Sunday, September 6, 2015

Sermon: Welcomed to the Table

Mark 7:24-37
Welcomed to the Table
James Sledge                                                                                     September 6, 2015

There are numerous pictures on the internet of black and white toddlers holding hands or hugging with a caption saying “No one is born racist.” I like the sentiment, though I wonder if it’s a bit optimistic. Hatred and racism may indeed be cultural and learned, but we humans seem to have a tribal nature, a tendency to coalesce into groups and create boundaries separating us and them. Culture teaches the norms that grow up around such boundaries, but the tendency seems to be innate.
How many of you ever had the childhood experience of moving and attending a new school? My family moved several times over my elementary and middle school years, and while this felt exciting and adventurous, it was also terrifying. Walking into an elementary classroom where you know no one, or worse, walking into a school cafeteria… At least in elementary school the teacher took you to the cafeteria as a class, but in middle school, you were on your own.
Where do I sit? Will I be welcome at that table, or maybe that one? I certainly wasn’t going to go sit at the table with all girls, and being new, it was hard to tell which tables had which sort of students. The athlete’s table was sometimes easy to spot. Easiest of all were the tables populated by those who didn’t really fit in at any of the other tables. Pushing aside those who are different may be learned behavior, but we start learning it awfully early.
If humans had no tendency to be tribal, I wonder if there would be political parties or politics as we know it. I wonder if there would simply be varying ideas about the best way to deal with this or that problem. But we are tribal, and so our varying ideas get turned into boundaries between us and them.
The surprising success of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign seems almost inexplicable, and many have speculated on what makes him appealing. One suggestion is that he loudly proclaims us and them boundaries that are already there but not spoken aloud in polite conversation. Some suggest that Trump has tapped into tribal fears of them, immigrants, the Chinese, and so on. He’s given voice to an us versus them fear that makes some think, “He’s on my side, unlike those regular politicians.” Perhaps Bernie Sanders appeal is not so different, just aimed at different tribes.
Us versus them tribalism was an issue for Christian faith almost as soon as it got started. It’s easy to forget in our time, but all the first followers of Jesus were Jewish. That did not change after Jesus was raised from the dead. It did not change as new followers began to join the Jesus movement. Jesus was a Jewish Messiah who remained firmly in the Jewish tradition all his life, and as the Church began to grow, no one thought of it as anything but Jewish.
When non-Jews began to come into the movement, that meant becoming Jewish first. Males had to be circumcised, and everyone had to adopt Jewish dietary and purity restrictions. But as the number of non-Jewish converts grew, so did the tensions. And people like the Apostle Paul began arguing that the Jesus movement was open to non-Jews without them becoming Jewish. It was the first really big church fight. Read Paul’s letters and you’ll get some idea of how heated and nasty things became.

Paul is arrested and dies, likely executed, before the issue is completely settled, before any of the gospels are even written. Mark’s gospel is first, written when the Gentile-Jew divide was still swirling. And in our passage for today, Mark drops Jesus right into the middle of it.
The story is remarkable and unsettling, very different from other stories in Mark. For starters, it is Jesus who stands in the way of a needed healing. Usually it is Jesus’ opponents or misguided disciples. And Jesus is depicted hard-heartedly embracing the us and them boundaries of his day. When this outsider, this Gentile woman seeks help for her daughter, Jesus not only refuses, he insults her. He calls her a dog. It’s a racial slur, so it’s not surprising that preachers and teachers have made desperate attempts over the years to claim that Jesus somehow doesn’t say what he clearly says.
Then the story gets even weirder. This woman engages Jesus in an argument… and wins. This never, ever happens. Jesus goes up against scholars trained in the Scriptures, against the recognized experts in the Law, and he always bests them, leaves them standing there with the mouths hanging open. But with a single sentence this woman, this foreigner, this outsider, has Jesus doing a full reversal. “Wow, you’re right. Your daughter is healed.”
There are all manner of explanations for how this could have happened. Some see an exhausted, human Jesus who fell thoughtlessly into the prejudices of his day, only to be jarred back out of them by this woman’s boldness on behalf of her daughter. Others suggest that Jesus acts as he does on purpose, a dramatic object lesson for his disciples. I’m partial to the idea that Mark’s gospel sets the reader up a bit, having Jesus seem to take the Jewish side in the Jew-Gentile divide, only to leave heads spinning as Jesus suddenly turns.
Regardless, this woman does something no one else manages in the gospel. She successfully challenges Jesus, boldly and fiercely demanding God’s care for her daughter, regardless of us and them status. In the process, she obliterates an us versus them boundary.
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One possible way to interpret the success of Donald Trump’s campaign is to connect it to a our culture’s regression in the tribalism area. Us and them boundaries tend to intensify when people are anxious, worried, or fearful, and we do seem to live in anxious times.
In a sermon that tackles tribalism, Barbara Brown Taylor draws on Parker Palmer’s book, The Company of Strangers: Christians and the Renewal of America’s Public Life.
Parker talks about the ways public life has broken down in this country, largely because we have begun—for good and bad reasons—to regard strangers as enemies. In a world that grows scarier every day, many of us have retreated to well-defended private lives. We do not go out in public unless we have to. We sort ourselves out into tribes who are suspicious of other tribes and quite often we go to war with one another, either overtly or covertly. The strangers we meet must either be kept out of our lives or made like us, which wreaks havoc with our public life. The endless variety of humankind becomes a threat, not a blessing, and the whole body suffers.”[1]
It happens at church, too. We divide into church tribes: liberal or conservative, Republican or Democrat, contemporary or traditional, serious music or that junk those other folks sing. And we all imagine that our group is the one who’s gotten it right. Jesus is on our side. We’re the true children, the ones who really belong at the table.
Then a most unlikely person speaks, an outsider, a foreigner, from the wrong ethnic and religious group, a dog, Jesus calls her. She speaks, and Jesus replies, “Yep, you’re right.” A boundary line disappears and she, the last one anyone expects, is welcomed to the table.
The table is ready, and Jesus says, “Come.” He invites folks we’re certain don’t belong, saying, “Come, all who hunger and thirst.” Why he even invites the likes of me and you.


[1] Barbara Brown Taylor, “The Company of Strangers” in Home by Another Way, (Boston: Cowley Publications, 1999), pp. 45-46.

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