LAS VEGAS: THE WEEDS AND THE WHEAT
(Matthew 13:24-29; 36-42)
Fred Vergara
New York
is known as the “city that never sleeps.” Seattle
is known as the “city that is not sleepless.” Las Vegas is known as“sin city.” The famous
or infamous quote about Las Vegas
is “what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.”
I was in Las Vegas
last week. We had a conference attended by over a hundred Filipino American
clergy and lay ministers serving in over twenty Filipino Episcopal churches in
the country. In 2003, while serving as “Canon Missioner for Asian Cultures” in
the Episcopal Diocese of El Camino Real, my wife (Angela) and I planted the
first Filipino Episcopal congregation
in Las Vegas,
under the Diocese of Nevada. At that time, the bishop of El Camino Real (south
coast of California)
was Richard Shimpfky (deceased) while the Nevada bishop was Katharine Jefferts Schori, who would later
become our Presiding Bishop. It was a cost-effective partnering of two dioceses
in Province VIII. For the El Camino Real, they simply had to release me for one
weekend a month and for Nevada,
they offered the facility of All Saints Episcopal Church.
The reason for our planting of a Filipino Ministry in Las Vegas
was missionary. Some of our Holy Child Episcopal Church members (the first Filipino
Church we also founded in San Jose, California), including our Senior Warden
(Manny Sese) and his family moved to Las Vegas for job opportunities. In the
year 2000, Silicon Valley experienced a “bubble burst” due to economic recession. Many people lost their jobs. Meanwhile, Las Vegas
experienced an economic boom. New homes were being built, new businesses came and the casino industry was flourishing. Many Californians moved to Vegas not only to work in
casinos but to serve in hospitals and schools because Vegas turned from being
simply a gambling paradise (or hell, depending on your winning or losing) into a
good residential suburbia..
The Filipinos, Hawaiians, Vietnamese, Chinese and of course
Latinos were some of the immigrant communities who moved to Vegas. At some
point, the fastest growing ethnic group were the Pinoys. Both jobs and housing
markets were magnets that drew them there.
Our first Mass in Vegas was attended by Bishop Katharine and
her husband Richard Schori. Bishop Katharine encouraged us while Richard took
some photos. We were welcomed by Rev. Frank Bergen, who was the rector of All
Saints at that time. The “Daughters of the King” who also were the Altar Guild,
prepared the sacred elements. Archdeacon Bob Nelson, the upbeat Canon to the
Ordinary, was very supportive.
We invited some Filipino American leaders, including Martin
Celemin and Atty. Jose Vergara (no relation to me) who lent moral support. From
the beginning, it was going to be a “lay led ministry” with the Sese Family as
some of the pioneers. There was no financial grant except for my gasoline
expenses driving from San Jose to Las Vegas one weekend a
month. Angela and I would stay overnight with the Seses before going back to California.
We would drive for ten hours from San
Jose; leaving Saturday night and arriving in Las Vegas on Sunday morning and do calling,
organizing and forming the congregation. Manny’s family (wife, Doris; daughters
Melissa and Madelyn; and sons Ruel and Reineir) would arrange the potluck and lead
the liturgy of the word, while Angela and I prepare the music and sacraments
respectively. The congregation grew and contact with the Filam community became
visible. The beginning of All Saints Filipino congregation at All Saints also
sparked another Filipino Congregation at St. Luke’s Parish (closer to the Las
Vegas Strip).
It was interesting how the Filipino Congregation began at
St. Luke’s. Paul Colbert, who was then the priest-in-charge of the congregation
and who was supporting the All Saints Filipino Ministry, invited me to speak to
the people of St. Luke’s who were then a declining, graying Anglo population of
at least eight members. They expressed they wanted to be a missionary church
and just by looking at them I could not believe they could do it. In Philippines, Singapore
and California
I spent considerable time in planting churches, reviving congregations but
mainly from the youth or young couples who have physical energy to move around and sprea
the vision. But I articulated that “mission in the modern world does not mean
going to the jungles of Africa or the islands of Asia and Latin
America but simply opening the doors of your hearts and opening the
doors of your churches to accept the peoples who God has placed in the vicinity
of your community. They are your new neighbors, your long-lost cousins and your
colleagues at work or at retirement homes.”
I had wondered how these Anglo elderly women would accept
people from other races and cultures but I would found out later that one of
the attendees of All Saints Filipino group (Mrs. Rose Kawi) had been attending
All Saints prior to my coming. She had become inactive but because of All Saints Filipino service, she was motivated to revive St. Luke's. All Saints Filipino masses were held on
Sunday afternoons (5pm), and she found it better to have a service in the morning at
St. Luke’s at 10:00 A.M.. The style of worship at All Saints Filipino was
contemporary and she felt more at home with the more traditional Episcopal
liturgy. The planting of a Filipino Mass at All Saints therefore helped to motivate the revival of
Filipino attendees at St. Luke’s. Overtime many Filipino Igorots who were
also members of the BIBAK (Benguet,
Ifugao, Bontoc, Apayao, Kalinga) mountain provinces in the Philippines swelled
the ranks of St. Luke’s, slowly becoming a bi-lingual, bi-cultural congregation.
It was a joy to see two new churches (with different worship styles) grew.
In May 2004, then Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold appointed me
as national Asian missioner for Asiamerica Ministries; my wife and I relocated in
New York. Fr.
Arsie Almodiel, who was then serving as associate priest in Delano, the Diocese of San Joaquin relocated
to Vegas and took over my role. Fr. Colbert relocated to San
Joaquin and Deacon Teogenes Bernardez took over his role as
spiritual leader for St. Luke’s. Fr. Frank Bergen retired and Fr. Eldwin
Lovelady became rector of All Saints. In the General Convention of 2006, Bishop
Katharine Jefferts Schori became the first woman Presiding of the Episcopal Church,
the first female primate in the worldwide Anglican Communion.
Postscript 2011: Today All Saints Church also has a vibrant
Latino congregation and St. Luke’s has a full-time Latino priest. Deacon
Bernardez was ordained priest and now serves as a chaplain in the U.S. Marines.
Bishop Dan Edwards is the new bishop of Nevada
and leading the Diocese in a new wave of church planting, renewal and growth.
Theological
Reflection
I used to joke that the reason why the weather in Las Vegas is hot (up to 110
degrees during summer) was because it is close to hell. But I also say that
while Vegas is known as the city of sin, it is also a city of grace. Who would
ever imagine that this desert land would become like rivers of living waters?
In Las Vegas,
you would see a man-made city thriving in life and prosperity. St. Paul in his letter to the
Romans 5:20 said, “where sin abounds, grace much more abounds.” How true that
is, in Vegas.
Sin and grace, bad and good, evil people and holy people…the
weeds and the wheat. Money, sex and power: symbols that bring life, or death.
This parable of Jesus, (Matthew
13:24-29; 36-42) while explained in the context of a rural, agricultural Palestine, is actually more pronounced in the modern city. It is in the city where the
struggle between good and evil is more intense. Last week, we were shocked at
the news of a little boy who was lost in New York city and fell into the hands of an deranged man, who instead of helping him, strangled him and dismembered his body.
In the parable of Jesus about the weeds and the wheat, the workers
asked the farmer to pull out the weeds but the farmer said to leave them alone,
or else by pulling out the weeds, they might pull out the wheat as well. This
reasoning really goes against the grain of our activist, judgmental, righteous
indignation. Why would you leave the weeds to stay and grow and even suck the
fertilizer and the water and all the nutrients that should only go to the
wheat? Shortly after the 9/11 tragedy, one of the immediate reaction of our
fellow Americans was to find out the perpetrators, put the blame and bomb the
hell out of any country identified with them.
Isn’t that what action-oriented righteous people need to do? What was
God’s reason for this inaction implied in not pulling out the weeds?
“Because while you
are pulling out the weeds, you may root up the wheat as well.” I wonder how
many wheat have also been uprooted in our eagerness to pull out the weeds. I
heard sometime ago that Trinity Episcopal Church, Wall Street, New York
had helped rebuild some mosques destroyed as collateral damages during the early
bombings in Afghanistan. The action of the church in doing so might have saved us from having more enemies.
In his parable, Jesus spoke of the last judgment, the
harvest time, when the weeds will be gathered separately and be burned into the
fire while the wheat be gathered and brought into the barn. But how about the
transformation of the weeds into wheat? If nothing is impossible with God, then
this can transformation can also happen.
In the sharing of testimonies in the Filipino Convocation in
Las Vegas, one of our speakers who happens to be
a rector of a church in Boston,
told the story of one of his parishioners. It is a well-known story in Boston about a man whose
son was killed by another man who is now in jail. The man sought the life story
of this criminal and found out that he also has a son, almost as young as his
own son, who was murdered. Because this murderer’s son was now without a
parent, this church member, decided to adopt him and treated him like his own
son who died. This extraordinary gesture is creating a tremendous change in
the man who is in jail. Would this weed turn out to become a wheat? It is
possible. All we are but unfinished buildings needing reconstruction.
The parable of Jesus about the weeds and the wheat is about
the kingdom or the reign of God. It is a kingdom pregnant with possibilities. It is about individuals being born again; it is about unjust structures undergoing social transformation; it is about hope becoming alive. Our task as farm workers of Christ is to
proclaim the kingdom
of God in the life that
we lead and in the relationships that we create. It is a noble task, challenging and exciting. It is an amazing task, difficult and fulfilling. It is an extraordinary task because it requires a miracle from the One who alone can make it happen. May the miraculous work of God
among us turn water into wine, weed into wheat, until the kingdoms of this
world shall be the kingdom of the Lord and of His Christ forever. Amen.
(My Ignatian Journal: July 17, 2011)
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