Monday, August 21, 2017

Learning to Change: August 20, 2017

Year A, Pentecost 11                                                 
Matthew 15:10-28                                                     

            When I was little and I heard the story of the birth of Jesus, I thought he simply dropped out of heaven. There was no real birth.  One minute the manger was full of hay and the next minute there was a baby.  I never thought of him growing up, being a toddler, or an adolescent.  Part of the reason is that the Bible tells us almost nothing about Jesus before he turned 30.  He was a baby.  Then he was 12.  Then he was 30.  Some people believe that there were stories about Jesus as a child, but they did not make it into the Bible because he was a child, doing childish things.  For instance according to these stories, when a child spurned him, he retaliated.  When he got in trouble for making clay pigeons on the Sabbath, he turned the clay pigeons into living birds, because he could.[1]  These stories speak of a child learning how to handle his power. It makes sense.  If Jesus was fully human, then he had to learn and grow.  He had to change. He was not born in the body of 30 year old, nor was he born with the mind of a 30 year old man.

There were also occasions where other people encouraged him to change. One example is the wedding feast.  It’s a familiar story.  They ran out of wine.  His mother asked Jesus to turn water into wine.  He said, no this is not my time. He did not think he was ready. His mother persisted and he agreed. He performed his first public miracle at the request of his mother.  Another example is our reading from today. Jesus had left his home turf and was in the region of Sidon.  This is important because this is an area that was populated by Gentiles, not Jews.  These were people that good Jews did not interact with.  The disciples had probably never been in a place like this. 

            As soon as he got there, a woman came to him, shouting “Have mercy on me Lord, Son of David, my daughter is tormented by demons.”  I am sure that he noticed that she was using the Jewish title for him.  “Son of David.” She knew who he was.  Despite that, he tried to ignore her. That was the easy thing to do, maybe even the polite thing to do.  He did not want to have to tell someone that he could not help her. 

Yet this Gentile woman, was relentless.  She could not take a hint. She kept coming at him and by now she had everyone’s attention, even the disciples.  They wanted him to just get rid of her. He tried. He told her the party line. He was just there for the people of Israel.  She could not be deterred.  She knelt at his feet…his feet.  There was no avoiding her.  He said, “It is not fair to take the children’s crumbs and throw it to the dogs.” That was what they called Gentiles.  Jews called Gentiles dogs because dogs were dirty.  They did not keep the purity laws. The children were the Jewish people, the chosen people.  His first duty was to the children—the Jews. 

            Instead of acting offended or lashing out, this woman chose another tactic.  She responded, “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.” She understood and acknowledged what no one else had. That even if he was meant to tend to the Jewish people first, there was more than enough mercy to meet the needs of the rest of the world.  Even the crumbs, the tossed off waste of his abundant love was enough….enough for her, her daughter, and the world. 

            And here is when it gets tricky.  Jesus, the all-knowing, all powerful Messiah learned something in that moment.  All along, he believed that he was there for the lost sheep of Israel.  They were his primary mission. Yet he saw something in this woman. He saw perseverance, courage, faith and knowledge.  She understood him and his ministry better than the Pharisees, perhaps even better than the disciples. She knew that his love was so great, so powerful, that there was enough to go around.  She helped him see something that he had not yet seen.  Because of that he saw not just a woman kneeling at his feet, but a beloved child of God who was ready to hear his message and experience his mercy. 

            The reason people struggle with the idea of Jesus changing his mind is that implies that he not was right to begin with.  It means he was imperfect, that he was not all-knowing. Yet I believe that he was that much more powerful because he was open to change.  He was willing to learn, willing to learn from a woman, a Gentile, willing to let go of a belief that one ethnicity was better than another, willing to accept that his love was without limit.  There was enough to go around. He did not have to wait for the Jews to accept him before moving on to the next group. He could start his ministry to the Gentiles now.

As a church, we are called to be disciples of Christ, to follow his example.  Part of following this example, is being willing to change and to let go of our prejudice and fear.  Our world is a scary place.  Just this week, ISIS killed 13 people and wounded 100 in an attack on a popular street in Spain.  They gave no reason.  You don’t need a reason when your heart is full of hate.

Before that we experienced our own terror right here in Virginia.  We saw a display of hate that while not unprecedented, was certainly a wake-up call for those who thought that kind of racism was a thing of the past.  When I was a on a mission trip in Appalachia several years ago, I was driving alone looking for one of our groups. I was lost because GPS did not work there.  I drove down a stranger’s driveway hoping I could get some directions. Instead I ran into a member of the KKK.  He was not wearing a white hood, nor was he burning a cross.  He just wanted to share that I had wandered onto the property of a clansman. I was terrified, and I am a white Christian.  I kept thinking, what would have happened if our African American youth was with me in that car. I told myself that this man was just some crazy guy in the hills of West Virginia. 

Yet just last week, we saw it on a college campus.  We saw in on our newsfeed, twitter, facebook.  Hate was on full display.  The root of that hate is the belief that one group is better than the other, that one group is more deserving of God’s love.  Two thousand years ago, Jesus started something. He started to dismantle prejudice.  He told people that they were loved, no matter what they looked like, or who they were related to. He told people that they were to love their neighbor and their enemy.  As his disciples, we are called to continue his work.  Much like the woman who was seeking mercy, we cannot relent.  We must persist.  Like Jesus, we have to look at the prejudices within ourselves.  While we cannot produce miracles, we can bring healing to our community and our broken world. The first step in that healing, is acknowledging the brokenness.  In our Eucharistic Prayer for today, the priest says, “But we turned against you, and we betrayed your trust; and we turned against one another.” Then we break the bread as a symbol of Jesus broken on the cross, as a symbol of our own brokenness. That is not how it ends.  The way the prayer ends is that we all come to the altar. We all partake in the love that Jesus shared.   We become vessels of his love and grace. 

As those vessels, we have a responsibility to carry that love and grace.  While God’s love and grace has no limit, each person has a limit to the pain that they can bear.  No Jew should have to see someone wield a swastika, a symbol of their intended annihilation.  No African American should have to hear racial slurs hurled at them. Sometimes God’s grace looks like us, standing between hate and the recipients of hate. 



[1] The Infancy Gospel of Thomas: http://gnosis.org/library/inftoma.htm
 

Monday, August 7, 2017

Just Jesus: August 6, 2017

Year A, Transfiguration                                                         
Luke 9:28-36                                                                                    

            Recently, I have been trying to get more organized.  I realized that I was feeling scattered, trying to do a million things at once, but never seeming to get anything done.  I thought, this has to be fixable.  I just need to figure it out.  I have made some changes in how I set my schedule and ensure I follow up on tasks.  But the major change is that I don’t try to do more than one thing at a time.  I am sure most of you have had this experience.  You are sitting down trying to accomplish one task, and then your computer chimes and you find yourself reading an e-mail.  You start to reply but are distracted because you see on your phone that a text has come in.  You start responding to the text and then see a news item pop up on your screen and go to read the article. This can all happen in about 3 minutes.  By the time you have read the article, you have completely forgotten what you sat down to do.  Most people have experienced some version of this. 

With all of our technology and devices, we have become more efficient in some ways and less efficient in others.  Most people pride themselves on their ability to multitask, but the whole concept of multitasking is a myth.  I have a good friend who is a neurologist and she told me that it is actually impossible to do more than one thing at once.  What we do is that that we shift from one task to another rapidly.  Sometimes this is handy. However, I think a lot of times, it makes us more fractured and scattered.  That is why at a time when we are more technologically advanced than ever, there is a movement to become more mindful.  That is why things like yoga are so popular because there is a focus on being present in that moment.   

            While Jesus and his disciples were not affected by technology, they still knew what it was to be pulled in different directions.  Often times, Jesus would go off to pray because even the savior of humanity needed time to be away from people and day to day tasks.  Occasionally he would take a few of his disciples with him.  That was what happened in our Gospel reading for today.  He took three disciples up to the mountain with him to pray.  Yet instead of having some nice quiet time with their friend and teacher, Jesus, the disciples experienced a bit of a light show.  While Jesus was praying, his clothes became dazzling white and his face changed.  As if this was not strange enough, two men appeared out of nowhere.  They were not just any two men, they were Moses and Elijah, two pillars of their faith, two people who were supposed to be dead. 

            It must have been an amazing thing to behold—these three men together. Peter did the logical thing, he offered to make some tents for them. He offered to make tents…for two people who were dead.  It seems like an odd offer.  Even the Gospel writer comments that Peter did not know what he was talking about.  Peter is one of those people who always seemed to be saying the wrong thing at the wrong time.  For millennia people have been speculating what Peter was thinking when he made that offer.  Was it a display of hospitality?  Was he being practical?  One theory I have always liked is that he was trying to convince Moses and Elijah to stay a little while.  They had come a long way… back from the dead.  There were so many reasons why Peter would have wanted this holy moment to last longer.

            Lately, I have been wondering if it was something else entirely.  I wonder if it was just too much for Peter.  I wonder if the moment was so astounding, he just had to do something else. He needed a task to accomplish. He wanted something to do with his hands so he would not have to think about the ramifications of this moment.  He would not have to hear Jesus talking to Moses and Elijah about Jesus’ departure….which was Jesus’ death.  Who can blame him?  Why would he want to think about his friend dying?  How many of us have turned on the radio to tune out our thoughts, or watched a stupid television show to zone out? 

So much of what culture seems to be pushing right now is not things to make us more efficient, but things to distract us.  One of the things I love about writing sermons is that it is the one time when I am forced to sit in silence and let my mind wander. Otherwise, I am always listening to music or podcasts or reading.  Being distracted has become a way of life.

God does not like it when people try to avoid him or his message.  Before Peter could even finish his sentence, God sent a cloud over them.  Our text says, “a cloud came and overshadowed them; and they were terrified as they entered the cloud.”  If this was not dramatic enough, God spoke from the cloud and said, “This is my Son, my Chosen; listen to him!”  No more chitter chatter Peter! Stop your yapping and listen!  This is what I love about this specific text.  It says, “When the voice had spoken, Jesus was found alone. And they kept silent…”  Moses and Elijah were gone.  There was no light show.  No clouds.  No booming voices.  It was Jesus…alone.   Thankfully the disciples had the presence of mind to keep silent.  I imagine that they had a lot of questions rolling around in their heads, but they knew that there was only one response to this kind of glory…silence. 

One of the things church should offer to every person is one hour a week where there is no distraction from God. It is one hour when we open ourselves up to what God might be telling us.  There are certainly people out there who have the ability to do that on their own, but those people are the exception and not the rule.  Of course we have our share of distractions, even in church, but the goal is to have time to focus on God.  Our opening prayer for today says, “Mercifully grant that we, being delivered from the disquietude of this world, may by faith behold the King in his beauty…” In case you are not familiar with this word, disquietude is the elegantly Episcopal way to say anxiety.

Life is full of so many anxieties, even if you are someone who does not suffer from technology overload.  Anxiety/worry is something we all carry.  Therefore, it is important to have some time in the week to unload those burdens.  Leave them at the door.  Because it is only when we can release these things (even release them a little) that we can truly behold the King—the King of Glory-- in his spectacular beauty.   After Moses and Elijah were gone—after the light show was over—after the voices stopped and the cloud receded, there was Jesus…just Jesus.  That is what we are looking for here every Sunday.  We are looking for Jesus.