Year B, All Saints Isaiah 25:6-9
It’s complicated.
All Saint’s Sunday is complicated. This is partly because the understanding of
this day has evolved over the years. It was originally meant to be a day to
commemorate all the Christian martyrs (those who had been persecuted and died
for their faith). In the first few centuries of the church, they would
commemorate a martyr with a specific day. But by about the 4th
century, with the increased persecution of Christians, it became clear that
they were going to run out of days. Finally, by the 9th
century, they picked one day and called it All Saints Day. This was to be
the day that would not only commemorate all Christian martyrs, but all Christians
who had died. With all of these changes, the understanding of what it was
to be a saint shifted to what many people perceive as the original
intention…the intention of the New Testament—to include all Christians who have
died and all Christians still
living.
When Paul used the word saint, he was almost always referring to those who were
alive. In his letter to the Ephesians he wrote, “I have heard of your
faith in the Lord Jesus and your love toward all the saints…” Even knowing
that---that saints includes the living and the dead, I have never completely
wrapped my head around the reason that the Episcopal Church specified this day
as a day when we should have baptisms.
There are 4
recommended days in the prayer book for baptisms. One is Easter, which makes sense. It’s a
celebratory day when we talk about new life and hope. Pentecost is another as it marks the day when
the Holy Spirit descended on the assembly and thousands of people were baptized
as a result. The other recommended day
is the day when we celebrate the baptism of Jesus, which seems like an
appropriate place to have a baptism. But
All Saint’s Day?
The challenge with
having baptisms on All Saint’s Day is not just the grief that comes with the recitation of the names
of those who have died in the last year, but also the biblical readings
themselves. The readings that we have on All Saint’s Day are the same readings
that are recommended for funerals. They are about death and grief, at least
that is what I associate them with. I recommend this reading from John when I
am officiating a funeral for someone who has died unexpectedly, because people
can often empathize with Mary’s frustration and anger and Jesus’ grief and
tears. I use this reading from Isaiah
that talks about the feast of rich food and wine when the person who has died
loved to cook or host gatherings. I
imagine them in heaven at this amazing banquet, finally being the recipient of
hospitality rather than the host.
While I associate
these readings with death and funerals, our funeral liturgy in the Episcopal
Church is about more than death and grief.
We try to emphasize with our readings, music and prayers, that we are
also celebrating the resurrection of Jesus and the resurrection of us all. Thus, it’s appropriate to have baptisms on
this day when we read the names of those we have lost over the last year. Because both baptisms and death are new
beginnings—in very different ways, but they are new beginnings.
This year, I am
just having a harder time with that idea.
I attended a funeral of a good friend a few weeks ago and I wanted to
embrace the message of resurrection and this beautiful life to come, but it was
hard. The final hymn was, “It is well
with my soul.” I struggled through singing that hymn, because it didn’t feel
well with my soul. My soul felt like it
was covered in that shroud that Isaiah describes so perfectly in the first
reading. Isaiah talks about a shroud
that is cast over all people. Isaiah
said that God will destroy that shroud and swallow up death forever. But Isaiah was predicting what was to come in
that time where there would be no death, when sin would be no more, when God
would wipe away the tears from our faces. That time has not yet come. People we love still die. We still live under
the shroud of death, and sin is all too present in our world.
In some ways,
having baptisms on All Saint’s Day is little act of rebellion, and we do love
our rebellions at Christ Church. When we
baptize our new saints, whether they be a small child like Rory or an adult who
teaches the children of our city like Leah, we aren’t pretending that sin and
death don’t exist. We are acknowledging their presence, but also protesting
them. We are saying, yes, death is still a reality in our world. Evil and
hatred are still present. In spite of all of that, maybe because of all that,
we are still bringing new saints into our communion of saints. Not only that,
we as a congregation are making a promise to support these new saints and be a
community of saints with them, not because we are all perfect, or even close to
perfect, but because we all know how much we need God in our lives.
The final line in
our reading from Isaiah is: “This is the Lord for whom we have waited; let us
be glad and rejoice in his salvation.” Let’s not wait until God comes again to
be glad and rejoice. Let’s claim every
moment we possibly can and rejoice in God’s love and salvation. Let’s do it
now.
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