Clothe
your ministers with righteousness
Suffrage
A, Morning and Evening Prayer
This
past Sunday we heard the story of the risen Christ encountering the
disciples on the evening of the Day of Resurrection; “but Thomas,
who is called 'the Twin,' was not with them.” In that first
encounter, Jesus tells the gathered disciples, “As the Father has
sent me, so I send you.”
In
the sermon I pointed out that the disciples represent us. As the
Father sent Jesus, so are the disciples sent. As the disciples are
sent, so are we sent. We are sent to proclaim the good news of God
in Christ. We are sent to help reconcile all people to God through
Christ. We are sent to preach, teach, proclaim, and heal. We are
Christ's ears and mouth, his hands and feet. As the disciples have
become apostles, so have we become apostles.
This
apostolic aspect is reflected in that charge of being sent to carry
out Christ's mission to all people. It is the corporate body of
those who are sent, all of us, that make up the corporate body of the
Church. And it is this body that is described as one, holy,
catholic, and apostolic. Unified in Christ, consecrated by the power
of the Holy Spirit, proclaiming the faith to all people, being sent
to carry out Christ's mission, this is who we are. By virtue of our
baptism, by virtue of living into our faith, by virtue of
participating in the life of the church, we are all ministers with a
variety of ministries. The ministry of the church can't be done by
one person, so we are all called and we are all sent.
Which
brings me back to Suffrage A.
We
offer Evening Prayer every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday, at
5:30. Most of the time we pray Suffrage A. When we pray that
prayer, and specifically the line above, I tend to think that
Episcopalians' brains default to equating “ministers” with
“people who wear a collar.” I tend to think our brain defaults
to the Archbishop of Canterbury, our Presiding Bishop, our Diocesan
Bishop and/or Assistant Bishop, and our parish clergy.
But
based on the fact that we are all part of the body of Christ, that we
all make up the church, and that we are all being sent as Jesus
himself was sent, we must remember that the ministers of the church
are us. We are all ministers in one way or another. So when we pray
that God's ministers are clothed with righteousness, we are praying
for everyone in the church.
Know
that every evening between 5:30 and 6, when I pray that God's
ministers are clothed with righteousness, I am praying for you.
Blessings,
It would be wonderful to have a rector living close enough to the church to offer Evening Prayer so often.
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