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10/31/2021 ~ Twenty-Third Sunday after Pentecost ~ Known in Some Traditions as the
Thirty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time ~ Proper 26 ~ Ruth 1:1-18 or Deuteronomy 6:1-9;
Psalm 146 or Psalm 119:1-8; Hebrews 9:11-14; Mark 12:28-34 ~ All Hallows’ Eve ~
A.K.A. as Halloween or Hallowe’en on the Secular Calendar ~ VIDEO OF THE FULL
SERVICE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sugwWa9r9w.

Listening

South Freeport Congregational Church
Rev. Joseph Connolly
October 31, 2021


“Hear, O Israel: / Yahweh, our God, Yahweh alone, is one. / You are to love Yahweh,
your God / with all your heart, / and with all your soul, / and with all your strength.” --
Deuteronomy 6:4-5 [ILV]

[The pastor moves to a pedestal on which there is a pitcher and several glasses,
pours water into one glass until it is approximately half full, holds up the glass, then asks
the following question.]

So, is the glass half full or is it half empty?

[The pastor moves 
back to the pulpit.]

A daughter of a friend of mine once lived for ten years in Turkey. A person of
some where-with-all, my friend Bill, went to see his daughter each year and spent about a
month. Early on he started a little habit.
Handy with a hammer, saw and screwdriver, while there he would build her a
small piece of furniture, a cabinet, an end table. The first year this of this endeavor he
went with his daughter to the Turkish equivalent of a lumber yard to get some wood and
learned some interesting lessons about cultural differences.

First, lumber is stocked in a pretty raw form. Indeed, in the yard you could see
whole sections of trees— bark still in place.
How do you buy lumber? You tell a worker what is needed. Then it’s cut to
order. On their first trip to the yard Bill and his daughter arrived about 8:30 a.m. but
waited some 45 minutes for anyone else to arrive. The owner was first.
That’s when clear cultural differences came into play. Bill’s daughter was fluent
in Turkish but it was obvious the owner would be doing business only with Bill.
But first the owner offered cups of tea to the pair. Refusing was useless. If tea
had been refused, then coffee would have been offered. If that had been refused, water
with lime would have been next.
If everything had been refused, no business would have been done. Bill’s daughter nudged him
to accept the tea.

Then negotiations started for real: the measurements of the wood required,
choosing pieces from the raw wood, the milling, the cutting were all accomplished. Last
a price was determined. It was a slow process.
It got to be about noon. Some wood still needed to be planed. But the worker
who did the planning had gone to lunch.

“When will he be back?” asked Bill.
“Sometimes he comes back; sometimes he does not,” was the answer.
“Can any one else do that work?”
“Well, you can talk to my brother. He owns the other side of the yard and has
someone who does that.”
Bill and his daughter walked about half a mile, moving the cut wood on a rickety
cart. They then encountered the brother. (Slight pause.)

“Would you like some tea,” he asked? (Slight pause.)

The transaction was totally

completed about 4:30 in the afternoon. Through it all, no one in the yard seemed
concerned this sale was progressing at a snail’s pace. (Slight pause.)

Shortly after arriving back in the States Bill stopped by a box store. There were
fifteen cash registers. Two were open. He got on the end of a long line and heard people
grousing.
“I’ll miss my game shows.”
“I need to pick up my kid.”
“I left my laundry in the dryer.”
Bill just smiled. He had internalized two things he suspected were true all along:
nearly all perceptions are cultural. And stress is, often, a cultural attitude and is, often, a
self imposed condition.
The second piece, that stress is often self imposed, was a reaffirmation of
something he discovered when he visited Bosnia. In that country at that time people
went about their business as if it was normal to have bombs crashing about them.
So, why was there any stress at all exhibited by those standing in this box store
check out line?
Perceptions, especially self imposed ones but certainly also cultural

perceptions, are pivotal in one’s own sense of well being.

[The pastor moves to a pedestal on which there is a pitcher and several glasses and
pours water into a second glass until it is approximately half full, then asks the following
question.]

And is that glass half full or is it half empty?

[The pastor moves back to the 
pulpit.]

These words are from the work known as Deuteronomy: “Hear, O Israel: /
Yahweh, our God, Yahweh alone, is one. / You are to love Yahweh, your God / with all
your heart, / and with all your soul, / and with all your strength.” (Slight pause.)

So this says love God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength.
Jesus reiterates this ancient instruction in the Gospel we know as Mark and adds words
found in Leviticus: “Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Slight pause.)

It’s all so easy, is it not— love God, love neighbor? (Slight pause.)

Then why 
don’t more of us love God and love neighbor more readily? After all, these words seems
pretty clear. (Slight pause.) Is it possible we’re missing something? (Slight pause.)
​

This is a given: we all have cultural blinders. We Americans see some things
Turks do not. Turks see some things we do not. But we are human. Blinders exist. But
is it possible that, no matter what the cultural biases of a given group, the largest human
cultural blinder is that we all often fail to recognize Who is the source of all love?

You see, given what the ‘great commandment’ says, there is something which
needs to happen before love can be experienced and expressed to its fullest.
(Quote:)

“Hear, O Israel.” (Slight pause.)

We need to hear the voice of God before we can listen

for love. (Slight pause.)

A widespread feature in all of Scripture, but especially here in the Shema, is it
points out the necessity for nurturing an appropriate attitude toward and about God. We
cannot have that attitude unless we develop our hearing skills, our skills of hearing the
Word of God, hearing the will of God, listening for the voice of God.

Further, it is only when we hear God that it is possible to move onto the resulting
attitudes: loving God and loving neighbor as ourselves. I maintain the loving
relationships of covenant happen when we hear God. And it is the very hearing of God
which empowers listening to the fullness of the message God offers. (Slight pause.)
So, what happens when hearing transitions to listening. I think the cultural
blinders we all develop, binders which attempt to block out God start to fall away.
When we hear God— God Who is still speaking— the love of God starts to
become more real to us and more sacred for us than that love has ever been before. And
yes, we begin to deeply understand God invites us to be in relationship with all people.
But still, we need to work at being attuned to the fact that God speaks— God still
speaks. Otherwise, the noise of our culture, the noise created in the context of any
culture, will lead us to believe God is... silent.

[The pastor walks back to the pedestal with the glasses and pitcher and fills yet
another glass about half way and holds it up.]

So is the glass half full or is it half empty?

[The pastor picks up the two half glasses and pours them back in the pitcher.
There is another glass filled with colored “Kool Aid” from the Time for All Ages. The
pastor pours that back into the pitcher which changes the water in the pitcher into colored
water and holds the pitcher aloft.
]

When we hear the voice of God, the world can

become more wonderful than it has ever been before. Hear, O Israel. Hear, O South
Freeport Congregational Church. God is with us. Let us listen for God.
Amen.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10/31/2021
South Freeport Congregational Church, United Church of Christ, South Freeport, Maine

ENDPIECE: It is the practice of the Pastor to speak after the Closing Hymn, but before
the Benediction. This, then, is an précis of what the pastor said before the blessing: “We
Congregationalists have long believed that God still speaks to us. English Puritan
minister John Robinson, said this to the Pilgrims as they left for these shores: “I am verily
persuaded God hath more truth yet to break forth out of the Holy Word.” Well, let us
continue to listen.


1.
INTRODUCTION TO SCRIPTURE: When people talk about the ten commandments as
if they were, pardon the pun, set in stone, my reaction tends to be which set are you
talking about? There are at least three sets of the so called Ten Commandments to be
found in the Hebrew Scriptures and they are all somewhat different. Additionally, some
Christian traditions actually count eleven. And, in the strict sense, there are 613
commandments in the Hebrew Scriptures. Then, of course, many who adhere to both the
Christian tradition and the Jewish tradition would claim there are but two: love God and
love neighbor. Last, most scholars say there is but one commandment and it is the
starting point of all Scripture— the so called great commandment— the Shema. We find
that commandment in this passage in verses 4 and 5 of this reading, a reading from
Tanakh, in the section called the Torah, in the work known as Deuteronomy.
​

A READING FROM TANAKH, IN THE SECTION CALLED THE TORAH, IN THE
WORK KNOWN AS DEUTERONOMY — Deuteronomy 6:1-7 [ILV]
[1] Here, then, are the statutes, the ordinances, the commandments, the decrees— that
Yahweh, our God, charged me to teach you. Observe them so that you may enter into the
land Yahweh, the God of your ancestors gives to you and that you are about to cross into
and occupy. [2] If you and your children and the children of your children revere
Yahweh, your God, all the days of your life and if you keep the statutes, the ordinances,
the commandments, the decrees I lay before you, your days may be long. [3] Hear, listen
therefore, O Israel, and observe carefully, so that it may go well with you, and so that you
may increase your numbers greatly in a land flowing with milk and honey, as Yahweh, the
God of your ancestors, has promised you.
[4] Hear, O Israel:
Yahweh, our God, Yahweh alone,
is one.

BENEDICTION: Go now— go in safety, for you cannot go where God is not. Go now--
go with the purpose of fulfilling the will of God and God will honor your dedication.
God now— go in freedom as we know God is the One Who sets us free from all that
destroys. Go now— go in hope, for hope sees clearly the promise of God to walk with us.
Go now— Go in love, for the love of God endures. Go now— go in peace for it is a gift
of God to all people whose hearts and minds honor, respect and love. Amen.

[5] You are to love Yahweh,
our God
with all your heart,
and with all your soul,
and with all your strength.
[6] Let these words
that I command today
be written in your heart.
[7] Recite them, teach them diligently
to your children
repeat them constantly
when you are at home
and when you are walking down
a road,
when you lie down at night
and when you get up
in the morning.
Here ends this reading from Scripture.

2. At A Time for All Ages the pastor filled a glass with water and suggested water in a
glass is hard to see. And some people say God is hard to see. However, perhaps you can
see God in the smile of a friend or when a parent says, “Job well done.” But is that
seeing God or is that feeling God. The pastor then picked up a second glass. At the
bottom of this glass there was Kool Aid powder. But, of course, that powder could not
be seen. So then the pastor poured water into that glass and the water immediately
changed color. The pastor then said perhaps it was not that you saw God. Perhaps it was
that you felt God and God really is there just like you can see the colored water.
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