Sunday, May 18, 2025

Love for All Creation

 This message was intended to be given during worship this weekend, however, with some miscommunication, I did not end up preaching as planned.  That said, I think the message worthy of sharing, so this is offered now for those who wish to enjoin with it regardless if I was able to deliver it this weekend.


Love for All Creation

 

Acts 11:1-18; Psalm 148; Revelation 21:1-6; John 13:31-35 (White)

 

Key Verses

 

6 As I looked at it closely I saw four-footed animals, beasts of prey, reptiles, and birds of the air. 7 I also heard a voice saying to me, ‘Get up, Peter; kill and eat.’ 8 But I replied, ‘By no means, Lord, for nothing profane or unclean has ever entered my mouth.’ 9 But a second time the voice answered from heaven, ‘What God has made clean, you must not call profane.’ – Acts 11:6-9

 

5 Let them praise the name of the Lord,

    for he commanded and they were created.

6 He established them forever and ever;

    he fixed their bounds, which cannot be passed.[a]

7 Praise the Lord from the earth,

    you sea monsters and all deeps,

8 fire and hail, snow and frost,

    stormy wind fulfilling his command!

9 Mountains and all hills,

    fruit trees and all cedars!

10 Wild animals and all cattle,

    creeping things and flying birds! – Psalm 148:5-10

 

1 Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. 2 And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. – Rev 21:1-2

 

34 I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. 35 By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” – John 31:34-35

 


 

Message

 

“Grace and peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.”[1]

 

Let us pray.  “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable to you, O Lord, my rock and redeemer.”[2]  Amen.

 

Good afternoon and welcome to the eve of summer.  This week’s weather certainly made it clear that winter is past and we are in for a very warm period ahead.  In ruminating on the appointed scriptures for this week, I couldn’t but be pulled towards and underlying theme that permeated through them.  There are also several contemporary events and shifts that spoke to me.  So, as I dive in here, I wish to beg some forgiveness if I go a bit too deep into what I am hearing here and maybe you are not.  To me, this set of lessons is all about God and His creation, specifically God and His creation and our role and how we are to view it and act within it for his glory and the glory of all He has made.  As you may be well aware, one of my core passions is related to sustainability and care for creation, and as such, this, again, may be “tickling my ears” in some sense.  I hope that what I share, however, resonates with what the Spirit is calling us all to hear.

 

Let’s begin with the oldest of the scripture readings this week, which, of course, is not the first lesson, but the Psalm.  The psalms are too easily forgotten as lessons to us, but they too are a part of the scripture.  Martin Luther famously leaned on the psalms, especially Psalm 118, during his imprisonment at Coburg Castle.  As Stephen J. Nicoles puts it, “Luther loved the Psalms, first lecturing on them in 1513–1516. His immersion in the Psalms certainly impacted the events of 1517. After the Ninety-Five Theses, Luther returned to the Psalms again and again. He started a practice of reading the Psalms through the day at seven designated times. This enabled him to read through the Psalter in two weeks. He kept disciplined at that practice throughout most of his life. He read the Psalms hundreds of times. He studied and lectured on the Psalms. He translated the Psalms into German. It is fair to say that Luther lived in the Psalms.”[3]  To that, we ought not forget that the Psalms speak to us as scripture as much as any other part of the Bible, this week’s selection being a case in point.

 

Psalm 148 is clustered at the end of that book and is among the “praise psalms” that bring these numerous ancient songs, poetry, and canticles to a conclusion.  What is striking here to me, if we look back at the verses, is how this litany of praise centers heavily on the nature of creation and the created order.  Specifically: 

 

“5 Let them praise the name of the Lord,

    for he commanded and they were created.

6 He established them forever and ever;

    he fixed their bounds, which cannot be passed.[a]

7 Praise the Lord from the earth,

    you sea monsters and all deeps,

8 fire and hail, snow and frost,

    stormy wind fulfilling his command!

9 Mountains and all hills,

    fruit trees and all cedars!

10 Wild animals and all cattle,

    creeping things and flying birds!”[4]

 

Alongside angels and the heavens, are “creeping things and flying birds.”  More than half the verse speak directly about creation and about how creation is itself a demonstration of God’s glory and grace in the world.  And it makes clear that creation is fully part and parcel to every single aspect of life, the life he gives and calls us to live.

 

As I am sure you are well aware, we now have a new Pope in Rome, Leo XIV who is the successor of Pope Francis.  Leo, like his predecessor, has already made clear that caring for creation is an imperative of Roman Catholics.  This is evident and made clear in Francis’ first encyclical, “Laudato Si”: On Care for Our Common Home.  While not a Lutheran document, and admitting that encyclicals can have their issues, this one has so much that transcends denominational boundaries.  To that, Francis echoed Psalm 148 when he offered that, “The entire material universe speaks of God’s love, his boundless affection for us. Soil, water, mountains: everything is, as it were, a caress of God.”[5]  This was certainly presaged when the ELCA adopted the Social Statement, “Caring for Creation:  Vision, Hope and Justice” back in 1993.  This earliest of social statements of our church offers that “Scripture witnesses to God as creator of the earth and all that dwells therein (Psalm 24:1). The creeds, which guide our reading of Scripture, proclaim God the Father of Jesus Christ as “maker of heaven and earth,” Jesus Christ as the one “through [whom] all things were made,” and the Holy Spirit as “the Lord, the giver of life” (Nicene Creed).”[6]  It goes on to say that “God blesses the world and sees it as “good,” even before humankind comes on the scene. All creation, not just humankind, is viewed as “very good” in God’s eyes (Genesis 1:31). God continues to bless the world: “When you send forth your spirit, they are created; and you renew the face of the ground” (Psalm 104:30). By faith we understand God to be deeply, mysteriously, and unceasingly involved in what happens in all creation. God showers care upon sparrows and lilies (Matthew 6:26-30), and brings “rain on a land where no one lives, on the desert, which is empty of human life” (Job 38:26).[7]

 

This is evident in the first lesson for today and the dream sequence that Peter experiences.  Peter still caught up in his Jewish identity, has been focusing on what is “clean and unclean” to the exclusion of the call by God to recognize all of his creation was created good.  In this dream God shows Peter a host of creatures that Judaism and their misapplication of the Mosaic codes had declared “unclean”.  “… four-footed animals, beasts of prey, reptiles, and birds of the air.”[8]  God instructs Peter to “Get up, …; kill and eat.”[9]  Peter’s reply?  “By no means, Lord, for nothing profane or unclean has ever entered my mouth.”[10]  It seems that Peter forgot to hear Jesus when he “… called the crowd to him and said to them, ‘Listen and understand:  it is not what goes into the mouth that defiles a person, but it is what comes out of the mouth that defiles.’”[11]  Peter however is reminded in this dream that “What God has made clean, you must not call profane.”[12]  No, instead, that what God has created is “good” and not profane.  And we have a calling to both remember that and act accordingly.

 

On this topic, Luther, in his Large Catechism, speaks emphatically about creation and our role in it.  He offers “For even though otherwise we experience much good from men, still whatever we receive by His command or arrangement is all received from God. For our parents, and all rulers, and every one besides with respect to his neighbor, have received from God the command that they should do us all manner of good, so that we receive these blessings not from them, but, through them, from God. For creatures are only the hands, channels, and means whereby God gives all things, as He gives to the mother breasts and milk to offer to her child, and corn and all manner of produce from the earth for nourishment, none of which blessings could be produced by any creature of itself.[13]  In another place Luther offers, “Now, since all that we possess, and, moreover, whatever, in addition, is in heaven and upon the earth, is daily given, preserved, and kept for us by God, it is readily inferred and concluded that it is our duty to love, praise, and thank Him for it without ceasing, and, in short, to serve Him with all these things, as He demands and has enjoined in the Ten Commandments.”[14]  “For if we believed [this] with the heart, we would also act accordingly, and not stalk about proudly, act defiantly, and boast as though we had life, riches, power, and honor, etc., of ourselves, so that others must fear and serve us, as is the practice of the wretched, perverse world, which is drowned in blindness, and abuses all the good things and gifts of God only for its own pride, avarice, lust, and luxury, and never once regards God, so as to thank Him or acknowledge Him as Lord and Creator.”[15]

 

In other words, God exists, in with, and through all of creation, and what we do to and with creation is an expression of what we believe about God.  If we abuse the world, the creation, we are abusing God, we commit sin.  Instead, we are called to respect, love and tend to the garden, the creation, that God has blessed us with.  Yet, if we are paying attention, we are not doing that very well.  This is clearly evident in the continuing climate crisis that, and as my colleague Curt Stager at Paul Smiths says, “The truth is, the overwhelming consensus — from climate scientists, the U.S. military, global insurers and even Exxon’s own researchers — is that human-driven climate change is real, it’s mainly being caused by the combustion of fossil fuels, and it’s already reshaping our world.”[16]  Curt, a climate scientist, and former human caused climate change skeptic, has been accumulating one of the most robust sets of local climate data we have on record.  From temperature change to when ice goes in and out on St. Regis Lake, to days of snow ground cover, to changes in local plant and animal species, he has demonstrated with clear evidence that the warming of the planet is having effects on all of us here and now.  As he says, “The science behind human-driven climate change is so strong now that denying the central role of greenhouse gases is a waste of time that serves nobody but the fossil fuel interests who continue to fund such naysaying. Moving forward to find solutions with the support of the best available science is both a responsibility and a path to empowerment. It’s about choosing to be well informed, to care for our communities, and to protect the people and places we love.”  While not using the language of faith, he is saying the same thing Francis, and Luther, and scripture itself tells us, we have a responsibility to care for creation.

 

But for how long are we to care for creation?  To what end?  Those are great questions. And we get a glance at that in our second lesson today.  John of Patmos, in his cataclysmic vision, helps us to understand the end-game for God and his creation.  AS it is written there:  “… I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.”[17]  It goes on to say that “See, the home of God is among mortals.  He will dwell with them; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them and be their God; …”[18]  And it offers that God is “… making all things new.”[19]  What John is seeing here is that creation itself has a huge role to play in the end times and the finality of all things.  We are not going to be whisked off to some far off heaven, as the false throey of the rapture would have you believe.  No, this very creation we live in, itself, will become a new thing.  God will remake it, come down and make it wholly restored.  This is precisely what we are praying for when we pray in the Lords prayer that “May your kingdom come. May your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”  So we are to care for creation, be its good stewards, and take part fully as we go headlong into the end times, the times we are in today.

 

God, knowing we needed signs and tangible markers of his truth.  So he did indeed, come down from heaven, and became a human, in our likeness as the creeds tell us.  Christ, God incarnate, was and is, and ever will be our guiding light to understand what God’s glory means for us.  This is why in today’s gospel, Jesus articulates his relationship with God and as God; glories, upon glories, all brought together in creation itself.  And it is also whey Christ instituted holy communion, a sacrament that helps us, today and whenever we celebrate the eucharist, tap into this God-power of glorious grace and love.  God distills out of the meekest parts of his creation, grains of wheat and fruit of the vine, a corporeal instance where he is intimately in touch with us through his body and blood.  He is declaring, through this sacrament that He is “through, with, and under” all of creation, but especially in this celebration, for the forgiveness, and ultimate unwinding of sin.

 

So, as we continue on our journey, it is upon us that we listen to and do what we can to steward those things we have been given, ourselves, our time, and all of creation.  All creation is a sign of God’s unending love.  As he implores us in the gospel today, we need to love one another, each person, each plant, each animal, each stone.  We need to love as God has loved us.  We are to be visible signs, just as much as the signs we see in the incarnation of Christ and in the eucharist, for the world.  We need to be seen by everyone that we are His disciples.  And to do that we have to have love for one another.  Let us go out, then, and demonstrate our love for all of creation.  Amen.



[1] 2 Corinthians 1:2

[2] Psalm 19:14

[4] Psalm 148:5-10

[5] Laudato Si, 84

[6] Caring for Creation:  Vision, Hope and Justice, ELCA, 1993, pp. 2

[7] Caring for Creation:  Vision, Hope and Justice, ELCA, 1993, pp. 2

[8] Cf. Acts 11:6

[9] Cf. Acts 11:7

[10] Cf. Acts 11:8

[11] Cf. Matthew 15:10-11

[12] CF. Acts 11:9

[17] Cf. Revelation 21:1-2

[18] Cf. Revelation 21:3

[19] Cf. Revelation 21:5


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