, both domestically and internationally. This is the time for biblically orthodox Anglicans to hang together, supporting one another in solidarity, in prayer and with expectancy.

My prayers are with you all, especially those whose plight is most difficult and whose patience is most worn. Pray for me and for all the leadership in Network, Episcopal Church, and Anglican Communion, and most especially for the Archbishop of Canterbury in this crucial moment in modern Anglican history. Again I say to you that a new day is dawning.

Faithfully in Christ Jesus,
+Bob Pittsburgh
Moderator of the Anglican Communion Network

a new thing

It came to me on my birthday. “It’s time.” Chronos. Clock time. Ticking. Time to start something new. Ticking.

It came to me in the night on my birthday. No words. The clock keeps ticking, but it can’t tell the most important time. Kairos. The right time.

Time filled with significance. I am already being made new. What will I do with the gift? What responsibilities come with it?

That is what it is to journey as a Christian, I believe. To live as someone who is already being made new by the life of God’s Spirit. It’s not finished by a long shot; but it’s already underway – the wind has filled the sails. I’m off and away.

For me it’s not the wind of just any spirit, but the one Spirit

  • that has always been, calling time and space into being
  • who became human and was here once, and
  • who now will never go away –calling to new life what is dead or dying — making whole those who are broken — never leaving alone.

This new thing happens in God’s good time. Which isn’t our time. Sometimes it’s slower, like the turning of a flower towards the light. Sometimes it burns hot and bright in an instant.

It came to me on my birthday: “The time is already.” I decided to blog its birthing.

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