Safehaven Worship Service
14 September 2003
Doing a New Thing - Psalm 27
By Rev. Yap Kim Hao

After the election of Bishop Gene Robinson was
confirmed by the Convention of the Episcopal Church in the United
States last month he was interviewed by the media. Among the various
responses he said this:
"And I think that's because God is doing
a new thing. God has taught us about people of color, God has
taught us about women, and now God is teaching us about gays and
lesbians as being God's children."
"It's not so much a dream as a calling from
God," In spite of the sharp criticisms and false accusations
leveled against him, he sensed it was a divine call that he could
neither evade nor withdraw. It was not really a personal challenge
to his conservative church or a fight for gay liberation although
it had a significant impact upon them. For true to his calling he
wanted primarily to be known as kind and compassionate person. He
reflected: " I think I can do more for gay and lesbian folk
in the Church by being a good bishop than by being the gay bishop."
A remarkable person who has won the hearts and
minds of the Episcopalians/Anglicans in his diocese in New Hampshire
had also won the votes of 60% of the clergy and lay persons in the
national Convention. He has become somewhat iconic - the new thing
that God has done. God some years ago ordained the first woman clergy
person from Hong Kong in the Anglican Church. In reality God has
ordained a number of gays all these years in the "don't ask,
don't tell" approach. However, Bishop Robinson is the first
openly avowed homosexual to be consecrated bishop in the history
of the world-wide Anglican Communion. Along the way the sacred cows
of divorce, and cohabitation were also toppled. What God has done
in Bishop Robinson has tremendous impact upon not only the Church
but also upon other denominations and religions and
the secular world.
I am of the conviction that God who makes all
things new has done this new thing at this appropriate time. As
Bishop Spong has put it succinctly "It is clearly an idea whose
time has come" and I must add even in Singapore and it is unstoppable.
Even in this secular society of Singapore the
time has come quite unexpectedly. I for one did not expect our Prime
Minister to say what he did in his interview with Time magazine
and I quote from the article: "Prime Minister Goh says his
government allows gay employees into its ranks, even in sensitive
positions. The change in policy, inspired at least in part by the
desire not to exclude talented foreigners who are gay, is being
implemented without fanfare, Goh says, to avoid raising the hackles
of more conservative Singaporeans. So let it evolve, in time the
population will understand that some people are born that way, Goh
says. We are born this way and they are born that way, but they
are like you and me."
Not in my wildest dreams nor even in my optimistic
moments could I imagine the Prime Minister of Singapore - a highly
regulated country widely known to be restrictive in personal freedom
and the society and church which are admittedly conservative in
attitude - institute such an enlightened policy. Yes, God is doing
a new thing in a secular society and in the church here in Singapore.
God is doing this new thing not exclusively through Christians but
people of other faiths and even those who do not claim any faith.
The point I want to emphasize here is that God
is at work. God is at work still. But the traditional image of God
is that God is the Creator of the universe has finished the work
and now sits back and allow it to run its course. Occasionally God
may intervene and come to earth to respond to the prayer requests
of the faithful and help them. Another traditional view is that
God is all-powerful and God alone is doing everything and even allow
evil and suffering of the people for a purpose that we cannot fully
comprehend.. There is yet another traditional concept of God who
is related to all that is good is engaged in spiritual warfare now
with Satan who is the cause of all that is evil in this world. Our
understanding of the nature of God determines how we view the world
and God's relationship to it. On the occasion when Jesus healed
the paralyzed man at the pool of Bethsaida on the Sabbath, he was
criticized by the Jews for breaking the Sabbath law through this
act of healing. It was recorded in the Gospel of John that Jesus
answered them: "My Father is working still and I am working."
Yes, we want to affirm that God to whom we worship
is God who is at work throughout his created world and beyond and
it is still working among us. Because God is working we like Jesus
must be working too. In obedience we are called to work as if everything
depends upon us and pray as if everything depends upon God. God
continues to work out God's purposes for creation in us, around
us, through us and in spite of us. In the struggles in life we cannot
just say that we lay our burdens on the feet of God and let God
take over. In our prayers we cannot just tell God to do what we
wish for and then just wait for it to happen. At all times and in
all situations we have to make ourselves available to work with
God in doing the new thing.
Today I come here to celebrate what God has done
through Bishop Robinson and Prime Minister Goh. We thank God. In
doing so we are aware of more new things that need to be done in
the days ahead. In the first Press Conference that Bishop Robinson
gave soon after he was confirmed in his Episcopal election at the
Convention he recited in its entirely Psalm 27. It was signally
relevant at that moment of time. He intentionally revealed his gentle
forgiving spirit and his strong faith which endeared him to the
people he served in his parish. He expressed his faith with the
opening words "The Lord is my light and my salvation, whom
shall I fear?" We need no longer fear but have courage. He
committed himself to the work ahead. "One thing have I asked
of the Lord, that will I seek after; that I may dwell in the house
of the Lord all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of the
Lord, and to inquire in his temple." Being in the Lord's house,
beholding and worshipping the Lord, and inquiring about the Lord's
ways is what we should seek to to do too. He then confessed his
hope that "he shall see the goodness of the Lord in the land
of the living." We live in hope that God's rule will come on
earth as it is heaven.
We know with a certainty that many more new things
need to be done. We still have a long way to go and in the words
of the New England poet Robert Frost "Stopping by Woods on
a Snowy morning." "The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep, An miles to go before I sleep, And
miles to go before I sleep." Around us there is still so much
hatred, so much violence, so much injustices. You and I have promises
to God to keep and a long ways to go before we sleep.
You are more aware than I am and continue to be
a victim of the stance of the institutional Church and the views
of a conservative community. It is not only in the area of human
sexuality but in the sphere of human community. People face many
problems in these uncertain times in society. You and I have lots
of work to do and we must participate and witness to the new thing
that God is doing continuously.
I came across a sermon that Bishop Robinson preached
that resonates with me. He was sharing the familiar story of the
healing of the man lame from birth at the gate of the Temple named
Beautiful. This cripple knew his condition. In the eyes of the purity
laws of his strict Jewish society he was regarded as unclean. The
religious powers had determined his place in society. The same Levitical
laws which were so severe to the males who had sex with one another
has this to say to physically handicapped people like me.
Leviticus 21:14-20 "For no one who has a
blemish may approach to offer the bread to God. For no one who has
a blemish shall draw near, a man blind or lame or one who has a
mutilated place or a limb too long, or a man who has an injured
foot or an injured hand, or a hunchback, or a dwarf, or a man with
a defect in his sight or an itching disease or scales or crushed
testicles."
It was this issue that those who challenged my
Episcopal election raised in 1968. I do not qualify because I am
physically handicapped. God did a new thing for me then.
Yes all such physically challenged or differently
abled people were relegated to stay at the gate of the Temple and
not allowed to venture in to worship God. The cripple had resigned
himself to a life of begging for alms. He was told to regard himself
as a sinner unworthy to be in the presence of God. Since he was
born lame it was the price that he had to pay for the sins of his
father and forefathers. The generational sins have filtered down
to him. He was looked upon as a sinner.
Along came Peter and John who gave him not silver
and gold which they had none but healing and liberation. He was
able to walk again and no longer carried the stigma of being unclean
or imperfect. He was set free from what has closeted and chained
him all these years. His rightful place was not outside the Temple
but inside. He no longer had to beg for alms outside at the gate
but could offer bread to worship God inside the Temple. No wonder
he leapt and danced and celebrated in the presence of God. This
man who was pushed to the periphery of religious life bounced back
to the very center of religious activity. He saw himself accepted
as a child of God.
In the words of Bishop Robinson to his community:
"You and I have been that lame beggar, believing what the Church
told us: that our infirmity made us unacceptable to God; that we
were responsible for our own shame; and that we dared not come any
closer than the gate of the Temple. And then, for you and me and
other gay Christians, someone comes along and touches us in the
Name of Jesus, and we are no longer crippled, no longer victims
of our own oppression, no longer estranged from the God who made
us. And so we come here today - Inside the "temple" -
to shout and leap and dance and praise the God who has saved us
and made us whole. And though we too are warned to stop our shouting
and to go back to our place outside the gates, like Peter and like
the lame man, how can we NOT tell the story of our own salvation
at the hands of a loving God?!"
He goes on to add: "You and I need to tell
the story of our salvation in Christ in such a way that they can
recognize Christ.
Talk about how God has come into your life
and touched you and healed you and loved you so much it makes you
want to leap and dance. Only then will their hearts be warmed. Only
then will Jesus have a chance to heal their infirmity."
It is not only the mere telling our stories of
our personal relationship to God and how God accepts and affirms
each one of us. There are other stories that require telling and
those are the stories of the actual living out of our transformed
lives. We bear witness to God through our lives. It is not what
we say but who we are that makes a more telling story.
Bishop Robinson is right on target when he wants more to be known
as a good bishop. He wants to tell new stories of how kind and compassionate
he is in his work in his church and his involvement in society.
God is doing the new thing in him and when people see the work of
the good bishop they see God working in the world. The healed cripple
went inside the Temple to praise God. Scripture has not recorded
how he returned to the world and the way he praised God through
his life. Each one of us has to tell this new story and to do the
new thing. By what we do we are showing to the world also what God
is doing around us.
Allow me to share a personal note. I am always
reluctant to do it and this occasion calls me to do something new.
As I reflect upon my life and what God has done to me I can point
to some formative influences. God helped me to deal with my injury
when I was beaten up for no reason by a Japanese military police
who was drunk. Then came the death of my father when I was at the
age of fifteen. These sad events occurred towards the end of World
War II. I had missed almost four years of schooling and resumed
at the secondary school level. At that tender age I was forced to
contemplate about my own future under very strained and difficult
circumstances. My Christian friends brought me to church and I was
fortunate to be under the theological guidance of missionaries who
were not conservative in theology and instead possess a social passion
of helping the needy. The Methodist college and seminary education
in the United States provided me with the sound theological base
for my ministry especially to those who are poor and marginalized.
I say this to you to highlight that is absolutely essential as you
inquire of the Lord that you get a good understanding of the nature
of God and how God relates to people and creation. Let me be candid
in saying that the prevailing theological climate in Singapore is
such that it cannot liberate itself from its narrow conservative
orientation. There is the tunnel vision in seeing Scripture narrowly.
Most of the church leaders are threatened by change and want to
remain and continue to subscribe to the theology of the 19th century
in the 21st century. That is why we have the official conservative
and traditional views of the institutional churches on a number
of social and political issues.
This stance is also seen in a report from the
Gay and Lesbian Christian Movement in Britan which is the largest
and most influential one and where Bishop Robinson is going to speak
at its annual conference next month. The report indicated that:
The great number of major denominations in Britain,
as in most other Western countries, have made policy statements
regarding homosexuality which, if are not outrightly hostile, display
an ambiguity which allows a grudging toleration of gay orientation
if not gay relationships. This means that, for the most part, lesbian
and gay Christians can be said to be particularly disadvantaged
in that they are subject to discrimination in both wider society
and ecclesiastical structures
Theologically speaking, gay Christians are largely
liberal in orientation. Most have embraced a "higher criticism"
of scripture. Internally, the movement embraces an eloquent theology
- forming a developing ideology which itself constitutes an important
"resource." It is one which largely focuses on Christ's
teachings of love
Homosexuality is regarded as part of the
divine plan of creation; that homosexual people are present as a
sign of the rich diversity of God's work, and that the expression
of homosexuality is as natural and good in every way as heterosexuality.
United Methodist Bishop Jack Tuell who was my
seminary classmate in his search for theological truth depended
not only on the word of Scripture alone but following what is called
the Wesleyan quadrilateral: Scripture, Tradition, Reason and Experience
came to the same conclusion when he preached:
The new thing that God is doing in our midst
right now is to show us that homosexuality is not simply an act
or acts of willful disobedience to God's law and commandments,
but it is a state of being. It is an identity that God has given
to some of His children. It is who they are. I hope that in days
to come I may be able to explore with you in the development of
such a theology that will provide an adequate resource and equip
us to follow Christ's teachings of love of neighbour and of self.
Such theological understanding will undergird our lives as we
each in our own way seek to be faithful and allow God to do the
new thing in us, with us and through us.
O God, take our lips and speak through them;
take our minds and think with them; take our hearts and love through
them. Set our lives to work with you and for you in the fulfilling
of the purposes which you have created us to live in this created
world of yours. In Christ's name we pray. AMEN.
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