Bishop Curry presides over the Episcopal Church
Diocese of the United States. He is the first African American
Bishop to hold that position.
With Curry’s great oratory skills, he has prioritized speaking out
on issues of social justice including race relations and marriage
equality.
Millions heard Bishop Curry deliver the sermon at the royal wedding
of Prince Harry and Megan Markle in 2018.
On a ‘Talks at Goldman Sachs’ segment the bishop spoke about his
faith journey. He grew up in a time when religion was booming, and
faith was a given. Bishop Curry’s father was an Episcopal Priest,
and his grandmother was a “dyed in the wool” Baptist.
In North Carolina, where some of Curry’s family grew up, everyone
was religious. He said faith was how people navigated through rough
terrain and life.
When the bishop was in middle school, he lost his mother and learned
more about how to navigate rough times. His father and the
grandmother who helped raise him navigated by a power greater than
themselves. Bishop Curry said they depended on God, who has the
capacity to help us through even the darkest midnights.
Bishop Curry’s grandmother was a powerful influence. She was a
sharecropper’s daughter who cleaned houses and raised three children
that all graduated from college. For the Bishop’s grandmother,
education was emancipation.
The Bishop’s father told both him and his sister that they needed to
do what they were supposed to be doing.
When Curry went to college he was leaning towards government work
and considered going to law school. He saw himself as the future
mayor of Buffalo, New York.
During his junior year of college Curry took a course where he read
some of Martin Luther King’s writing. As he did a research thesis in
Boston, Curry soon realized he could have an impact as a religious
leader.
In 1978, Curry graduated from Yale Divinity School. He worked with a
crisis contact ministry.
A church community in Winston Salem, North Carolina was the bishop’s
early ministry.
During Bishop Curry’s ministry in North Carolina, he helped bring
clergy from East and West Winston Salem together. He said at the
time, those groups coming together was revolutionary.
Building these relationships is what Bishop Curry said led to the
crisis contact ministry. Food banks and other safety nets like
ecumenical summer day camps for children spun out of the crisis
response pastoral care the bishop was a part of.
In 2000, Bishop Curry was elected eleventh bishop of the Episcopal
Diocese of North Carolina.
Since 2015, Bishop Curry was elected as the 27th presiding Bishop
and Primate of the Episcopal Church.
On Saturday, May 21, 2022, Bishop Curry helped preside over the
ordination of the 12th Bishop of the Diocese of Springfield.
At Sunday’s service, Bishop Curry began his message with a passage
from John 14 that has Jesus’ words at the Last Supper. Here Jesus
shares some of the deepest things that are on his heart.
In this passage, Jesus said to Judas (not Iscariot), “Those who love
me will keep my word, and my Father will love them, and we will come
to them and make our home with them. Whoever does not love me does
not keep my words; and the word that you hear is not mine, but is
from the Father who sent me.”
As Bishop Curry said, we may mess up, but God will make his home
with us. Love leads to God and to each other. This love is the key
to our relationship with God and with each other. Love is the key to
making life here on earth better. It is key to getting into Heaven,
where Bishop Curry said people have a great time.
To explain this love, Bishop Curry talked about
the old Spiritual “There is a Balm in Gilead.” One of the verses
says if you are discouraged and feel the pain, the Holy Spirit can
revive your soul. There is a balm in Gilead to heal the sin sick
soul.
Paraphrasing another verse of the song, Bishop
Curry said if you cannot preach like Peter and cannot pray like
Paul, just tell the love of Jesus. He [Jesus] died to save us all.
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The song ends with the lines: There is a balm in
Gilead to make the wounded whole. There is a balm in Gilead to heal
the wounded soul.
Again, the Bishop said love is the key. It is the key to life with
God. It is the key to life with each other. It is the key to now and
unto the day of eternity.
Bishop Curry then referred to John 14 where Jesus said he [Jesus]
and the Father will make a home with them. The bishop said, that is
a home I want. I want to say God is at home with me. As Jimmy
Stewart said, it does not get much better than that.
Most of the message centered on love, which Jesus continually talks
about. Bishop Curry said this love is powerful.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus tells the people “Love your
enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you.”
In passages from Matthew 22, Luke 10 and Mark 12, Jesus tells those
he is speaking to that the greatest commandment is to love the Lord
your God with all your heart, soul and mind. Jesus said that is the
first and greatest commandment. The second is to love your neighbor
as yourself.
To Bishop Curry, everything God was trying to say in the Hebrew
Scriptures, and is now trying to say to us through the Holy Bible,
hangs on love. Love and you will be close to the kingdom of God.
Love and you will live.
In other words, Bishop Curry said love and you will find life. Love
is the key.
The well-known verse John 3:16 reminds us that God loved the world
so much that he gave us Jesus. To Bishop Curry this love is why
there is Christmas and Good Friday.
We are coming up on Memorial Day when we remember those who have
served and given their lives for the cause of freedom.
Bishop Curry’s father-in-law served in the navy and was at Pearl
Harbor. At one point, his [the father-in-law’s] mother screamed from
the kitchen, “There is something wrong with my baby.” She knew
something had happened to her son though she did not hear anything
for a week or two. Fortunately, her son was injured but not killed.
As Jesus said, greater love has no man than this, that he lays down
his life for a friend. Bishop said Memorial Day is about the kind of
love where people give up their lives.
Firefighters go into a building to save someone who he or she does
not know. Bishop Curry said that is love. A law enforcement officer
protecting people also shows love.
Love is the key to life with God. 1 John 4:7-8 says, “Beloved, let
us love one another: for love is of God; and everyone that loves is
born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not know God,
because God is love.”
Love has the power to lift and liberate when nothing else will. Love
has the power to heal and save when nothing else will. Bishop Curry
said it is not because of the simple power of love. It is because
love is like the river spoken of in Revelation that flows from the
very throne the heart of God.
Though Bishop Curry was born in Chicago, his family moved when he
was three. He grew up in Buffalo, New York. Bishop Curry has been a
diehard Buffalo Bills fan through thick and thin. Bishop Curry
remembers when the Bills lost four Super Bowls in a row.
After their fourth loss, a parishioner called the bishop to express
condolence. The parishioner said Bills stands for Boy I love losing
the Super Bowl.
Talking about the recent tragic shooting where 10 people were killed
at a grocery store in Buffalo, Bishop Curry said seeing that brings
him deep sadness. Knowing it was done for hate also brings sadness.
[This sermon was delivered the Sunday before the Uvalde, Texas
massacre of 19 elementary school children and two teachers that took
place on Tuesday, May 24.]
Love is the key. Bishop Curry said hatred, jealousy and bigotry do
not work - love does.
If the Buffalo Bills win a Super Bowl, Bishop Curry is convinced it
may mean Jesus is coming back. Even if they never win another Super
Bowl, the bishop said he has never been prouder of them.
Players on the Buffalo Bills team were due to come back for early
training next week, but Bishop Curry said they all came back early.
The Bills donated money from the Buffalo Bills Foundation and have
raised money to care for survivors of the grocery shooting.
The theme the Bills have chosen is stop hate, end racism and choose
love. Love is the key to life with God and all of God’s children.
In concluding his message, if you cannot preach like Peter or pray
like Paul, Bishop Curry said to just share the love of Jesus. Jesus
died to save us all and that is the balm of Gilead. It is the balm
of Gilead to heal the sin sick soul.
[Angela Reiners] |