Friends in Christ,
Welcome to an Hallelujah Anyhow Lent!
“No matter what comes my way, I’ll lift my voice and say, Hallelujah Anyhow!”
Now, I wonder how many of you are loving this Gospel music style? And how many of you are not...especially during Lent!
I’ve known we were going to do this ever since our worship planning meeting in January. As we talked about all the hardships of this year, this pandemic season, this divided nation, this troubled heart…and decided together, let’s sing Hallelujah anyway this time around. Yeah there’s meaning in refraining from the A-word (or H-word, depneding on how you spell it), but not this time. We can still mark Lent.
And believe me, my little liturgical heart has been pitter-pattering ever since! Singing Hallelujah during Lent...much less singing it joyfully and upbeat? We always, bury/fast from the Alleluias during Lent.
But this year’s different...in so many ways, and we’ve gotta sing out, “My God has never failed me yet so I’m gonna stand my ground…”
Look at this Gospel text for today: We jump back to Chapter 1 again, and it starts with the heavens ripping open, the dove descending, Jesus gettin’ baptized, and the original voice (same one we heard last week on the mountain of Transfiguration) — that original voice saying “You are my son, the beloved, with you I am well pleased.”
And then immediately—right after that—no baptismal reception, no cake in the Jordan River narthex, no handshakes and hugs—no, immediately the Spirit drives Jesus out into the wilderness...TO BE TEMPTED BY SATAN! FOR 40 DAYS!
Welcome to Lent, right? We’re now into day 5 of our 2021 40-day Lenten journey. I don’t know about you, I’d rather ease into Lent. You giving anything up for Lent? Taking anything on? I’d rather kind of try it. Grace, you know? But look at Jesus: ALL in! Tempted, wilds, 40 days, no games. Satan.
Friends in Christ, we’ve got a lot to contend with too. Our baptismal liturgy isn’t messing around:
“Do you renounce the devil and all the forces that defy God? Do you renounce the powers of this world that rebel against God? Do you renounce the ways of sin that draw you from God?”
These are the questions at the baptismal font.
We’ve got a lot to contend with, and Mark’s Gospel style is honest about that. So is our atypical Lenten Gospel Acclamation! “Through every test and trial, I’ve got the victory. The enemy has tried his best to make me turn ’round, bring me down…”
—
Our Lent this year begins also with the story of Noah and the flood! Maybe you haven’t thought about it since Sunday school? It’s a troubling story as an adult: God wanted a re-do on creation. Everything had gone awry, and so God flooded the planet, save for a very few, but God also said never again would that happen. God was heartbroken that it did, and God put a rainbow in the sky — a reminder of peace and beauty instead of violence at the last.
We live on this side of the flood, the rainbow side! Whenever we talk about Noah and the flood during Lent, you have to think: baptism. The waters that destroy are also the waters that save!
Jump back to Mark and Jesus getting baptized, there’s that dove again! The sky ripping open, but instead of a deluge of destruction, God keeps the covenant, God cares about what happens down here, and on this side of the flood, on the rainbow side, it’s the dove of peace that descends among us.
But that doesn’t make the struggle go away. In fact, the struggle just begins. Mark keeps it real! Jesus is driven immediately into the wilds to be tempted, right away. And then we hear about John’s arrest on top of that! And that’s right about the time — right at the moment of temptation and testing, trials and tribunals, right at the moment of arrests and riots, racism and injustice, right at the moment of horror and disease, and despair, right at the moment of bloodshed and even death — that’s right when Jesus shows up among the people and starts proclaiming and preaching the good news — that God has come near. That’s a soft translation. The Greek actually says God IS here, now. Change your ways.
Temptation and turmoil are still coming our way on this side of flood. But God is with us anyhow. Hallelujah? Through it all, “through every test and trial, [you’ve] got the victory.”
This is Lent is Markan: Being baptized, blessed, beloved — we don’t then escape the challenges, the struggles, the pains of this life: no, we’re driven right into them...immediately. And still we’re gonna sing, “Hallelujah anyhow.” God’s never failed us yet, so we’re gonna stand our ground.
Lent this year starts with a making a stand. Making our stand in the cold waters, as we remember the covenant God made with Noah after the flood, and the covenant that God made with us after the baptismal waters “splish, splash,” crashed down on you and me! It all starts there, and then immediately the troubles come our way. OK.
Don’t be surprised. Don’t be discouraged. Don’t be afraid. These things are bound to happen.
(Speaking of liking or disliking this Gospel musical style Gospel Acclamation — I saw Bono of the band U2 give a great interview, where he talked about Gospel music — “everything is up” vs. the Blues — honest. Maybe listen to Blues music this Lent too. Honest.)
The cross is honest. Our central symbol, even here at Bethlehem, the place of the manger, the cross comes first. It’s stark. Troubles are bound to come our way. And yet, in the shadow of the cross, we sing together.
Friends in Christ, peace be with you on this side of the flood, the rainbow side. Peace be with the stands that you make this season. As you stand for justice, as you stand for those who are hungry and homeless and cold this week through Hypothermia Shelter — so much struggle and pain for so many — peace be with you as you stand your holy ground in the waters of baptism, in the Gospel of God. The peace that Jesus gives us isn’t a cheap peace, on the surface, it’s down in our bones.
Nothing can shake it. Not temptations, not heartaches, not ship wrecks, not terror, not even death itself.
For WE know, that God has the final say, that Christ conquers Satan, that life on this side—on the rainbow side—of the flood, is renewed: a gift of grace, made new each day in the waters of baptism. Splash yourself every day of Lent, and give thanks for your baptism.
And that goodness is ours to share. Hallelujah? That goodness, comes from God, and will stay with us through it all. Amen.
"AMEN! LET'S EAT!"
Sunday, February 21, 2021
February 21 -- Hallelujah Anyhow (Lent 1B)
Tuesday, February 9, 2021
February 7 -- The Jesus Injection (After Epiphany 5B)
Mark’s Gospel is coming at us at high speed — different stories piling up like the snow outside today. Now, it’s taken us two months to read the whole first chapter of Mark, and we took a week here and there to dip into the Gospel of John and Luke, but just stop and consider for a moment how much and how quickly everything has happened up to this point:
In the very first verses, John first appears on the scene to preach repentance, to baptize and to “prepare the way!” for Jesus. That lasts about 6 verses. Then enter Jesus – no birth stories in Mark, no little boy in the temple, just grown up Jesus, ready to go/ready to rock. And it all starts with a sky-ripping baptism. That lasts about 3 verses, and then the gut-wrenching temptation in the wilderness. Matthew and Luke take almost 15 verses to describe what happened to Jesus there; Mark does it in 2. Then Jesus begins his ministry in Galilee, calls some disciples, and some patterns begin to emerge. Moving in and out of the synagogue, he preaches and heals, preaching and healing. We almost settle into a rhythm of this in the book of Mark, and preaching and healing almost become synonymous, and where they happen is not as important as the fact that there is a healthy flow and balance to Jesus’ movement in and out of the worship space (nice reminder for us today). Whether Jesus is preaching or healing, the end result is that life and health are not just proclaimed gently but injected, like a life-saving shot (in Mark’s almost abrasive style), freely granted, over and against death and all those demonic forces that keep us down. This just keeps happening, keep watching for it in this Year of Mark. And let that good message become a part of your movement in and out of your worship space, following the example of Jesus.
“The life and health injection” is certainly the theme on a number of levels in our lesson today.
Here in the text, Jesus heals Simon’s mother-in-law. She doesn’t even have a name. (It’s not the first time this happens to women in the Bible. There are countless nameless women who teach us…and that’s the case here.) Now, I wonder if perhaps you had, like many who read this text today, an immediate and very natural and appropriate reaction when Simon’s mother-in-law is healed by Jesus. Did you catch what the first thing she does after is? It said Jesus took her by the hand lifted her up…the fever leaves her…and she began serving them. You almost get this impression, that the disciples are like, “Hey Jesus, can you fix her because we’re getting hungry in here?” At first glance, it’s almost like she’s a victim of Jesus’ healing.
And all that might be true. But I do think it puts a modern lens on the story. That’s OK. That’s what we do. And I think we should always read with critical lenses around gender roles, sexism, racism, xenophobia, and on...
But don’t miss also some of Mark’s major themes that are emerging, even in this first chapter...namely casting out demons and bread/feeding/eating.
Jesus is constantly trying to teach his male disciples about serving and caring for one another. Emptying themselves of ego, pride, bluster; and instead embodying love, compassion, service and justice for all. And Simon’s mother-in-law gets that immediately. Jesus is constantly trying to get the disciples to respond to the life and health he is injecting. (We’ll see that they’re not getting it as the Gospel goes on.) It’s almost like they’ve got a high tolerance to the Jesus injection. Like the vaccine doesn’t take. But Simon’s mother-in-law is immediately impacted by Jesus’ life-giving shot. He takes her by the hand, and “it takes.”
How’s your immunity to Jesus’ life-giving power? Is the shot only 50% effective? Is it taking? You know, those of us who have been around church for years, who have heard this language about grace and forgiveness ad nauseum, week in and week out — we have a tough task, because I imagine we’ve got a pretty high tolerance to the Jesus injection too. To hear Sunday after Sunday “How vast is God’s grace, through the power and promise of Christ Jesus our sins + are washed away,” “God gave us a gift to set us free, when the waters were poured down on you and me...”, “the peace of Christ be with you always,” again and again...means we’re in danger of producing some pretty potent antibodies to Jesus’ life-giving power and healing. So were the disciples. I couldn’t help but laugh thinking about vs. 36-37, where Simon and the others find Jesus and say, “Hey, everyone’s looking for you.” Hey, you do it, Jesus. All these people need help, and they go get Jesus. Great lesson for us – “You do it pastor, you do it church council, you do it bishop, you do it Mr. President, you do it Congress, you do it doctors, you do it teachers, you do it...everyone’s looking for you.” All these people need help, and like the disciples, maybe we have the tendency to go get the guru to help them. (It occurs to me :) we don’t say, “Go in peace, and find somebody else to serve.”)
Well, Jesus complies with their request here, actually. That’s because we’re still in chapter 1. The further we get into Mark, the more we get the sense that Jesus is constantly injecting this life-giving power into his disciples — it’s going to take a couple shots — they keep resisting, it doesn’t take right away...
But Simon’s mother-in-law gets it immediately. She serves. It is a fore-glimpse of our ministry in Christ. She is our teacher. Immediately, she began to serve them. (Yes I think there’s some sexism built-in. Always is. But don’t miss the transformation, the “immediately”, the fact that Jesus’ healing took.)
The life-giving power of Jesus is what we speak of at the end of our worship: Go in peace, and serve. That’s not just some catchy little thing to say at the end, and it’s not code for “Good news, this church thing is finally over now you can go home, go back to your life unchanged” – “Go in peace and serve the Lord” means, injected with God’s life-giving power, injected with healing, injected with Christ-light, injected with the promise of divine presence, injected with a peaceful assurance that the whole world is—in fact—in God’s hands despite all the turbulence (that’s the peace that passes all understanding), injected with Jesus himself in the holy waters of the font, bread and wine, injected with grace, GO NOW and share it with others, GO NOW and serve immediately...like Simon’s mother-in-law.
Jesus injects us again today with life and health over and against the powers that hold us down. Jesus raises us from our fevered state so that we too might get it, and serve in response.
And maybe part of that injection is finding quiet space too. Maybe Sabbath is part of the injection. This is a rich text today. It’s not just go work your brains out for the other. We also see our lord resting, amen? Vs. 35: “In the morning, while it was still very dark, Jesus went away to a deserted place to pray.” He’s doing that all the time by the way. As I hand-wrote this passage this week, I had this thought: “Wait a second, there were still more people that needed healing! He wasn’t finished! Jesus himself is going off to a deserted place to pray?”
Friends part of the injection is taking the moments we need, the downtime we need — Jesus is modeling it — the prayer time we need. What a gift the snow can be: it slows us down. It’s like a reminder from God: “Hey, take a quiet place.” Jesus is always silencing the demons. Maybe that’s the voices in our heads that never stop — anxiety about the future, traumatic voices from our past, the good and noble things we feel we have to do, the cries from all the people that need us — can you sense a certain FEVER? But Jesus models for us going a way for a bit, re-calibrating, praying. That too, friends, is Christ taking us by the hand, like he did with Simon’s mother-in-law, and lifting us up. That’s the snow day, everybody needs a snow day...no matter your climate. It makes the fever go away, you see?
This is our God: Lifting us up, healing us, showing us how to slow down, and calling us, from sabbath, back into Gospel action — back and forth, working for justice, offering peace, living in hope, and sharing God’s joy with this world. This is our God, friends: sheltering us and holding us in the palm of her hand, this day and always.
Thanks be to God. Amen.
Sunday, January 31, 2021
January 30 -- Exocisms, Hiding, and YOU (Epiphany 4B)
Grace to you and peace….
How many of you have ever witnessed in real life an exorcism? I’ve heard of them. I’ve never seen an exorcism myself in the traditional sense. I wonder if the man in the gospel text was foaming at the mouth, talking with a different voice, flailing around…the stuff of Hollywood movies.
It’s possible to get caught up in imagining and trying to figure out what that must have been like, the drama, tragedy and terror of a man possessed by an unclean spirit, and miss the point of this story: that Jesus casts out demons. And he does in the synagogue, as the Rev. Dr. Joy Moore points out — in the holy house, when people gather to worship. Jesus can cast out demons among us Bethlehem and friends...as we huddle together in worship on this snowy day!
Yes, Jesus casts out unclean spirits, and we all have them. We all have demons living inside us. Maybe it’s not as obvious as this text or in the movies, but I think the most powerful demons are actually the most subtle, buried way down in our psyches, polluting our deepest being. It’s easy to separate ourselves from this story, at first glance, but we’re actually right in the middle of it. Can you name your demon? What is it that possesses you?
I’ve been doing some thinking about demons this week – stuff in us that’s got a hold of us for the worst, those death-making (as opposed to life-giving) – and it occurs to me that there are many, many different kinds of demons. Different for everyone.
The more obvious kinds of demons are the ones that are expressed externally. One might think of the seven deadly sins, among them: greed, sloth, anger, pride. These are demons that can live within us. Reinhold Niebuhr, 20th century theologian, used to say that the greatest problem with the world—if you could take all the sin of the world and sum it up with one word, it would be—pride. Talk about an unclean spirit…Everything comes down to the human being proud. That’s why people fight among themselves. That’s why people say cruel things. That’s why nations invade others who are weaker, that’s why there’s racism, that’s how anger flares up and greed takes over. That’s why people are hungry and poverty is a reality. PRIDE: The unclean spirit, according to Niebuhr.
But then others came along after Niebuhr and said, “That’s a very male perspective.” They said, “You know, that’s good stuff, but it doesn’t ring true for many women, nor is it true for all men.” This is my point: there are so many different kinds of demons.
Maybe for some of you, pride is the demon. It certainly can be for me. Anger too. Many of us act out our brokenness. But how many countless others are not full of pride in the least? In fact, maybe just the opposite. I don’t want to over-generalize, but I am generalizing: while many men and boys externally act out their brokenness (we see this with boys at school) into and through adulthood — powerful quote btw from Richard Rohr on men..he says that "when positive masculine energy is not modeled from father to son, it creates a vacuum in the souls of men, and into that vacuum, demons pour." — many women and girls, on the other hand, can go inside themselves, they can internalize their brokenness. (We see this with the rates of eating disorders among teenager girls, staggering numbers are cutting themselves or harming their own bodies in other tragic ways. I talked to someone who used to cut herself, and she said she did it because she desperately wanted to “feel” something, even if that was pain—makes you wonder if the churches could be more involved…)
So more contemporary scholars have countered with or added to Niebuhr’s idea of the sin of pride, the “SIN OF HIDING.” For one, the extreme is the “inflation of self,” the self thinks itself greater than it actually is—anger, greed, entitlement. But for others there is the “negation of self” – the sin of hiding. Susan Nelson Dunfee first described "the sin of hiding." She says it has enabled, in part, so many women to remain at in margins or in the shadows of leadership. I believe, there’s also of course sexism at play there (that’s a demon in itself...as is racism, and all the other toxic -isms). But the sin of hiding – silence, submission, enabling abuse, succumbing to guilt. Oh, guilt is a demon isn’t it? How many of us do things for no other reason than the fact that guilt is riding us like a monkey on our backs?
This gospel text is so real for us today. And what’s the good message here, that we can miss? Jesus cast out the demons!
Jesus takes our demons, friends—whatever they are—and commands them to leave us. One of my favorite spirituals. [clapping] “I’m so glad Jesus lifted me!” It’s a simple and profound celebration of the fact that Jesus does cast out our demons, molding us into the truest and purest thing we can be: fully human, fully Pam, fully Joe, fully Sydney, fully Kaj. For some, we fall victim to trying to be more than human, inflating ourselves with the “sin of pride.” For others, we fall victim to being less than human, deflating ourselves with “sin of hiding.”
Hear the good news, sisters and brothers, siblings in Christ: Jesus casts out those distorted portraits of ourselves, whichever way they’re distorted by sin and demons, and calls us, paints us into who we are made to be: beloved and sent out children of God. Baptized.
Sounds nice. But it doesn’t happen without a some thrashing about. Did you notice that in the text? “The unclean spirit, convulsed him and cried out with a loud voice.” Demons don’t like Jesus, and they don’t like to come out. Just ask anyone who’s battled addiction. The Greek word for the convulsing — sparatzan — has connotations of grasping and shaking violently.
And here’s another interesting thing to think about: The demons recognize Jesus. Often it’s very hard for us to recognize Jesus, when we meet him. Have you ever noticed that? You don’t know it’s Jesus immediately when the stranger greets you, when the friend offers a harsh word of admonition. [surprised] “Oh, that’s Jesus.” (Emmaus) The OT lesson today talks about false prophets — we don’t always recognize Jesus right away...but the demons do. What’s that about?
When our demons of pride or hiding are threatened by Jesus, it’s going to hurt coming out. The exorcism is going to shake us, because we’ve grown accustomed to living with our demons. So don’t be surprised if it stings a little, if you convulse a little in church — maybe the exorcism takes a whole season. Lent is coming.
...It all reminds me of when our kids would get a cut and always used to cry or at least wince when we washed the wound. We an all relate to that.
But in the end, friends in Christ, we are made clean, we are healed, we are freed from the all the demonic forces that tie us down. This is the Gospel truth, this day and forever. Praise be to God. AMEN.
Sunday, January 24, 2021
January 24 -- Glitchy Zooms and Demons (After Epiphany 3B)
Friends, grace to you and peace from Jesus the Christ who calls you now. AMEN.
I thought I had something earlier this week, and then yesterday a small handful of us (along with a few members of 3 other churches) gathered on a glitchy Zoom call and survived our way (and much more) through the entire Gospel of Mark!
It’s something I like to do every new year with the congregation, at least, whoever is up for a very different kind of Saturday morning: reading the Gospel of the year aloud in its entirety, taking turns chapter by chapter. And of course this year, it had to be virtual. Our time “together” started very fragments, by trying to figure out how to hear and see each other. A flurry of texts to get the meeting code again, computers muted, or not muted, video on, or not able to be on — I think even our most tech-savvy can relate to those days...At one point I as the host got bumped off the call, I thought I lost everyone, a few folks came in after we had started. Somehow we managed it all. There are definitely many worse things happening in our nation and our world right now, but to be honest, this felt like a little bit of a virtual storm, out in the sea of ministry.
And then Jesus found us, and called us.
As we got into the chapters, I was again swept up by the narrative of God’s mercy, as different voices among us came through my speakers one way or another. It was quite beautiful actually and incredibly powerful (pic).
I shared with a friend yesterday afternoon, that every year, to be honest, I drag into this endeavor at the last minute. I am deflated at that point where we start reading, all tangle up. I try to build the event up, in the weeks before, but always when that Saturday morning actually rolls around, I envy everyone who is opting out of this, to be honest, as a small group is climbing with me into the saddle of another gospel reading. This year was no exception...
And then, every year — every year, the Gospel is enough, the words are enough, more than enough, and I leave the experience always inspired, challenged, filled. This year was no exception.
And it’s changed my direction as I preach on this early section from Chapter 1, where Jesus shows up (out of the baptismal waters) and calls the disciples, where Jesus calls you and me.
The Gospel of Mark is the gospel of exorcisms. That’s what jumped out at me again and again as we read yesterday.
Jesus — not just in stories where he casts out demons, of which there are many — Jesus is calling out and driving out the evil and the brokenness in the world and in the hearts of people all throughout the Gospel of Mark! It is the Gospel of exorcisms!
The reading from Jonah today...is God having to send Jonah again. After that whole dramatic whale episode that I imagine many of us learned in Sunday school — you know, God sends Jonah to Ninevah, he doesn’t want to go, jumps on a ship in the literal opposite direction, asks to be thrown overboard in a fit of guilt, gets swallowed by and lives in the belly of a giant fish for 3 days, then is spit up onto the shore and finally goes to Ninevah. After all that! He still doesn’t learn, he doesn’t think the people deserve God’s mercy, he still tries to run from it, and here in our OT text God is sending him again! All that to say, we, like me in our online reading event yesterday, need God nudging us, calling us, sometimes dragging us, fishing us out from our own nets, and sending us too again and again and again.
Why? Because “we are the ones through whom our God is seen and heard.”
And the demons are not just overtly evil actions and intentions...like the terrorists we witnessed rushing up the steps and attacking the capitol on the Day of Epiphany, 3 weeks ago now. That was pure evil, violence through word and deed...more and more stories of the brutality and sheer hatred are coming out. The demons are not just that. Nor are they just cruel words and back-handed comments, vengeful thoughts, secret schadenfruede (you know, the “pleasure derived by another’s misfortune”).
The demons — as I realized in myself — are also our anxiety, our fear, our obsession with perfection, and our distrust that God’s got us now and always. The demons are many and various and need an entire Gospel narrative to be named and finally cast out by Jesus.
Yeah, I said perfection! I want everything (and always want everything) to go perfectly. Are you like that too, high achievers? Mending nets that are broken, constantly so that, not only do they work, they also look good, present well, function most efficiently! Jesus finds us there. “Hey, follow me instead,” he says. Let go of those nets.
—
I am currently in our annual Bishop’s Academy — which is this year of course a Zoom call (for like 5 weeks on Wednesdays) — and we’ve got Dr. Ryan Bonfiglio of Cantler School of Theology — deep-dive-lecturing us on Sabbath. This week he was reflecting on what it is we need sabbath, i.e. sanctuary, from:
productivity, efficiency, perfection, technology and orthodoxy. Perfection really jumped out at me. He talked about one (of 39) of the Old Testament Sabbath prohibitions is driving a hammer...and while that looks pretty easy on the surface to keep, the rabbis have taught for centuries that hammering a nail is clearly symbolic in Jewish tradition of finishing a job well.
And I don’t know about you, but finishing a job right and well can absolutely possess me. It can make me crazy. Make me miss my own children’s needs, right under my nose, make me angry unfairly with my spouse, make me self-medicate, made me sleepless, make me dangerous on the road because of fatigue and distraction. Make me say and do things that aren’t me, the list goes on...and that’s starting to sound like a demon. Are these the nets from which Christ’s mercy calls us too, friends? Perfection?
There’s a lot tangled in those nets: fear, anxiety, and finally that stumbling incompetence at entrust all this to God. That’s what the deep spirituality of the Offering is, every Sunday. That’s the disciples and us, dropping those nets and starting to take our first steps behind the Savior. Try to trust. Trying to walk free.
The Gospel of Mark is life-saving.
It happened again yesterday: I thought I was drowning and yet Christ found me. I thought everything was falling apart, and yet Christ calls us.
As Amanda Gorman proclaimed from those same capital steps on Wednesday:
We've braved the belly of the beast
We've learned that quiet isn't always peace
And the norms and notions
of what just is
Isn't always just-ice
And yet the dawn is ours
before we knew it
Somehow we do it
Somehow we've weathered and witnessed
a nation that isn't broken
but simply unfinished
Friends in Christ’s inauguration, in Christ’s call to discipleship, we begin our journey again. And Jesus is the one who finishes the brokenness, the driving nail: Christ, the one who loves, who forgives, and who saves us all from the demonic nets. Thanks be to God. AMEN.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
January 10 -- No Small, Sweet Thing (Baptism of Jesus - Epiphany1B 2021)
Friends, I said we’re in the Year of Mark, and
WE. ARE. IN. IT.
The baptism of Jesus is no small, sweet thing.
Baptism has become a bit of a nice, small, sweet thing in our time: A perfect, new baby is born. A nice tradition of getting that baby baptized lingers in the family’s DNA. Church participation might be pretty minimal, but the pastor’s fine with that. Hey, everyone’s welcome. Grace abounds, and after all the young parents and everyone knows, “it would mean the world to Grandma” to see her precious little grandchild get baptized, especially given her recent health concerns. So why not? It’s a sweet day, the family travels to be there, the pictures by the font are so nice, the little brunch that follows (at least in pre-COVID times)...and then just a year later, everyone pretty much lets that “big” day come and go, maybe a baptismal candle is lit, a card from a sponsor or friend from church arrives in the mail, but that’s about it...and even that can buried as the years pile up. Because...baptism, in our time, largely has become a nice, small, sweet thing.
But friends, you need to know that Jesus’ baptism is revolutionary! The ripping open of the sky and the descending of the Holy Spirit on Jesus — and by extension, on us too...according to our Paul New Testament theology —
“When Paul had laid his hands on them, the
Holy Spirit came upon them” — this Baptism is no small, sweet thing. It is earth-quaking, heaven-splitting, new-path-setting, irrevocable, re-arranging, re-surrecting, re-creating, re-volutionary action, here and now and in-your-face!
It is chaos losing to order.
Violence being swamped by peace.
It is racism ending to equality and justice for all.
It is the tyrannical empire of Caesar’s Rome succumbing to Jesus!
It is evil falling to love.
Baptism is death dying to life in Christ.
Welcome to the Year of Mark. WE. ARE. IN. IT. Might be the shortest book, but it packs a punch. Its symbol is the roaring lion. Clear, sharp, immediate, irreversible and a powerful way to start this already difficult year.
[catch breath…]
Baptism here is a renunciation of death and the devil. Biblical scholar Alan Streett says, baptism is letting your subscription to Caesar’s reign of terror expire, it’s “burning your draft card” to Rome’s violent conquest, and proclaiming and embracing an opposite allegiance: God’s new reign of radical justice, compassion and peace.
When it says the “heavens were torn open,” that Greek word, is powerful and irreversible, according to Markan scholar Don Juel. God is unleashed on the world. Welcome to Mark! God — unleashed on the world!
Frankly this kind of action is a more than most people are willing to sacrifice. This kind of faith is just too risky. This kind of divine love and justice is simply too much to get behind...too much at stake. This baptism of Jesus is too big. We’d all probably want to shrink it down, put it back in the box (the little bowl-of-a-font), and keep it sweet and sentimental, and a nice excuse to have a small reunion.
And then we have weeks like this...
And we find ourselves needing more than just a nice, small, sweet, little ritual. We find ourselves longing for a grounding in hope, a place to make a stand, a position to take, a word to speak.
And friends in Christ, this Baptism of Jesus holds up — even and especially in the face of violence in our nation’s capital and beyond. This baptism of Jesus holds up in the face of blatant racism and white privilege. This baptism of Jesus holds up to fear and the chaos, the uncertainty and the cruelty. This baptism of Jesus is no small, sweet thing.
Friends in Christ, let’s buckle up for the kind of ministry Jesus has in store for us this Year of Mark, because he’s just come up out of the waters of baptism. He’s made his stand in the Jordan river. We are covered in those waters too, so now the trip begins!
I hope we can stay on board. Brace yourself for whiplash because the Gospel of Mark moves fast (in chapter 1 alone, Jesus gets baptized, gets tempted in the wilderness, calls the disciples, teaches in the synagogue, casts out demons and heals a leper! Chapter 1)...I hope we can stay on board because following Jesus gets bumpy down the the muddy roads of the baptized life.
This will not be easy. Remaining faithful will not be easy. There will be confrontation with forces of evil, with chaos, and violence — If the baptism of Jesus is for us too, if like the Ephesians, the Holy Spirit descends on us too, then get ready to make your stand in Jordan and join Christ for the journey.
This is a stand against SATAN (ever heard me talk much about Satan? Well, I’m trying to channel Markan Christology here!), this is a face-off with Satan is no small, sweet thing — it’s no 3-little-drips of water from a tiny bowl in a peaceful sanctuary, a nice white gown, some cake and some pictures. No, this discipleship is gonna hurt, it’s gonna leave us bruised, struck down but not destroyed! “The Gospel of the Lord.”
Friends, are you still with me? Why’d everybody sign out and log off? (just kidding—I can’t see who’s here) Are you still with me? Are we still together in Christ? Has the chaos and the terrorism on our own soil, in our own town, has the violence of this season broken us up, torn us down, frightened us away? Or are we going to get Markan here in 2021? M-A-R-K-A-N. Are we going to buckle down and buckle up and journey with Jesus?
Friends in Christ, here’s the thing about Mark’s Wild Ride: We’re not just along for the ride...
As this rich narrative unfolds, as we get jerked and bounced from one scene to the next, Jesus is actually going to pass the reins over to you! [pause] That’s the Gospel of Mark. (Like a scene from an action movie.) And there it is again: “When Paul had laid his hands on them, the Holy Spirit came upon them.” The Holy Spirit descends on YOU. SPLISH, SPLASH, is pretty much how it went. “You are my child; you are my the beloved,” God says to you, “with you I am well pleased.”
We are emerging from the baptismal waters too. We are standing in the Jordan river too. The Holy Spirit is descending on you too. And now Jesus is calling you aboard. Here we go. AMEN.
Sunday, August 30, 2020
August 30 -- Come, Die With Us (Pentecost 13A)
Last week Jesus calls Peter “the Rock”. He lifts him up, promises him the “keys to the kingdom”, says, “upon this rock I’ll build my church.” Jesus has Peter feeling pretty good, I imagine. This week (only 8 verses later) Jesus calls Peter “Satan.” What happened?
Peter probably wanted to take his titles and honor and blessings from Christ and just enjoy them (just for a second...just 8 verses, Jesus?); Peter wants to “take the money and run,” so to speak.
But then Jesus instructs Peter — and all of us — in the ways of discipleship. This is a calling — once we acknowledge Christ as the Messiah, once we make our bold statement of faith, like Peter, this is a call — to take up our cross, this is a call to come and die. Peter wanted to hinder that. He wanted to block it. “Say it isn’t so, Lord.”
I wondered about putting “Come Die With Us” on our digital sign out front. [pause] I wonder how fast this church would grow.
This Gospel passage from Matthew, that is before us today, is terrible marketing. It does not make people feel good. It’s frightening, and confusing and, frankly, not the way most people are going to choose. “I don’t want to come die with you, Lord. I want to enjoy the Rock, the church. I want to enjoy the comfort of being in your presence. I want to enjoy knowing that my soul is safe with you. I don’t want to suffer.”
"If any want to become my followers [though],” Jesus said, “let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake [and for the sake of the Gospel] will find it.”
Christ calls us to give ourselves away for this world. [pause]
How are you, how are we, giving ourselves away for this world? In a world and a culture that says, “No, protect yourself and your dearest ones! Don’t give yourself away! That’s stupid.”
But Christ bids we come. We give ourselves up. And as D. Bonhoeffer wrote, “When Christ bids we come, he bids we come and die.”
[How am I doing here, btw? As I wrote this I found myself wanting to add lots of jokes and humor to this passage. That’s a defense mechanism. A little sugar coating...to take the edge off.]
How is Christ calling you to lose your life, to give yourself away for the world, to take up your cross and follow him?
It always needs to be said, when we reach this passage each year, about bearing your cross, it needs to be said that your “cross to bear” is never to be the recipient of some sort of abuse. [pause] I interject with that, because I’ve heard and met people who say that their pastor or priest told them that they ought to be silent and bear the physical/emotional/spiritual abuse of their spouse or parent or church because that’s simply their “cross to bear”…like “Well, we all have our crosses to bear.” Being the recipient of abuse is never someone’s cross to bear — for that is not giving yourself away for the world for the sake of the Gospel, that is not being the truest you for the world that God created you to be, and that this world, this community, this family needs you to be. God didn’t mold us for abuse and violence — not recipients of abuse & violence and not perpetrators of abuse & violence. Let’s all work to stop that.
Our “cross to bear” is that cross that was traced on our foreheads in our baptisms. It was traced with oil as a symbol of a sealant. And it gets traced again with ashes each springtime, at the beginning of Lent. It is the cross under which we live, and under which we die. [Do you remember that cross? Is it still there? Trace it again, just to make sure you know it’s there.]
It is that cross that says we belong to Christ — it’s a branding — Christ who we boldly confess as Messiah, along with Peter.
And having had that cross sealed on our foreheads, having made that bold confession, we now go, into the deep and pain-filled valleys of this life, into the fear, and the storms that rage all around us. That is, back into our labor — the courtrooms, the newsrooms, the classrooms, operating rooms, the living rooms and dining rooms and bedrooms of our daily lives. We seek out the places where there is pain, and we go there, to give ourselves away, to be agents of God’s grace. I had a wise colleague who pointed out when we were struggling together with this text: “You know when God asks us to come and die, you can’t really die just a little bit. When you die, you die. It’s all or nothing.” So when Jesus calls us to come and give our selves away, he’s asking for every part of you! He doesn’t say, I’ll take your 1:30 minutes each week. I’ll take whatever you have leftover in your wallet. I’ll take—if it’s not putting you out too much—your volunteer time for my cause. Jesus doesn’t say that! Christ bids we give our whole selves away, that we die to the things of this world.
And maybe that means you need to rethink everything...I don’t want to shy away from that possibility. Maybe God is calling you, or us, to rethink everything! — to re-shape our whole lives in response to Christ’s call. That’s really frightening for those of us, who are settled, and on track. [Dad’s experience in Norway — freedom of not having roots down, no stakes in the ground.] Maybe God is calling you to rethink and reshape everything in your life. Maybe it’s time for a brand NEW start, a life that is in line with God’s call to give yourself away. Dangerous words today, on one hand.
But I would suspect—and I know—that many of us are not thinking we’re completely off track with God’s purposes for our lives. I would suspect that many of us have been trying to follow Christ in our daily lives...many for a long time.
Then I would encourage you to welcome this message as a wake-up call. Sometimes we sleep through our alarms from God. Let this be a wake-up, “Hey, where is God calling you to give yourself away in what you do, in where you are, in who you are?”
The church has failed somehow, I think, in talking about vocation, in talking about “having a calling” as only something pastors or professional church people get. (Were you taught that somehow? I hope you weren’t.) What’s your calling/vocation?
Martin Luther said that every single person has a calling from God...from the maid scrubbing the floor, to the shoemaker. (Those were Luther’s examples.) God calls us all to do what we do and do it, as well as we can, for the sake of the world, to the glory of God. [pause] Let your dishwashing be a prayer; let your lesson-planning be a psalm; let your tile work, or your lab research or your carpentry or investment baking or your parenting or your caring for a aging parent be a hymn to God’s glory, for the sake of the world. [pause]
Our work can be very hard — we give ourselves away in it, and today we’re given a booster shot to give ourselves away even more. Wash dishes for someone else, give away some of your labor or your research, or your craftsmanship. Do something creative (in the COVID world) to help care for and nurture someone else’s child or aging parent, in addition to your own. Giving ourselves away for this world, in response to Christ giving himself away for you: this is your cross to bear.
A great task for us all, as Labor Day approaches. God calls all of us into this holy labor. Dangerous words today, on one hand. But on the other hand...
Jesus promises us, that in losing our lives — in giving our lives away for the sake of the other — we actually find our selves and find our lives...
Let’s go find ourselves...for we have been found by Christ, buried with Christ. We’ve been imbedded in God’s healing and forgiving love all along! That cross is a tree, you see; that cross of death...is a cross of life. Thanks be to God. AMEN.
Sunday, August 23, 2020
August 23 -- A Chip Off the Old Rock (Pentecost 12A)
At the beginning of a new school year, however new that looks this unprecedented school year, at the end of August, beginning of September...it’s time to go back to the basics. Can’t start a new school year without going back to the basics, reviewing where you came from – your multiplication flashcards, the alphabet, the writer’s handbook, the periodic table, Gray’s Anatomy, in seminary it was the dictionary of theological terms and Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Life Together.
Pick your level and your discipline, but you can’t start a new year without remembering where you came from. And this week, our lectionary texts are practically synched up with the same idea: We can’t start anew without remembering where we came from. It’s time to go back to the basics…back to the building rocks. Molecules and cells. Letters and grammar. Numbers and formulas. Theories and cases.
And today in church: Who we are and whose we are. Where we have come from…and then who is this Jesus?
Our first church lesson from Isaiah calls us, especially in times of trial, to “look to the rock from which you were hewn, the quarry from which you were dug. Look to Abraham your father and to Sarah who bore you.”
Siblings in Christ, we are called back to the basics this late date in August: we are called to remember that we all come from the same rock. What an image: God shaped us and molded us from a common rock, dug us up and breathed into each of us. We trace our ancestry of faith back to Abraham and Sarah, back to Adam and Eve, back to the very hands of God. “Look to the rock from which you were hewn.” The mighty fortress, who is our God.
How…we…can…forget…that we came from God. How we can run and hide, and deny and evade. And joke. How our memories can be short-term, tracing our ancestry of faith back only one or two generations (back to Pennsylvania or Iowa or Sweden or Puerto Rico or Sierra Leone)…but not hundreds and thousands of generations.
But let’s get back to the basics today: It is the Living God who chiseled away at our being, and who continues to chisel away at us, who dug us out of the dirt and gave us this holy life, this sacred earth, and who continues to dig us out of the quarry: out of our despair, our guilt, our brokenness and our sorrow. It is the living God who refashions, remolds us, puts us back together (i.e. remembers), breathes into us new life again, and now, today, sets us free. It is the living God who set the heavens in their places and filled the seas with creatures. [We can start sounding like psalmists when we go back and start reflecting on the basics!]
May we be psalmists this week as we begin anew, even if you’re not getting back into the virtual classroom, like our children and teachers will be very soon, may we be like little psalmists singing God’s praises and wondrous deeds with our thoughts and actions. We have been resuscitated by the living God, brought to life again and now again!
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And now, having been brought back, this God asks us a question. “Who do people say that I am?” Jesus probes his followers.
Kind of a timeless question. People are still talking about Jesus today, saying/writing who he is, or who he is not, or at least who he was. [Albert Schweitzer] Pick your context and your camp, and off you can go with things to say about Jesus. I think many, many people in our post-Christendom, post-modern American culture today believe that Jesus was just a prophet, like the disciples said, just a radical activist—who was executed for advocating love of the poor and the outcast, violating Jewish laws and undermining Roman authorities. Compelling stories, but he lived long ago, and is pretty much irrelevant today, other than being yet another inspirational role model who we could never fully imitate. [Temple of Self Realization in Malibu]
Others think he was just a super-nice pastor who wants to be your best friend in spirit. Not so sure about how radical his activism was, the point of Jesus, some say, is just to have a personal relationship with you. “I just want to be with you.” I had some friends that used to call that “Jesus is my boyfriend” theology.
If you can replace the word “boyfriend” for “Jesus” in your songs or your prayers, and it starts to sound like a love song, you might be in danger of “Jesus is my boyfriend” theology. “I just want you to be with me, Jesus. I just want you all to myself, Jesus. Don’t leave me, Jesus.” Where, it’s only about a personal relationship.
Meanwhile I had a professor in seminary who really disliked the song, “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” because he thought it had misled generations of Christians to shortchange the Church’s confession about who Jesus is. (Peter didn’t confess Jesus as his friend.) Of course Jesus is a friend, and I don’t mean to undermine or make light of that relationship. But as disciples of the One who came to earth to take on our flesh—who ventured through the pain-filled valleys of our existence, offering both life-giving healing and life-changing challenges, who suffered death, not just for his friends but for this whole world, and then rose from the dead to have the last word over death and evil—we must stand and confess a whole lot more than “he’s just my special friend” or just an inspirational figure in history! Amen?
Friends in Christ, we join with Peter, and confess Jesus as the Messiah, the anointed one—THE ONE, sent from God, AND YET VERY GOD, God from God, Light from Light, True God from true God (as the old Nicene Creed helps give us words for what is beyond words).
Sisters and brothers in Christ, we join with Peter, and go back to the basics today, as we too confess Jesus, the rock of our salvation, yes friend, yes radical activist for the poor and the outcast, yes Son of the Living God, yes God in the flesh before our eyes in this Word, in this Holy Communion, in these holy waters of Baptism! In you. Yes Jesus lived long ago, and yes Jesus lives now.
Our confession is great, like Peter’s. And in making this bold confession that we do, do you know what we become?
A chip of the old block.
A chip off the old block is what we are, people of God! A chip off the old ROCK. A chip off the old rock that is God. We are a chip off of God. Broken and shared for the sake of the world, that’s what we are: fractured and forgiven, but sent out for many. [Imperfections on the rock you’re holding? Fractured and forgiven.]
Siblings in Christ, lest we forget who we are and from whence we come: WE ARE THE CHURCH, THE BODY OF JESUS CHRIST, and we’re about to chip off into this world! That’s not a bad thing!
Peter’s confession becomes our confession, and so Jesus is beyond just friendly, relevant or inspirational: Jesus is necessary! For without him, for us who are of his flock, his disciples, his followers, we have no life…
Without him, we have no life. Our life is in Christ. That’s lesson number one, back to the basics. Except this is more than a lesson, this is a gift! And this gift is ours for free! Nothing you can do to earn it, or precede it, for that matter. All we can do is accept it. All we can do is put out our hand and receive it. God’s grace, life in Christ, poured out for you. Let’s start with that.
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And so now what? God’s done the work, given the gift, now we just get to be the church. And Paul’s letter to the Romans speaks to this and gives us further instruction: “Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. Don’t be [chiseled, molded into the ways of] this world, but [continue to be chiseled by God], be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God.”
Is it God’s will that children go hungry or get separated from loved ones...or is God chiseling away at us when we see that? That refugees be rejected? That species go extinct and air polluted, that communities suffer with illness and isolation, that wars drag on? Is it God’s will that you continue to live in fear, burdened by anger, guilt, sorrow, or resentment? Or is God chiseling away at us? Molding us, fashioning us to be a chip of the old block that is God.
Friends in Christ, BACK TO THE BASICS: we are the church, and God is still chiseling. Still working, still calling us, molding us, still tapping away at this world…
Sculpting a way for peace…the peace that passes all human understanding. Praise be to Jesus, the Messiah. AMEN.
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Our hymn of the day is “Goodness is Stronger than Evil” — back to the basics, and yet, far from elementary, it’s the heart of our faith, and it carries us. These words come most directly from the pen of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who cuts through the static, and all the ugliness of apartheid and racism, and gets at the heart of the matter. The melody comes from a Christian monastic-style community on an island in Scotland called Iona. A composer in that basic and harsh setting—rocks, wind, sea, sky—set the Archbishop’s powerful words to music for us to sing.
Sunday, July 19, 2020
July 19 -- From Star Wars to Barn Dances (Pentecost 7A)
Will you pray with me: God of the harvest—give us your patience, give us your peace, give us your word. Amen.
I love the Star Wars movies. I love the special effects, the story, the humor, the characters. I grew up watching them. I had the action figures. You could say I was a big fan. And I still love Star Wars today.
But like many movies, Star Wars makes the good guys and the bad guys very easily distinguishable. In case you’re not sure, you can tell who’s good and who’s bad by the color of their uniforms and also by what kind of music is playing when they’re on screen. [sing the famous Darth Vader tune] It’s pretty easy. And despite an intergalactic stage, the division between good and evil is pretty simple. The good guys are here, the bad guys are there. We are not they, and they are not we. We are of God, they are of the devil.
But the world, in which we live, is not quite that clear cut, is it? [pause] Reality is not quite as simple as the Star Wars movies. God’s world is wonderfully messy…but that means it’s messy.
Many theologians and thinkers through the years have offered alternative, more complicated models to this simplified, Star Wars-like worldview.
Is it possible, theologians have wondered, that every person is both good and bad at the very same time? Is it possible that good resides in the hearts of evil people. And that evil resides in the hearts of good people? And so good people and evil people are suddenly much more difficult to distinguish.
Martin Luther of course talked about this, when he spoke of the Christians’ “sinner-saint” status, that is, those who believe and follow Jesus are both sinners and saints.
Isn’t that confusing? To think that we are each horribly evil, and at the very same time, very good…for indeed we are all exalted creatures of God’s good creating! (In fact, Imago Dei is the name of the Zoom series our Synod is doing right now!)
And to make it more complicated, sometimes it’s even difficult to differentiate which is the sinful part and which is the saint-ful part in our thoughts and actions. Evil certainly has a way of disguising itself, getting between and around our good deeds, just like weeds around the wheat. I read a book a some years back called The Seven Deadly Virtues, which was all about just how sneaky evil can be.
Biblical scholars tell us that, interestingly, the kinds of weeds that grew in the wheat fields of the ancient Mediterranean require a very skilled eye to tell which is which as they grow. So that’s what Jesus was talking about.
In this Gospel text, we are left with an elusive question:
Who is the evil one, the devil, or the children of the evil one? Can we pin point them, the weeds? Can we at least point to a group of people or a series of events, and say, “Now there, there is evil,” and be done with it? Or is it more messy?
With issues as weighty as good and evil, we can find ourselves, like the disciples of old wanting simple answers, crying out, “Explain this to us Jesus, so that we can make sure to be on the good side, on your side, and join your quest to rid the world of the evil ones!”
But Christ surprises us again and again. And in the search to figure out who the weeds and the wheat are for us today, we might just find ourselves led down new paths…
For we hear this morning that it’s not our job to uproot the weeds, it’s not even our job to help, just like it’s not the servants’ job in the parable.
“Do you want us to go and gather the weeds?” the servants ask. “No,” says the master, “that’s my responsibility.”
It’s ultimately the job of the Great and Mighty…[wait for it] *surprise* Gardener-Farmer to do the weeding.
Christ, the Gardner-Farmer.
One might even imagine a peaceful tone in his voice as he responds to the servants’ urgency and anxiety to destroy the weeds:
“No [calmly],” the Gardener-Farmer says, “do not gather the weeds; for in gathering them you would uproot the wheat as well. Let both of them grow together until the harvest.” After all, this is same teacher, earlier in the Gospel of Matthew, who uttered these challenging but grace-filled words: “Judge not, lest ye be judged.” “Blessed are the peacemakers.” And — probably the most challenging three words in the entire Bible: “Love your enemies.”
Indeed Matthew is not portraying a teacher who commissions his students to violence and destruction, hunting down and killing weeds, Star Wars-style...or worse. “No, you leave the weeding to me,” the Gardener-Farmer gently says.
Could it be, siblings in Christ—given our sinner-saint status—that within our very communities and within our very selves we possess the soil where both weeds and wheat might grow?
And with all our worries and fears, with all our temptations and distractions, it’s so easy to get overcome by the weeds. It’s so easy for the wheat in our hearts, without attention, to be choked out by the weeds of sin that flourish.
The weeds of sin: self-centeredness, arrogance, apathy, hatred, bitterness, neglect—neglect not only of our neighbors and of the earth, but neglect of our selves, our own bodies. [pause]
The truth is that we can’t do our own weeding. We need the divine Gardener-Farmer to come and cut back the weeds that grow in our communities and in our hearts. Good thing Jesus came along. Good thing Jesus promises to deliver us from evil. Good thing we continue to follow in the radiance of that promise. For in trusting, Jesus frees us from the weeds of sin that grow in our hearts. But that’s not the end of the story!
So often we hear that Jesus liberates us from death, sin and the evil one. But the Good News is not just about side-stepping sin & death!...
The Good News is that because of this freedom, freedom from death and sin through Christ, we are enabled then to live. It’s about having LIFE…and we all know that having life is far more glorious than simply not-dying.
It’s about the wheat growing, transforming, and bearing fruit. In the same way, it’s not just about winning—beating out the bad guys—and then kicking back to gloat. (Sometimes I think we’re drawn to the graphic imagery of the burning and gnashing of teeth, the fire, destruction, apocalyptic stuff, wipe our brows and say, “Whew, glad that’s not me”…it does sound like a good action movie…it appeals a cultural, insatiable appetite for violence and revenge...even just plain ol’ cut-throat competition: We win, you loose.) But, no! There’s more to the parable...
It’s about being alive in Christ! Such gruesome pictures can distract from what comes next in the text:
*Are you ready? It’s really exciting. [somewhat sarcastically but seriously]* Matthew 13:30—The harvester takes the wheat into the barn. That’s where the parable ends.
But let’s continue the story together. Can you imagine…
[I’ve always thought that the church suffers — not because of money or not enough pastors or old buildings, but — from a crisis of imagination.]
So let’s imagine what happens next in the parable Jesus tells, let’s add a chapter to the parable (afterall, that would be very biblical):
The harvester of the wheat carries it into the barn, where it undergoes a change, a transformation…and is finally turned into bread to nourish the hungry. Catch that? — The wheat (with the addition of the right ingredients) becomes bread—it takes on a new form, i.e. new life emerges. The life we have in Christ, is made new, it takes on a new meaning. We, as followers of Christ, are taken inside the barn and given special knowledge/ingredients.
There is a separation from the rest of the world, from the field, certainly from the weeds, but what is it that sets us apart, siblings in Christ? [pause] We are given a glimpse of God’s realm, we get to see what we and the rest of the world have to look forward to! We get a glimpse of God, a glimpse of grace, a glimpse of divine love, joy, peace. A glimpse of hope, right smack in the midst of all the ugliness and pain of this world.
And it is in this experience that our lives are transformed. After all, wheat — which escapes fire — will eventually die out in the field as well. But the harvester takes the wheat into the barn, where it is transformed, given a new life, a new form, a new purpose.
But that’s not the end of the story either!
Wheat turns to bread, and look what happens when people gather at the table around to eat this new thing, this transformed wheat! Strangers are welcomed because there’s plenty of good bread to go around, ideas are shared, care is given for those who are going through tough times. New life emerges again this time in the form of community. And once the people have eaten the bread, they are strengthened to get up from the table, to go out from the barn where they were sitting together, and to plunge into this messy world with new energy, new hope, planting new wheat fields, inviting more to the table to be fed. Life, and new life, and new life…this is what “life abundant” means (to borrow from the Gospel of John).
What an powerful and empowering development: What went into the barn as nothing more than a bundle of wheat, became the center of a party: a barn dance. What went into the barn as just a bundle of wheat enlivened and strengthened a people for the journey of outreach and service in the world. Sometimes we need sit together and dance and celebrate inside, right? And then out we go. That’s what worship is!
The task of living God’s love is a great one, seeming insurmountable and hopeless at times. So we continue returning to the barn for sustenance, through communal Word and Sacraments. And then we leave the barn once again.
We are caught up in a dynamic tension of excitement and patience. This movement to and from this sacred barn becomes our new life, our new life in Christ. Fear, hatred, lust after destroying some “enemy” has no place in this new life; the Star Wars-like worldview doesn’t work, for it is the good and gracious Gardener Farmer who does the weeding, not us.
Because of Christ, we are freed from having to pick out the good weeds and the bad weeds in our hearts and in our world...
No, “we just get to do church,” as one of my great mentors Fred Danker (of blessed memory) used to say — dance in the barn, work in the field, back to the barn.
Or as Senator John Lewis (of blessed memory) would say: We need to “get into trouble, good trouble, necessary trouble”...
We just get to live into our baptismal covenants, live among, serve all people, strive for justice and peace and worship together. I guarantee that gets us into some “good trouble.”
And so in this vision of the barn dance, moving into and away from the barn, the realm of God is being realized “on earth as it is in heaven,” just as we had prayed for it to be…as we do each week inside the barn. The realm of heaven is coming into view here on earth...for God’s children are shining like the sun, warming and nurturing the world—the field—with life and hope. That’s you.
Followers of Jesus: The weeds have been removed, the vision has been offered, and those divine arms are open in gracious invitation: “Come,” Jesus says, “join the living. Dance in the barn, plant in the field, shine like the sun.” AMEN.
Sunday, March 1, 2020
March 1 -- First Sunday in Lent
The First Sunday in Lent every year begins with the retelling of the story of Jesus being tempted by Satan in the wilderness... lest we take Lent too lightly. This gives us a morning, maybe even a whole week, to pause again and consider “the devil.”
Does anyone even believe in Satan anymore? In many ways, the devil’s been reduced to a Halloween costume. I marvel each year in October when suddenly we see images, adults and even little children dressed up like the devil: Red pitchforks, and pointy tails and horns. It’s as if Halloween is the only time the devil comes out, and it’s all just pretend and trying to be funny (or sexy) at that. Either this, or we’ve assigned all evil in the world to certain people like the Adolf Hitlers or Osama bin Ladens. (I remember some assigning Barrack Obama with these descriptions only a few years ago...and I’ve certainly heard Trump called the devil). It’s as if we’re trying to compartmentalize the devil and control Satan by assigning the label “evil” to specific individuals or a group or class or even race of people.
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But the devil really comes out during Lent, when we head like Jesus “into the wilds.” This season of Lent is a time for weeding. And when you weed, as any gardener knows, you can’t just pick off the prickly leaves and vines that you see on the surface and call it good. You can’t just point to a person who’s committed war crimes or violated ethical codes or humanitarian laws, destroy that person...and then go back to sleep. We’ve got to dig deep into the soil of our own hearts, where the roots of evil have a strong hold. We’ve got a lot of work to do in the garden, we’ve got a lot of work to do in the wilderness. Be assured, friends in Christ, that the devil is real.
Temptation is all around. But we’ve got a strong Word to contend against the devil.
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How interesting that these temptation stories today are not temptations to murder, or any other big obvious sins. Neither Jesus, nor Eve and Adam were handed a sword or a get-away-car. (Do you know what I’m sayin’?) If that were the case, we’d probably be much more able to resist temptation. But the tempter is far more subtle...what’s wrong with a little piece of fruit? It’s healthy, right?
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Let me break these three temptations in Matthew’s Gospel down for us (as scholars have done for me): Jesus was tempted by wealth, security, and power. And we are tempted by wealth, security, and power.
The first temptation is wealth -- bread. See there’s nothing wrong with bread, there’s nothing wrong with wealth if we’re careful. But how easily wealth/money can become the center of our worlds. Our treasure. Which is where Jesus said, “There will your heart be also.” Too much bread is the sin. Too much wealth is the sin. Turn these stones into bread, the devil said. But Jesus: “One does not live by wealth alone, but by every Word that comes from the mouth of God.” Let us too cling fast to the strong Word of God this Lenten season. Let’s keep going for more insight into that strong Word.
The second temptation is security. Nothing wrong with security. Who doesn’t want to have a roof over their head, clothes to keep them warm, shelter for their family and their communities. But when we become so obsessed with security...we loose sight of what is most important. Like a weed, those roots run deep and can take over, and always at first, subtly.
[story: Bethel Lutheran adopting “Risk Taking” as a biblically-based congregational value.] There’s nothing in scripture that lifts up the virtues of being secure. Abraham, Moses, Ruth, Mary, Jesus, Paul...where? And yet it’s our first priority so much of the time.
How we are tempted to dump ourselves and our resources down to the angels of security below. Safety nets! “Do not test God,” Jesus says. “Do not let your lust for perfect, peaceful security and comfort come between you and God who is out there among the poor and the neglected, and calling us to leave our nets, to take risks and follow Jesus!
“Use your head,” Jesus says. “Be shrewd, but leave your nets.” God doesn’t minister to us. We serve God and minister our gifts — our time, talents and treasures — in compassionate ways, by sharing our bread, reaching out to the poor. Lent is the season to pull up the weeds that grip our hearts, that hold us from the inside. Oh, the devil is real. [Wish I had a James Earl Jones voice ;) ]
Finally, the third temptation is power. So subtle. So tricky. Nothing wrong with being in control, right? Having people under you? Having people do what you say. We’ve got a number of managers and bosses in this congregation. Someone’s gotta call the shots, right? But again this can be abused. Power for power’s sake. I used to love House of Cards on Netflix (Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright) — a whole show about power for power’s sake. Kevin Spacey turns hauntingly to the camera all the time and whispers, truly devilishly, that it’s not about money for him — it’s all about power. And that speaks to a deep desire for us as humans. And it’s not just overt shows of power. How we can try to manipulate things behind the scenes, especially if access is power is not granted or assumed immediately or by the culture.
When we make ourselves god, when we put ourselves at the center, we turn away from God. This is what the tree in the Garden of Eden was all about: Shall we trust in God, or not? Shall we trust ourselves? That was the temptation. It’s still the temptation.
Welcome to Lent, friends in Christ. Do the hard work of introspection these 40 days. Do the hard work of weeding in the garden of your hearts. Work the steps, commit to the journey. In this walk is life. And Jesus meets us in our struggle, in our stumbling and getting back up, in our time with the devil, our time of honest reckoning. This is a hard time — coming face-to-face with God and the powers of temptation, but it is good. And Christ will bring us through.
Will you pray with me?
God give us the power to resist the allures, the subtleties of Satan, in this wilderness journey of Lent. Give us the courage to trust in you. Weed out our sinfulness, cleanse our hearts, and walk with us now. Keep us always steadfast in your Word. And continue to love us...as you always have. AMEN.