All Saints Sunday, C, November 2, 2025
History is complicated.
When I first entered college
25 years ago,
I was a history major.
I took many fascinating classes,
and learned a lot of information
about a number of things.
The most eye-opening course
however,
was Historiography.
Historiography
is the study of how to write history.
The study of History itself
can take two different tracks;
one is the exploration,
recovery,
and recording of historical events
in chronological order,
a bare statement of facts and figures,
a bit like retroactive journalism.
This is the stuff of archeology,
anthropology,
paleontology,
even theoretical physics
as it explores the universe
to better understand how this universe came to be.
It is largely a scientific pursuit.
It relies on empiricism,
verifiability, evidence,
hypotheses and testing hypotheses,
until a reliable record of events
can be reviewed by one’s academic peers
and broadly accepted as the facts
about a given subject.
Every attempt is made at neutrality,
writing as unbiased a record as possible
in hopes of leaving future generations
as clear a picture as possible
of events as they happened.
The other track
is interpretation of the facts.
These historians
take the facts
and make meaning
from the bare record,
writing the story of a time,
a place,
a person or a people,
to help us understand
not just what happened and how,
but why it happened,
and what it means for us now,
how we might avoid the same mistakes
or repeat the same triumphs.
These narratives become part of who we are,
how we understand ourselves
and our place in the world,
how we justify or make amends for our actions in the past,
how we explain ourselves
to others
and to ourselves.
And this is where history gets complicated.
The first type of history can change.
As new evidence comes to light,
archeological discoveries are made,
and new technologies produce more capacity
to extract and examine more information,
the historical record can change,
replacing misunderstanding and misinformation
with better understanding and better information.
Most Americans know the story
of George Washington and the cherry tree,
when as a child,
George uses his new axe
to chop down the prized tree.
When confronted by his parents,
George fesses up,
famously saying,
axe in one hand,
the other over his heart,
“I cannot tell a lie.”
Thus,
Washington looms large in our hearts
as the epitome of the ever elusive
“honest politician.”
So,
it is of little note
and almost no consequence
that there is zero evidence
that this event ever transpired,
meaning that
though the story is factually false,
it still contains some sort of truth
we felt we needed.
We needed a truth
that bare facts could not supply.
And we don’t tend to like it
when facts get in the way
of the meaning we have made.
Today,
we celebrate All Saints’ Day,
a day set aside to remember our history.
A day to honor those faithful believers
who have gone before us
to show us the way of grace and truth.
We remember those sainted dead,
those holy foremothers and fathers,
who lived this life of faith before us
and whose stories tell us who we are.
We recall grandparents and parents
aunts and uncles,
siblings,
friends,
pastors and Sunday School teachers,
camp counselors and Bible study leaders,
campus ministers and youth group leaders,
spouses, colleagues, and acquaintances
who loved us into the Kingdom of God
and have now shuffled loose this mortal coil,
existing just beyond our grasp.
And as we recall these fond memories
it’s often not the facts that we recall,
but the stories,
the tales of meaning
that have endeared these saints to our memory
and knit their lives into our very identity,
and our very identities into the life of God.
But when we recall the stories
without an ear to the facts
we often diminish the truth
and weaken the story.
We have not come to this point
in the history of the world
or the history of the church
“standing on the shoulders of giants”
as we like to imagine.
Rather,
we have come here upon a hill of skulls
a mountain of death
and sin,
and pain,
upon the Cross of Christ.
There are no saints
who were not first sinners.
There are no saints
who were not first redeemed.
There are no saints
who have not come through the great ordeal
and washed their robes in the blood of the lamb.
When we tell the stories
without the facts
we deceive ourselves into thinking
that we might be able to live this life
without pain.
That we might escape misfortune,
suffering,
death.
That those saints were somehow
spiritual superheroes,
or that life was less complicated back then.
But Jesus tells us otherwise.
Jesus says,
“Blessed are the poor.”
Jesus does not say
“Cursed are the poor.”
Jesus does not say,
“If you really believe in me, you won’t be poor.”
Jesus doesn’t say,
“It is God’s will that you should be poor.”
No,
Jesus says,
“Blessed are the poor.”
Blessed are the hungry;
Blessed are those who weep;
Blessed are the rejected.”
AND
“Woe to the rich,
woe to those who are satisfied,
woe to those laughing now,
woe to those with good reputations.”
Jesus says that life in this world
will bring poverty and wealth,
hunger and satisfaction,
weeping and laughing,
with rejection and good repute.
Jesus is laying out the facts,
giving us the evidence,
giving us an accurate picture of the way of the world.
But Jesus,
like a good historian,
is also giving us a story,
making meaning of the facts.
Jesus tells us that the bare facts
will not define us,
nor will the grand sweep of history consume us.
Neither poverty nor wealth,
hunger nor fullness,
weeping nor laughing
will last forever.
This life is filled with tragedy and celebration,
pain and pleasure,
loss and leisure,
suffering and satisfaction,
death and resurrection.
And God is making meaning of it all.
God is telling a story,
a truth that takes the facts seriously
and is yet bigger than the sum of its parts,
a truth that makes meaning
of all the suffering and sorrow,
a truth that makes saints out of sinners,
a truth that brings life out of death.
We are living in a historic moment.
Today is day 33 of a government shutdown,
leaving federal workers unpaid
and relying on food banks to eat.
These already strained food banks
are now the primary source of food
for some 42 million neighbors
who rely on the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, or SNAP—
formerly food stamps—
to eat and feed their families.
Jesus’ advice to his followers
in light of the facts of life,
the blessings and woes,
is that we should treat others
the way we want to be treated.
As we look back at the saints who brought us here,
we must also look in the mirror,
at the saints God is calling us to be.
The hungry are blessed
because Jesus calls us to be a blessing.
The late Pope Francis said,
“First you pray for the hungry,
then you feed them,
because that’s how prayer works.”
Beloved,
we are the saints.
We have come through blessing and woe,
hunger and fullness,
weeping and laughing,
to possess this kingdom of God
in this very life.
This is what made those who went before us saints,
and this is what will make those who come after us saints,
that by the Love of God,
in spite of all the facts,
God is making meaning of all life’s blessings and woes,
turning us toward each other in Love,
in goodness and prayer,
in nonviolence and generosity.
God is making meaning of the facts of this life
by making saints of each of us,
so that, with the eyes of our heart enlightened,
we may perceive what is the hope
to which we have been called,
the riches of God’s glorious inheritance among the saints,
and the immeasurable greatness of God’s power in Christ
for us who trust in the truth
according to the working of his great power.
So, give to the poor,
feed the hungry,
comfort the weeping,
and let your reputation
be that of a redeemed sinner in this life.
This is a life with meaning.
Amen.










