![]() |
|
|
|
Fleming Rutledge is a preacher and teacher known throughout the mainline Protestant denominations of the US, Canada and parts of the UK. She is the author of seven books and has received a grant from the Louisville Foundation to complete a book about the meaning of the Crucifixion. One of the first women to be ordained to the priesthood of the Episcopal Church, she served for fourteen years on the clergy staff at Grace Church on Lower Broadway at Tenth Street, New York City. Fleming and her husband celebrated their 50th anniversary in 2009 and have two daughters and two grandchildren. She is a native of Franklin, Virginia.
|
Saints and HeroesSt. Clement’s Anglican Church, Toronto, Ontario
Saints and Heroes
Sermon by Fleming Rutledge All Saints Sunday 2008
Text:
Matthew 5:1-12
************************************ My
mother had a powerful intellect and was not at all sentimental, but she did
have one contradictory quality, and she knew it was contradictory. She was a
hero-worshipper. She admitted that there was no sense in this. Take for
instance one of her chief heroes, Admiral Lord Nelson, who was killed aboard
his flagship while winning the great Battle of Trafalgar. She read many biographies
of Nelson, which meant that she had to confront the fact that he was a flagrant
adulterer who conducted his famous liaison with the married Lady Hamilton in
plain sight for years, abandoning his own wife in the most public and heartless
way. My parents were solidly married for more than fifty years and they most
definitely did not approve of adultery. So I asked my mother if Nelson was
still her hero, when he made his wife so miserable and flaunted his affair all
over I knew which prayer she meant. This prayer was written by
Nelson in his diary on board his ship, on the eve of Trafalgar, in full view of
the enemy fleet.[1]
Here is the prayer that Nelson wrote: May
the great God whom I worship grant to my country for the benefit of What is a hero? What is a saint? The eleventh chapter of
the Epistle to the Hebrews gives a roll call of the so-called Old Testament saints.
The passage is often called “the Heroes of Faith.” I don’t know about Is
a saint the same thing as a hero? Halloween is a much more subdued affair here
in But
what about all those names? Were all those people saints? Were they “heroes” of
faith? Or were they merely “souls,” to be remembered on All Souls Day (which is
today, actually)? What makes a saint? Does Nelson’s prayer qualify him to be a
saint or only a British military hero (we won’t ask the French about it)? When
I was in the Dallaire
found himself in an intolerable position. The great powers behind the UN, with
the It’s
customary to read the Beatitudes on All Saints Day. Why is that? Are they
marching orders for saints? If so, they are strange orders. It is not easy to
hear the Beatitudes the way they are meant to be heard. I think they are
somewhat baffling to most of us. We are familiar with them, but we don’t really
know what they mean. Are they instructions? How are they related to our actual
lives? Listen again: Our
Lord Jesus, when he saw the crowds seeking after him, gathered his disciples and
went up on top of a mountain where he taught them, saying: Blessed are the poor in spirit… Blessed are those who mourn… Blessed are the meek… Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness… Blessed are the merciful… Blessed are the pure in heart… Blessed are the peacemakers… Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’
sake… When you read those words in the context of the suffering of General
Dallaire, they take on a special meaning, don’t they? They become words of
comfort, words of sustenance, words of promise. A wise interpreter explained
that the Beatitudes are not exhortations;
they are congratulations.[2] Another biblical
commentator wrote, The
sayings of Jesus…in the Sermon on the
Mount are a part of the gospel.
To each of these sayings belongs the message: the old aeon is passing away. Through
the proclamation of the gospel and through discipleship you are transferred
into the new aeon of God. And now you should know that this is what life is like when you belong to the new aeon of God….This is what a lived faith is like. This is what the life of those
who stand in the salvation-time of God is like, of those who are freed from the
power of Satan and in whom the wonder of discipleship is consummated.[3] I recently assigned a book by Graham
Greene to my students at Fr. Thomas: You are not
suggesting that there are not live saints? Superior: Of course
not. But don’t let’s recognize them before the Church does, We shall be saved a
lot of disappointment that way.[4] If we are going to have heroes in this
life, human nature being what it is, either we are going to be disappointed or
we are going to be in denial. Greene’s novel ends ambiguously: we are not
specifically told if the architect finds redemption or not, though it is
certainly hinted at. What Greene seems to say in almost all of his novels is
that redemption finds us in spite of ourselves—that is to say, the grace
of God follows those whom God loves to the last station up the river, the deepest
place in the jungle, the furthest outpost where we seek to escape. And there,
Greene seems to suggest, God is able to make a saint where there was no saint. Lord
Nelson seemed to sense this as he threw himself on the mercy of God in his
final hours. On this special day let us remember that we do not achieve sainthood, nor did any of those
whom we call saints. The saints are the people of God, period—so that Paul
addressed all the members of all his churches as saints, no matter how badly
they were behaving. Martin Luther taught us that we who are baptized members of
Christ are saints and sinners at the same time. I was surprised, as I prepared this
sermon, to find myself using so many military examples. Ordinarily it’s best to
be careful about finding heroes in the military because it is so commonplace and
unthinking to do so. However, there was a story on the front page of The New York Times yesterday that forcibly
struck me in the context of the Beatitudes. Combat Post Lowell is a company-sized American
outpost in One recent day, the Taliban fired an
82-millimeter mortar into the outpost. It blasted shrapnel into two of the
Afghan men who were serving the American military. One of them died instantly.
The other, Jamaludin, was the cook, an aging man with a severely
atrophied leg. He received numerous wounds that were potentially fatal.
Immediately the American Army doctor and the medics went into action. Jamaludin
was very near death. There was blood everywhere. The helicopter would not be
able to come for an hour, if at all. There was no time to put on gloves. Jamaludin’s
breathing was obstructed, so the doctor put his thumb in his mouth and held it
there to keep the passage open. The medics worked frantically. The first sergeant began to prepare
for the wounded man to be carried outside to the helo when it came. That would
mean they would all be under fire. But the first sergeant took the time to give
the cook a message of encouragement in his own Pashto language. He turned to
the Afghan interpreter. “Tell him,” he said, “tell Jamaludin we’ve got him.
Tell him we’ve got him.” Note that this was not a military comrade. This was
not a companion in arms. This was a cook—a peasant, a cripple, an aging Afghan
without a word of English. One of the medics, Sergeant Filip, had a free moment
so he stepped aside and scrubbed Jamaludin’s blood from his fingers. “I hope he
doesn’t have anything,” he said. “I didn’t have time to put gloves on. You have
to stop the bleeding however you can.” The helicopter arrived. The mortar
fire started up again. The medics and the doctor ran across open ground with
Jamaludin on a stretcher. The mortars fell short. The men got him onto the helicopter.
It shuddered and rose. It lifted and passed over the hills. Jamaludin was going
to make it. Sergeant Filip stepped behind a screen and prayed.[5] Heroes? Saints? Or just ordinary men
doing extraordinary things in the midst of carnage and death by the grace of
God? For it is God who makes saints and heroes out of such damaged goods as we
sinners are made of, and many of such saints are known to him alone. In actions
like that of Sergeant Filip and the others, and a thousand thousand other
self-forgetful deeds not found in newspapers, truly we may recognize and give
thanks for the presence of the One who said, Blessed are the merciful, for they
will receive mercy. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they
shall be called the children of God. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for
they shall be satisfied. Blessed are those who meekly put their trust in God, for they
shall inherit the earth. AMEN. [1] A printed, framed copy of Nelson’s prayer is placed on top of his
tomb in Written by Lord Nelson in his diary on board the
Victory, while in view of the enemy.
It is dated October 21, 1805, the eve of the Battle of Trafalgar in which he
received his mortal wound. [2] I wish I could remember who this was. [3] Joachim Jeremias. The Sermon on the Mount [4]
Graham Greene, A Burnt-out Case. [5] This extraordinary reporting was done by C. J. Chivers and the photographer Tyler Hicks. “A Warning (‘Incoming!’), a Blast, a Fight to Save an Afghan Life,” The New York Times, 11 November 2008. Related: |
|
|
|