VESPER SERVICE of the 124th Annual Sessions of Supreme Council 33° in Windsor.

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"This is the day the Lord has made"

ILL. BRO. THE RIGHT REVEREND C. ROBERT TOWNSHEND, 33°
Bishop of Georgian Bay, Huron Diocese (Anglican), Ca.

“This is the day the Lord has made; let us be glad and rejoice in it.”  Psalm 118: 24

When Henry David Thoreau, the author of “Golden Pond”, was terminally ill a friend tried to get him to express his thoughts on life after death. Thoreau replied, “one world at a time”. It is a great blessing to be able to live in one world at a time, to be able to live fully and completely in the present moment. It is a great blessing to realize that the very best way to prepare ourselves to die, is to live fully and completely now.

The words, “eternal life”, obviously have a future reference but not always. There are a great many scripture passages in which the words, “eternal life”, have a present reference. For example, in the Old Testament although the people already had an awareness of the importance of the past and of the future, nevertheless they were very much “now” people. This is beautifully expressed in the 118th Psalm which opens up by acknowledging God’s presence and his power and his love. Than it reaches a climax as the Psalmist says, “This is the day the Lord has made, let us be glad and rejoice in it” (Psalm 118:24).

Not yesterday, not tomorrow but today, this is the day the Lord has made. We get this feeling of “nowness”, in the New Testament as well and especially in the Gospel of John in which “eternal life”, is the primary theme of Jesus’ teachings. Here Jesus speaks of eternal life as a quality of life, not a dimension. He defines it clearly for us in his great prayer in the “Upper Room”, “This is eternal life, to know you the only true God and him whom you have sent, Jesus Christ. (John 17:3)

To know God, to love God, to experience his presence with your whole being, this is the beginning of eternal life and it is now. Many of us get caught up in the past, dreaming with Barbara Streisand, about, “The Way We Were”, and many of us get caught up in the future dreaming about the way we will be, “when we retire”, “or when the kids grow up”. Or we get so caught up in the after life that we are missing the present life. “We are so caught up in heaven that we are no earthly good”, is the way an old Psalm puts it. It is important that we be conscious of our Christian heritage knowing that what we are now is rooted in what has come before. It is important also to be a people of hope in what is yet to come. But what is most important for us Christians, followers or not, is to be able to live deeply and fully in the present moment. “This is the day the Lord has made, let us be glad and rejoice in it.”

The Scripture tells us that, “God gave us eternal life” and that this life is in his Son. “Whoever possesses the Son possesses life, whoever does not possess the Son does not possess life.” (1 John: 5, 11,12) Jesus said that he came that we might have life in heaven to the fullest. What does it look like, this life God gives us in Jesus Christ?

It looks like acceptance as experienced by the despised tax collector.

It looks like forgiveness as experienced by a woman who was about to be stoned by those who did not understand such forgiveness.

It looks like new meaning as when a person who is estranged from her community comes to the well at mid-day to find a mysterious young Jew who tells her about the refreshing waters of eternal life.

It looks like comfort and hope as experienced by two women who are crying because their beloved brother is in the tomb.

It looks like hungry people sharing some loaves and fishes on the hillside. It looks like human need of all kinds being met; the lame leaping for joy, the blind receiving sight, the deaf hearing, the captives released, the dead brought to life again.

It looks like a man going all out for another, holding nothing back for himself, sacrificing himself in affirmation of all people and than appearing on the third day as a stranger who is recognized in the simple act of breaking bread together.

What does it look life, this life we have in Jesus? It looks like a scene that unfolded one night in a hospital. The nurse escorted a tired, anxious, young man to the bedside of an elderly man. “Your son is here”, she whispered to the patient. She had to repeat the words several times before the patient’s eyes opened. He was heavily sedated because of the pain of his heart attack and he dimly saw the young man standing outside the oxygen tank. He reached out his hand and the young man tightly wrapped his fingers around it, squeezing a message of encouragement. The nurse brought a chair next to the bedside. All through the night the young man sat holding the old man’s hand and offering gentle words of hope. The dying man said nothing as he held tightly to his son. As dawn approached the patient died. The young man placed on the bed the lifeless hand he had been holding, than he went to notify the nurse. While the nurse did what was necessary the young man waited. When she had finished her task, the nurse began to offer words of sympathy to the young man. But he interrupted her. “Who was that man?”, he asked. The startled nurse replied, “I thought he was your father”. “No, he was not my father”, he answered. “I never saw him before in my life.” “Then why didn’t you say something when I took you to him?” asked the nurse. He replied, “I also knew he needed a son, and the son just wasn’t here.” “When I realized he was too sick to tell whether or not I was his son, I knew how much he needed me.”

That is the scene from “eternal life”, on a day the Lord had made. “This is the day the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it.”

On a wall filled with graffiti someone had written, “Christ is the answer!” Underneath those words another person had written, “What is the question?” On this day the Lord has made, the question is, “when can you most expect the Son of Man to come into your life?” and we can rejoice and be glad in the answer, for our answer is always, now, for this is the day the Lord has made.

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