St. Elizabeth's Episcopal Church - Elizabeth, NJ

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  • Home
  • Welcome
    • History >
      • Historical Sizzle
    • I'm New
    • Let's Get Acquainted
    • Rev. Canon Andy J. Moore
    • Leadership
    • Mission
    • Habits of Grace: Prayer into Action
    • Bishop Curry Who is my Neighbor >
      • Bishop Curry
    • Make a Gift
    • Services
    • Gallery >
      • May 7 Covid-19 Testing
      • 25 Years of Priesthood Gala >
        • 25th Years of Priesthood Gala
        • 25 Years of Priesthood Gala
      • Harvest Sunday
      • Sunday School Father's Day 19
      • Men's Club Community Flea Mkt
      • Community Christmas Party
      • Thankgiving Baskets
      • Celebration for High School Gradates
      • Homecoming 2018 >
        • Homecoming
      • Music in the Garden
      • Mother's Day 2018
      • Mother's Day 2018
      • Sunday School Youth Sunday
      • Maundy Thursday
      • Christmas Mass St. Elizabeth's
      • Christmas Eve Mass
      • Christmas Eve Mass
      • Christmas Eve Mass
      • Community Christmas Party
      • Frist Presbyterian
      • Feast of All Saints
      • Sanctuary Sunday 2017
      • International Food Festival
  • Get Involved
    • Sunday School >
      • Sunday School Lift Ev'ry Voice
      • Black History - MLK
      • Sunday School Black History
      • Sunday School Black History ii
      • Youth Ministry
    • ESL Cerificate of Achievement
    • Computer Literacy
    • Episcopal Church Women
    • Mens Club
    • Outreach
  • Hall Rental
  • Calendar
    • News & Events >
      • Bishop Curry Easter 2022
      • Bishop Chip Heart of The Matter
      • Bishop Curry Address the Nation 1/6
      • Bishop Curry Christmas Message
      • Christmas Poinsettias
      • Advent Worship Services
      • ECS Sunday - Bishop Chip
      • Bishop Chip COVID-19 Testing
  • Contact
  • Realm E-Giving Launch
  • Living Like Job
  • it's Friday....but Sunday Comin!!
  • Bishop Curry
  • Past Masses
    • Zoom Service Aug 23rd, 2020
    • Zoom Service Aug 16th, 2020
    • Zoom Service Aug 9th, 2020
    • Zoom Service Aug 2nd, 2020
  • Lenten Sermons 2021
  • Thanksgiving Basket Nov 22nd
  • New Page

Watch Night Sermon

12/31/2020

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“When they had seen him, they spread the word concerning what had been told them about this child”, Luke 2:17

So, here we are again standing on the cusp of another year; truly, no one regrets saying farewell to 2020.  The year was one overshadowed by the pandemic titled, COVID-19; it was not only an unprecedented illness but, in many forms, demonic.  It bought pain, fear, grief, and untold loss in lives and livelihoods; it drove us away from families, friends, and human relationships; it droves us away from workplaces, schools, movies, parks and even from our church buildings.  Many lives were lost, and when combined with the inability to grieve in traditional ways, we were left empty, lonely, and angry. 
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2020 also revealed the combination of politics driven by the twin evils of greed and racism which were so palpable, they became a shroud of deep-seated bitterness.  The thin veneer of normalcy was ripped away by the vulgarity of the public execution of George Floyd along the horrible attempts to cover up the murders of Breonna Taylor and other unarmed and poor black people.  These atrocities have led to an ongoing revolution the likes of which we have not witnessed since the sixties.

My friends, all of these cruelties combined with so many ongoing crises can be the evidence of the work of an alternative power which seeks in every way to negate the presence and power of goodness, hope and joy. Yet, this evermoving force of time brings us again to a new year.  Many began 2020 lacking the sobriety that new beginnings and fresh starts often demand.  Many of us will prefer to remain stuck in the chasm of yesterdays and times far long gone.  Many of us will not trust the future based upon things all that was exposed in the fires of COVID-19, institutionalized racism and institutions which are no longer viable enough to support us in our new future. Yet, there are those who will grasp the world of ZOOM, MasterClass, Google Class and all the other leaps of progress which have been developed during the year of 2020.
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My friends, as the shepherds discovered Jesus buried beneath swaddling clothes in a cold animal trough, they unearthed something truly amazing. Their amazing discovery remains an ongoing, unfolding mystery. The discovery was that the powerful presence of God cannot be denied, smothered, or limited by all the combined forces which may seek its elimination.  For over 2020 years the Good News of Jesus Christ has lived on through plagues, wars, slavery, communism, capitalism, and despotic leaders.  As we also stand in the same theological space as the shepherds, we are called to proclaim the same message, Tell the world that God is with us.  Our churches will be called to do something in new and exciting ways. We will need to configure ourselves differently. We may need to continue to congregate in new ways and maybe in different spaces, and yet, the message remains the same, Go tell the world that Jesus Christ is born!

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The Lights of Advent

12/12/2020

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Wilderness

12/5/2020

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Mark 1:4   John the baptizer appeared in the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.

Generally, when we think of a wilderness, we think of an uncultivated, uninhabited, and inhospitable physical region, the Mojave Desert or the dense jungles of the Amazon.  Sometimes, it can a position of disfavor; especially in a social context.  I remember doing many things as a child that would make my mother angry.  She wouldn’t physically punish me, but I was certainly in a wilderness she imposed upon me.  It can also have significant meaning for people in a physical way. I remember a feeling of dread of riding through wooded areas with my kids, and another black parent with us commented, “It’s only due to the kids we are not perceived as a threat”.  Bad things happen to black folks out in the wilderness and in the cities and towns where we live.  I recently saw an interview of black members of the Sierra club where they shared one of the fears they had to overcome was that of being black in the bushes.  Their feeling was if you went into the woods by yourself and you are black you may not come back.  And of course, we cannot forget this spring in Louisville and summer in Kenosha. 
The questions are, “How do we define wilderness in the world today? What is my wilderness experience?”

We have all found ourselves in a place of deep uncertainty as we face life within the horrors of the COVID-19 Pandemic.  As human beings, we are social animals. We get our food, our sense of being and our purpose by our association with others; isolation has always been linked to punishment. This when we are now called to self-isolate for our own protection and the protection of others places us in conflict with our very own nature. This has, of course, led to rebellion by many, but for those of us who accept the worth and value of self-protective isolation, there is a tremendous cost.  Mentally it takes a huge toll as we seek to create some space within which we can remain connected to reality.  Spiritually, our faith can often be tested as we seek to connect with God outside of the traditional format. Our homes and family become not only a refuge, but for some, the new battle ground where small fissures now become cavernous, unnegotiable barriers. In the social world the pandemic has revealed the public health crisis of racism even as the names George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor seem to fade for many.

My friends, in many ways both the prophet Isiah and John the Baptist faced similar challenges as the prevailing socio-economic and political world of their times reflected what we face today in many ways.

All the traditional signs and symbols of God’s presence were either forcibly removed or hidden from plain sight. Their community was seeming left to thrive on their own or seek out false replacements for God.  Many were now willing to accept the view of their captors and settled down to thrive in a foreign world which provided false hope and meaning.

The role of the prophets then and now is to call the community to a sense of renewed identity and purpose symbolized by their own faith in the power of their God to transcend the present.  Both Isaiah and John began with a call for repentance.  Repentance is the humbling admission of our role in the brokenness we face both within our homes and the societal level. Repentance is the call to acknowledge our weaknesses in seeking to act without God’s love.

Increasingly, many are identifying the original sin of this nation has led to a public health crisis which started on plantations and now resides within communities of color where there is violence, disparities in health and health care, poor education, and lack of meaningful jobs. We, however, are not free from guilt, for often times, we create spaces for those forces to exacerbate an already tenuous situation. We allow other voices to shout their new-found liberal thoughts over our pleas for restoration and justice.  John the baptism therefore sets a clear pathway that cannot be muddled by false hopes or bad intent.

 Mark 1:1&4  The beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. John the baptizer appeared in the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.
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The fresh start and new beginnings for those who wished to embark on a new faith journey with God through Jesus Christ begin with acknowledgment and repentance of sins; not by good intent, empty promises, or new ways to sustain old positions of power.
For the season of Advent may we humbly follow the call of the odd fellows of Isaiah and John the baptist and allow God to meet us in the wilderness of the unknown to lead us to a new and bold future.

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    Author

    Rev. Canon, Andy Moore 

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St Elizabeth’s
305 N. Broad Street
Elizabeth, New Jersey 07207

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