The Imminence of Christmas

Post Content

In 2018, I went with a delegation from Pittsburgh Theological Seminary to visit our partners at the Evangelical Theological Seminary in Cairo, Egypt. People in Egypt have a different conception of time than we do. There is a strong sense of the imminence of the past in the present. For example, when asked for a brief history of the seminary, people would invariably say something like, “Certainly. Saint Mark came to Egypt in the 1st century…” 2,000 years is as brief as it gets in Egypt!

I returned to Egypt last Christmas with my spouse, mother, and brother. Many of the Christians we met this time around spoke with great pride about how, even before Saint Mark came to Egypt, the holy family found refuge in Egypt shortly after Jesus’ birth. Matthew 2 recounts King Herod’s infuriation at the prophecies he heard from the wise men about the boy Jesus, an infuriation that led to his ordering the murder of all baby boys near Bethlehem. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph waited out this slaughter in Egypt until Joseph had a dream that it was safe to return.

Just as there was a straight line from Saint Mark to the seminary in Cairo, there was a straight line from providing shelter to the holy family in their time of need to extravagant hospitality for Christians traveling far away from home at Christmastime. These ancient stories had an immediacy in their present moment.

We do not have the luxury of monuments millennia old all around us to remind us of our connection to the past. Nevertheless, I hope you feel the immediacy and imminence of the Christmas story in your life this season. I hope you have the chance to see in yourself or someone else those qualities, whatever they are, that led to God becoming incarnate in people just like us. I hope you have the chance to offer hospitality to people in need, like the holy family in Bethlehem. I hope you have the chance to show compassion to those from faraway places seeking refuge, like the holy family in Egypt. I hope you have the chance to outsmart the King Herods of the world, just like the wise men did. I hope the Christmas story is alive in your life this season.

Merry Christmas.

A Prayer for Deep Peace

Post Content

I’ve had more than a few people tell me that Advent has flown by fast, and they can hardly believe it’s almost Christmas. It is true that this year the calendar gave us the shortest Advent season possible, but it always feels a bit rushed in this last week before Christmas, doesn’t it?

Company’s coming, there’s baking to do, gifts to purchase and wrap, the house to decorate, and all the rest can add up to a frenetic feeling. At the church, we’ve been proofreading and printing a seemingly countless number of bulletins for multiple services. Deacons are delivering poinsettias, and the Care Team is following up on urgent pastoral concerns. The musicians and pastors are making special preparations, and behind-the-scenes volunteers are beautifying, baking, and serving alongside many mission partners.

When this joyful season begins to feel more full than joyous, and I feel the need to stop and breathe deeply and find some respite from the hasty preparations, I turn to this favorite Gaelic Blessing.

Deep peace of the running wave to you.

Deep peace of the flowing air to you.

Deep peace of the quiet earth to you.

Deep peace of the shining stars to you.

Deep peace of the gentle night to you.

Moon and stars pour their healing light on you.

Deep peace of Christ the light of the world to you.

Deep peace of Christ to you.

These words, their rhythmic repetition, and their lovely images from the natural beauty of God’s creation, have the power to center and refocus me on what matters most as we prepare for the rebirth of Christ in our hearts. When the outer world seems to spin in far too much chaos, violence and fear, this Gaelic Blessing reminds me to heed the invitation from the Letter to the Colossians to “let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts.”

In her introduction to poet David Whyte’s book entitled Consolations, author Maria Popova says, “Words possess us more than we possess them. They feed on us more than we feed on them.” In this culminating countdown to Christmas, may we be possessed by formative words of deep peace, which seems a fitting way to welcome anew the Word made flesh, whom we have come to call the Prince of Peace.

Christmas Lessons and Carols

Post Content

For more than 40 years, BMPC has enjoyed an annual musical event during the seasons of Advent and Christmas. These Sunday afternoon programs have run the gamut from semi-staged operettas to celebrations of the American southwest to performances of “Messiah,” to performances of Menotti’s “Amahl and the Night Visitors, “to Lessons and Carols services. This year, we will offer a foretaste of Christmas Eve with a festive Christmas Lessons and Carols service.

Patterned after the celebrated annual services at Kings College Cambridge, this service will feature nine lessons accompanied by singing, either by the Sanctuary Choir or the congregation. The lessons detail the story of the fall of humanity, the promise of the Messiah, and the birth of Jesus told in nine short Bible readings or lessons from Genesis, the prophetic books, and the Gospels, interspersed with the singing of Christmas carols, hymns, and choir anthems.

Joining the Sanctuary Choir is the Bryn Mawr Festival Brass and carillonneur Lisa Lonie, who will present a festive prelude before the service.

Sunday’s service is filled with gorgeous choral works, including favorites by John Rutter, John Stainer, G.F. Handel, David Willcocks, and Philip Ledger. Of special note, in anticipation of the choir’s tour to France next summer, Pierre Villette’s stunning “Hymne à la Vierge” will be presented in French! This service presents an opportunity to hear amazing choral music and to lift your voices in praise in several carols accompanied by brass and organ. This is also an opportunity to show gratitude to friends and family by inviting them to join you in what promises to be a deeply stirring service of word and music. A free-will offering will be received to help defray the costs of the service. Please join us this Sunday, December 15, at 4 p.m.

Code Blue Training This Sunday

Post Content

We are just three weeks from once again hosting the Lower Merion Code Blue Shelter in our building for January. Last year was a transformative experience for our neighbors and our congregation as we welcomed men sleeping outside in our community on the coldest winter nights to stay in the church gym. Hosting again this January will continue to shape who we are as a church and as individuals.

Inevitably, the prospect of staying up all night (or even half the night) as a volunteer at our Code Blue shelter can seem exhausting. I can confirm that it is as someone who volunteered multiple shifts last year. I am unsure when “all-nighters” used to be easy for me, but they aren’t anymore. And yet, the benefit of volunteering at the shelter, at least for me, far outweighs the inconvenience of a lost night of sleep.

I have shared before and will share again here the significance of being able to welcome guests into our own church spaces here– both personally and professionally. For too long, our sense of mission and service has been characterized as something we do elsewhere. We gather in the church parking lot to carpool together to a mission partner in Philly. We meet up at the international terminal at the airport to fly off to and connect with our global partners. Yes, we make over 1,300 casseroles in our very own kitchen each year, but almost none of the 100-plus casserole makers who serve faithfully ever get to greet and serve the neighbors who eat them.

Over the past four years, our Mission Council has been intentionally focused on Bryn Mawr, Lower Merion, or even the Main Line as a fertile field for engagement, learning, and service. The creation of this Code Blue shelter was never in our minds when these local mission conversations began, but it has been the catalyst for changing our mission paradigm one overnight shift at a time.

Each of us who volunteer at the shelter takes on an important responsibility. It is a responsibility beyond offering hospitality, food, and shelter to our guests. It is a responsibility beyond assisting guests when necessary to access the assistance available to them through County services. It is a responsibility beyond ensuring the safety and maintenance of our spaces.

The important responsibility that overshadows all of those others is the weight of being the face, the hands, and the feet of our congregation and Jesus Christ for a world in need, to represent to the community who we are and what we value in loving all of our neighbors, to shift the impression that we are one-dimensionally that “big fancy church on Montgomery Ave.”

This vital work transforms who we are as a church, and the weight of this responsibility carried by all those who step up to be a part of this work also changes who we are. It builds new connections among us. It deepens our experience of faith. It strengthens our identity as members not just of this church community but the community at large.

I know that almost all who volunteered at the shelter last winter are planning to do so again this January. But I want to encourage you, if you didn’t have the chance to volunteer last year, to join us at the training this Sunday at 3:00 p.m. in Congregational Hall. At that gathering we will share the details of hosting the shelter, but also share with one another how we were each transformed through this work.