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Sunday, June 21, 2026

Sermon, Year C, All Souls, "You Are Not Alone"

 

C All Souls OL Col Paul 2025
Hebrews 12:1-2, 12-13
November 2, 2025

          Several years ago, my good buddy, Rev. Andy DeBraber, came to visit us for an overnight on his way to a speaking engagement he had in northern Indiana.  Andy and I both process life through physical exertion so we took a long hike around Tower Hill and talked at length about saving the world. 

Andy had just come off his sabbatical so I asked him about the most meaningful experiences he had out on his own, hiking and camping in the wilderness.  He shared a conversation he had with an Ojibway Elder, how many Native American peoples will talk about the seventh generation into the future as a way of caring for the earth to make sure the goodness provided for by Creator was still around for future generations.  But this Elder also spoke of how his people were to remember the seventh generation out into the past as a way of knowing their ancestors.  Then, to Andy’s surprise, this Ojibway Elder shared his history back through seven generations. 

He knew them all.  He knew every generation.  He could talk with wisdom about the lives of his ancestors to the seventh generation.

          We both marveled.  I can remember my family back through my grandparents, know something of their lives, but could not begin to tell you the lives of my great-great grandparents.  And whether we realize it, that’s important.  For most indigenous peoples and the peoples of the ancient world that was the Bible, they can trace those generations back in detail.   In the Bible, time is not linear.  It is cyclical.  Particularly when it came to holy and sacred moments in a community’s life, past, present, and future could collapse into one another so that we could readily not only expect our great-great-great grandchildren to show up and thank us for being good ancestors but also our ancestors might show up wondering if we have kept the path, followed in the trail they blazed.   

          I am reminded of a presentation made by Native American psychologist, Dr. Eduardo Duran, some years ago.  Eduardo was considered an expert in Native psychology, sought after by many who were active in trying to improve Native mental, emotional, and social health.  Duran was also strongly tied to the Bozeman UCC Church in Bozeman, Montana.  On a late summer’s day, Eduardo Duran shared with those gathered that when you come to regular recovery meetings, attend to your own mindfulness in sweat lodge, or remember your own community by celebrating Pow Wow, your ancestors come with you, looking for their own healing.  I saw so many of my friends nod their own heads knowing and understanding in that moment the truth of intergenerational trauma.   You are not alone. 

          I remembered that moment because my best friend from Billings, Josiah Hugs, who is a superstar in the Native Wellbriety movement, just received another honor by being asked to be on the Recovery Friendly Montana Advisory Board.  Josiah has been the Native American Liaison for the major health clinic in the largest city in Montana.  We Zoom every so often to catch up.  And I asked him, what was it like the first time he started at the health clinic, just starting to get recognition for his work.

          As I said, Josiah is an incredible healer and has been responsible for so many lives redeemed from the grips of chemical dependency.  I can remember a time when he came into my office and told me that the evangelical Christianity of his youth had preached to him that remembering his ancestors was idol worship.   The consistent message was to be Native and practice Native faith was to be an infidel, a pagan, unfaithful.  Josiah had broken from that to now say to people who remained outside recovery, “Your ancestors seek your healing.  Be a good ancestor.” 

          In his first presentation at the hospital, he was nervous, he told me.  All these white folk were going to look to him for how to understand his people, to accompany them in their healing and health through one of the two major hospital systems in the largest city of Montana.  “How did it go?”  I asked.  “Akbaatidia (the Crow name for Creator) was good,” he said, “I remembered when I walked in there that all the ancestors came with me.  I was not alone.”  He was not alone. 

          As a person who has worked in immigration justice issues almost my whole adult life, I often hear people wonder why there is such white hatred for immigrants.  One of my longtime friends in the campaign for a more humane immigration practice and policy once told me, “It is because we have buried our intergenerational trauma.  We white people intentionally or unintentionally don’t remember all the pain and suffering it took to leave a land many of us loved, to arrive and scratch and scrape to get by in a new place, all the struggle to assimilate in a place that is not our own.  So we’re angry, hurt, traumatized, and we’re not sure why.  We don’t remember.  We’ve buried it.”  Yes, I thought, we don’t remember our ancestors.  As a result, sometimes we get caught up thinking we are all alone.  But our faith tradition forever wants us to remember, we are not alone. 

          I think that was one of the most painful ways that the pandemic affected many of us.  The pandemic isolated us and made us believe that we are alone.  We rebel in odd ways and talk about “freedom” and our right to choose—pretending we can make it on our own.  Our very best days during the pandemic were not when we cavalierly forgot one another to refuse to do protocols. Our very best days were when we remembered how to take care of one another through Mutual Aid Networks which delivered food or provided transportation, made the extra phone call, cared for “essential workers” or hospital staff, remembered those protocols to get vaccinated, kept our distance, wore our masks.  To essentially say, our ancestors have been through plague and pandemic before, and we want to learn from them to find healing.  And then, to be good ancestors ourselves.  We are not alone. 

          At a time of incredible chaos, trauma, loss, and collapse for the Jewish people in the Biblical setting for our Scripture verse today, the writer of the epistle in Hebrews speaks of a cloud of witnesses.  In the preceding chapter, chapter 11, the writer speaks of the ancestors, those people who have gone before who were willing to risk by venturing out, enduring the hardships of each age, running the race with perseverance.  All of these ancestors went forward never having seen the completion of God’s work in their lifetime.  But they risked.  They ran the race.  And it is a reminder that this summarizes the life of Jesus, the one we call the Messiah, the Christ.  He ventured out, he ran the race, but the completion of God’s promise did not happen in his lifetime.  The teacher of Hebrews wants us to know.  You are not alone.  Do not think the trauma, the loss, the chaos you see all around you is any different than any other time when this cloud of witnesses decided to risk, venture out, run the race.   The writer of Hebrews uses the crucifixion to remind the present generation of the very real violence and hatred, the hostility Jesus faced, risked with, endured in, and persevered through.

          The teaching ends with these words, “12 Therefore lift your drooping hands and strengthen your weak knees 13 and make straight paths for your feet, so that these times don’t get you bent out of shape but rather be healed.”  Put in the frame of an athletic competition, the teacher of Hebrews reminds the saints of his time:  Risk!  Endure!  Persevere!  Do you not see the whole lot of saints that surround you in this time, who join hands with you to say, just as in our time, in your time.  You are not alone! 

          And this is the final understanding of the seven generations of Native theology.  That we are not only aware of the ancestors that go before us but the people who will follow us.  We then are the good ancestors who make the way for generations yet unborn.  We persevere as the cloud of witnesses that remind them that things were tough for us too.  And yet, we did not give up and give in to a violent world that would have us push down our pain to not know our own healing. 

In mutual love, we remember the words of Joan Maruskin, the one time Executive Director of Church World Service, who wrote, “The Bible was written by, for, and about migrants, immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers.”[1]  These are our faith ancestors.  How shall we then be good ancestors to the seventh generation, that they might remember us as faithful?  Will we be the people who are caught up in the violence and hatred of this age?  Or the people who endure providing sanctuary, a safe place, a hiding place, a refuge, for yet another generation?  We are surrounded by a cloud of witnesses, the Scripture says.

Clouds throughout Scripture are always a sign of God’s presence and protection, a manifestation of divine power.  The God of the Hebrews was known as a “cloud rider” and appeared to lead the people out of Egypt by day as a cloud pillar.[2]  Our scripture says, “Because we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, these faith ancestors, we can persevere to run the race.”  This is what the historical ancestors provide for us.  We are not alone. 

Who shall we be?  How shall we be the presence and protection, that cloud, the manifestation of God’s power for future generations?  Risk.  Endure.  Persevere.   And in this sacred moment in time, the past, present, and future collapse to see the faithful in our age joining hands to once again bring about joy, healing, and sanctuary for God’s good earth.  You, you . . . you are a part of a cloud of witnesses, a communion of saints, just by being on the path.  Be a good ancestor.  Amen. 



[1] Joan M. Maruskin, Immigration and the Bible:  A guide for Radical Welcome, August 29, 2012.

[2] “clouds,” HarperCollins Bible Dictionary, https://www.bibleodyssey.org/HarperCollinsBibleDictionary/c/clouds.

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Sermon, Year C, All Souls, "You Are Not Alone"

  C All Souls OL Col Paul 2025 Hebrews 12:1-2, 12-13 November 2, 2025           Several years ago, my good buddy, Rev. Andy DeBraber,...