Tuesday, December 24, 2019

You Count: December 24, 2019


Year A, Christmas Eve                  
Luke 2: 1-20                                                                                                                    
            I remember my first Christmas as a newly ordained deacon.  I was very anxious about reading the Gospel at the late service.  That church had a tradition of processing around the church (there were aisles on both sides of the pews) before reading the Gospel on big feast days.  It felt like a very long walk.  One of things I had practiced over and over again was the name Quirinius.  In doing so, it was burned into my memory so that every time I hear Quirinius, I remember my nerves on that Christmas night 14 years ago.  But this year for the first time, I started wondering, just who was this Quirinius and why does he matter.  Why did Luke bother mentioning him?  Luke saw himself as a bit of an historian.  He starts his Gospel by saying, “I too, decided, after investigating everything carefully from the very first, to write an orderly account for you.” Therefore, it was understandable that he set this scene in the context of history.  But there was more to it than that.  He had to explain, why Mary and Joseph felt the need to take a very long journey to Bethlehem when she was extremely pregnant. 
            They were making that trek so that they could be counted for the census.  “All went to their own towns to be registered.”  The census was a required by the Roman Empire.  They required it so they could know how much to tax these people who were under their control.  It was also so they could determine how much military they needed to keep these people in check. As you can imagine, many Jews resented the census. When hearing the story of Jesus, we can never forget that he was born to a conquered people.  His family lived with few rights or privileges under the control of a foreign government.  They were making this difficult journey because it was required and the Romans knew they could make them do it.  It was dehumanizing. This is what powerful people often do to a conquered people (or anyone who might be vulnerable), they try to take away their humanity.  It was this world and family that Jesus was born into. 
            If you have been to church on Christmas enough times, you have probably heard the word incarnation.  It means that God was born in the flesh, as a human.  That’s spectacular for so many reasons.  But when you put it in the context of Quirinius and the census, it’s revolutionary.  This census, like so many things the Romans did, was an attempt to control people.  It was an attempt to take away their dignity, their humanity.  In the midst of this inhumanity, Jesus was born as a human baby to a woman, with even fewer rights then the men in this occupied territory.  It was like God was watching what the Roman Empire was doing, how they were wielding their power and he said, “Oh you think you can take away my children’s humanity, watch this.”
            While I admire God’s creativity and sense of irony, sometimes I wonder if God could have used more effective and efficient means.  If Jesus was born to a king, in a palace, he would have gotten a lot more attention. He could have had the weight of an empire behind him. Everyone would have followed him because he would have been forced on them.  But that is not what God wanted. God didn’t want to force Jesus upon people-- he wanted  to invite them into a relationship with Jesus--God in the flesh.  The Romans thought they had control over the Jews, but it was a flimsy and superficial control.  Jesus, being born as a human is a reminder that no power, no principality can ever take away our humanity.  Even if you are born in a barn amongst animals, you are a child of God, a human who deserves basic rights and more importantly, who deserves to be loved.
            The census was counting people so that they could be efficiently exploited.  In sending Jesus in the flesh, God was telling everyone on this earth (both then and now) that they counted to him.  He counted them as his children and he would stop at nothing to let them/us know that.[1] That means that I can tell all of you tonight that you count, you matter to the greatest power this world has ever known.
            Now we don’t live in a place that suffers under a foreign rule.  Yet, we still see people in our world, our country, our community who are exploited and treated as less than human.  On this night, I want you to go home with warm fuzzy feelings and the knowledge that God loves you with reckless abandon.  However, I also want us all to remember that Jesus was born to people who were oppressed, people who worried that God had forgotten them.  He was born in this way to ensure that we never forget any human, that no person is ever treated as less than human.  God’s gift to us is our lives and this world.  Our gift to God is how we care for one another and this world.   I would like to close with a lovely poem by Howard Thurman, who we are reading in our Sacred Ground program.
When the song of the angels is stilled,
when the star in the sky is gone,
when the kings and princes are home,
when the shepherds are back with their flocks,
the work of Christmas begins:
to find the lost,
to heal the broken,
to feed the hungry,
to release the prisoner,
to rebuild the nations,
to bring peace among the people,
to make music in the heart.[2]



[1] This idea came from a Working Preacher podcast for Christmas 2019 by Rolf Jacobson
[2] “The Work of Christmas” is from Howard Thurman’s The Mood of Christmas and Other Celebrations

Mr. Rogers and Isaiah: December 8, 2019


Year A, Advent 2                                                              
Isaiah 11:1-11                                                                                 

            Lately my son has been talking a lot about good guys and bad guys (mostly bad guys).  Not only do humans fall into these categories, but animals do as well. Once we were playing a game where we were running from a lion.  Joshua decided to shoot the lion.  We don’t let Joshua have toy guns, but he can make anything into a gun.  I explained to him that I didn’t want him shooting a lion.  He replied, “But lions are mean.”  I then tried to explain to him that while lions are dangerous, they are not innately bad.  We then had to discuss whether there would be any circumstance where shooting a lion would be appropriate and it all got very muddy.  I decided perhaps we should avoid a safari for a family vacation.     I have noticed that in most popular children’s shows and almost all movies, there is always a bad guy or bad animal.  I guess it makes things interesting for a young mind.  But it makes me sad that at the age of 3, my son is already categorizing people into good and bad and thinking about injuring people and dangerous animals.  I have attempted to explain to him that God created us all good, but so far, that’s just not working.  If a 3 year old is already programmed to perceive people as good and bad and talk about shooting people, imagine how we adults have been programmed. Even if we intellectually have moved past that, it’s still there in the back of our minds lurking, like an unwanted intruder. 
            This reading from Isaiah (our first reading) is often referred to as “the Peaceable Kingdom.”  It’s a beautiful and poetic passage with a moving message. There are many works of art modeled after the image that Isaiah paints.  The reading from Isaiah last week was another famous passage.  It read: They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.” That passage is about peace between the nations, which is a fairly lofty dream.         This week the dream seems even more unfathomable.  The wolf shall live with the lamb, the leopard shall lie down with the kid, the calf and the lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead them.” Instead of peace between the nations, Isaiah is now envisioning peace within nature. All the animals are vegetarians.  The laws of evolution are basically tossed out. There is no longer survival of the fittest.  Every person—every animal—survives and lives together in harmony. It’s basically the Garden of Eden before the fall.  It’s a place where there are no good or bad people.  There are no good or bad animals.  All are just as God intended, inherently and permanently good.  
            This is the image that should be planted in our children’s mind. I’m not saying we should shelter them from all that is bad.  We can’t.  But it’s like we don’t even try to create this peaceable kingdom in our books or our movies.  It’s not even worth dreaming about or imagining.  That’s a sad thing.  It means that not only has hope died, but the dream that carried the hope is buried under our low expectations.    You might think, well that’s just too depressing. There is no point in dreaming or hoping for something that cannot be.  Isaiah didn’t think so when he wrote this text.  And if you think that the prophet Isaiah was some kind of Pollyanna, just read virtually any chapter in the book of Isaiah and you will see that this guy was living in a very precarious situation.  He was living in a land about to be invaded, preaching to a people who were miserable, angry, and scared.  It wasn’t exactly a utopian paradise. Isaiah called for repentance and spoke of the need for change.  He spoke the truth, even when it was unpopular. Yet in the midst of his dire warnings about the fate of Israel, he stopped and painted pictures like the one we heard today, a picture of the peaceable kingdom.  He wanted people to remember that God’s vision for our world was audacious and bold.  It wasn’t just meant to be a dream or vision but a reality, a goal to strive for. 
            Therefore, we can never stop painting these pictures, telling these stories of goodness and peace.  You might think, “That’s not effective. Then you’re just living in a fantasy.” However, consider the resurgence of Mr. Rogers. There are books about him, a documentary and now a film starring Tom Hanks.  Mr. Rogers didn’t fight bad guys.  He was just good.  He created a world of make believe where animals and people lived alongside one another in peace and harmony. He invited people into that world so they could see glimpse of what could be.  And he did more than just provide a dreamscape.        
         In the late 1960’s racial tension in America was high.  Martin Luther King was assassinated in 1968 and race riots followed.  Segregation was technically illegal, but many places were still not integrated. One of those places was public pools.  Near the one year anniversary of Martin Luther King’s death, Mr. Rogers invited one of his neighbors over, a friendly black police officer.  They decided to cool their feet in a plastic kiddie pool.  Then they shared a towel.  Mr. Rogers never said a word about integration or race relations, but the image was clear. This is the peaceable kingdom.
What is amazing about that image is that when we look at it now, we don’t see anything remarkable about a white man and black man sitting beside one another with their feet in the same water.  That’s because it’s our new normal.  I’m not saying we have eradicated racism, we have a long way to go. But we have made progress.  We’re swimming in the same water now.  I’m not saying Mr. Rogers fixed the problem single handedly.  Many of our African American brothers and sisters suffered and died in that fight. But, it played a small part.
            Most of the time, a small part is the best we can do.  Yet we fear even doing that because we think, it won’t make any difference.  Despite everything Mr. Rogers accomplished in his life, he still wondered if he made any difference at all. But  we know he did.  On Friday, the church commemorated the life of St. Nickolas.  We do every year on December 6th.  He was a bishop and probably attended the Council of Nicea, which was a big deal.   But what he is remembered for his kindness toward strangers in need. The church is not just hear to worship God serve others.  We are also hear to support one another be the people who God created us to be and build the world that God intended, the Peaceable Kingdom.