Monday, November 11, 2013

Soli Deo Gloria!
All Saints

This first Sunday in November, whatever the date, is the one designated to remember the saints:  the saints the church commemorates, and the ones in our own lives .

What makes a saint?  A saint always points towards God and away from themselves.  I want you to keep that definition of a saint in your mind as I speak about two saints today.

The saints we commemorate today are Martin de Porres, renewer of society, and Andrew Carnegie.  Have you heard of them?  Either of them?

Martin de Porres was the son of a Spanish knight and Ana Velazquez, a freed black slave from Panama.  Martin apprenticed himself to a barber surgeon in Lima, Peru, and was known for his work as a healer.  Martin was a lay brother (meaning he wasn’t ordained) in the Order of Preachers (Dominicans) and engaged in many charitable works.  He was a gardener as well as a counselor to those who sought him out.  He was noted for his care of all the poor, regardless of race.  His own religious community described him as the “father of charity”.  His work included the foundling of an orphanage, a hospital, and a clinic for dogs and cats.  He is recognized as an advocate for Christian charity and interracial justice.  He died in 1639. (Sundays & Seasons 2013)

Sounds pretty saint like doesn’t it?  In his work he always pointed away from himself, and pointed whoever would follow in his footsteps, towards God.

Now to the other saint I mentioned, Andrew Carnegie.  You’ve heard of him, haven’t you?  Perhaps you didn’t realize he had been beautified, canonized, which are the steps taken by the Vatican when a new saint is introduced to the faithful.  Do you feel like you missed something?

I’ll wager you know his story:
Carnegie was born in Dunfermline, Scotland, and emigrated to the United States with his very poor parents in 1848. Carnegie started as a telegrapher and by the 1860s had investments in railroads, railroad sleeping cars, bridges and oil derricks. He built further wealth as a bond salesman raising money for American enterprise in Europe. He built Pittsburgh's Carnegie Steel Company, which he sold to J.P. Morgan in 1901 for $480 million (the equivalent of approximately $13.5 billion in 2012), creating the U.S. Steel Corporation. Carnegie devoted the remainder of his life to large-scale philanthropy, with special emphasis on local libraries, world peace, education and scientific research. With the fortune he made from business, he built Carnegie Hall, and founded the Carnegie Corporation of New York, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Carnegie Institution for Science, Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland, Carnegie Hero Fund, Carnegie Mellon University and the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh, among others. His life has often been referred to as a true "rags to riches" story.  (Wikipedia)

But I guess you had missed the part about Andrew becoming a saint.

Him, and his story, however, is much more known than the story of Martin de Porres.  He is the type of person we seek to emulate:
 make sure you have yours first
one only survives by the natural law of ‘tooth and fang’ – do what you have to do to make it in this world
justify the discrepancy between the wealthy and the poor by saying the poor deserve their lot, or, if they worked harder they would have more
don’t give away any of your hard earned money until you’re sure you have enough to get by, and then, make sure you don’t give it all away

Andrew exemplifies the American dream! It's why we admire him!  That's why people strive to emulate him!  He may not have formally achieved sainthood, but you would never know if from the way we treat him and people like him. It’s why we play the lotto, gamble in casinos, play bingo, invest everything in Twitter or Microsoft or Google.  It’s why we work hard, and feel ashamed if we can’t make it working a 40 hour week, why you will even hear poor people say they don’t want food stamps or Obama care – we’re supposed to make it on our own!

We look with suspicion on ethnicities that band together, that help each other, who loan money only to family – don’t you know that family will only bring you down?  Not repay the loan?

Andrew, St. Andrew of Carnegie, that’s who we want to be like.  Martin de Porres sounds a little too goody goody, to wishy-washy.  We want muscle in our lives.  We want muscle in our churches.  Why follow behind some do-gooder when we have a dollar and a dream?

Why indeed?

If you are to be my disciples, Jesus said, you will continue in my word.  You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.

What is truth?

Truth is that you don’t gain the kingdom by force.  You don’t gain the kingdom through arrogance, through injustice, through being unloving, unkind, through not only caring about the poor and the sick and the voiceless among you, but by doing something about it.

Loving your enemies, doing good to those that hate you, blessing those who curse you are not the marks of a wishy washy person.  It takes courage to stand on Jesus’ words and Jesus’ promises.  It takes faith to believe that what Jesus promises – a full life now and in the world to come – is possible even if great riches don’t happen, and you never escape the 40 hour work week.

It takes believing that Jesus’ system of justice – that one gives not because one has to but because one wants to is what brings peace to ourselves, our families and eventually our communities.

It means that giving in love, giving generously, giving sometimes without your left hand knowing what your right hand is doing – will always be rewarded, sometimes in surprising ways.

We have been blinded to the truth; we have been tempted by the attractive, yet unattainable goal that Andrew and the other robber barons from the 18th century to this present age have told us is important.

Jesus calls you to another story, another way of living and being in this world.  Jesus reminds you that in your baptism you have been made free, and that freedom can never be more important than the next new car, or a big bump in your stock portfolio, as important and as gratifying as those things may be.

Jesus calls you and tells you there are still some who don’t know Him.  There are still some who don’t know they have been set free.  There are still some suffering and in pain.  Jesus says you do something about it.  You fix this.

You might not be liked for your stance.  Perhaps no one will ever call you the latest manifestation or incarnation of Andrew Carnegie.  But perhaps, just perhaps, someone might say to you in the midst of your work for Jesus’ sake, ‘thank you!  You’re a saint’!

Amen +


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