Saturday, May 23, 2020

Ben Camino's Baccalaureate, Part Two





Ben Camino's Baccalaureate, Part Two   

        [You really ought to listen to Part One first; if you have, then go ahead and start the soundfile and read along or not as you wish]

         Be that as it may, I have tried my best (and that’s all Ben Camino ever wants to do) to sum up Paul’s final words of application to his original audience and my final words to you (are you my audience?) in three pithy and, I hope, profound statements. One warning. One conundrum. And one imperative. First, beware of dogs! Second, the past is rubbish (sorry history department)! Third, a popular graduation speech sentiment, with perhaps a more sacred meaning than usual, press on.
            Beware of dogs. The past is rubbish. Press on.
            No, “beware of dogs” does not indicate that Paul was tracked down by the Roman guards using a team of trained hounds. A close look at the passage makes clear that Paul is talking about legalism and pride, especially pride about legalism. Beware, he says, of those who insist on the Jewish practice of circumcision in order to be considered a true Christian; and beware, especially of those who boast about it. 
        If any person ever had reason to boast about legalistic righteousness, Paul declares, it was I. Once upon a time, I considered myself a good Jew, a good Pharisee, a zealous opponent of false religions (Christianity, in fact), and just an all-around holy guy. Beware, he says, of that kind of thinking. Such externals may not, ultimately, have a lot to do with our relationship with God. If what you learned at university was that meeting your deadlines, getting to chapel regularly, adhering to a specific code of behavior (even a very fine one), participating in mission trips ever year, and feeling really good about yourself because of all that, you weren’t paying attention. 
          Not your righteousness, not your GPA, not your Student Leader Award gets your any credit where it counts. Paul understood that dependence on and thankfulness for the Giver of every good gift, not pride in those gifts, is what counts in human life. Sometimes we might even need some time out of the spotlight (in prison for example) to remind us of that. Don’t neglect this truth. Beware of dogs.
            And remember the second truth, which grows out of it – the past is rubbish. It was a misguided but rich American who boldly but wrongly proclaimed “history is bunk.” But this is not at all what Saint Paul or yours truly has in mind at all. I mean, history was one of my seven majors in college before I settled on a full-time career in as an ironist. From the light or dark of his prison cell, Paul realizes that all those past achievements, all those things he had once trusted in, count for nothing compared with the present opportunity to grow into a deeper, fuller, better version of himself.
            In his characteristic style, never one to pull any rhetorical punches, Paul says he has, for Christ, “suffered the loss of all things, and I regard them as rubbish.” Yes, I had the right national identity, yes I had the right religious credentials, yes I had the right educational experiences, yes, at least according to my culture, I did all the right things. But none of that matters now. Not ultimately anyway. I am in prison. No one here is very interested in my resume. But I can know God here. I can fellowship in his sufferings here. I can know a foretaste of heaven right here. So I might as well throw all that other stuff on the to-be-incinerated pile, because that is exactly what is going to happen to it eventually. Big fire. Lots of resumes. Lots of ashes.
            But seriously. Does Paul want us to throw everything on the trash pile? All our senior papers? Our framed volunteer tutor certificates? Our all-conference trophies? Is he suggesting we throw away everything in search of some deep, mystical spiritual experience.  No,I don’t think so. From the looks of things, Paul did not get rid of his knowledge of language, writing, or rhetoric. Or the literature of the Old Testament. He didn’t throw away his writing utensils. So at least remember what you learned in your English courses.  
          More seriously, some of the things we carry with us are the very expressions of our relationship with Christ and, in him, with his world. In fact, Paul charges us to “hold fast to what we have attained.” You can’t hold fast to something at the same time as you throw it away. Hold on to some things, definitely. But maybe throw away some others. What Paul does is encourage the Philippians and us to take this time to reflect upon our pasts, to evaluate as he did in prision, and as Bonhoeffer did twenty centuries later, what we have learned and what we have become. 
          Part of that reflection will result in a rejection. Some of you perhaps have experienced that this spring. Part of that reflection will lead us to reorient ourselves towards the future. To remind ourselves again of where we are heading and how we should be traveling. To think again of our traveling companion John (not Paul) Bunyan, sometimes we simply need a night in prison, especially if it’s in the city of Vanity Fair, to help remind us of our highest priorities and our ultimate goals.
            Finally, always a fraught word with Ben Camino, but this time I do really mean finally, Paul challenges us to press on. He is not there yet, but he is headed in the right direction. We might join the mockers for a moment and ask, “Excuse me Paul, but isn’t this prison time a slight detour?” No. It is, as Bonhoeffer humorously referred to his imprisonment, “an unexpected sabbatical.” Most important, we should note that Paul refuses to make the same mistake he made back in his earlier legalistic days: “Not that I have already obtained this or have already reached the goal, but I press on.”
            Press on. As I have already suggested, this is where my speech (is that what it is?) starts sounding rather like a stereotypical graduation speech. I own that. But truthfully, if all it means is “get up and get going” as is sometimes popularly thought, you don’t need to hear it. You’re already moving. Or, at least, you are definitely ready to get moving after the last few months.
            But pressing on is not just moving on. And it’s not just moving aimlessly about. It’s moving in a certain direction with a certain attitude for a certain purpose. That direction, the usual interpretation goes, is heaven: “I press on toward the goal for the prize of the heavenly call.” But the Greek work translated here as “heavenly” should be translated “upward.” Given the entire context, I am sure Paul wants us to keep the goal of heaven before us in our times of imprisonment, persecution, isolation, and the like. But equally important is the theme of maturity, which is threaded throughout the letter.
            The upward call is the call to move up not just move. And it is the call to move up not just to heaven but to a new level of maturity (the stations of the cross, the stages of growth, I mentioned several hours ago). This mature outlook forgets (relatively speaking of course) the mistakes and  failures (and even the successes) of the past and looks forward to the continual improvement of the good work which God has begun. So, press on in success and failure. Press on in hope and in sorrow. Press on despite our circumstances, seeking to bring all of your life into fellowship with the one who came a downward path to find you and life you up to be with him. Pressing on may mean sharing that path with him.
            As the popular bumper stickers say, “Prisons happen.” No, wait, it was . . . sheesh, what was it? “Pandemics happen.” They do, they have, they will. We still celebrate today. Heck yes we do. We still rejoice today. We still kiss somebody today, just make you’ve been at least introduced. But, it is a little sad (I’m not saying I’m sorry) because all these celebrations are more than a little subdued, more than a little constricted compared to what we think we ought to have. And I will give you this. I wish we had that. I do love a good celebration. And I do wish you had the biggest, baddest graduation and graduation party every seen on the face of the planet.
            Still, for those who are still with me (quit thinking about that kiss), days come when life looks like a jail and, to tell the truth, God looks like a jailer. We probably all knew that in our heads a little bit. More of us now know it in our bones and in our guts. And we find ourselves trying to figure it out. That’s a good thing.
            I hope that Paul’s letter from a Roman jail will help you today and in those days ahead. Let’s speak the truth. Let’s not be ignorant. Great grandpa wouldn’t like that. Some days you just have to step it up, march somewhere you’d rather not go, and say goodbye to some things you aren’t ready to say goodbye to. But that’s not the whole story. Not at all. Remember the lessons Paul learned from his prison experience, remember the lessons you have learned/are learning from your strange spring semester of 2020. Remember Ben Camino’s dad with shrapnel in his leg and a bullet in his butt who said loudly to anyone who had ears to hear, “I’m one of the lucky ones.” And he knew it. And he didn’t forget it.
            If anything you ever sang in chapel, read about in Biblical Literature, told others about in a Daytona Beach spring break “mission trip” is true, it will be true in the dark, difficult isolation. If the coming of Jesus Christ into this world means anything, it means that there are some problems that are only solved through suffering hardship, and that sometimes we must be emptied before we are filled. And although the apostle Paul, or whoever your Paul is or was, cannot be with you in person, you can work it out, knowing that Christ is with you. Also, I think Paul would like me to say this too: make your mentor proud.
            And remember too his final advice to his friends in Philippi. Beware of the dogs of legalism and pride. It’s a relationship with him not your transcript that will help you stand on that final graduation day. The past is rubbish – so hold on to the good and get rid of the junk that will come to fill your life and clog your spiritual arteries. And finally, press on. Not just any direction, but upward. Strive to find that best self, what Gerard Manly Hopkins called that “immortal diamond” which is your life made complete in Jesus Christ.
            Does it sound like too big of a job? It does to me. Nevertheless, I leave you with a final phrase from Saint Paul’s letter from his unexpected sabbatical time in a Roman jail: 
                I am confident of this, that the one who began                    a good work in you will bring it to completion                    by the day of Jesus Christ. (1.6)

          Before we say goodbye, just know that I will start feeling sorry for you again exactly thirty seconds from now. I just didn't want to tell you that. I didn't want to emphasize that. We have bigger concerns. Deeper things. Care and cure are from the same English root. I care; so I'm pointing towards the cure. But each of us, of course, needs to care about the unique persons God puts in our way. Still, I think I've been as true as I can be to the message of Paul's letter from a Roman jail, and the burden on his heart for the care/cure of the dear people he is addressing. 
          There’s an old gospel song I learned somewhere along the way, apparently not in Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Church, my childhood religious home. But somewhere. It goes like this.
I’m not sorry
I’m not sorry
I answered the Master’s Call
Jesus took my heavy load
Now I’m on the glory road
And I’m not sorry at all.
Sorry.
Not.

Ben Camino's Baccalaureate, Part One





Ben Camino’s Baccalaureate

        [Don't start the sound file yet.] Not long ago, Ben Camino was sifting through some archives when he came upon an article about a baccalaureate address at his university delivered about a century ago. It was reported to have gone over an hour and gone over (other meaning) very well. Allowing for some possible exaggeration, the question came to mind as to the length and depth of such an address for such an occasion. The answer formulated by the learned brother was that expectations were higher. Expectations for speakers, expectations for audiences, expectations for graduates, expectations for such an occasion. 
        He told me when he delivered this to me, wrapped in sanitizer, for editing, (which I'm sure I've botched, since I kept falling asleep while reading it), that he was only sorry he hadn't quite matched those expectations (or length) Now I know what he meant by being "only sorry" about that. It was ironic. 
        Anyway(s), I hope you enjoy it (or whatever one does with such an address). It is so long that it's in two blog posts, each with a sound file. The first is 33 minutes long; the second is 13. If you haven't read Ben Camino before, I'm sorry, I can't help you.  Now would be a good time to start the sound file. Read along or not as you wish. 

Mr. President, Mrs. President, Mrs. Vice President, Mr. Vice President, Mr. Miami Vice, Members of the Bored Trustees, Dean Jones, Dean Rusk, James Dean, Jimmy Dean, Dino, Desi, and Billy, Dr. Fauci, Dr. Seuss, Dr. Pepper, Dr. class of whatever years this is, parents, loved ones, liked ones, merely put up with ones, and those reading this on Zoom. Boy have you got your wires crossed. But we get it. For twenty years, Ben Camino has waited to be asked to give a Baccalaureate address. Why? Because he knows the meaning of the word among other things. Also because he has things to say. Good things. Things that hurt good. Things that goad good. Ironic things. Things to say.
So, Ben decided to wait no longer. He decided to keep referring to himself in the third person, to take the bull by the horns, to make use of the miracle of modern technology and email Xerox copies of his speech to all the graduates everywhere. Sort of like President Obama, but without the video.
But seriously. The one thing you need to know before you start, if you are thinking that you might start, is that Ben doesn’t feel sorry for this year’s graduating class. He gets that they are sad to not have a real graduation ceremony in May, sad that they had to say goodbye to their friends a couple of months earlier than they should have, sad that they had to be socially isolated like 2/3 of the rest of the human race. The other third is trying to kill the rest of us, in case you didn’t know. Don’t try to kill the rest of us; sorry if that hurts. If you were still huddled in the dorms on campus until . . . Saturday, you would have done some damage. So think about it.

I know, I know. Another grandpa getting all in our face about how tough he had it way back whenever it was and I should be thankful that I have Taco Bell because he didn’t. Well, that’s not what this is about. It’s about great-grandpa. My dad. He was just 19 when he had to leave his friends for awhile. Some of them he never saw again. He was hoping to start university but didn’t do that either. They did have one heck of a party to say goodbye though, so he was lucky that way. He and 999 of his closest friends met in downtown Houston on May 30, paraded through the streets, took the Navy Oath, and marched immediately down to Union Station to catch the express train to beautiful Southern California. San Diego to be exact.
He was lucky enough to come home eventually. But not before mastering a new kind of education. Still, he did all right, he even won the highest honors. Not a summa, but two Purple Hearts, one wound from Japanese shrapnel and another from a Fascist bullet in Italy. Like I said though, he was one of the lucky ones. And he knew it. And he never forgot it.
Anyway, or as all the Jennifers say, anyways, I may be the only Baccalaureate speaker in 2020 who doesn’t feel sorry for you. Maybe that alone is reason enough to listen.
Speaking of the war, two weeks ago week we celebrated the 75th anniversary of the Allied Liberation of Europe from the demonic system of Nazism. Liberation. Freedom. A new beginning. Freedom from the terror of the past. It became, immediately, a time to plot a new course, a new future. Celebrations. Reunions. Marriages to sweethearts back home. Well, you get the picture. So many connections to make between graduation (the usual kind) and all that. Liberated from your wicked professors, you stand today free to make a new start, ready to embrace a bright and better future, not to mention embracing that sweetheart I mentioned four sentences ago.
Before the eighth of May, VE Day, however, came the ninth of April. On that day, a beloved German pastor, professor, theologian, author, social justice fighter, graduated to a new life as well. By means of the gallows. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, author of The Cost of Discipleship, Life Together, Ethics, and many other works, spent the last two years of his brief but heroic 39 year life in a succession of Nazi prisons. He, along with several of conspirators, all of them part of a failed plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler were executed on April ninth, just weeks before Hitler’s own suicide and just days before the liberation of those very death camps we remember with such horror.
            When Bonhoeffer, a scholarly boy wonder if ever there were one, graduated from theological seminary in Berlin in 1930, what high hopes were held for him not only by his family and his professors but himself as well. And he more than fulfilled those hopes, cramming a lifetime of service, preaching, education, writing, teaching, scholarship, pastor care, and even, counter-espionage in to the next fifteen years of his life.
            But perhaps the Bonhoeffer most of us best remember is the man revealed in the letters and papers which were smuggled out of prison and published in the years following his death. During this time of testing, of separation from his intensely close and loyal family and friends (not to mention his beloved piano), and of being taken out of the public eye in which Bonhoeffer had always shone, there came a new reality, perhaps a new validity to his faith and to his words.
            The Bonhoeffer of the seminary, the Bonhoeffer of the pastorate, the Bonhoeffer of the study, gave way to a new, and, he might say, more authentic person. One who could rejoice in the face of tragedy, because he grasped what true faith was. What the stakes always were when one said the first two words of the Creed, “I believe.” When one said, “I will follow.” This Bonhoeffer was not afraid to reflect honestly, sometimes critically, on his past and his church’s past, and yet looked eagerly to the future. And he became someone who eagerly sought to crystallize what it was that he was learning, who it was he was becoming, and where it was that he was going.
            Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s case is not, of course, so unusual. But we make it so when we live the lights of our own moment only. When we forget, that is, history. When we forget that this has always been the story of the faithful.
            Heroes on the edge, whether at the point of death or imprisoned or suffering great hardship, call us to attention. Martin Luther before the court at Worms, saying “Here I stand, I can do no other.” Martin Luther King Jr. writing his now famous (to many then, infamous) “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” to explain his action against southern segregation laws in the service of a higher moral law. Henry David Thoreau wrote his famous “Essay on Civil Disobedience,” based on his stay in the Concord jail for refusing to pay his taxes to support an unjust war and for, as we remember, marching to the beat of a different drummer. And, of course, John Bunyan (not Paul Bunyan as a student of mine once wrote on an exam) composed his masterpiece of wayfaring and warfaring Christianity, for the most part, during his twelve-year stay in that now legendary Bedford (England) jail.
            Who else should we add to this list of eloquent, heroic prisoners? I would suggest a man who knew a great deal about jailed heroes of faith, since he was personally responsible for jailing a good many of them. Ironically, years later he was given the distinct privilege of being what he called “a prisoner for Jesus Christ.” I mean, of course, none other than a man named Saul, who came from a place called Tarsus, a person we now remember as Saint Paul. His letter from a Roman prison to a band of persecuted believers in Philippi has provided inspiration and wisdom for twenty centuries of those preparing to graduate – whether from educational institutions or simply from one station to another along the path of Christian discipleship.
            I know, I know. I hear the queries and complaints of the tribe of Ben, most of them named Jennifer. Why focus on prison letters and words written by chained hands on this day of freedom and celebration? Why not, instead sing “glorious things of thee are spoken” to the class of 2020? Why not stick to the official guidebook for graduation speakers and use the word achieve at least once on every page? Seriously, why prison on a day like this? Especially after what this class has been through? By the way, dear imaginary reader, I can see what you are trying to do there. You are trying to get me to say I feel sorry for you. But I am sorry . . . to say that I’m not sorry.  I have a good reason and a clear answer to all of the above.
            One reason I speak about a letter from prison and all the difficulties that suggests is that my message is, for perhaps the first time in Ben Camino’s life, relevant. We’ve all been stuck in our cells (of varying kinds) for awhile by graduation day. How’s that going? How is the one basic approach I have seen and heard so far from the experts to deal with this problem working? I mean, of course, the one that starts, “We feel sorry for you.” Truth be told, this too, I hope and pray, will pass. But the prisons and dead ends and traps and constrictions will go on in different way, at different times, to different degrees throughout our lives. How do we not know this? I know the answer to that question too. We ignore it.
            Really, inspirational speeches at graduation are usually not really necessary, although often memorable. The audience of graduates are fired up and ready to go. They need a job, not inspiration. The need cards with lots of money or gift cards or maybe even some car keys. They need to pay off their library fines. The best graduation speeches are not for graduation day. They are for someday. The someday the graduates will, in fact, need that speech. Or at least the message from Saint Paul, written from imprisonment. Because, we most of us now know, imprisoning times will come. That might be a global pandemic. I guess I shouldn’t say maybe. But ask your grandpa or grandma if you can get them to be honest with you. They will tell you. An imprisoning job might come someday. An imprisoning circumstance. An imprisoning relationship. Maybe even prison, let’s not kid ourselves. As with my examples above, in this dark world sometimes those who stand up for the light will find themselves there. And on those days, all the “You made it!” cards, cash, car keys, reference letters, and certificates won’t help you. The truth, though, will help you. The words that hurt good, that goad good, that connect us something historically and eternally true. If we have ears to hear.
Of course, another reason for considering Paul’s letter from prison is that hidden in it, you might say locked up in it is one of the most popular and inspirational texts for moments like this but one often disconnected from its context and, therefore, rendered un-ironic. And in the Ben Camino universe, that is a sin. Here is the passage from what we now call chapter three of the Epistle to the Philippians.
Not that I have already obtained this [Paul probably means the resurrection from the dead] or have already reached the goal [been made perfect]; but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own. Beloved, I do not consider that I have made it my own; but this one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on towards the goal for the prize of the heavenly call of God in Christ Jesus.
To his enemies, I’m sure that Pauls’ words called forth something like ridicule. “Oh really, you haven’t reached your ultimate goal yet? You still have a ways to go? No kidding! Wake up and smell the unleavened bread, apostle man! You are in prison. You are nowhere and you are going . . . nowhere!” I suppose his boastful sounding “I can to all things through Christ who strengthens me” (4.13) would have evoked even louder laughter and further derision. I don’t want to put some of us in that category of Paul’s mockers, but we might consider how he might respond to us when we say, as soon as this crazy crisis is over, I will be able to get going again on all those dreams and plans, utilizing the abilities with which I’ve been gifted. Until then, I’m just stuck.
            You might wonder why Saint Paul would respond to you at all, and I would say, well read the letter, he already has. Because Paul’s letter was meant specifically for the church in Philippi and their very specific situation. This church, the first he had established on the continent of Europe, had always been close to the apostle’s heart. They were good people, dear people, faithful people, and yet despite all that, they were going through a very rough time. From the beginning they had faced significant opposition and, as Paul clearly expressed in his letter, they were now undergoing persecution and suffering. Hard times? Yes. Unusual? Hmmmm. So Paul writes to offer himself as an example of how to live when our external circumstances have become painful, when it becomes difficult to understand why we have given our lives to an invisible Lord who promises abundant life and joy and love, yet our visible situation looks more like a bleak and hopeless prison cell.
            Sound familiar? Are you there? If you aren’t, just remember great grandpa and his going away party. If you are there or when you are there, sooner or later, remember the thoughts of our imprisoned friend, Saint Paul, who spilled his ink to encourage his good friends in Philippi and Indiana and all around the world (even Michigan) to, as he says repeatedly, “rejoice in the Lord,” even when the freedom promised Christ followers looks a lot like bondage.
            At first, Paul gives his usual salutations, graces, peaces, and high fives; he even flatters his readers by calling them saints. Or maybe it’s more than flattery. Paul has plenty of good reasons to say that “I thank my God every time I remember you,” because they have been his most faithful friends, they never deserted him, they kept showing their true and deep concern time and again, even sending him the ancient equivalent of care packages. Some of your graduates know the worth of such gifts. More important, all of us in our present crisis know what it means to have (or sadly not to have) friends who never desert us, who keep showing their concern, who provide care in the most tangible ways they can.
            In the next bit, though, the apostle really starts writing with the passion we expect from his greatest passages. He boldly, ironically, claims that his prison experience has become a liberation (1.12-18). It has even become clear to those around him, including the “imperial guards” that is imprisonment is “for Christ.” What do you mean Paul? I think he would answer his hard time, his apparently constricted, limited time has given him the chance to “shine his light” in a way and to people that he could not otherwise. I think he would say, don’t be sorry for me. Pray that I will take advantage of my new circumstances.
            But the following passage (19-26) gives a fuller meaning to this seeming paradox. Paul says that whether he is set from from prison or whether he stays (I think our application is obvious), he has discovered that “to live is Christ.” I’ve heard this a million times and it’s always been presented as a bunch of spiritual gas. It’s not. You are now going to learn what it really means. I hope you are as excited as I am. Paul, this most active, busy, and extremely successful man (whether persecuting or producing Christians, he was super busy and super successful), a graduate of the finest Pharisee education shekels could buy, found himself . . . sitting still.
            No boat trips with Luke, no camel trips with Silas, no exciting quick exits from town just in time to escape stoning or whipping from a frenzied mob with Barnabas. Just sitting. Still. Probably getting sick of the sound of his own breathing. And no Zoom to keep in touch with John Mark or to meet with the Board members in Jerusalem and Antioch.
            Was it for this he was educated? Was it for this he gave up his lucrative career as a Christian persecutor? Was it for this he became the apostle to the Gentiles? No, I’m not saying that Paul came to the conclusion that being stuck in prison (or quarantine) was his purpose in life, his vocation. But sometimes prison comes. Lockdown comes. Distancing comes. And other kinds of prisons and lockdowns await us to be sure. And Paul came to understand and write that Christ is just as available in those places, those circumstances, as we was in the middle of his most successful days of ministry. Maybe even more so.
            I’m sure some of his original hearers cringed, just as perhaps some of us do today at what we think is a pretty sentiment but certainly not something for us. But he’s not about to let us slip away. He includes us. Whether they wanted or not, Paul “encouraged” the Philippians with the truth that they had been “graciously granted” the same “privilege” he had been given: “the privilege not only of believing in Christ, but of suffering for him as well” (1.29). Ouch. And so he encourages them, in another famous passage that we don’t really get, to let their faith be exercised, show up for what it really can be, rise to the occasion, in these difficult times. Not to shrink back, but to flex.
If there is any encouragement in Christ, any consolation from love, any sharing in the Spirit, any compassion and sympathy, make my joy complete be of the same mind, having the same love, etc.
In other words, if anything I have taught you is true, if anything you have professed is real, now is your opportunity on the grand stage of middle earth, with heaven and hell watching. I’m sorry, but I’m not sorry. If this good news is good, Paul reminds them and us, it has to be true now, not just in the good times and the celebrations and the campus rituals and traditions, and staying up late playing way too many video games; and happy chapels, and those difficult mission trips to Daytona Beach; not just in those three days we called a revival, or those laudations we earned for our good work.
            There’s more, I’m sorry (not sorry) to say. It gets better or worse, depending on your interest in a little thing called reality. Not only, Paul insists, should we understand that the truths of the faith must be true in the bad times as well as the good, BUT (and that’s a big but) those hard times, those imprisoning circumstances become, when we see with what Paul calls “the mind of Christ,” a key to an authentic Christian faith, a holy pattern that is deeply embedded in the mystery of redemptive love. To prove this, Brother Paul (never more a saint than when singing) breaks into poetry or song for one of the most brilliant, glorious, yet theologically significant passages in all of literature. The canticle of kenosis. (2.5-11)
Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus,
who, though he was in the form of God,
did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited (held on to),
but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave [a prisoner would have helped my message Paul),
being found in human form, he humbled himself
and became obedient to the point of death –
even death on a cross.
Therefore God also highly exalted him
and give him the name that is above every name,
so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bend,
in heaven and on earth and under the earth,
and every tongue should confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.
Sometimes, you just have to say whoa. Thank you Brother Paul. For helping me get my mind right. Jesus Christ himself came into a kind of prison, took upon himself great limitations and humiliations, but in doing so he achieved a glory found only that particular pilgrim pathway, on that specific “road less travelled.” Pay attention here if you will. Paul’s example for living through the present moment of difficulty was not Paul back in the good old days before difficulty and it wasn’t an imagined future Paul after escaping from his difficult circumstances (prison, pandemic, little brother). His example was Jesus Christ who, as they say “had been there.”
            For although Jesus Christ’s suffering for the salvation of humanity was a once-for-ever, unique event, that we can never fully imitate or repay, it also models for us a broader truth which we ignore at our own peril. Because then we would be ignorant. That truth is that some problems can only be solved through suffering, through hardship, through what I have been calling, rather loosely I know, imprisonment. Certainly, the forces of evil must have rejoiced when they saw their greatest foe apparently crushed and quieted forever on an ugly cross, on a little hill, outside a relatively insignificant city, in a dusty little Roman province. But they were as wrong as the White Witch who understood not the Deeper Magic from before the Dawn of Time.
            Another life-long lesson to draw from the example of the self-emptying Christ (who, as Charles Wesley wrote, “emptied himself of all but love”) in our times of difficulty is a simple but terribly hard one. Sometimes we must be emptied before we can be filled. I don’t want to push this one too hard on a bunch of graduates and their parents who have just invested four (five? six?) years and thousands of dollars on an education. Hold on now Mister Doctor Professor Speech-Maker Dude! Don’t tell me you are saying we should empty ourselves of what we have worked so hard to obtain? New Testament Greek? Contemporary Social Work Theory? Advanced Musical Composition? My jump shot? Alright, alright . . . I give up. You imaginary folks ask some pretty tough rhetorical questions. I reply, if somewhat madly, to my own questions – Christ himself, though, is our model. Paul is our source. I am just . . . Ben Camino.
            He emptied himself of his unique, divine giftedness to become a prisoner of space and time, but, as a result, all the universe will someday bow and sing praises to his name. Just as Christ emptied himself of his special privileges as the Son of God, Paul emptied himself of his special privileges as a devout Jew, as a zealous Pharisee, and ultimately, even as an apostle to find the experience he calls “to live is Christ.”
            And he admonishes his friends in Philippi, in Indiana, in Oxford, and anywhere else where inspirited dust yearns for the fullness for which it was formed, to recognize and follow the same pattern. All our knowledge, our credentials, our cum laudes, our funny hats and clumsy robes, our friendships even – all to be treasured since they are God’s good gifts too – must always be laid down at the feet of the one who did not regard his position of privilege to be held on to at all costs. Only Jesus Christ can make that ultimate claim on our lives. But let’s be honest with ourselves – he does have that right.
            Paul follows his ode to the humiliated and exalted Christ with one of his most commonly misunderstood phrases: “Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling” (2.12). I say misunderstood, because I so often hear this phrase used in the controversy over whether one is saved by grace or work or difficult-to-measure combination thereof. Again, the context clarifies what Paul means, and I think it has terribly (sorry about that) obvious application for the graduates. Paul says you Philippians used to learn from me, and, in doing so, you grew in your faith. But now I am in prison, separated from you by a number of barriers. So now, remembering me (and please don’t forget me when it comes time for the care packages) but without my physical presence, work out your own salvation, leaning on and learning from Christ and his grace, not Paul and his charismatic personality. For, as he adds, “it is God who is at work in you, enabling you both to will and to work from his good pleasure.”
            Hmmm. I guess it’s no wonder that we haven’t heard this preached more over the years. It seems to be deconstructing the role of the pastor/teacher/senior leader/mentor in the life of a follower, a disciple. That’s probably a little extreme, but I think it’s definitely what Paul means (partly out of necessity) and I know it’s definitely apropos of your circumstances (recent and future). Perhaps Paul had, I surmise the Philippians had, and I’m guessing that we have come too easily to rely on others to prop up our lives and our faith. Yes, we need each other, and if you ever read Ben Camino, you know how deeply he believes in the communal nature of Christian living. But, we must also learn to “hold fast to the word of life” (2.16) on our own. Chapel, classes, small groups, mission trips, Centers for the Study of Saint Paul and Friends – wow that’s a long list to be followed by the words are not enough. Prisons, pandemics, and all sorts of other circumstances come along and knock out the props from our faith, or what we have called our faith hitherto. That happens to some degree when we go to college and miss all the props of home (and I don’t just mean family). Typically, that happens again when we have to leave college and miss all the props of . . . college. This year that happened early. And, as I said before, I’m not going to say I’m sorry about that. It was going to happen even though it happened earlier than expected.  
            One of the problems of college is the prop replacement syndrome. We thought we had developed a whole new thing by getting rid of our props, but often we are actually replacing one prop with another. And don’t get me wrong, we are called to “prop each other up” in a proper (sorry) way, but I am talking about something else. So, we exchange a parent for a Professor. A pastor for a campus pastor. A friend for a roommate. A hometown boyfriend for a college boyfriend. A midnight curfew for . . . unlimited video games.  Paul senses that it might actually be a good thing, a growth thing, for him to be separated from the church in Philippi in whom he has invested so much of his life. Time for you to “work out your own salvation” – obviously he doesn’t mean apart from Christ, but he probably means apart from Paul.
            Who are your Paul’s? You have them. I have them. We all do. They are dear, they are significant, they have helped us in deep and remarkable ways. This next part is hard to say, except it’s actually easier because you have already been separated since mid-May. But it’s still hard. They won’t be around any longer. They won’t be there to stretch you intellectually, to challenge you to be your best self, to prop up your faith, to cheer you on, to give you a good talking to, to bring a guitar to class to sing Christmas carols on the last day of Fall semester. Not to mention . . . pizza. Unless you come back to attend graduate school because you can’t stand to be separated from people. That’s not a good reason to go to grad school in case you need someone to give you a good talking to, by the way.
            Well, here is my paraphrase of that scary part: “You’ve got to work it out for yourself now, in your own wobbly, trembling, messy way.” Here’s my version of the encouraging part, though: “If any of this is true, he will be there to help if you seek him. In fact, he will especially be there in those prison moments, when you realize you have nowhere else to turn. If he is Lord of the universe, Lord of heaven and hell, he is Lord of your prisons as well.”
            “Finally, brothers and sisters, rejoice in the Lord.” That is not only the beginning of Paul’s conclusion to this letter, but the beginning of mine as well. Don’t get so excited. Note that Paul’s conclusion takes two chapters, exactly one half of the entire epistle!