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Summary: A sermon for All Saints Sunday, Year A

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November 5, 2023

Rev. Mary Erickson

Hope Lutheran Church

Revelation 7:9-17; Matthew 5:1-12

For All the Saints

Friends, may grace and peace be yours in abundance in the knowledge of God and Christ Jesus our Lord.

All Saints’ Sunday. There’s something very moving about this ceremony we observe every year. We call out the names of those from our Hope community who passed away during the previous year. And as we speak their names, we light a candle for each of them. With each name, the light grows. And then we all join in adding candles to the light stations in the chancel area. All of the candles collectively add into a greater light. Together they reflect the witness and legacy these departed saints have left behind them. The flames dance with life and vibrancy. Their energy suggests that something about these departed souls still moves and dances amongst us. They are gone, but their witness and their imprint lives on.

All Saints’ Day is something of a family reunion. We’ve all come together to celebrate the big family of all God’s children. And as we pose for the family portrait, we come holding the photos of those most dear to us, because they’re part of this reunion, too. They may not be with us in person, but they’re absolutely here in spirit.

All Saints’ Sunday is the day we remember and honor all the people who have shaped us into who we are. We recognize the effect they’ve had in making us into the people we are. Some of them are still walking this earth. Some have died – maybe only a few days ago, or centuries ago. In short, it’s the day we laud the communion of saints.

The communion of saints. This vast community comprises ALL the saints. It spans across time and space to include those of us currently living and those who have completed their lives, who now dwell face to face with God. They see now with the long vision of eternity. They see from God’s perspective; they hold all of time within the single span of now. They can see around time’s corner, too, to those saints who are yet to be named.

It's a vast family portrait. It bends around time and space to capture ALL the saints.

As the saints on EARTH, we see, as Paul said, through a mirror, dimly. Our perspective is short-sighted. We’re in the trenches, you and I. Our lives of faith are filled with troubled waters. We face hardship and uncertainty. We’re challenged by jealousy and anger, fear and just simple exhaustion. We’re beset by violence and calamity, despair and sorrow.

They cloud our vision, and they make the call to faithful living anything but crystal clear. We are in the throes of what St. John called in our reading from Revelation “the great ordeal.”

By contrast, the saints who have completed their life’s course now see from heaven’s perspective. They’ve come through the great ordeal, and now they’re part of the great cloud of witnesses, cheering us onward.

Our gospel reading for today is the cherished passage of Jesus’ Beatitudes. Jesus’ disciples are seated before him. He teaches them with the wisdom of heaven. He describes who are the blessed. But his blessed ones don’t sound so blessed to us!

“Blessed are the poor in spirit.

“Blessed are those who mourn.

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness.

“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake.”

These are not deemed blessings by human standards! And yet, Jesus declares these situations as blessed. They are blessings which are hard for us to see from the trenches of worldly struggle. But nevertheless, blessing is there. Jesus is declaring a word of encouragement to those of us saints in the trenches.

It’s a great consolation to know that, in all the stations of our life – both good and evil – we are under the canopy of divine blessing. Jesus’ pronouncement of blessing bestows encouragement into our confusion and struggle. Even in the seasons of our harshest trials, there is still a blessing. The light of blessing cannot be extinguished. It shines through the night of our sorrow.

When we look at these beatitudes, we see that they describe Jesus’ own life. He was the bearer of mercy, he was pure in heart. He mourned with the grieving, he was humble and poor in spirit. People reviled and cursed him. And in the end, he was crucified for righteousness’ sake. In his living and his dying, Jesus embodied all of the stations described in his beatitudes.

But his trials became the very means to bestow the greatest of blessings. For we have received his mercy, we have been called children of God, and the kingdom of heaven is ours.

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