Luke 15:11-32
In the End, Beloved Community
James Sledge August
23, 2015
Just
over a year ago, Shawn and I traveled to Austin, Texas for the wedding of our
daughter Kendrick and now son-in-law Ryan. In many ways, it was like a lot of
weddings, with bridesmaids and groomsmen, tuxes and dresses, and friends and
family gathered from here and there. If you’ve been involved in many weddings,
you know that they have their share of family dynamics, tuxes that don’t fit,
and frayed nerves. Here again, this wedding was probably typical, although it
all came together beautifully. But when my father of the bride duties had all
been completed, this wedding, in my admittedly biased opinion, did become
distinctive.
I
can’t say exactly why. It was a reception like many other receptions with a
band and a bar and dinner, but this one worked better than most others I’ve
been to. Perhaps it was just the right combination of food that was good, drink
that was good, a band that was good, a venue that was good, and a great mix of
family and friends from the various places we’ve lived over the years. Whatever
the reason, I can’t remember when I’ve enjoyed myself more. I ate, drank,
mingled, talked, laughed, danced (I rarely dance), and I did not want it all to
end.
I
think that experience gave me a greater appreciation for Jesus’ and the Bible’s
use of wedding banquets as metaphor for the kingdom, the reign of God. Weddings
were huge deals in that time, feasts and celebrations that went on for a week.
People pulled out all the stops for a wedding. When the father in our parable
today kills the fatted calf to celebrate his younger son’s return, he throws a
wedding banquet type party. No wonder the elder son is so upset, giving this
party its own family dynamics and drama. “I’m not going if he’s going.”
I’ve
long loved the exchange between father and elder son that concludes the
parable, leaving the situation unresolved. The Presbyterian son – in the Greek
he is the “presbuteros” (presbu/teroj) son, root word of
our denominational name – has disowned his younger sibling. He is no longer his
brother, and so he yells at his father, “When this son of yours came back…” But
the father will not let the family disintegrate so easily. “But we had to celebrate and
rejoice, because this brother of yours was dead and has come to life…”
The elder brother might have been happy
for his sibling to return in the manner the younger had imagined, a hired hand
and not a son. But the father’s love makes that impossible and leaves him in
anguish at parable’s end, longing for reconciliation among his children.
A
few years back the book The Shack was
all the rage, especially in church circles. The story centered on a middle-aged
fellow named Mackenzie or Mack, who received a curious invitation to come spend
a weekend at the shack where a still-at-large kidnapper had murdered his youngest daughter a couple of years before. At first he thinks it some sort of cruel
hoax, but he gradually becomes convinced that the invitation is from God.
During
his strange weekend there, Mack has an encounter with a mysterious, beautiful
woman in a long, flowing robe, like that of a judge. She talks with him about
his hurt and anger over his daughter’s murder, and his questions about how a
good God could possibly allow such a thing to happen. Mack’s anger grows, and the
woman tells him that he is with her for judgment. Mack wonders what he is to be
judged for, but the woman explains that he will be the one doing the judging.
The
idea seems preposterous, but the woman points out that he has plenty of
experience. He regularly judges the
people around him. Mack admits as much, but who is he supposed to judge? “God…
and the human race,” the woman replied the woman nonchalantly.
Mack
objects, but the woman prods him. “What about the greedy who feed off the poor
of the world?... And what about the man who preys on innocent little girls? What
about him, Mackenzie? Is that man
guilty? Should he be judged?”
“Yes!”
screams Mack.
The
woman continues, asking about the murderer’s father who “twisted his son into a
terror. How far do we go back, Mackenzie? This legacy of brokenness goes all
the way back to Adam, what about him? But why stop there? God started the whole
thing. Is God to blame?” The woman is
relentless until in anger Mack bursts out, “Yes, God is to blame!”
“If
you are able to judge God so easily, then certainly you can judge the world,” she
continues. “You must choose two of your children to spend eternity in God’s new
heavens and new earth, but only two.”
Mack
objects but the woman continues, “And you must choose three of your children to
spend eternity in hell.” Mack starts to panic but the woman says calmly,
“Mackenzie, I am only asking you to do something that you believe God
does.” If he thinks that God so easily
judges God’s own children, surely Mack can judge his. And one had been terrible
of late. Mack continues to object but
the woman will not relent. Finally Mack screams, “I can’t. I can’t. I won’t!” The
woman just looks at him. He pleads,
“Could I go instead?” He falls at the
woman’s feet pleading, “Please let me go for my children, please …”
And then it is over. The woman smiles at Mack and says, “Now you
sound like Jesus. You have judged well,
Mackenzie. I am so proud of you!”
___________________________________________________________________________
When
Jesus envisions a final end, he speaks of a wedding banquet, a great and joyous
celebration. It is many times more wonderful than my daughter’s wedding. But it
also has a very curious guest list. There are people I never would have
invited. There are people I don’t like. There are people I am certain should
never be on such a guest list. In fact, one of the biggest difficulties for Presbyterian/elder
brother types can be the temptation to say, “I’m not going if they’re going.”
I’ve
occasionally heard such statements connected to wedding planning I do with
couples in my role as pastor. Especially when there are betrayals, divorces,
and other sorts of hurt and trauma in a family’s history, gathering everyone
together can be difficult. But weddings sometimes become moments for
reconciliation. And the father in our parable pleads and waits for
reconciliation, for the elder brother to come in. Reconciliation is the end God
is planning. And the cross gives a glimpse of the lengths God will go to get
there.
God
plans a beloved community, where people come from east and west, north and
south, to sit at table together in the kingdom. And the first to go in will be
ne’er do wells and people we would never have invited. And many
Presbyterian/elder types will be hanging around just outside, debating whether
to go to a party with those folks. And God beckons, reminding us that they are
not “those people God invited,” but our brothers and sisters.
And
in the end, there is good food and good company and good drink and a great band
and dancing and laughter and joy. In the meantime, we are called to help the
world get ready. We are called to begin creating God’s beloved community where even
those we had never planned to invite find welcome, where we become, by the
mystery of God’s love in Christ, more and more like the Father who throws the
party.
We Make the Road by Walking. The practice begun in Advent comes to an end with
this sermon, the last based in Brian McLaren’s book. This week’s chapter is 52, “God
in the End.”
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