Sunday, October 21, 2012

Chutzpah of James and John

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Job 38:1-7, (34-41)
Psalm 104:1-9, 25, 37b
Hebrews 5:1-10
Mark 10:35-45

James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came forward to Jesus and said to him, "Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask of you." And he said to them, "What is it you want me to do for you?" And they said to him, "Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your glory." But Jesus said to them, "You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to drink the cup that I drink, or be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?" They replied, "We are able." Then Jesus said to them, "The cup that I drink you will drink; and with the baptism with which I am baptized, you will be baptized; but to sit at my right hand or at my left is not mine to grant, but it is for those for whom it has been prepared."

When the ten heard this, they began to be angry with James and John. So Jesus called them and said to them, "You know that among the Gentiles those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them. But it is not so among you; but whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all. For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many."


The Gospel lesson today is another story of the Disciples not getting the message.  It is the story of our human nature.  It is a story that is re-emphasized by our own culture today.  We want to be the top dog.  And if we can’t be on the top we want to be right next to the top.  Taken by itself this little clipping out of the gospel of Mark is remarkable in the chutzpah of James and John but when it is put into context it is even more remarkable.  This section of Mark comes after the third prediction of Jesus’ passion.  Or as Rolf Jacobson, professor at Luther Seminary calls it the third of the “Interpretations of the Messiah's Servant Mission."  (workingpreacher.org) When Jesus is teaching his disciples about Messiah-ship, to coin a word, it is more than being a prediction about his death.  It is about how the messiah is going to act and how they should act.  In all three cases leading up to today’s reading when Jesus teaches the disciples what type of messiah he is they don’t get it.  After each of the three teachings the disciples do something that is ..well.. frankly human.  They don’t get it.  Rolf Jacobson provided a neat little outline of this central section of Mark.  It open’s with  Jesus Healing a Blind Man followed by the first interpretation of the Messiah's Servant Mission after which Peter puts his foot in his mouth – 

This first time follows Peter declaring that Jesus is the Messiah only to have Peter rebuke Jesus when Jesus talks about his death – messiahs don’t die they come in glory to over throw the oppressors in Peter’s world.  Peter is so adamant in his worldly view that Jesus rebukes him with “Get behind me Satan!”

The second Interpretation of the Messiah's Servant Mission we heard a couple of weeks ago which was followed by another occasion of Disciples putting foot in mouth when they argue who is going to be the greatest among them!

Last week we had the third Interpretations of the Messiah's Servant Mission with the story of the rich man.  At the end of last weeks reading Jesus reminds the disciple’s that “many who are first will be last, and the last will be first.”  And following on the heals of that message of Jesus’ mission we come to today. James and John putting their feet in their mouths. 

James and John come across as arrogant to say the least.  They first ask for Jesus to give them what ever they ask and then they ask to be sitting at places of honor when Jesus comes into his Glory.  James and John must have had visions of a victors banquet.  James and John still had visions of the type of messiah that they had been taught would come.  A messiah that would overthrow the oppressive regime and restore the fortunes of the house of Israel.  But that is not what Jesus has been telling them was going to happen.  Jesus is not about a worldly kingdom.  Jesus’ vision of the world is so anti-establishment that it is going to get him killed.  He knows this and keeps trying to get his followers to understand that the overthrowing of the oppressors won’t happen through a divine war.  It will happen through turning the assumptions of society upside down.  Jesus asks James and John if they can follow in turning the world upside down – because if they do they will indeed share in Jesus fate.  They arrogantly say that they can follow!  Which we learn later in the Acts of the Apostles that they do indeed follow.

 But in this moment in our gospel reading the other disciples overhear James and John and get upset.  The group dynamics are so predictable both in this story and today.  When we are in a group and someone or some sub-group wants to position themselves to be in a place of honor or power we react the same way.  Our response is likely to be “Just who do they think that they are?” In this and so many ways we are so like the disciples.  After over two thousand years society, to a large extent, still does not get it.  Jesus did not come to bring a princely kingdom.  Jesus came as the anti kingdom.  Jesus reminds the disciples and us that the rulers of the world “lord it over” the people.  In this election season that surely is evident that those who want to be leaders see themselves as better then the others.  Better than their opponents.  There are so many advertisements that denigrate the other side.  Both the opponent and by extension anyone who agrees with their views of the world.  So little seems to have changed.

But we are called to change.  Jesus reminds us that “whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all.”  We are called to serve not to be served.  It is when we are serving others that we are doing God’s work.  It is when we see the good in creation that we are doing God’s work.  Jesus over and over again reminds his disciples, both those who followed him during his earthly pilgrimage – and those who follow him today - that the dream of God is not for us to be a powerful people lording it over those who have nothing.  The dream of God is a society that takes care of those who have the least.  It is a society where the hungry are fed.  It is a society where we clothe those who are naked.  It is a society where we take care of each other and don’t see “the other” as an alien.  For over two thousand years Christianity – when it is at its best - opens our eyes to see Jesus in those whom society ignores – or worse – kills.  We are called to feed the hungry.  To cloth the naked.  To visit the prisoners – in whatever prison they inhabit.  Like the story last week it could be the prison of wealth,  It could be the prison of addiction.  It can also be the prison of being bullied.  No matter the prison we are called as followers of Christ to be there.  We are called simply to bring a radical dream of God’s Love to fruition.

It may be a simple dream but it is not an easy dream.  The idea that we are to be servants of each other is antithetical to our society.  But that is what we are called to do.  The good news is that we do have a role model.  Jesus.  And in our gospel lesson Jesus reminds us that the “Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many."  Another preacher commented that this metaphor of ransom would be better understood if we used the word “gift”  That Jesus came to give his life as a gift for many. 

Rolf Jacobson says that “Taken in the context of the Gospel of Mark as a whole, there is only one event that will finally pull the curtain all of the way back so that Jesus' followers will finally understand that he is a servant king -- the kind of king that God had always wanted Israel's kings to be.  That event is the resurrection.  But even then -- and this is a warning for all of us who live on this side of the resurrection -- we see, as St Paul says, only in part, as in a mirror dimly.” (http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx)

I invite all of us, especially during this election season, to look for the good in society.  To look for ways to serve. What follows In the Gospel of Mark is the healing of a blind man.  It probably is not a coincidence that the writer of the Gospel put the healing next.  Jesus was trying to open the eyes of the disciples and is trying to open all of our eyes to the kingdom.  Look around you.  The dream of God is here.  We are part of that dream.  Let us go out into our society as anti-kingdom people.  Let us find ways to follow Jesus in loving God and loving our Neighbors – all of our neighbors – even those that don’t look or act like us – perhaps especially loving those who are not like us.


Sunday, September 16, 2012

Who do You say the I am?


I preached this sermon at St. Paul's Sacramento on September 16, 2012.  

Sunday closest to September 14
Proper 19B RCL

Proverbs 1:20-33
Psalm 19
James 3:1-12
Mark 8:27-38
Jesus went on with his disciples to the villages of Caesarea Philippi; and on the way he asked his disciples, "Who do people say that I am?" And they answered him, "John the Baptist; and others, Elijah; and still others, one of the prophets." He asked them, "But who do you say that I am?" Peter answered him, "You are the Messiah." And he sternly ordered them not to tell anyone about him.
Then he began to teach them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again. He said all this quite openly. And Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him. But turning and looking at his disciples, he rebuked Peter and said, "Get behind me, Satan! For you are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things."
He called the crowd with his disciples, and said to them, "If any want to become my followers, 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 save it. For what will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life? Indeed, what can they give in return for their life? Those who are ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of them the Son of Man will also be ashamed when he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels."

Who do you say that I am?
There are a lot of powerful images in out readings this week.  I could pick any of them and have more than enough material for a sermon.  Of course the reading from James contains an admonition that would keep almost any preacher or teacher from getting up in front of a group to teach or to preach.  What does he mean that the preachers and teachers are held to a higher standard by God?  Yikes.  Perhaps I should just go sit down now before I get into any more trouble.  But for better or worse I am not stopping because the reading from Mark just reached out a grabbed me and I need to say some things about it.

First it is helpful to put this reading into the context of the whole of Mark.  The reading today is right in the middle of Marks Gospel and marks a turning point.  Before this reading we have seen Jesus gather up the disciples and do a number of wondrous healings and miracles.  But there is nothing that would really point to him being a messiah.  Oh it is easy for us to see it because we know the end of the story.  But for those who were following him at the time he was a great teacher, healer and one fine miracle worker.  But everything changes today.

Jesus and his disciples are in Caesarea Philippi, which is a very Roman City at the time and once the limit of ancient Israel's northward extension (Luther Seminary 2009).  So here in the midst of a Roman City Jesus pops the question.  Who do you say that I am? So far all we have heard is that the demons Jesus cast out identify him as the Son of God.  The disciples come up with a reasonable laundry list given the healings and feedings that they have witnessed and then we have Peter.  Brash. Wonderful Peter.  Who blurts our “You are the Christ”.  Peter’s confession is startling.  And Jesus then does something equally startling and for the first time details that he will suffer and die.  What!  How can this be says Peter.  After all the messiah is going to issue in a new reign of the Jewish people.  The long awaited messiah is going to throw off the oppressive Roman occupation and lead the Jewish people once again into a place of peace and prosperity.  What do you mean Jesus is going to die first.  Jesus turns the expectations of God’s Messiah on its head.  As Dr. Matthew Skinner from Luther Seminary said says “We can forgive Peter if all of Jesus’ new talk about suffering, rejection, and death does not sound right to him. Thus far he and Jesus’ other companions have heard the kingdom of God announced and inaugurated only in victorious tones. In fact, they have participated in the same liberating ministry, having been appointed to preach and given authority over satanic forces and diseases (3:13-15; 6:7-13), just like Jesus.” (Skinner 2003) When Peter objects Jesus tells Peter in no uncertain terms that all Peter is worried about is the worldly aspects of a messiah and to get out of the way.  Jesus is going to turn the worlds expectations upside down.
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So who do we say that Jesus is today?  Is Jesus the God of wealth and prosperity?  He is if you read any of the “prosperity gospel authors.”  Just pray for that Rolls and it will come.  Or is Jesus the God of the self made man.  OR is Jesus the God and protector of our society to the exclusion of others?  I don’t know about you but I don’t remember any parables or teaching of Jesus where he said “Come on now – just pull yourself up by the bootstraps.  You don’t need any help.  Be a self made person.”  Nope.  Jesus said to Love God and Love our neighbors.  Jesus said that when we are able to feed the hungry, clothe the naked and visit the prisoner we are taking care of God.  This is not what our society expects.

If you have a strong stomach you can see some of the societal views in the comment section of the on-line Sacramento Bee, or any other paper.  The commenters blame the homeless and the immigrants for everything that they view as wrong with this world.  If you would believe what some of the commenters say that the homeless are nothing but a bunch of lazy no-nothings.  The homeless could live in a home if they only worked as hard as they did.  Really?  Wow.  Whenever I read those comments I wonder what Shangri-La they think they live in.  When we have a society that does not want to lend a hand to the down and out.  When we have a health care system that will bankrupt anyone without insurance.  When we have a society that believes that names don’t hurt –and believe me words can kill - and that mental illness is an excuse.  It’s just not that easy.  We can’t blame societal ills on the people society has discarded.  That is not what we are called to do.  And that gets us to the part about being disciples.

Jesus says that if we follow him we too have to deny ourselves, take up our cross and follow him.  It is easy to read this as a call to personal denial.  Dr. Skinner said “denying oneself suggests a posture that does not easily find models today within a culture that prefers jargon of self-actualization, self-discovery, or self-potential” (Skinner 2003).  Dr. Skinner goes on to say that in Jesus’ time that denying oneself and taking up your cross meant redefining self from the way the dominant society would have you behave. “To take up a cross is to recognize that the dominant currents of society stand opposed to one’s manner of life and identity. It symbolizes the world’s denial of oneself.” (Skinner 2003, 329).  Seen in this light we should not be surprised that if we follow Jesus, even today, we will be acting against a dominant society.

Our confession of Jesus as Messiah can have a surprising effect on us.  It can turn us from an inward person to one who sees God’s hand in all of creation.  When we see God’s creation as good how can we not treat everyone with respect?  Just look at our Baptismal Covenant.  When we are baptized or renew our baptism we promise to take action.  We are asked in part:  “Will you proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ?  Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself? Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being?”  And there is no asterisk that days “just the people who look like us” in our baptismal promises!  And our answer to these questions is “I will, with God’s help.”  In our baptism we recognize that we are not promising to extend God’s Reign on earth by ourselves.  We are promising as a community and with God’s help to turn society on its head. 

Our promises will surprise us.  They will lead us to follow Jesus, the Christ.  Not the Christ/Messiah that will usher in a capitalistic society of me first and wealth.  But a Christ who calls us to recognize the good in all creation.  To continue to welcome all into God’s world.  To work to turn society on its head as we preach and work to usher in a community and kingdom of love for all of creation.  So.  Just who do you personally, and who do we as church say that Jesus is? And are we really willing to follow him? 

Works Cited

Luther Seminary. Preaching this Week. 12 20, 2009. http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?lect_date=12/20/2009 (accessed 09 15, 2012).

Skinner, Matthew L. "Denying Self, Bearing a Cross, and Following Jesus: Unpacking the Imperatives of Mark 8:34." Word and WOrld 23, no. 3 (2003): 324.


Sunday, August 12, 2012

Jesus Promise of Abundance


I preached this sermon on Sunday August 12, 2012 at St. Paul's Sacramento at both the 8:00 and 10:00 services

Sunday closest to August 10
Proper 14 B RCL

2 Samuel 18:5-9, 15, 31-33
Psalm 130
Ephesians 4:25-5:2
John 6:35, 41-51

Jesus said to the people, "I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.

Then the Jews began to complain about him because he said, "I am the bread that came down from heaven." They were saying, "Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? How can he now say, `I have come down from heaven'?" Jesus answered them, "Do not complain among yourselves. No one can come to me unless drawn by the Father who sent me; and I will raise that person up on the last day. It is written in the prophets, `And they shall all be taught by God.' Everyone who has heard and learned from the Father comes to me. Not that anyone has seen the Father except the one who is from God; he has seen the Father. Very truly, I tell you, whoever believes has eternal life. I am the bread of life. Your ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness, and they died. This is the bread that comes down from heaven, so that one may eat of it and not die. I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats of this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh."

Are you tired of bread stories yet?  This week is the third week of bread and it will continue for a few more weeks.  The Choir director at the cathedral complained that he is running our of “Bread” anthems!  We are reading our way through John chapter 6.  It is our summer respite from the gospel of Mark.  We picked up our Gospel reading where it ended last week with Jesus’ declaration “I AM the bread of Life.”  Unfortunately we then skip six verses.  They are important verses that we should not leave out as they set the stage for why the people were complaining. So here are the missing verses  But I said to you that you have seen me and yet do not believe.  Everything that the Father gives me will come to me, and anyone who comes to me I will never drive away; for I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of him who sent me. And this is the will of him who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me, but raise it up on the last day. This is indeed the will of my Father, that all who see the Son and believe in him may have eternal life; and I will raise them up on the last day.’” 

So when we put these verses back in the story we hear that not only are the people having problems with the whole bread thing but also with Jesus assertions that he has come down from heaven and that the Father will draw us to Jesus.  Jesus is making a messianic claim here.  He is promising eternal life through himself and promising that those who come to him will be raised by him at the last day.

Jesus is upsetting the Jew’s world in this passage.  No wonder when we pick up the reading the Jews are complaining.  He is setting himself aside as different and the people don’t buy it.  Their response is one that I think we all would make.  How can this be?  We know his parents?  Mary and Joseph!  Jesus is the carpenters son!

 But Jesus is claiming more.  In these passages Jesus is starting to reveal who he is.  He is using language that would be unmistakable to his audience.  He is claiming to be the new Moses and more.  Jesus relates his own flesh to the manna that God supplied when Moses delivered the people form slavery.  Jesus is not only referencing what happened with Moses but there is the shift to God.  God provided the manna in the wilderness and Jesus is claiming to be the bread from heaven.  Jesus is claiming not only to be the bread but to be God.  So is there any wonder that the people were complaining?

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Jesus said to the people, "I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty. What does this mean for us?  It really is still radical.  Jesus is promising an abundance that we don’t often see.  And may not believe.  Never hungry?  Never thirsty?  How can that be? There is the promise of abundance but an abundance that is different from the worldly abundance that we want to equate with this. It really is still radical.  Jesus is promising an abundance that we don’t often see. 

 Have you ever known someone who seems to live a life of unexpected abundance and grace?  I have been privileged to know several people who epitomized living a life of unexpected abundance.  One dear friend lived in a world that was full of life even when life was difficult.  When her body broke down she did not complain.  The worst complaint I ever heard come out of her mouth was “Oh Bother!” when her body failed to function the way it had in her younger days.  She believed in the abundance of God.  In her infirmity she went out of her way to help others around her.  She ministered to those around her in amazing ways.  For example until the end she would make sure that one neighbor who had lost many of his mental faculties was still able to participate in community meals.  She made sure that he still was at table with his friends and did what she could to help him know that he was still valued. 

My friend looked forward to being fed the Bread of Life.  The abundant gift of Jesus.  Not in a Jesus that will come but a Jesus that came into the world and is still operating in the world.  She operated out of that place of abundance.  Her last meal was the gift of the living bread.  Her last meal was communion.  She died secure in the promise of eternal life.  Not some future eternity but an eternity that is already around us and already here.  I don’t think there was any fear in her departing her failing body as she had tasted the bread that leaves one full and believed in the gift of eternal life.

When the church is at its best we help feed that abundance.  When we take communion we are offered a taste of the heavenly banquet.  That mystical feeding that sustains us with the promise of God’s grace.  For me that is one reason I am so strongly drawn to the priesthood.  I have been fed by the sacraments in times of despair and in times of hope and I feel called to help bring that feeding to others. 
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Jesus said “I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats of this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh."  This radical statement would have set the Jew’s teeth on edge.  The ideal of eating flesh was against all of the purity laws.  It was upsetting.   Jesus was turning the world upside down!  It is still an upsetting image.  Some of my un-churched friends have quite literally been sick to their stomachs in hearing our Eucharistic words “Take, Eat, this is my body!”  These words that we hear week after week have become too tame for us.  We divorce our selves from the radical nature of the words.  Jesus words are not always meant to comfort the world.  They are meant to turn it upside down.  When we partake of the Bread of life our response and our hope should be radical.  Our response to God’s Grace that is present in our Eucharist should be to go out and create the abundance that it promises. Jesus calls us to love God and Love our neighbor.  Yes even the cranky neighbor and the neighbors who don’t look, smell or act like us.  The hope is radical.  The promise is not some future place of abundance but an abundance that is already unfolding in our midst. 
 Dr. Karyn Wiseman Associate Professor of Homiletics at Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia said I want to be who God calls me to be and make an impact in the world, sharing resources and offering assistance to those in need. Many will call me a socialist and deride my genuine care as a political agenda, but I believe no one should go hungry. Spiritually or physically.
I know that one of the best ways to help is to instill a sense of worth that all are welcome to come to the table – to come to the Bread of Life. All persons deserve to receive the gift of abundant life.
The truth is everyone – in spite of their life circumstances – needs to have hope. They need to see options for a better world. They need to envision a time and place when they are gifted with what God intends for them. This passage reminds me of that hope, that vision, and that gift. It brings us into deeper relationship with the one who is the Bread of Life - the one who feeds us over and over again.” (http://www.odysseynetworks.org/news/onscripture-the-bible-john-6-35)
God is calling all of us to an abundant table.  God is offering us nourishment that will never leave us hungry.  We are called to the Eucharistic feast. We just have to be willing to come to the table.  To acknowledge that we are worthy of the feast.  God feeds us an abundant feast.  In response we are called as God’s agents to bring God’s hope and abundance to our hurting and hurt filled world.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Parable of the weeds among the wheat.

I preached this at the final Eucharist for our two week Anglican Immersion Program as part of the HyCAS Program  at Church Divinity School of the Pacific.  This was done as part of my preaching class.  


Homily For Friday July 27, 2012


Matthew 13:24-30 Parable of the weeds among the Wheat 

What kind of crazy farming manual did we just hear in the gospel?
Its crazy  At least to our modern sensibilities.  In our time we want to do everything to maximize our yield.  With todays technology we do things differently.  As a botanist who spent some time in my life working on genetic engineering of crop plants I would look for round-up resistant seeds to plant so I could use round-up to kill the weeds.  Or I would look at better living through chemistry to find a selective herbicide to kill the weeds.  After all if we let them grow along with the wheat they will compete for space, nutrients and water and reduce our yield.  Thankfully this parable is not a guide to modern farming practices!  But more importantly God’s farming practices and God’s economy is upside down compared to ours. 

How many of us as leaders in our congregations or in our denominations look out and see the weeds growing with the wheat? How many of us see the evil in the world and want to do something to eradicate it?  We ask ourselves what could we have done as a society to prevent the shootings in Colorado last week?  How can we prevent murderous dictators from creating genocide?  We really do want to help God and help Society.  But how?  Surely it must be ok to lock away evil.  To go about our societies and make sure that we are safe.  The problem is that evil – like the tares in the parable – look an awful lot like the wheat before it is ripe.  Who and how do we judge?

In addition to looking at societal evils, or weeds, we sometimes look into ourselves and see that perhaps there are parts of us that we should excise and burn.  Am I too impatient with those around me who read scripture literally when in comes to same gender blessing.  Or do I, as a gay man, not pay enough attention to what scripture says in regards to relationships – so much so that I don’t look to see what good news might be part of that scripture?

As we all gathered here these past two weeks we have learned about scripture, congregational leadership tools, liturgy and preaching.  We have set at the feet of some of the leaders of the church to hear what they have to teach us and we have sat with each other to hear what our different contexts can teach each other.  There have been some wonderful discussions in classes and over an adult beverage or two!  We are probably all zealous to go back and put into practice the things we have learned this week.  To tell our fellow worship leaders what they are doing wrong.  Or to use some of the practical theology tools to fix our dysfunctional congregational systems.  As Susanna is fond of saying “Do try this at home”  and I agree with that with one little caveat.  That what we are called to do is sow good seeds in our endeavors to fix the church. Not to go home and rip out the tares and to throw them in the fire. 

Elizabeth Johnson , a preacher from Luther Seminary , said “Jesus' parable makes clear that any attempt to root out the weeds will only do more damage to the crop. This has played out far too many times in congregations and denominations, with some determined to root out anyone who does not agree with the "right" interpretation of Scripture, liturgical practice, or stand on a particular issue. There are also those who pronounce judgment on people outside the church -- on people of other faiths, for instance -- declaring them to be destined for eternal damnation. Whether judgment is focused within the church or without, it does serious damage to the church and its mission.” (http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?lect_date=7/17/2011&tab=4)

 It is our job to plant the good seeds not pull up the tares!  It is, however,  our job to occasionally shake up the system.  To jolt ourselves and our congregations or other systems out of the status quo.

When the slaves asked about pulling up the tares the farmer told them to let them be lest they also destroy the wheat.  You see the weeds that are translated as tares look very much like wheat until they are mature.  It would be easy to mistake a stalk of wheat for a tare before it is ripe.  Likewise I think it is very hard to judge who or what is evil in our midst or even sometimes what is evil in ourselves before it is ripe.  It is not that is does not matter.  It is important to call out evil and dysfunction when we see it.  But it is not our jobs ultimately to judge.  That is for God.  God in the fullness of time, as our liturgy says, will be the ultimate judge.  That annoying cranky person sitting in the pew may look a lot to our eyes as a tare that needs to be plucked out of our congregation but perhaps we are wrong.  They may well have a good reason to be cranky.  If we wait for the harvest at the end we may discover that they have characteristics that actually help bring God’s reign of justice and peace to the earth.  Even if they are annoying to us.  Likewise we should take care of suppressing too soon the parts of our own selves that we want to excise.  What looks like weeds now may indeed be a skill or a characteristic that will ultimate help in our leadership. 

What a strange farmer our God is.  So unlike ourselves especially in the 21st century.  We want to use all of our tools, especially the ones we have learned about this week, to help bring in the kingdom of God.  We want to rip up the tares and grow our church.  But that is not our job.  Our job is to sow good seeds and to try and not worry too much about the weeds that inevitably sprout up with the good.

 As we return to our local contexts I hope there is one tool especially that we will continue to use.  That we will continue to have conversations with each other.  To bounce ideas off our fellow classmates – the new friends that we have made and the friendships that we have strengthened over these past two weeks.  Let us use our technologies not to find ways to rip up what we perceive as weeds but to reach out to each other.  To find ways to plant good seeds.  To help each other with the tools and patience to leave it to God to make the ultimate decision as to what is a weed in our congregations, our denominations and in our own lives.  We may just be surprised that the weed is actually wheat once it ripens.

 

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

I preached this Homily for my course on "Preaching the Bible" at Church Divinity School of the Pacific on July 17, 2003.  The homily was preached for the HyCAS Class.


Homily using the Proper’s for Advent 4 – for Preaching the Bible


For some of us the story of Mary and her song – the magnifcat- is so familiar that we perhaps glaze over or have an emotional reaction to the story without really hearing it.   When trying to look at the story with fresh eyes a couple of things strike me about Mary’s story.   Why did Mary run in haste to see her Cousin Elizabeth?  Did she want to confirm what the angel told her a few verses earlier  - that Elizabeth was pregnant?  Or did she want to share her news with the one person on earth who she thought would understand her.  Or as a friend suggested perhaps she ran to help Elizabeth with her pregnancy.  We don’t get the motivation for the trip.  We just get the result.  The result is wonderful but the why still tugs at me.  The other thing that interests me is Mary’s Song – the magnificat and what can it say to us.  When we really look at Mary’s song what does it say to us today?  What does it say to us about God?

First – why did Mary travel?  After all it was not a safe thing to do in Mary’s time for a young women to travel in the hill country alone.  It was a dangerous place. Just like today it can be dangerous to travel to some areas alone.  But that did not matter to Mary.  She went in haste to her cousin Elizabeth.   When Mary said yes to the angel she agreed to do a dangerous thing.  She agreed to become pregnant as an unwed mother.  An act that would have easily been interpreted as adultery.  An act that could result in her death.

I think that any of these or other motives that we might think of for Mary’s trip would be reasonable for us to ponder.  As startling as it may be for some to question Mary’s motives I think it is ok to consider the motive that she wanted to see this other miracle – the pregnancy of her older barren cousin or that she wanted to share.  I think we all have similar times in our lives when we have had such motivations.  I think it is human nature to want proof.  At least it is for those of us who have been trained in the scientific method. Richard Hamm, an author on church renewal,  said that “We who are late-moderns were raised to dissect everything.  It is a powerful approach to observation and discovery.  It got us to the moon and back.  However it must be admitted in the end that most things are more than the sum of their parts.” I would want to see the proof.  I would want to see Elizabeth as pregnant.  But what was Mary’s motive?[1]

Perhaps Mary really did just want to share her experience of the Angel Gabriel with the only other person who would truly understand.  The person that the angel told was also experiencing the miracle of an unexpected pregnancy – Elizabeth.  The sheer joy of the encounter with the Angel would certainly have been enough to get Mary to hasten through the hill country to see her cousin.

I’m sure we have all had experiences that have made us want to run and tell the one person, or persons,  who would truly under stand.   I know that I have had experiences that I have wanted to share as soon as they happened.   I needed to share them with someone who would understand.  I  wanted to reach out as soon as possible because the experience was a wonderful one.  For example when – on my second time with our Diocesan Discernment weekend the commission on ministry and standing committee recommended that I go forward as a postulant for Holy orders I could not wait to tell the people who would understand.  I could not wait to tell my priest, spiritual director and family.  So in haste I did that very modern thing and instead of traveling down from the hills I quickly texted the message to all the people who where waiting for the answer.  How very different that was than 3 years earlier when the message to me was “we hear a call to the priest hood but our Diocese is not ready to have a Gay man go forward in the process.  The timing is not right.”  In that case I waited until I got home to tell most people.  I only immediately told my closest family.  But when the news is wonderful – when we are visited – perhaps unaware – by an angel we want to share the good news.  We go in haste, perhaps oblivius to the risks, to share our news.

So perhaps a clue as to why Mary went to Elizabeth is in the result.  The wonderful song that is recorded in response to her visit with Elizabeth and the leaping of the embryonic John the Baptist.  For even if the motivation for the visit was to confirm the words of the Angel Gabriel the result of the visit was wonderful.  Mary’s reaction to her cousin’s greeting of , "Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb.”  Gives us some clue.  Mary sings.  She sings about the works of God and how they are opposite of what society would expect.  Mary’s song – the Magnificat is a song sung out of joy and wonder. 

It is also a song of reversal.  It is a radical song that goes against the power structure.  It is a song that tries to describe an indescribable God.  And how can we describe God?  In the case of the magnificat God is described through reversals.  Mary describes a God who does the unexpected.  A God who values the poor over the rich.  A God who values the lowley and the hungry.  A God who is revolutionary.  A God who entrusts a single young, powerless women to bear His son. 

Walter Breuggeman said “[Mary] sings about “the hungry,” the ones cut out of the food chain and denied access to the world’s great granaries. Mary knew what Micah knew, what Israel always knew, and what the church knows in Advent. The weak and vulnerable will be “lifted up.” The poetry and the song invite us to move out beyond the world given us by “the hard men,” and into a new, different world. We may, in anticipation, already act in and for that new age…. Folk around Mary can hope and sing.” (http://sojo.net/magazine/2009/12/getting-ready-unexpected)
Now I have to admit that my response to God’s call has not been very much like Mary.  It takes me a little while to both recognize that God is speaking to me and to respond.  And even when I do respond I’m afraid I have been a little like some of the prophets in the Old Testament.  My responses have been reasons why God certainly could not be calling me..  I don’t speak well…I’m gay….I’m not perfect enough.  But God persisted and so here I am.  I wish I could say that when I first heard God’s call I responded with Be it unto me according to thy will.  But it was not.  The good news is that I believe that our individual responses to a call do not lessen the impact that Mary’s response can have on our future responses. 
As I see it Mary can be a role model for our ministries.  It really does not matter why we are here.  Whether we got to this place through a dramatic invitation from an Angel – perhaps named Gabriel – or that we got here after years of hearing a nagging voice nudging us to say yes to our call to ministry – whatever that call may entail.  What matters is that we are here.  We are here and I bet all of us have a song in our hearts.  – Even when we are struggling on what to preach about on a given Sunday or in this class! – Mary invites us to sing.  To see that God’s reign is different.  It is a reign of peace and love where there is war and hatred.  A kingdom where the hungry are fed and the lowly are lifted up. 
Our invitation its to sing.  To sing our magnificats to God and to the world.  To sing the unexpected song in the unexpected place.  It really doesn’t matter if it is Advent or Christmas or any other time of the year. When we say yes to God we too will hasten to visit with those who will understand.  But more we will be over flowing with songs to share with the world.  Songs of reversal. We are invited to sing songs and to join in God’s activities to bring God’s unexpected reign of love and peace to our world.

Resources used:

Breuer, Sarah Dylan. Dylan's Lectionary Blog. 12 20, 2006. http://www.sarahlaughed.net/lectionary/2006/12/fourth_sunday_o.html (accessed 6 26, 2012).


Brueggemann, Walter. Sojourners. 12 2009. http://sojo.net/magazine/2009/12/getting-ready-unexpected (accessed 6 26, 2012).

Hamm, Richard L. ,  Recreating the Church – Leadership for the Post Modern Age, 78 St. Louis, MO Chalice Press, 2007

International Bible Society. Holy Bible New International Version . Grand Rapid, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1973.

Luther Seminary. Preaching this Week. 12 20, 2009. http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?lect_date=12/20/2009 (accessed 6 27, 2012).

The Society of Biblical Literature. Harper's Bible Commentary. Edited by James L Mays. San Francisco, CA: Harper & Row, 1988.



[1] Hamm, Richard L. , 2007 Recreating the Church – Leadership for the Post Modern Age, 78 St. Louis, MO Chalice Press