Feast of St. Nicholas

Feast of St. Nicholas

st. nicolas 1 copy 2.jpeg

St. Mark’s 12 step Eucharist, December 4, 2019

If you have been at this 12 step Eucharist previously on the first Wednesday in December, you have heard a homily about St. Nikolas. I apologize right now because you are going to hear about him now for the third time. I am powerless when it comes to St. Nikolas. He has just been too important figure in my life. You might say that in December, I replaced my addiction to alcohol for an addiction for St. Nikolas.

Very little is known of the life of Nicholas, bishop of Myra who lived in Asia Minor around 342. He is the patron of seafarers, sailors and more especially of children. As a bearer of gifts to children, his name was brought to America by the Dutch colonists in New York where he popularly became known as Santa Claus.

The feast day of St. Nicholas has been celebrated in our family as a major holiday. We have a big family meal together. My husband dresses up as Bishop Nicholas with a beard, a miter, and crozier and long red stole and comes to visit our grandchildren after dinner. He speaks Greek to the children and the adults. Speaking Greek is my husband’s favorite pastime, and of course you know that Nikolas was Greek. Nike the Greek! Then our grandchildren go into the bedrooms and leave their shoes outside the doors and Bishop Nicholas leaves chocolate coins and presents in their shoes. I won’t bore you with our pictures of this family event, but they are stunning.

Why am I sharing with you our family story? For the last several years on this feast day, I sit and watch this pageant and am filled with so much gratitude, for my sobriety date is close to the feast day of St. Nicholas. Each year I know that if someone had not led me to a recovery program, I would not be alive tonight. I would not be witnessing this wonderful blessing of seeing my children and grandchildren giggle with glee as they try to respond to a beautiful old man with a fake beard speaking Greek to them and secretly giving them candy in their shoes. For me it is a yearly reminder to keep working these 12 steps so I can be around for another feast day of St. Nicholas.

This is just a suggestion. Look at the calendar of saints. Find one close to your sobriety date. Learn about that saint. Observe that saint’s day in your home, in your life. You may just consider that saint as your patron saint. This is just one more way to remember how your life has been transformed by your sobriety. Spend that saint’s day giving thanks for those before you who loved you before you were born with a love that only comes from the love of the God of our understanding.

Joanna joannaseibert.com


Advent Remembrance St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Mystics

Advent Luncheon St. Mark’s December 7, 2019

Past Advent Gatherings of St. Mark's Women."

Thank you so much for inviting me to be a part of your Advent program. I first spoke at this amazing Advent gathering of St. Mark’s women probably around 40 years ago when we met at night in homes. How exciting that we are now too large a group for most homes. I don’t remember what I talked about, but I do remember one thing about it. As I was holding my plate in line to get dinner, Margarite Metcalf, whom a few will remember, pulled me aside and quietly whispered with a bright twinkle in our eyes, “I didn’t know you were a mystic.” I thanked her. I had no idea what she meant, but I knew that I had been anointed a mystic that night by one who was.

So, 40 years later I would like to pass that torch on to each of you from Mrs. Metcalf for this Advent season and anoint each of you a mystic just for Advent. If you like the anointing, see if you would like to try it on for Christmas and Epiphany and Lent and Easter and Pentecost and then Advent again next year.

First let’s describe who you now are. A mystic is someone who can see and carry mystery. For Christians that means we can see the mystery of God’s presence above us, in our neighbor, around us and within us. For Advent, we mystics are waiting, looking for the Christ child within the world, within us and around us. We are looking for the Christ in ourselves and the Christ in our neighbor. We are seeking that connection within us from which we came.//

About that same time as my encounter with Mrs. Metcalf, another St. Mark parishioner, Dean McMillin, whom some of you may know, told me a story about the mystery of finding Christ that has become a part of my being. The story goes that God wanted God’s love to be more related to the world God had made. AS God is thinking about this, God looks into a very very large mirror. Suddenly God decides to break the mirror with God’s reflection within it into millions and billions of very tiny pieces that then fall to earth and became a part of each being in the world. Part of this tiny piece of God within each of us is that yearning that is constantly calling us to a relationship with the God of love. It is God’s own GPS embedded in each of us. Our spiritual journey: following spiritual practices such as prayer, silence, the Anglican rosary, centering prayer, fasting, journaling, gathering in community, worshipping, reading scripture and other spiritual sources is what we are doing to make and keep that connection. When we each do find that relationship, that piece of God within us, we are sooo excited. I have found God!! We have found God!!!

That, however, is where many people stop and get stuck on this spiritual journey. They believe that this very tiny piece of God that they have found within themselves is the ONLY image or likeness or portrait of God. They cannot relate to any other idea or picture of God that anyone else might have. Theirs is the only understanding of God. But we mystics know that the great mystery of God is much bigger than any one person’s relationship with God. Our job as mystics on this spiritual journey is to try to connect our piece of God to the many other pieces of God that each person in our community, each person in our world now also has embedded within them. Each of us has been given a small image, a small understanding of God. As we listen to others, we learn to connect our piece of the mirror of the image of God with the piece of God in our neighbor. Consequently, our God becomes much larger and larger as we make more connections. Sometimes we talk to people as they describe their understanding of God, their piece of God, and we think, “This cannot possibly be God.” Sometimes this especially happens when we are talking with our children. However, as we continue to connect our piece of the mirror of God to the relationship others have with the God of their understanding, we start to connect now to that piece from our children or our neighbor whose understanding is distant from ours. Eventually we learn to see God in that neighbor or child which we could not see before. Our image of God keeps growing and becoming larger and larger. //

You are especially looking this Advent for the Christ in yourself. For this Advent, also keep looking for the Christ in your neighbor. Often as you see Christ in your neighbor, that piece of God in your neighbor reflects back to you the Christ within you./ After all it is a piece of a mirror!//

I promise you that as you continue to make connections, your understanding and your relationship with God will keep growing. It is a mystery, just as mysterious as the birth of Jesus. But this is the path of a mystic, searching for the presence of God in ourselves and in the world. I welcome you to walk this mystical journey of mystery with me and so many others this Advent. Joanna. Joannaseibert.com


27C, Luke 20:27-38, 12 Step Eucharist November 6, 2019, St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Little Rock, 5:30pm

12 Step Eucharist St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, Little Rock, November 6, 2019, 5:30, Luke 20:27-38, 27 C

Our gospel passage is about resurrection, new life after death, being “children of God, children of the resurrection.” John Sanford told us that the kingdom of God or what some might consider heaven is not only in the afterlife but also present in this life around and especially within us.1 So many of the Psalms remind us that heaven is here on this earthly home if we only have eyes to see and ears to hear and hands to care for it.

Bishop Jake Owensby and the writings of Marcus Borg remind us that the “Christian life follows the pattern of resurrection: dying and rise.”2 Resurrection to a new life occurs in this life as well as at our physical death. Those in a 12-step group should know more about resurrection than many other people. In our addiction we are living a life of death, death to the person God created us to be, but also a living death for those around us. Our addiction becomes the God of our understanding. Everything begins to center around that addiction to the exclusion of others. If we are traveling, we must make sure we carry plenty of hidden alcohol with us just in case we cannot find enough at our destination. The same is true for food, drugs, and even work. Our homes are filled with secret storage places for our drug or alcohol or food of choice. We drink or use to celebrate, and we drink or use when things are not going well.

Recovery is resurrection to a new life, a new life where we gradually can hear and see heaven on this earth, within us, and within others, without the use of mind-altering substances. As we not only recite these same 12 steps we say tonight and actually work them and put them into practice, we discover a new God of our understanding, always a God of love. We learn from this God about surrender, forgiveness, and gratitude. We learn about love for our neighbor and love for the person God created us to be. Our addictive substance is no longer the love of our life.

At our physical death, the only thing we will leave on this earth is that love, the love we give to the earth itself, the love we give to everyone we encounter each day, the love we give to our family and friends. The only thing we carry with us into the final resurrection to be more connected to the God of love is also that same love we shared on this earth. The love we have learned about and shared in our resurrections in this life is the only thing that will never die. Love lives in this life and is alive in the life to come. It is a great mystery that we and the Sadducees must keep learning about it and practicing it through these 12 steps each day, one day at a time.

Joanna. Joannaseibert.com

1 John Sanford in The Kingdom Within

2 Jake Owensby in A Resurrection Shaped Life (Abingdon Press) XIV.


24C Jacob Wrestling Genesis 32:3-8,22-30, St Mark's Episcopal Church, October 20, 2019

24C Jacob Wrestling

Genesis 32:3-8, 22-30.

St. Mark’s, October 20, 2019

In the name of our God, who wrestles with us and blesses us. Amen.

Just before my father’s birthday the day before Halloween,, I would always ask him, “What would you like for your birthday?” Every year he gave the same answer, “Peace and quiet.” /I learned at an early age the importance of the basic human need/ to control the chaos around us. We pray that God will bring order to our lives, restore the status quo, let us feel safe and comfortable again. That is how we know God is present and has blessed us, when all is peace and quiet. When our heart stops pounding and we can breathe normally again. We know God’s presence when we no longer are afraid,/// like that sigh of relief we experience when our teenaged children drive the family car late on Saturday night safely back into the driveway. /This viewpoint of knowing God’s presence is appealing, but unfortunately the Bible does not always support this perspective of our relationship with God. Many of God’s greatest blessings take place in total chaos, with people scared out of their wits:/ Mary, listening to an angel’s ambitious plans to plunge her into scandal; Paul, lying on the Damascus Road with his life’s mission wiped out in the dust./ Since we know the ending to these stories, we may forget the wrestling, the sheer terror, the collapse of the known world that accompanied these blessings.///

It has been twenty years since young Jacob ran away from home fleeing Esau’s vow to kill him after he steals his twin brother’s blessing from their father, blind Isaac, with his mother, Rebecca, as an accomplice. Soon afterwards in the wilderness north of Beersheba, our imposter dreams his famous vision of the holy parade between heaven and earth. Jacob names the place Bethel, and our King of Deals cannot resist cutting another one. Speaking to no one in particular, but loud enough for anyone at the top of the ladder to hear, he shouts, “If God will be with me,/ and will keep me in this way that I go,/ and will give me bread to eat and clothing to wear,/ so that I come again to my father’s house in peace,/ then /the Lord shall be my God.”/ We are so like Jacob, praying the Bethel prayer, listing the conditions for us to be in relationship with God./ We see God like the wizard in The Wizard of Oz, answering the petitions of his subjects. But our God and the God of Jacob is not in the business of granting wishes. Our God is in the business of resurrection, of raising the dead, giving people new life./ Have you ever witnessed someone coming to a second life? It is a blessed, painful process. An alcoholic who has lost almost everything has a moment of clarity, seeks help and after many stops and starts, gradually becomes one of the most amazing women helping others in her community./// Doctors’ I Phones cry out “code blue.” You are having a cardiac arrest. Your lips are purple; there is a terrible pounding on your chest. The smell of fear is in the air. Finally, you feel the choked return of your breath, like a drowning person rising up for air./ For many this wrestling with death becomes a life changing event. There are people in our congregation who can validate these stories.// We would rather make this return to a new life like sleeping beauty by candlelight with the smell of tea roses and the cello in background, a soft kiss on the lips and gentle rubbing of our hands and feet until feeling returns. But this is not the way that new life comes. The birth of a baby constantly reminds us that new life is a blessed, painful process, often filled with chaos./

There is nothing wrong with letting God know what we want, but we must not mistake our list for God’s covenant./ God’s covenant is unconditional, not a deal. It is God’s promise to be our God not by consent, but because of love. It is a relationship. Our only choice is whether to believe it; but we are never in charge of the relationship. If we choose to believe in this relationship, we must give up our illusion of control. /

Jacob has been the poster child for the struggle to control. He poaches his brother’s birthright, flees with the stolen goods, picks up a dream along the way, and arrives in Haran, where he meets his deal-making match in Uncle Laban. He also meets the love of his life, cousin Rachel, and serves fourteen year’s hard labor for her hand. /The struggles of domestic life become life changing for Jacob; there is nothing like two wives, two mistresses, and eleven children to extinguish the illusion of control. Jacob changes, but cannot imagine that after over twenty years that Esau has. He fears that the brother he twice robbed will still want to kill him. In a last-minute effort to repay this debt, he sends hundreds of animals ahead of him, moves his family to another camp, and waits alone across the river./ In the darkness he meets what appears to be a new adversary, a muscular angel. They cannot see each other in the moonless night. They fight by feel until the rosy light of early dawn. Just as Jacob seems in control, the “angelic” stranger drops all his weight on Jacob’s leg, and “pops” Jacob’s hip out of joint. But Jacob will not let loose of the angel. He is in extreme pain and crippled but smells the scent of heaven. Then Jacob does what Jacob does best; he makes a deal. “I will not let you go,” he says, “unless you bless me.” Locked in each other’s arms, the angel asks, “What is your name?”/ If we really listen, we can hear the echo of the same question, another time when someone else who barely sees Jacob asks his identity. “I am Esau,” he said that previous time. “Jacob,” he answers this time, and the name falls away from him like a snake losing its old skin. He is no longer Jacob, the supplanter. He is Israel, the survivor, the one who strives, who struggles with God. Jacob limps to his reunion with Esau, in whom he sees the face of God for the second time in one day. His exile is over. He is home.///

Let us fast forward to several years and imagine that we are sitting around the campfire with old Jacob and his grandchildren and ask him the question we all want to know. “Why didn’t you let go of the angel when you had your chance?”/

Old Jacob’s eyes brighten as he whispers, “Because that was the most alive I ever felt. I have never seen anything like the light in that face and I could not let go.”

“But Jacob,” we ask, “what about the limp and the hurt leg you have for the rest of your life?”

“Oh my, it indeed hurts, but it goes with the blessing. They are a matched pair. Every time I lean to the right and feel that shooting pain in my thigh, I remember my new name, Israel, the one who strives, who struggles with God.”/

It is the answer to Jacob’s Bethel prayer, not the comfort and safety part, but the “God be with me” part. It is the end of making deals with God, the last act in his struggle for control. /

Of course, this is all a Bible story until we, ourselves, have some new life-changing event like a stranger with the faint scent of heaven on our back wrestling us for all it is worth. When it happens, do not let anyone tell you there is something wrong. Do not let anyone convince you that if it were really God it would not be scary and it certainly would not hurt. Hang on with every part of your mind, body, and spirit, even if it hurts. Insist on a blessing to go with your wound/ and do not let go until you have one. Then, thank God for your new life, LIMP AND ALL, and leaning on your cane slowly make your way home.”

Barbara Brown Taylor, “Striving With God,” in Gospel Medicine,(Cowley Publications 1995) p. 107-114.


St. Francis 12 step Eucharist

FRANCIS OF ASSISI (4 OCT 1226)

St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, Little Rock, Arkansas,12 step Eucharist, 5:30 pm Oct 2, 2019.

On October 4th we will celebrate the Feast Day of St. Francis of Assisi. Francis was born in 1182, the son of a wealthy cloth merchant. His early years were frivolous. He joined the military and was captured early in the Assisi-Pe/rug/ia war. A year’s harsh imprisonment and a lengthy illness, probably malaria, at age 19 lead him to reflect on the purpose of life. Like many people starting 12 step-recovery, he became “sick and tired of being sick and tired” and prayed that he could be guided and helped from returning to his old life. One day, in the church of San Da/mi/ano while looking at its now famous cross, he seemed to hear Christ saying to him, "Francis, repair my falling house." He took the words literally sold a bale of silk from his father's warehouse to pay for repairs to the church of San Da/mi/ano. His father was outraged, and there was a public confrontation at which his father disinherited and disowned him, and Francis in turn renounced his father's wealth. A favorite account says that he not only handed his father his purse, but also took off his expensive clothes, laid them at his father's feet, and walked away naked.

Later after hearing a sermon about Jesus’ command to go out and proclaim the kingdom taking no money or walking stick or shoes, (Matthew 10:9) Francis realized that God was not calling him to rebuild the building of his church but the people of his church, especially the poor, and the rest of his life was spent doing that.

Like people in 12 step-recovery, Francis made a dramatic change in the direction of his life and turned his life over to his higher power. There are so many stories for us to study about Francis, his life of absolute poverty, his love of the Eucharist, love of animals and his love and connection to God in creation and Nature. A now famous quote about the well know saint1 is that “Francis of all the saints, is the most popular and admired, but probably the least imitated!”

To honor St. Francis, our clergy will be here Sunday at 4:00 to bless all and any of your animals.

Tonight, let us concentrate on the prayer that is attributed to him. It is in our Book of Common Prayer on page 833, but there is a copy in your seat. This is a prayer asking God, our Higher Power to change us just as God did for Francis. It could be considered a third step prayer. Let us read it together.

PRAYER OF ST. FRANCIS

Lord, make me an instrument of Your peace.

Where there is hatred, let me sow love;

where there is injury, pardon;

where there is doubt, faith;

where there is despair, hope;

where there is darkness, light;

and where there is sadness, joy.

O, Divine Master,

grant that I may not so much seek

to be consoled as to console;

to be understood as to understand;

to be loved as to love;

for it is in giving that we receive;

it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;

and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life. BCP 833

1Lesser Feasts and Fasts, 2006, p. 404.

Joanna Seibert joannaseibert.com