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abundance, care, Christian, church, cohousing, community, disconnected, faith, God, Holy Spirit, Jesus, possessions, Sermon, social, stewardship, transform, worth
“The meltdown started with a small thing — a bag of [lollipops]. Rachel Damgen’s four-year-old son wanted one. She said no. It was a few years ago, in the middle of the pandemic, when it was not unusual for her to be home alone for an 11-hour stretch with her two young kids. She was struggling with the isolation. Small obstacles felt outsized…” That meltdown, where she too ended up crying on the floor, “…was a turning point. With their extended families far away in other states, she and her husband, Chris Damgen, began asking themselves if there was any way to reconfigure their lives in order to optimize for more support and community. The answer they found was cohousing.”[i]
According to research, “The cohousing movement started in Denmark in the late 1960’s. Today [cohousing is] an international movement.” In the United States there are almost 200 cohousing communities across 36 states. “Cohousing participants commit themselves to live intentionally in community. Families live in private housing, but share public spaces, responsibilities, meals, resources, activities, and events. Shared care for children and the elderly is often part of the mix. Neighbors collaborate to plan and manage their communities. Decisions often require consensus. Cohousing is one response to the lack of social equity that the political scientist Robert Putnam of Harvard documented in his book Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community (2000). Putnam showed how many people today feel disconnected and isolated. We’ve accumulated what he called a growing ‘social-capital deficit’ that leaves people in our culture longing for a ‘more collectively caring community.’”[ii]
That same collectively caring community is what Luke describes in the lesson from the Acts of the Apostles today. The scene takes place after the event of Pentecost, when the early church is forming and growing under the leadership of the apostles. The reading first tells us some very basic tenants of life as a Christian – a new follower of Jesus. We are told that after they are baptized, they do four things: they devote themselves to the apostles’ teaching (so, what we might call Bible Study); to fellowship (think about small groups, Men’s Breakfast, or what some Episcopalians call the eighth sacrament, Coffee Hour); the breaking of the bread (for us this is weekly communion, but they also mean the actual sharing of meals after the ritual of communion); and the prayers (this is both the formal and informal prayers that were breathed in and out of daily life). I imagine all those things sound very familiar and are things you too like about life in Church.
But then comes the twist from Luke that probably made each of you squirm if you were listening. Luke tells us, “All who believed were together and had all things in common; they would sell their possessions and goods and distribute the proceeds to all, as any had need. Day by day, as they spent much time together in the temple, they broke bread at home and ate their food with glad and generous hearts, praising God and having the goodwill of all the people.”[iii] They sold their possessions and goods and distributed the proceeds to all. Now, I know what you are thinking, “Here we go – here comes the financial ask to the Stewardship Campaign.” Well, take a deep breath. That’s not where we’re going. Well, not totally.
Professor Willie James Jennings helps break open this radical way of living. “It is not a new thing,” he says, “that people would offer up their possessions to a noble or religious cause…A different order of sacrifice is being performed here, one that reaches back to the very beginnings of Israel… A new kind of giving is exposed at this moment, one that binds bodies together as the first reciprocal donation where the followers will give themselves to one another. The possessions will follow. What was at stake here was not the giving up of all possessions but the giving up of each one, one by one as the Spirit gave direction, and as the ministry of Jesus made demand. Thus anything they had that might be used to bring people into sight and sound of the incarnate life, anything they had that might be used to draw people to life together and life itself and away from death and the end of the reign of poverty, hunger, and despair – such things were subject to being given up to God. The giving is the sole purpose of announcing the reign of the Father’s love through the Son in the hands of communion together with the Spirit.”[iv] In other words, coming into the life of Jesus and the walk of faith transforms the whole life – how one spends one’s time and how one regards and shares their treasure. Those newly baptized into the newly forming Christian community were not just declaring faith in Jesus, or joining a Church: their entire lives and way of being was transformed.
The Damgen family moved into a cohousing complex in Oregon. Moving into the community was a game changer – both for their mental health and for the health of their family. They decided to have a third child because they knew the community would support them. Rachel described a day where one sick kid had finally fallen asleep when another kid needed to be picked up. Within five minutes, she found a neighbor who could sit in the home while the sick kid slept so she could run to the school. Kids and elders play and visit together in the common spaces, pets are enjoyed across family lines, and, as one older widow in the community attests, the community helps conquer loneliness and isolation experienced by many in America.[v]
Now, I’m not saying we all need to move to Oregon or we all need to time travel to those early days with Peter and the apostles. But what I am saying is being a part of Hickory Neck and being a faithful Christian means not just engaging the practices of learning, fellowship, communion, and prayer. If we take the life and witness of Jesus seriously, our entire lives are transformed here. How we regard others, how we regard our possessions, and how we regard our worth is changed. As Matt Skinner says, “Deep care and concern are unavoidable fruit of Easter faith.”[vi] When Jesus says in our gospel from John today, “I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly,”[vii] Jesus gives that abundant life that through the vehicle of the Church and the Holy Spirit. The shared gifts, the shared community, the shared sense of care and love is abundant in this place because we inherit the fruit of Easter faith. Our invitation is not to go and do more work to inherit abundance. Our invitation is to see the abundance all around us, to celebrate and share that abundance, and to invite others into that overflowing abundance with us. Amen.
[i] Katia Riddle, “How to be not lonely? ‘Cohousing’ is an answer for some people,” December 1, 2024, as found at https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-health-news/2024/11/29/nx-s1-5210688/lonelieness-epidemic-social-isolation-parenting-cohousing on April 25, 2026.
[ii] Dan Clendenin, “Life Together,” April 30, 2017, as found at https://journeywithjesus.net/essays/1362-life-together on April 24, 2026.
[iii] Acts 2.46-47a.
[iv] Willie James Jennings, Acts (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2017), 39-40.
[v] Riddle.
[vi] Matthew L. Skinner, Acts: An Interpretation Bible Commentary (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2025),50.
[vii] John 10.10b.