Sunday, August 2, 2020

Sermon: Assaulted by God

Genesis 32:22-31
Assaulted by God
James Sledge                                                                                                   August 2, 2020

When I was a child, my father would read Bible stories to us before bed. I can still see the big Bible Story book he used. It had stories about Jesus, but as a child, the Old Testament stories stood out more. There were a lot of “hero” type stories: David fighting the giant Goliath with only a sling, Samson, the Hebrew version of Hercules. And then there were all those stories about Abraham and Sarah and their offspring: Isaac, Esau and Jacob, and then all of Jacob’s sons, including Joseph.
The characters in those Bible stories didn’t seem much like real people to me. Perhaps that was just how far removed they were historically and culturally. Or perhaps it was because the Bible stories themselves had a kind of comic book quality to them.
Whatever the reasons, I was well into adulthood before it dawned on me what a messed up, dysfunctional family Abraham and Sarah’s clan was. It starts with the half-brothers Ishmael and Isaac and only gets worse from there.
Rebekah and Isaac have twin boys, Esau and Jacob. Esau is the first born by a few seconds, and the sibling rivalry is off and running. Not that the parents help matters much. Dad likes Esau, and Mom likes Jacob. Esau is an outdoorsy, hunting and fishing sort of guy,  and Dad plans to pass on the family business to him. Jacob is a Momma’s boy who likes hanging out in the tent. He’s also sneaky and manipulative, a scoundrel who takes advantage of Esau’s tendency to act first and think later. And his mother is happy to assist.
Jacob and Esau are born when Isaac is quite old, and he is feeble and blind by the time the boys are fully grown. Sensing that his time is short, Isaac calls Esau and asks him to go out hunting and bring back some savory game they can enjoy together. After the meal, Isaac will formally sign over the family business. In the language of the Bible, he will bless Esau.

But Momma overhears. She goes to Jacob and they, literally, cook up a scheme to deceive the old, blind father. She prepares a meal and helps Jacob disguise himself as Esau. He puts on some of Esau’s cloths, and Momma uses goat skins to make arm hair wigs so the smooth-skinned Jacob has the hairy arms of his brother.
I know it sounds crazy, but that’s what is says in the Bible. Jacob goes to his father, pretending to be Esau. Isaac recognizes Jacob’s voice, but the smell of Esau’s clothes, the meal, and those arm hair wigs, (and maybe a little dementia?) are enough to fool the old man. 
And so Isaac blesses Jacob moments before Esau returns to discover that he has been robbed. I don’t know why there is no undoing this contract made under false pretenses, but it seems that the blessing cannot be taken back. It is Jacob’s now.
Robbed of his birthright, Esau threatens murder, and Jacob flees for his life, going back to Momma’s homeland to live with her family. By the time he gets the nerve to come back, he has a couple of wives, eleven sons, a twelfth on the way, and one daughter. He is still a con-man and trickster, and he will repeat the mistakes of his own parents by favoring one child over the other, and Joseph becomes a spoiled brat whose own brothers plot to kill him. But that’s another story. In ours, Jacob heads home, not knowing if Esau still wants to kill him. 
Now I have known my share of dysfunctional families, but I’m not sure I’ve ever met any so thoroughly messed up as this one. And perhaps that would not matter, except that for some inexplicable reason, God has hitched the hopes of blessing and restoration for all humanity to this dysfunctional family. What was God thinking?
I don’t know if you’ve ever noticed, but church congregations can be dysfunctional families themselves. There are manipulative folk who to get their way by complaining or threatening to leave and people who rarely lift a finger to help out yet perpetually think they deserve more from the church. There are parking lot meetings that circumvent the official meeting. There is gossiping and anonymous criticism where “lots of people” without names are upset or angry. Yet for some inexplicable reason, God has hitched the hopes of humanity’s blessing and restoration to this dysfunctional family. What was God thinking?
For much of Jacob’s dysfunctional story, God seems largely uninvolved, but as Jacob returns home, that changes. The night before he and Esau meet, A man wrestled with (Jacob) until daybreak. A man? Esau? God? It’s a strange story with religious sensibilities quite different from ours, open to dramatic encounter with a strange, earthy God. This is not about belief. It’s about struggle and blessing. Jacob seeks to deal with the “man” as he does with everyone, grabbing what he wants, but it does not work. Jacob is not defeated, and he does get a blessing, but in the process he is renamed and left with a limp. God’s plans are still hitched to Jacob, now Israel, and his dysfunctional family, but Jacob and those who follow will be changed and marked by this blessing, bound in an ongoing struggle with God.
______________________________________________________________ 

I’ve probably spoken before about the huge study on the religious beliefs ofAmerican youth, conducted in the early 2000s. It studied a broad swath of religious traditions and found that most young people don’t dislike religion or church. They have mostly positive views. However, their religious beliefs are so benign and bland as to have no real bearing on how they live their lives, providing almost no need to participate in organized religion. The study named their faith, “Moralistic Therapeutic Deism,” and it has five main components: belief in God, God’s desire for people to be good and nice, a life goal of being happy and feeling good, a God who is not at all involved in daily life but may help you out in a crisis, and the belief that good folks go to heaven. 
There’s nothing offensive about any of this, but neither is there much substance. Professor and Christian Educator, Kenda Dean uses terms such as “Christian-ish” and “cult of nice” to describe it. It bears little resemblance to the faith the Church has proclaimed for centuries, but this is not, according to the study, because young people misunderstood or perverted their faith. Rather it is the faith transmitted to them by their parents and their congregations.[1]
Now Jacob lived a long way from 21st Century America and “Moralistic Therapeutic Deism,” yet I can see some points of contact, at least prior to Jacob’s wrestling match. Aside from moments of crisis, God seems uninvolved in Jacob’s life. Jacob is all about his own wits and cunning, grasping for all he can so he can be successful and happy. But then God, for all practical purposes, assaults him. Strangely, the match is something of a draw. God blesses Jacob, but he is permanently changed and marked, with a new identity and a limp. 
Now here we are, the dysfunctional descendants of Jacob. We often imagine a safe, benign God not much involved in our lives, but perhaps willing to only to give us a spiritual lift or buzz. We can scarcely imagine a God who assaults us, grapples with us in a strange encounter that does not overwhelm us yet transforms and marks us, sending us out with new identities, carrying God’s blessing, limping as we go. Such a thing seems preposterous… until we actually meet God.


[1] See Kenda Creasy Dean, Almost Christian: What the Faith of Our Teenagers Is Telling the American Church (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010)

No comments:

Post a Comment