Monday, February 27, 2017

Unity

We have hope for a renewed and common witness to the love of Jesus. All the body of Christ must continue to work for unity in love.



https://www.facebook.com/americamag/videos/10154234570102882/


Fr. Troy Beecham

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Humility

Humility is always the path



https://cruxnow.com/global-church/2017/02/26/francis-urges-humble-path-unity-historic-visit-romes-anglicans/


Fr. Troy Beecham

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Political idolatry

A common theme of mine, here eloquently put by a bishop, though the use of the phrase "centrist" has as many political entanglements as progressive/liberal/conservative.



http://anoddworkofgrace.blogspot.com/2017/02/a-radical-centrist-manifesto-2017-iii.html?m=1


Fr. Troy Beecham

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Preaching

"All effective homilies have this sense of urgency and freshness, revealing the startling beauty and promise of the Kingdom of God and of Jesus who embodies it and brings it to reality through his Death and Resurrection. The message of the Gospel is truly a matter of “life and death” for us; there is nothing routine or trivial about it. If a homilist conveys merely some example of proverbial wisdom or good manners, or only some insight gained from their personal experience, they may have spoken accurately and even helpfully, but they have not yet spoken the Gospel, which ultimately must focus on the person of Jesus and the dynamic power of his mission to the world."


Fr. Troy Beecham

Monday, February 20, 2017

Big picture Christianity

For those interested in "big story" attempts to conceptualize Jesus and the "point" of Christianity, this article does a fair job at introducing one of the most influential Christian theologians of the last 50 years, and an Anglican at that.

https://baptistnews.com/article/can-tom-wright-save-christianity/#.WKtmS6pOKaP


Fr. Troy Beecham

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Gospel

“The political principles of Christianity, if it be right to use such words of a divine polity, are laid down for us in the Sermon on the Mount. Contrariwise to other empires, Christians conquer by yielding; they gain influence by shrinking from it; they possess the earth by renouncing it.”

– John Henry Newman, Development of Doctrine

In response to a question about the state of American Christianity, I have some thoughts. Much of American "Christianity" has become almost indistinguishable from our prevailing culture and our culture wars. Such debased and compromised religion has accepted an idealized and mythical version of an American golden age, based largely in Enlightenment ideals, and has falsely identified becoming a social justice warrior (for whichever side or for whichever cause) in the attempt to engineer utopia (the attempt which inevitably becomes fascist - both left and right), as a manageable and less personally costly substitute for the gospel of Jesus.


I was raised in that maelstrom, as so many of us were, and recognizing the continuing bankruptcy of it often makes it difficult to call myself a Christian. Rather than walking away from the gospel of Jesus, though, we must continue to do our best to love as he asked his disciples to love, live as he asked his disciples to live, and choose to refuse to allow a false substitute to claim the name of Jesus. We must refuse to let demagogues and those who would turn the faith of Jesus into a tool of empire or partisan politics, a path to obscene wealth, or a means of control to be the only voices.



Originally, the word "christian" was used to describe the early disciples of Jesus by those who did not follow him. It means "little christ ", because the early disciples lived so closely to his gospel, and paid a high social cost for it as he paid, that their neighbors wondered at their loving-kindness, self-sacrificing generosity, and mutual love. To be honest, someone else has to call you a christian for it to be true. We can only legitimately say for ourselves that we are doing all that we can do to be a disciple of Jesus. Whether or not it is visibly true, or that we are, in fact, christians is up for others to say.



Jesus did not come preaching how to choose a side in the perennial human obsession with the game of thrones, a game that leads us in a constant spiral of genocide, poverty, and slavery.



Jesus came preaching a promise, the kingdom of God, the promise that his Father will someday restore creation, and humankind, to a state of original blessedness and innocence, and give birth to a peaceable kingdom where war, misery, slavery, and even death, have faded away. He taught his disciples that sacrificially loving each other would allow us to experience that promise here and now, and that our love for each other would be the proof that the Father did indeed send him into the world.



This Way, this becoming a disciple of Jesus, re-orients the human heart, teaching us to refuse to participate in the game of thrones, to refuse to be compromised by earthly political realities, the allure of wealth and power, or the ongoing lie that we are anything but one human family.



Following Jesus orients our hearts on the kingdom of God, which will not be found by choosing one empire over another, or become so partisan for a particular nation, tribe, or creed that we lose sight that we are all one human family - all of us brothers and sisters. It is in losing sight of this that we seek to justify war, slavery, and and poverty.



The kingdom of God is not about simply inverting who currently holds power, but about faithfully living in the love of Jesus, enduring the ruin that we continue to make of each other and the world, until God finally subverts all human power in the redemptive power of Love, revealed in Jesus as self-emptying, self-sacrificing care for each other.



So, sisters and brothers, let us love one another as Jesus loves us, keep our hearts fixed on the promise of the kingdom of God, and faithfully await the day of his coming.


Fr. Troy Beecham

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

True preaching

https://cruxnow.com/vatican/2017/02/14/lack-prayer-turns-gods-word-philosophical-idea-pope-says/


Fr. Troy Beecham

St. Valentine

So, who was the actual St. Valentine, and why do we associate him with loving relationships?

http://www1.cbn.com/st-valentine-real-story


Fr. Troy Beecham

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Christian unity

We must always continue to work towards Christian unity as a sign of hope to the world


https://www.facebook.com/AnglicanCentre/posts/1445671222110156


Fr. Troy Beecham

I pledge

https://www.thykingdomcome.global/


Fr. Troy Beecham

Monday, February 6, 2017

Christian unity

"That they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me."

Jesus

http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/look-to-christ-to-overcome-tragic-reformation-legacy-pope-says-99687/


Fr. Troy Beecham

Lady Gaga, the Super Bowl, and going to Church

So, while some folks stayed home yesterday and skipped Christian worship to prepare for the superbowl, Ms. Stefani Germanotta, aka Lady Gaga, who is a devoted Catholic Christian, chose to attend mass and to worship the Lord Jesus with the good folks at the Episcopal Church of St. Martin in Houston.

Thank you, Ms. Germanotta, for your witness to your Christian faith in demonstrating your priorities.


Fr. Troy Beecham

Saturday, February 4, 2017

Keep our eyes on Jesus

Keep our eyes on Jesus

http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/pope-francis-jesus-was-concerned-with-people-not-popularity-83512/


Fr. Troy Beecham