12/7/25

Homily: a scrawny, piddling, trivial dream

Above you'll find a video of my homily for the Second Sunday of Advent and below you'll find the text.  Here's a link to the scriptures I preached on, especially the first reading from Isaiah.

Are we dreaming of a white Christmas?

Just like the ones we used to know:

When the treetops glisten and children listen,

to hear sleigh bells in the snow.

Are we dreaming of a white Christmas

with every Christmas card we write?

Hoping everyone's days will be merry and bright

and all our Christmases be white?

 

It's a nice song. 

But I think I have to say it's not much of a dream. 

In fact, it's a scrawny, piddling, trivial dream. 

 

Snow? Shiny treetops? Sleigh bells?

Things that melt, shed needles and make noise!

Is that what Christians dream in advent?

Is that what Christians dream for Christmas? 

 

How about a real dream? Like the dream you heard this morning in the words of the prophet Isaiah. A dream of a swashbuckling hero who comes to slay the wicked; who comes brandishing justice for the poor and the afflicted; who comes with a champion's belt around his waist, the belt of loyalty and fidelity. How about dreaming of the peacemaker of all time? What kind of peace? Dream this peace. Dream a peace that pervades all of nature, all of creation - such that a lamb will take a wolf out to dinner; a leopard and a kid goat will go down for a nap together; a calf and a lion will go for a walk and a little child will lead them; where cows will pasture with bears; where a cobra's den becomes a baby's playpen - with no fear of harm. Isaiah's peaceable kingdom…

 

Perhaps it's our history, our pride, our stubbornness - perhaps it's our apparent preference for war - that keeps us from dreaming such a peace. But this is precisely the kind of peace the Lord desires to establish on the earth - not just in heaven. He calls us to make this kind of peace now, to make this dream come true, the kind of peace he commands us to make among ourselves -- if we have any understanding of the peace Jesus was born, Jesus came to bring us.

 

Perhaps the imagery of Isaiah among the animals there seems beyond our reach - because the prophet dreams of a peace between natural enemies. But Isaiah's imagery is just that: it's imagery.  It's intended to stand in for another reality. Isaiah calls for us to dream of peace, not between natural enemies, but rather between brothers and sisters: creatures of the same kind - all of us children, all of us, all of us, all of us - made in the image of God.

 

Through Isaiah, God invites us to dream of a world where all nations, faiths and peoples will live together in peace, and not just to dream about that, but to give ourselves over to negotiating a justice that makes such a peace, such a world, a possibility - even a reality.

 

God invites us to dream of a world where there's peace between all of those who are: separated, alienated, marginalized, shut out, left behind, abused, forgotten, and abandoned. And not only to dream of such a peace, but to do everything in our power to make that very peace - and to let no one and nothing stand in our way.

 

God calls us 

   to dream and to build a world where there's peace 

between the right and the left,

between the east and the west,

between blue, red, and purple states,

between the rich and the poor,

between natives and immigrants,

between male and female,

between Democrats and Republicans

-- even between Red Sox and Yankee fans.

See how real it gets?

How much peace God wants us to make?

 

Isaiah dreams a peace that changes everything: that makes friends of enemies and families of foes. A peace that ensures there will be no more harm on God's holy mountain. And make no mistake about it: the world that you and I live in is God's holy mountain.

 

So does it sound like I'm talking about an impossible dream? If it does, then you and I have missed altogether the message of the scriptures. If peace among people seems an impossible dream, then we have missed entirely the message of Advent, the message of Christmas and therefore, the message of Jesus.

 

I wonder how much the mess in the world we live in is ours, because we've decided that peace is impossible - an impossible dream.

 

Or perhaps the dreams we do dream are too small. Do we limit ourselves to scrawny, piddling, trivial dreams, dreams not even worth imagining? Not worth dozing off for? Dreams not worth the dreaming? Advent calls us to dream, to believe in and to work towards what may seem impossible, not doable, unachievable.

 

Advent calls us to dream the impossible dream:

- dreaming of making that peace we need to make with that relative in our family - and all of us have one;

- dreaming of making peace with that neighbor down the street - and we all know who that is;

- dreaming of making peace with ourselves, which usually means making peace with God.

 

If we've given up on the dream of making peace in the house we live in, in the family that's ours, in our own households and neighborhoods - if we've given up on that - how will we ever dream of, how will we ever make peace in the world?

 

Perhaps the saddest sin of believers is this: to give up on dreaming for peace. To tire of looking for the peace Christ promises us. To lay down on the job of working to make that peace of Christ a reality in our world.

 

How and where is God calling you this morning, and me - how and where is God calling us this morning to refresh our dreams of peace and to work for that peace in our own situations, in our own circumstances, in our own stuff.

 

The problem with dreaming of a white Christmas is that it's a dream that asks so little of us - while God's dream asks so much of us -- because it promises us everything.

 

We find ourselves in the season of God's dream: Advent. The season of a dream in which God visits his people; where God is born as a child in Bethlehem; a dream in which that child grows up to become a carpenter - and a preacher of dreams: dreams of love and mercy - for everyone; dreams of healing and peace - for everyone.

 

This dream asked a lot of the preacher born in that stable. It asked everything of him. And so he gave everything he had - for the peace he promised us.

 

Even this morning, weeks before Christmas,

the God-man-preacher- dreamer comes again,

and invites us to gather around his table, to share a meal that's not a dream, a meal that is very real.

 

The Eucharist is the dreamed-of-presence of God at our table in the bread of life and the cup of salvation.

 

The Eucharist is the food of the peace we dream.

 

The Eucharist is the banquet where the peoples of the whole world and of all time are invited to come and take a seat - to take a seat where we, unfaithful wolves, are invited to share in the supper of the Lamb.

  

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NIGHT PRAYER: Sunday 12/7


On Sundays, Night Prayer takes its lead from some element from the day's liturgy. Tonight we begin with a line from the first reading at mass, "a spirit of wisdom and understanding..." 
 
Because I'm often foolish, Lord, 
be generous in giving me
a spirit of wisdom: 
    I need it! 
 
In these short, dark December days,
shine your light upon my path 
to help me follow where you lead
especially when I'm not sure
    of where I've been
    or where I am
    or where I'm going...
 
May your wisdom bring:
    order to my chaos,  
    faith to bear on all my doubts, 
    common sense to sort out my confusion,
    truth to enlighten my choices,     
    reason to course-correct my foolish ways
    and hope to help me see beyond today
        to all tomorrow offers... 

Because I'm often foolish, Lord,
be generous in giving me 
a spirit of wisdom: 
   I need it!

Be my wisdom, Lord:    
    fill my mind with your counsel,
    shape my thoughts with your truth, 
    bless my imagination with insight,
    and strengthen my heart's convictions...

Let your wisdom be my guide, Lord:
a star to draw me close to you
in this holy Advent time
and through the seasons of my life...

Because I'm often foolish, Lord,
be generous in giving me 
a spirit of wisdom: 
   I need it!
 
Protect me, Lord, while I'm awake
    and watch over me as I sleep
that awake I might keep watch with you
    and asleep, rest in your peace...

Amen. 

The Perfect Wisdom of Our God

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Pause for Prayer: SUNDAY 12/7

It's hard to believe that it was 35 years ago that I recorded the lead vocal on Rachel Burckardt's beautiful Advent song, One Voice.  This piece was included on the album, Gross Santa's Yuletide Favorities (which isn't as weird as it sounds!). Musicians for One Voice came from the Wood Harbor Ensemble and the choir of St. Ann University Parish in Boston where I served as a campus minister for Northeastern University and Emerson College from 1982-1991.  In today's gospel we'll hear the words, "A voice of one crying out in the desert: Prepare the way of the Lord and make straight his paths." This morning's prayer and the song that follows it complement that scripture.

Your one voice calls me, Lord:
    you speak to my heart
    in all its dry and barren places,

    in the wilderness my life can sometimes be...
 
You call me by name
    to prepare a way for you
    who come to make of my desert
    a lush and blooming garden...

You call me to change,
    to change my desires, my habits, my ways:
    to clear a smooth path
    for you to come and make your home in me...

You call me to make peace
    where I am, where I live,
    where I work and where I play
    with all I meet and know,
    whose paths cross mine each day...

Of all the voices 'round me, Lord,
    help me hear your one voice calling me
    to make a way, a place for you to dwell
    deep within my soul this Christmastide...

Amen.

One Voice by Rachel Burckardt 

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12/6/25

Lighting the Second Candle on the Advent Wreath

  
At sundown today we begin to celebrate the Second Sunday in Advent: a season to prepare our hearts for the celebration of Christmas and for the day when Christ will come again at the end of our lives and in the fullness of time...
 
Last week we prayed for peace, this week we pray for faith...
 
If you have an Advent Wreath at home, light the second and first candles each night this week.  If you don't have an Advent Wreath, light any candle you have. And if you have no candle, use the virtual candle above and join us all in prayer...

As we light the second candle on the Advent wreath, 
    we pray for the gift of faith...

- for the deepening of faith

       in the hearts of all believers...

- for deeper personal faith 
       in trying, troubling times...

- for the gift of faith
       for all those who seek it...

- for the strengthening of faith
       when in we're in doubt...

- for faith to sustain us
        in worry and fear, 
            in anxiety and grief...
 
- for the faith we need just to make it 
        from day to day 
            and through the night...

- for any whose faith
       is tenuous, shaken or broken...

- for faith to help us survive
        unexpected crises and changes...

- for faith to embolden our words and deeds
        with courage and zeal...

- for the prudence of faith to help us discern
        with clarity and compassion...

- for the wisdom of faith to anoint our thoughts
        with reason, vision and truth...

- for faith that leads us to love one another
        with integrity, justice and honor..   
 
- for the faith we need to share our faith
        with humility and conviction,
            with freedom and joy...

- for faith that seeks to live in peace
        with people of other beliefs and faiths,
 
We pray for faith to lead us, Lord,
    to respect and revere the whole of creation,
    to work for a harvest of justice and peace,
    to share from our want when serving the poor...
 
Give us deep faith in you and your love, 
    faith in your mercy, your word and your truth,
faith in our neighbors, near and far,
    and faith in ourselves to do what you ask...
 
Protect us, Lord while we're awake
    and watch over us while we sleep
that awake, we might keep watch with you
    and asleep, rest in your peace...

Amen.
 
We Walk By Faith by Marty Haugen
 
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We walk by faith and not by sight
No gracious words we hear
Of him who spoke as none e'er spoke
Yet we believe him near
 
We may not touch his hands and side
Or follow where he trod
Yet in his promise we rejoice
And cry "My Lord and God"
 
Help then, oh Lord, our unbelief
And may our faith abound
To call on you when you are near
And seek where you are found
 
That when our life of faith is done
In realms of clearer light
We may behold you as you are
In full and endless sight
 
We walk  by faith and not by sight
No gracious words we hear
Of him who spoke as none e'er spoke
Yet we believe him near

  

  

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A Christmas gift idea!

Looking for a gift that won't be forgotten or tossed away a few days after Christmas? 
 
Or even if your Christmas shopping is all done (good job!) you might be looking for some answers to questions about your faith: questions that have long been on your mind questions that come up in conversation; questions for which you'd like to have a few good talking points to work with.
 
Fr. Dave O'Leary, a brother priest and good friend, has just published Twelve Tough Question and a Pastor's Response (available on Amazon)In a dozen brief chapters (each 4-9 pages long), Fr. Dave responds to real questions from real people he has met in his ministry.  And the answers are real as well: concise replies in accessible language, giving inquirers a good footing on which to base their own thinking and further reading.
 
What kind of tough issues does the author tackle?  Questions ranging from Where Do Pets Go When They Die? -to- What's the Church's Opinion on Transgender Issues?  And ten other questions (including a couple of church-state matters) that might very well come up at your dinner table on Christmas day!
 
If you or someone you know might benefit from a knowledgeable survey of some hot-button issues, then this is the book for you!  Although the book is only 74 pages long, it's probably too wide to stuff into a Christmas stocking - but far more valuable than other trinkets you might think of giving.
 
Do your family and friends (and yourself) a favor and order some copies of Twelve Tough Questions! It's a gift that will stay with you well into the new year!

  

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12/5/25

Pause for Prayer: SAINT NICHOLAS 12/6

Today (December 6) is the feast of St. Nicholas, known as a friend of the poor and a giver of gifts.  See my post from last night for much more info on Saint Nicholas!

The red-vested cleric also enjoys the lead in Benjamin Britten's cantata, Saint Nicholas. The lyrics (by Eric Crozier) tell the life and legends of Nicholas, all of which you can read about and listen to here. (Audio of a portion of the cantata follows today's Prayer below.)

Let's Pause for Prayer...

Lord, 
while I'm shopping for gifts for family and friends,
while I'm buying and hanging the Christmas lights,
while I'm splurging on parties and open-house feasts,
while I'm giving so much to so many people
    who have, already, much more than they need:
keep me mindful of your humble birth in a manger
    and kindly Saint Nick, a faithful bishop 
            and generous friend to all in need...
 
As I spend and charge 
    and take care of my own,
help me hear the cry of the poor
    and the claim they have 
        on the bounty that's mine...
       
Amen.
 
The red-vested cleric also enjoys the lead in Benjamin Britten's cantata, Saint Nicholas. The lyrics (by Eric Crozier) tell the life and legends of Nicholas, all of which you can read about and listen to here.   Here's just a portion of Britten's Saint Nicholas.  This is Part VIII in which the chorus sings of Nicholas' piety and good works.
 
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For forty years our Nicolas,
Our Prince of men, our shepherd and
Our gentle guide, walked by our side.
We turned to him at birth and death,
In time of famine and distress,
In all our grief, to bring relief.

He led us from the valleys to
The pleasant hills of grace.
He fought to fold us in from mortal sin.
O! he was prodigal of love!
A spendthrift in devotion to us all,
And blessed as he caressed.
We keep his memory alive
In legends that our children
And their children's children treasure still.

A captive at the heathen court
Wept sorely all alone.
"O Nicolas in here, my son!
and he will bring you home!"

"Fill, fill my sack with corn," he said,
"We die from lack of food!"
and from that single sack he fed
A hungry multitude.

Three daughters of a nobleman
Were doomed to shameful sin,
Till our good Bishop ransomed them
By throwing purses in.

The gates were barred,
the black flag flew,
Three men knelt by the block
But Nicolas burst in like flame,
And stayed the axe's shock!

"O help us, good Nicolas!
Our ship is full of foam!"
He walked across the waves to them
And led them safely home.

He sat among the Bishops who
Were summoned to Nicaea:
Then rising with the wrath of God
Boxed Arius's ear.

He threatened Constantine the Great
With bell and book and ban,
Till Constantine confessed his sins
Like any common man!

Let the legends that we tell,
Praise him with our prayers as well...

We keep his memory alive
In legends that our children and
Their children's children treasure still..... 
  

  

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SHOES - not stockings!

 
The custom of hanging stockings on Christmas Eve is the English adaptation of the Dutch custom of putting out shoes on the eve of the feast of the Greek saint - Nicholas

St. Nicholas (the fourth century bishop of Myra, a province of Asia Minor) is not only the subject of many legends, he's also the real man behind "Santa's" beard.  The red-vested cleric also enjoys the lead in Benjamin Britten's cantata, Saint Nicholas, the lyrics of which are tell the life and legends of Nicholas, all of which you can read about and listen to here.

A little more research reveals that St. Nicholas is the patron saint of:

Apothecaries, Bakers, Barrel Makers, Boatmen, Boot Blacks, Boys, Brewers, Brides, Captives, Children, Coopers, Dock Workers, Druggists, Fishermen, Greece, the Greek Catholic Church in America, Grooms, Judges, Lawsuits lost unjustly, Longshoremen, Maidens, Mariners, Merchants, Murderers, Newlyweds, Parish Clerks, Paupers, Pawnbrokers, Perfumers, Pharmacists, Pilgrims, Poor people, Portsmouth - England, Prisoners, Russia, Sailors, Scholars, Schoolchildren, Shoe Shiners, Sicily, Students, Thieves, Travelers, and Unmarried girls!
In some countries December 6 (not Christmas) is the day for gift-giving. So you might want to surprise a friend or family member with a little gift tomorrow. It doesn't need to be something you shop for, charge, and wrap in paper and ribbons - the best gifts come from the heart!

To understand the curious painting at the top of this, check out the story of how the first "Santa Claus" (SAiNT Ni'CLAS) brought gifts not down a chimney, but through a window!

And here's everything else you could ever possibly want to know about St. Nicholas!

  

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NIGHT PRAYER: Friday 12/5


For many years now, in Advent, I've posted Reubem Alves' reflection on hope.  Alves was a Presbyterian minister and one of the Protestant advocates of liberation theology.  These words on hope are strong and wise: they bear repeating.  (My prayer for this evening follows Reubem's text...

What is hope?
It is the presentiment that
    imagination is more real
       and reality is less real
          than it looks.

Hope is the hunch
that the overwhelming brutality of facts
that oppress and repress us
    is not the last word.

It is the suspicion that reality is more complex
    than the realists want us to believe -
that the frontiers of the possible
    are not determined by the limits of the actual -
and in a miraculous and unexplained way,
    life is opening up creative events
which will open the way
    to freedom and resurrection.

But the two – suffering and hope –
    must live from each other.
Suffering without hope
    produces resentment and despair.
But, hope without suffering
    creates illusions, naivete and drunkenness.

So let us plant dates -
even though we who plant them    
   will never eat them.*
 
We must live by the love 
   of what we will never see.
That is the secret discipline.

It is the refusal to let our creative act be dissolved
    by our need for immediate sense experience
and it is a struggled commitment
    to the future of our grandchildren.

Such disciplined hope
    is what has given prophets, 
        revolutionaries and saints,
       the courage to die for the future they envisage.
They make their own bodies
    the seed of their highest hopes.

- Ruben Alves 

*Date palms don't bear fruit
    until  7-10 years after planting!

Lord, I can be so easily weighed down
    by my struggles, my burdens, my pain,
    by the harsh realities of my daily life...

Sometimes, I fear I'll lose hope
    in you,
    in tomorrow, 
    in others,
    and in myself...
 
So I pray you'll help me trust,
help me hope
    that the peace I imagine,
    the peace I pray for,
    the peace I long for,
    the peace you promise
        is stronger and greater,
        deeper and wider,
        than any power or problem I face...
 
Let hope be my hunch, Lord:
    my hunch, my hope, that my future's not fixed
        by the scope of my present trials;
    my hunch, my hope,  that the troubles I face
        won't have the final word;
    my hunch, my hope that my sorrows and burdens 
        are truly a prelude to joy...
 
Give me hope 
    in the midst of my suffering, Lord:
        I know that's the path of your love,
        I know it's the way that leads me to you,
        I know it's the way that leads me to peace...

Help me see how my troubles prepare me today:
    for the peace your reign offers and brings,
    for the gift of your healing presence and mercy;
    and then, at last, for the harvest of hope
        my hunch proved right by your grace...
 
Protect me, Lord, while I'm awake
    and watch over me while I sleep
that awake, I might keep watch with you
    and asleep rest in your peace... 
 
Amen. 

There Is A Hope by Stuart Townend 

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