Sunday, January 18, 2026

HOMILY: "Yahweh in the Desert"

Matthew 3:1-17
The Second Sunday after the Epiphany
Martin Luther King Jr. Weekend, January 18, 2026

1.

It’s the last line in today’s reading, the very last one, that seizes my attention this morning and almost seems to drag me into this scene, into this life, into this particular gospel. After all his wandering, after all his visioning, after all the soaking in of his own wild and marvelous baptism in the Jordan: “Jesus was led even further into the desert…” Jesus was led even further into the desert. By the Spirit.

I watch the news out of Minneapolis this week, the menacing confrontation of government vigilantes with immigrants and their advocates. And aren’t we all being drawn, further into the desert now? And the President’s talking about invoking the Insurrection Act. In Minnesota. A military move against activists like you and me. And aren’t we all being drawn, further in the desert now? I get a notification on my own phone, as so many of you did on Friday, that ICE agents are showing up here on the Seacoast now, in unmarked cars in shopping center lots. I’m asked to pay attention, take videos, report what I see. And aren’t we all being drawn, further, further into the desert now? A geography of unknowing. A landscape of unnerving vulnerability.

But in our tradition and (let’s be honest) so many other indigenous traditions, also a place of repentance and renewal, of shedding worn-out habits and grounding ourselves in wisdom, of testing one another and risking new patterns of communal care and solidarity. The desert is in so many ways God’s greatest sanctuary. Where frightened souls learn to trust a Higher Power. Where fleeing people become a covenant community. So Jesus was led even further into the desert. By the Spirit.

You’ll remember, of course, that the Hebrews met Yahweh in the desert. This is the foundational biblical story and found in the book of Exodus. Liberated from Pharaoh’s pyramid economy, Pharaoh’s grinding, inhuman economy. Set free from their oppression for new life in new places.. Chased out when they too had been accused of insurrection.

But liberation, they discover, isn’t transactional, nor is it in any way quick. There’s a desert out there, a desert to be faced, to be embraced, to be welcomed in awe and wonder; a desert in which the Hebrews will be tested and tempted and thrilled and re-tooled for the projects and promise ahead. Yawheh in the desert!

The rabbis of old liked to say that it might have taken just a few days to get the people out of Egypt; but it took all of forty years to get Egypt out of the people. The desert. Where old habits are shed, and old expectations purged, and new practices implemented, new joys embraced, new commitments made. A fleeing people becomes, in time, a covenant community. It took just a few days to get the people out of Egypt; but it took all of forty years to get Egypt out of the people. Yes, a geography of unknowing. Yes, a landscape of vulnerability. But a sacred space. A sanctuary space. A space where the Spirit does her most impressive and consequential work. As do we.

2.

So we can talk a bit about our own desert moment: this unnerving moment in American life, and global society in general. And how we might find in all this something beyond despair, something like holy opportunity and radical renewal, and a spiritual challenge that aims to remake us. Maybe that’s our calling in moments like this one: to resist catastrophizing the news and remain open and available to grace and transformation.

But it’s worth noting first how Jesus—at the very dawn of his adult life, his mature ministry—how Jesus is moved to align his spirit, his life, his purpose with that same Hebrew journey out of Egypt, that same communal experience of un-learning and re-imagining and embracing anew God’s ways of communal care and mutual liberation. Again, we have to see that Jesus is not out to establish a new and better religion, not at all. He is out to fully and radically live into the traditions and lessons and practices and insights of his people’s faith. Yahweh in the desert. And that means going out from Egypt, accepting the call to repentance and unlearning and receptivity in strange and godly places. Yahweh in the desert.

Jesus knows that he’s loved. And loved a lot and forever. And Jesus’s seen the Dove of Peace hovering over him. And claiming him as God’s own. Jesus has faced the fears that may have scared him from loving and caring. And he has cast off the cords of shame, the tangled angst that may have clung too tightly to his dear and beloved soul. What a moment out there in the river! That voice! “This is my Own, my Beloved, on whom my favor rests!” And still he goes even deeper into the desert, further into the unknown, deeper into the wild places of his tradition and heart. Because that’s what we do. Liberation isn’t transactional. It tests and transforms us, and whole communities are reborn. If we go. Further into the desert.

And, of course, what happens to Jesus in the wilderness, in the desert, is much like what happens to the Hebrews in their own forty-year sojourn. He is indeed tested. He is surely and even sorely tempted. And it’s out there—in the desert—that he finds his people’s deepest truth, his people’s theological tradition, the radical edge that says no to violence and yes to peace, that says no to magic and yes to compassion, that says no to patriarchy and power trips and yes to covenant and collaboration. It’s out there in the desert that Jesus owns his tradition, his faith and what it requires of him. Love has bathed his imagination in wonder. The river has flooded his shame with grace. The desert has tested his faith and prepared him for a particular kind of ministry. He’s ready to speak about repentance and renewal. He’s ready to risk new patterns of communal care and mutual liberation.

3.

In 1967, Martin Luther King, Jr. came out against the Vietnam War in a hugely important speech in New York called “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence.” The speech, by the way, was delivered at the Riverside Church which holds dual membership in the American Baptist tradition and our own United Church of Christ.

In that seminal moment, Doctor King spoke to a spiritual crisis that seems terribly familiar and deeply related to our own moment in time.
Increasingly, he said, by choice or by accident, our nation has taken the role of those who make peaceful revolution impossible by refusing to give up the privileges and pleasures that come from the immense profits of overseas investments.

And then he said, I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin to shift from a thing-oriented society to a person-oriented society.

And doesn’t that hit home this week: We must rapidly begin to shift from a thing-oriented society to a person-oriented society; from a gas-and-oil-oriented society to a person-oriented society; from a Wall-Street-oriented society to a person-oriented society; from a body-armor-oriented society to a person-oriented society.

And then Dr. King said this: When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights, are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.

Wow. 1967.
And I’m moved then to say this. That in our own desert moment, in this strange and unnerving season of American culture, when democracy itself seems as vulnerable to despots and despair as it ever has been—we too are being tempted, tested like Jesus. That in the streets of Minneapolis and now it seems Portsmouth and Rochester, we too are faced with choices that will define our children’s futures and indeed our commitments to faith, discipleship and democracy itself.

“When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights, are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.” This is our chance, my friends. And it’s a holy opportunity, a sacred obligation and our desert moment. To reject together the giant triplets King speaks of: racism, materialism and militarism. To reject together White Christian Nationalism as an American ideal, or even an American tradition, and certainly as an American future. To wrestle together with the ways these triplets infect our institutions, our faith, our fears, even sometimes our habits and dreams. And to choose instead Yahweh’s way: the way of communal care, human rights, economic equity, and mutual liberation.

What if this is our calling? To wrestle in this desert with temptation. To embrace in this desert God’s promise of sufficiency and community and grace. To choose in this desert the Hebrew ways of bold economic sharing, and brave neighborly love, and sweet hospitality for the immigrant and stranger. What if this is our calling in 2026? As communities of faith? As people of faith? As a church right here in New Hampshire? Isn’t it true that the joy of our baptismal identity, the great gift of the baptismal promise—is that we can face the past with courage, and meet the present with irrepressible creativity and grace? Like Jesus in the Jordan. Beloved!

Sunday, January 11, 2026

HOMILY: "This Supper of the Suffering Servant"

Isaiah 42:1-9
The First Sunday after the Epiphany
Communion Sunday, January 11, 2026

1.

I was handed this long-stemmed white rose on Thursday night at a huge and raucous protest in Merrimack, by a bright-eyed old woman wearing a neon vest that said PEACEKEEPER across the back. And it’s a plastic rose, of course, but its purpose served the cause. When outrage runs deep—as it does again this week, across the country—dissent stays true to a higher calling. Human dignity. Sweet liberation. True justice. When resistance coalesces quickly—as it does this week, around the martyrdom of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis—leadership draws from the deepest wells of compassion and grace. That Thursday night protest in Merrimack was angry and defiant, and I was angry and defiant too. Still am. But I took the old woman’s rose as an invitation to communion in a secular space, as an offer of wisdom in another moment charged with rage and grief and perhaps even a dose of despair.

Renee Good’s murder in Minneapolis, by a poorly-prepared and sadly emboldened ICE agent, has shaken us all to the core this week. And Thursday’s protest amplified the outrage of all kinds of New Hampshire folk, from all generations and backgrounds, who also worry for the government’s plans to build new warehouses, detention and deportation outposts, in communities like Merrimack. No, no, no, we said. The madness of racism has not only infected the spirit of America, it has now proven dangerous to communities simply standing together in love and solidarity; it has now proven lethal for mothers, fathers, students simply acting in good conscience to protect neighbors from armed vigilantes with government IDs.

But I had this rose in my hand, and I had today’s ‘servant song’ from Isaiah in my mind. And it makes we wonder how it is we couple outrage and compassion in moments like this one; or how it is we yoke the gentle spirit of the ‘suffering servant’ in Isaiah with the resolute, even tenacious commitment I felt in that determined community of protest Thursday night. There was such anger among us, outside that Town Hall; we have been pushed together to some kind of limit, even some kind of breaking point, by a government of such cruelty and callousness it defies all imagination and decency.

And yet this morning the Holy One calls out the servant to bring true justice to the nations, true justice, consequential justice, not by crying out or raising her voice; not by breaking tender reeds or bellowing such bluster as to quench a wavering flame. But by offering light in the darkness. And by opening the eyes of all who struggle to see. And by freeing captives from their prisons, and opening the doors of detention so the frightened can go free again.

Did you catch that in the text? It’s subtle, but it’s deep and provocative, I think. Even that one verse at the end of that first stanza. “So gentle that you do not break a bruised reed, or quench a wavering flame, faithfully you will bring forth true justice.” I wrote this one verse on a scrap of paper and folded it into my coat pocket Thursday night. It’s the first of four defining poems in what’s known as the Second Book of Isaiah, or Second Isaiah, and together they’re called “Servant Songs.”

And this first suggests a kind of faithfulness, a kind of engagement, a kind of advocacy that is nurtured not in defiance and anger, but in trust and prayer; not in outrage, but in tenderness and humility; not only in righteousness over and against evil, but in sacrificial commitment to one another’s liberation. “So gentle that you do not break a bruised reed.”

Becca and Renee Good
I was struck yesterday by the statement released by Renee Good’s grieving wife Becca, who said that her wife lived by an overarching belief that there is “kindness in the world and we need to do everything we can to find it where it resides and nurture it where it needs to grow.” She was a Christian, Renee was, who knew that all religions teach the same essential truth: “that we are here to love each other, care for each other, and keep each other safe and whole.” Many will imply that she was an anarchist or a zealot; but she was indeed a Christian, Renee Nicole Good, a follower of Jesus. And like him, she carried the cross to the very end.

2.

Over the centuries, some have interpreted the Servant Songs of Isaiah merely as foreshadowing Jesus’ own messianic arrival. But I prefer to believe that Jesus read this poetry early and often, and that he took it to heart as he grew and matured in faith and conscience. And like many faithful Jewish believers and many devoted communities since, Jesus integrated these same Songs into his spirituality and self-understanding. What it means to be God’s servant in the world. What it means to love sacrificially among the brokenhearted of the world. And more importantly, I prefer to believe that Jesus integrated these Songs into his sense of community vocation, congregational mission and discipleship. Let’s not miss this.

Because this first Servant Song, at least, is clearly intended not as a clarion call to individual service, but as a ringing invitation to congregational, even covenantal mission. And as we look forward to our own Annual Meeting in a couple of weeks, it’s significant I think, that we hear in this poetry, God’s “appointment” of a covenant people—not just a superstar messiah, not just a heroic champion, and not one or two amazing souls, but a covenant people, “a light to the nations.” And here, again, is our calling, ours in community: “to open the eyes of the blind, to free captives from prison, and those who sit in darkness from dungeon and detention.” Our covenant calling.

Toward the end of Thursday’s protest, organizers assembled at the door of Merrimack’s Town Hall—where residents of Merrimack would soon file into a town council meeting. There, to register their wholehearted opposition to any kind of ICE warehouse in Merrimack or anywhere else in New Hampshire. Some non-Merrimack folk were understandably disappointed not to be invited in, not to have their own opportunity to speak and express all kinds of outrage for what’s happened across the country of late.

And that’s when our friend, Grace Kindeke took the bullhorn and spoke to the murmuring crowd. Grace has spoken here at the Community Church several times, worked for many years with Maggie Fogarty and the American Friends Service Committee, and serves now as Program Director with the New Hampshire Center for Justice and Equity. She’s a proud advocate for New Hampshire’s immigrant communities and a brave voice for oppressed peoples everywhere. And with that bullhorn in hand, Grace channeled the wisdom of Isaiah, the spirit of the servant and the grace of God. Surrounded by a restless community, a sad and mad community, she found a way to fuse anger to tenderness, and outrage to hope, and despair to lovingkindness. Her voice did not waver. She was strong and loud. Her invitation was not demur. She was insistent and uncompromising.

But I could see tears in her eyes, and then rolling down her face. And I could hear love in every encouraging word she said. And between thoughts, she’d look around at the crowd on all sides with such kindness and such purpose: “We have to move forward together,” she said. “We have to move forward together, because we are so much stronger and wiser together than when we are apart.” And even as she said these words, I could feel the crowd leaning in towards her, straining to see that power in her eyes, aching to feel what she was feeling, eager to soak up the determination that Grace had gathered like a warm winter shawl around her shoulders. She found a way. To fuse anger to tenderness. To wed outrage and hope. To inspire broken hearts with lovingkindness. And that, my friends, is leadership. Servant leadership of the highest order. I found myself mouthing another line from today’s text: “You will neither waver nor be crushed!” “You will neither waver nor be crushed until justice is established on earth, for the islands await your teaching!” Wow. That was Grace Kindeke Thursday night; but not just her, it was a whole community, a beloved community, right here in New Hampshire, speaking truth to power, with love and gentle hope.

3.

We are wise, my friends, to remember that communion, our sacrament today, is the supper of a suffering servant. It’s not magic, but it surely is transformational. It requires no ‘hocus pocus,’ but it absolutely requires embodiment and intention. This kind of communion does not save us from sadness, but delivers us from isolation, for resilience and living hope and even a kind of imperfect yet holy salvation. I’m thinking about the occasional sandwich I share with Antony at his table downstairs. And I’m thinking about baked pigeon at a family table in Bethlehem last summer, and the laughter around that table as Palestinian friends imagined a future of justice, and liberation, and harvests, and joy. This kind of communion is simple and bountiful. It’s global and it’s not ours alone. It’s God’s greatest gift.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

HOMILY: "Shoulder to Shoulder"

Sunday, January 4, 2026
Matthew 2:1-12

The Second Sunday in Christmastide

1.

"Epiphany" (www.janetmckenzie.com)
Yesterday I visited our dear friend Henry Smith in the hospital. And as some of you know, Henry’s faced a number of setbacks, physical setbacks, you might even call them unnerving setbacks, of late. I know you’ll keep him in your prayers. And sometimes, you know, our physical vulnerabilities prove spiritually challenging, and sometimes they even provoke the deepest kind of contemplation and reflection. So many of us have been there. Our own experience. Or with a loved one.

Henry’s lost a lot of weight. Eating’s become a chore. And his neck is unstable, and sore all the time. All this is startling.  But, instead, what struck me yesterday was this. How fully—even in his diminished condition—how fully Henry trusts in the God who brought him here to you. Many years ago. When he hears me say your names—Diane, Gretchen, Dennis, Donna, Antony—his tired eyes brighten like stars over Bethlehem. You are everything to him. Maybe I can say that in a different way. In his own wonderfully circumspect way, Henry notes that a strange combination of relationships and needs and hunger and hope brought him to this congregation two decades ago. “And I have never been the same,” he said to me yesterday, “because of all the love, and all the friendship I’ve found in this congregation.” And then this: “God has shown me a better way,” he said to me. “Through my friends at church.” “God has shown me a better way.” In his season of tiring, grinding, physical concern, Henry doesn’t have to guess at who God is. He knows who God is. Because of you.

There’s a star, inlaid and polished, in the flooring beneath the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem now. Pilgrims travel to the West Bank from all over the world to kneel before that star, to touch it, as it represents the place, the actual place where Jesus was born more than two centuries ago. While that kind of devotion can be a beautiful and touching thing, it misses the more important point, the more dynamic truth—that the God of Love and Compassion is embodied in ordinary, run of the mill, weirdly composed communities (like this one) where wise guys like Henry Smith meet the mercy and the love they’ve needed all along. And in that meeting, we’re all changed. Every one of us. Changed, redirected and set on a whole new course. Like Henry. Who lies now in a Dover hospital bed. Knowing who God is. And trusting that he will be OK.

You see, this is about the baby born in a Bethlehem cave, and the old man lying in a Dover hospital, and it’s about all of you and what happens here day by day, week after week. You see, your love—and God’s love in you—has revealed in Henry’s life the joy and the wonder at the heart of his own journey, the goodness in his own soul, the grace that will never leave him and walks gladly beside him in good and bad times alike. Like those magi, you see, Henry will never again need the dark, brooding, meanness of Herod in his life. Like those magi, he’s walking a different route. He’s going home by another way. And I’ve got to tell you. It’s a beautiful thing, as tender and vulnerable as he is right now. It's a beautiful thing to see.

2.

What an amazing story, this epiphany story. And how oddly composed, its details and plot twists. How is it—for example—that a Child who comes only to unite, only to bless, inspires such fear in a King like Herod? And how is it that a Child whose ways will feed the hungry and heal the broken and forgive betrayal incites rage and rancor in the halls of power?

The familiar but strange story of Herod—who flat out lies to the magi—reminds us all too well that Jesus’ message of compassion may mean joy and renewal and blessing for some; but it threatens structures of privilege, systems of control and their protective guardians. Maybe it’s always been so. And Herod’s willingness to sacrifice not only his integrity, but the children of his own kingdom, for the preservation of those same systems, of his privilege, is sobering even now, in 2026. Bloody nationalism insists it can do no wrong: whether it plays out in the killing fields of Ukraine, or in a genocidal assault on Gaza, or now even in the streets and oilfields of Venezuela. Our Christmas story does not flinch in the face of it all. It runs right through Herod’s lies. The Love of this Christ will meet the delusions of the mighty with vulnerable grace. The Gospel of this Christ will redirect our politics, our organizing, our commitments to the common good and one another. To transform our shared dreams. To imagine among us a collaborative peace. To reveal among us another way home.

Just as it is with the magi.

As they appear on stage in Matthew’s second chapter, these magi are ready for adventure, open to all manner of signs and portents, excited even by the scriptures of other traditions. They come from afar with dreams and hopes for a better world. “Show us the way.” “Where is the newborn king?” And when King Herod invites their counsel and begs their assistance, initially they are more than willing to collaborate. For how can it be that Love threatens anybody? And how can it be that such a Child would move any monarch to rage and rancor?

But these magi, their spirits are lifted so delightfully by the star shining above the Child’s cave, and their hearts are turned so radically inside out by Mary’s boundless love and the Child’s ordinary beauty, that these magi see in their new dreams the counsel of God, the wisdom of truth. They are changed in community. As we are by the little Christ’s Gospel of peace. And Christ moves now in their minds and in their hearts to send them home by another route. Not through the same tired ways and habits of Herod and Hegseth, Johnson and Trump. Not through the deceptive, duplicitous promises Herod makes, over and over again, to the wise and kind. This Gospel will change the way we travel. This Gospel will shake up our prayers and priorities. This Gospel will turn our hearts inside out. “Because they were warned in [that] dream not to return to Herod, they went back to their own country by another route.”

By another route. By another route.

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

ACTION NOW: "Stand Up and Speak Out for Beit Sahour"

Settlers are implementing plans to clear Palestinian communities for illegal settlements in Beit Sahour, in the Bethlehem district of Palestine. This is yet another indication of their intention to ethnically cleanse Palestine and enforce apartheid on the ground. Please use this form, and letter below, to put pressure on our U.S. Congress to prevent this next step in the destruction of Palestine.

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

HOMILY: "The Virginity of Joseph"

Sunday, December 14, 2025
Matthew 1:18-25 (The 3rd Sunday of Deep Advent)

1.

When Joseph wakes up that next morning, having been visited by some kind of an angel, having been roused in a dream to a whole new set of possibilities; when Joseph wakes us that morning, he really has no idea where his life is going. What the cost of it all will be. How radically his heart will be broken. Where this dream will take him. It strikes me now that this may be the most remarkable thing about this remarkable story. That this brother is prepared, by the light of day, to heed some sort of divine direction planted in a dream, defying cultural norms, risking his community’s shame and making a family with Mary and her baby. Without knowing. No guarantees.

There is no question that his life is now wildly complicated. There is no question that faith itself is about to rock his world. And there’s no question that what’s required of Joseph now is more, so much more than he ever imagined having. In his heart. In his bones. In his spirit.

But in his dream, in his sleep, in darkness that is both gracious and true, the angel says to Joseph: “Don’t be afraid.” The angel says to Joseph: “Salvation is at hand.” The angel in his dream says: “Take Mary and love this child and be a family.” And he wakes up. Joseph wakes up. And he does as the angel has asked him to do. Undaunted by all the unknowns, unfazed by fear, and ready to make love the singular purpose of his singular life. Wherever it takes him. And whatever the cost.

It's fascinating, really, that Matthew’s gospel begins not in a sanctuary or temple, with some kind of ancient rite, and not in a synagogue or classroom, with old texts explained—but in a simple man’s dream. God meets Joseph in the shadowy hallways of his unconscious; God visits Joseph in the language of his own uncertainty and bewilderment. “Don’t be afraid.” “Salvation is at hand.” “Take Mary and love this child and be a family.” In other words, resist the shaming energies of tradition, imagine a family made whole by love, and trust in God and God alone. Trust in the sanctuary of spirit you find in your own anointed heart. Where angels speak of fearlessness and salvation.

But it is Joseph’s faithfulness—in the absence of assurance, in the absence of proof—that seems most timely for us this morning. None of this can be easy for him. This kind of faithfulness is never easy for you, or for me either. Convention comes naturally. Codes of purity are predictable, even dependable. Orthodoxy makes sense. And yet, and yet, Joseph bares his heart before that angel in the darkness. He risks his future, his equilibrium, and certainly his reputation for the newness of God. Am I willing to do the same? Are you? Is it possible that this is the gospel challenge before us at Christmas? To bare our hearts before angels in the darkness? To risk our futures, our balance, our reputations for the newness of God?

2.

None of this is easy. In so many ways, doubt dances with belief, confidence with confusion; and Joseph’s heart is shaken by love and then by angst in equal measure. And isn’t this always how it goes when angels come to call? Isn’t this always how it goes when God wanders off our well-worn maps, and insists that we do the same? Whether you’re parenting children whose imagination and creativity break down walls and stereotypes, yet also make them profoundly vulnerable to worry and despair. Whether you’re budgeting for a 21st century church committed to sanctuary ministries, Christ-like inclusion, transformational programming. Whether you’re doing everything humanly possible to protect immigrants in our midst and love them and challenge the cruelty that threatens them. If doubt dances with belief in Joseph’s heart, if confidence spins with confusion in Joseph’s spirit, so it is in us. If his heart is shaken by love and then by angst in equal measure, so too with us.

You know, we have every reason to center Mary’s courage, Mary’s chutzpah, Mary’s incarnational imagination in our reflections around the Christmas story each December. But there’s a place for Joseph in our wondering too, there’s a place for Joseph in our musing around faith and grace and making space for new things. If Mary’s imagination is the generating spirit of Christmas, then Joseph’s vulnerability proves essential to our receptivity and our own awakening.