When politicians come to the end of their term in office, it is common to hear that they are concerned with their "legacy." What mark have they made that history will remember. Sometimes the public can detect a real shift in the manner of a president or governor when their focus turns from getting elected to how they will be remembered.
Pastors are not politicians, but that doesn't mean there isn't a political aspect to being a pastor. Most pastors want to be liked by their congregations, which is not so different from a politician wanting your vote. And most pastors want to make their mark in some way.
Do not put your trust in princes,
in mortals, in whom there is no help.
When their breath departs, they return to the earth;
on that very day their plans perish.
Happy are those whose help is the God of Jacob,
whose hope is in Yahweh their God Psalm 146:3-5
I'm a "lame duck" pastor. I'll be leaving this congregation in a few weeks. I hope my legacy is mostly good. I hope that whatever mark I've made has been helpful for this congregation and for its future. But I have no doubt that some of things I started or that I wanted to start - my plans - were more about me than about God. They were my plans and they will perish with my departure.
While I love my work most of the time, and while I consider it a great privilege to be paid to wrestle with Scripture, seeking to hear God speak, I wonder sometimes about the role of educated, professional pastor. I wonder if we don't sometimes end up acting a lot like those princes in the psalm. And in the process we may very well draw people away from leaning on God, on placing their hope and trust in Yahweh.
The Apostle Paul already sees this problem developing back in his day with the congregation in Corinth. Some like Apollos, some prefer Paul, some follow Peter. It infuriates Paul that this focus on Christ's workers is deflecting the Corinthians from being one in Christ.
And so as I prepare to leave one congregation for another, I'm trying not to think much about legacy. But I am trying to think a lot about how I might serve a new congregation in a manner that points away from me and toward Jesus. After all, I assume that he has plans for his Church.
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
Sermons and thoughts on faith on Scripture from my time at Old Presbyterian Meeting House and Falls Church Presbyterian Church, plus sermons and postings from "Pastor James," my blog while pastor at Boulevard Presbyterian in Columbus, OH.
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Monday, March 5, 2012
Cutting God to Pieces
Sometimes the process of working up a sermon can be frustrating. (To a much lesser degree, writing these little reflections can be so as well.) By that I mean that some passages of Scripture do not seem to inspire. I look over them and find them pedestrian or, worse, threatening. As one who usually preaches from the lectionary (a set of readings for each Sunday), my nightmare is when all 4 selections leave me cold.
When you think about it, this process of chopping up the Bible into tiny little snippets is quite odd. No one would read a novel the way we often approach the Bible, taking in a few paragraphs or perhaps a page or two at a time. But if I ask a Bible study group to read the entire Gospel of Mark before next week's class, you would think I had just asked them to read War and Peace. (For the record, Mark is 21 pages long in a large print Bible I pulled off my shelf.)
Perhaps you've heard some version of an old Indian parable about the blind men and the elephant. It exists in many different versions, but all involve blind men who attempt to discover what an elephant looks like by touch. One feels a tusk, another a leg, another the tail, and so on. And they separately conclude that an elephant is like a pipe, a pillar, a rope, and so on.
These blind men surely could have moved around a bit and expanded on their encounter beyond one particular part of the elephant, but in the parable they do not. And sometimes I wonder if we don't handle the Bible in similar fashion. We seize upon a passage or two, then proclaim, "The Bible says so!"
Reading the Bible a page at a time doesn't necessarily cause this. Presumably we can eventually combine all those little snippets into a whole of some sort, like blind men or women who eventually made their way all around the elephant. But in my experience, this rarely happens. Many of us spend so little time with the Bible that a bigger picture never emerges. And so when we do encounter Scripture, our impressions may be as unhelpful as those of a blind man who thinks the elephant is only the tail. And I suspect that almost all of us have a picture of God that suffers from this deficiency.
Back in the 1950s, J.B. Phillips wrote a book entitled, Your God Is Too Small. I read it many years ago when I first became serious about faith. Recalling it, I think the small gods he describes are products of this piecemeal and/or selective reading of Scripture. We end up with petty, trivial, tribal gods that look more like what we want in a god than Jesus or the God of the Bible.
Where do you get your picture, your image of God? Is it big enough?
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
When you think about it, this process of chopping up the Bible into tiny little snippets is quite odd. No one would read a novel the way we often approach the Bible, taking in a few paragraphs or perhaps a page or two at a time. But if I ask a Bible study group to read the entire Gospel of Mark before next week's class, you would think I had just asked them to read War and Peace. (For the record, Mark is 21 pages long in a large print Bible I pulled off my shelf.)
Perhaps you've heard some version of an old Indian parable about the blind men and the elephant. It exists in many different versions, but all involve blind men who attempt to discover what an elephant looks like by touch. One feels a tusk, another a leg, another the tail, and so on. And they separately conclude that an elephant is like a pipe, a pillar, a rope, and so on.
These blind men surely could have moved around a bit and expanded on their encounter beyond one particular part of the elephant, but in the parable they do not. And sometimes I wonder if we don't handle the Bible in similar fashion. We seize upon a passage or two, then proclaim, "The Bible says so!"
Reading the Bible a page at a time doesn't necessarily cause this. Presumably we can eventually combine all those little snippets into a whole of some sort, like blind men or women who eventually made their way all around the elephant. But in my experience, this rarely happens. Many of us spend so little time with the Bible that a bigger picture never emerges. And so when we do encounter Scripture, our impressions may be as unhelpful as those of a blind man who thinks the elephant is only the tail. And I suspect that almost all of us have a picture of God that suffers from this deficiency.
Back in the 1950s, J.B. Phillips wrote a book entitled, Your God Is Too Small. I read it many years ago when I first became serious about faith. Recalling it, I think the small gods he describes are products of this piecemeal and/or selective reading of Scripture. We end up with petty, trivial, tribal gods that look more like what we want in a god than Jesus or the God of the Bible.
Where do you get your picture, your image of God? Is it big enough?
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Sermon - Bringing Up the Rear
Mark
8:31-38
Bringing
Up the Rear
James
Sledge Lent
2 - March 4, 2012
Satan
shows up in our gospel reading this morning.
And Satan has been in the news of late thanks to the Republican
presidential campaign, specifically a speech given by Rick Santorum. I’m not entirely sure how the speech became an
issue. It was given by Santorum back in
2008 at Ave Maria University, a conservative Catholic college, but once it
started getting airplay on the internet, it was all over the news.
In
it, Santorum pushes the rather odd notion that the United States has been about
the only thing Satan worried about or attacked for the last 200 years or
so. And apparently the most fertile
territory Satan has found for his work has been college campuses and the
Mainline Protestant Church. (Santorum
isn’t really being anti-Protestant here.
He simply said that America was founded as a mostly Protestant country
and so that’s what Satan went after.)
Now
to my mind, if you want to argue for a personal “Father of lies” who is out
creating horror and mischief in the world, things like the Holocaust, apartheid
in South Africa, genocide in Rwanda, or the shelling of civilians in Syria should
surely make any short list well ahead of OSU or Ohio Wesleyan. So I imagine that my and Rick Santorum’s
understanding of Satan are a bit different.
The
Bible may not be all that much help clearing up these differences. Satan appears in a number of different guises
in the Bible. In some of them he isn’t a
bad guy at all but a kind of prosecuting attorney for God. Sometimes he’s credited with things that don’t
seem to be his fault.
For example, lots
of people talk about Satan tempting Adam and Eve in the Garden, but look up the
story and you’ll find no mention of Satan at all.
By
Jesus’ day, most Jews had come to see Satan as a bad guy, an opponent of God in
some way. And so it was common to speak
of Satan as the cause of illness or misery.
But an actual being named Satan shows up rarely in the gospels. In Mark’s gospel it happens just twice. Satan’s first appearance is at Jesus’
temptation in the wilderness, and it is quite brief. (Jesus) was in the wilderness
forty days, tempted by Satan; and he was with the wild beasts; and the angels
waited on him. That’s it. Our reading today contains the only words in
Mark that Jesus actually speaks to Satan, and of course these words are
directed at Peter.
I
think Jesus’ words to Peter may be much more helpful to us than fanciful ideas
about Satan invading college campuses. According
the Jesus, the Satan problem is much more personal and immediate.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Who Speaks for God?
Now it is very difficult to be serious about following God or Jesus without ending up in a religious group of some sort. Whether you're focused on feeding the poor, racial reconciliation, or ending abortion, you are likely to link up with others who think about God in similar fashion to you. We are social animals and we need the support of groups. Religion often gets a well-deserved, bad reputation, but it's nearly impossible to practice any form of serious faith or spirituality without some sort of group or practices or methods. And as soon as you do that, presto, it's a religion.
But having said that, it certainly seems that a lot of God's surrogates are obnoxious and shrill. They sometimes seem more angry than loving, more arrogant than humble, more "it's my way or the highway" than "love your enemies." If those claiming to be God's surrogates are supposed to represent God, to share some attributes with God, well no wonder some people get a bad impression of God, not to mention religion.
God doesn't seem to be real big on showing up in person that often, and so as someone who believes in God, I think it's a good thing that God at least put in a lengthy appearance in the person of Jesus. For me, Jesus is the surrogate's surrogate, the one who fully embodies the character and disposition of God. And Jesus rarely has the shrill, angry, arrogant, "my way or the highway" attitude of some who claim to represent him and God.
When Jesus does get all worked up, it's almost always at shrill, arrogant, holier-than-thou religious types. It's not that Jesus is anti-religious. In fact, he's a very religious person. But he seems constantly to have troubles with his religious brethren, and he ends up spending a lot of time with folks the religious surrogates wag their fingers at.
My own denomination (Presbyterian Church, USA), like most denominations, has a mixed history as God's surrogate. We've had our better moments, and we've had our colossal failures. But as religious participation has waned in America, we, like many other denominations, have gotten worried about survival. We talk a lot about evangelism and worry about how to attract new people to our congregations. To the degree that all this helps us become a little more outwardly focused, a little more concerned about people outside the church, I'm all for it.
But I sometimes wonder if we wouldn't be better served simply to focus on being more accurate surrogates. If we spent our time getting to know God better, and then modeling God in our lives - living in ways that look more like Jesus - then I suspect lots of folks might rethink some of their distaste for religion. They might even be interested in following Jesus themselves.
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Hunting Down Jesus
Today's gospel reading tells of Jesus getting up very early in the morning and going out to a deserted place to pray. He must have slipped off before his disciples got up (there are only 4 at this point) because we next read, "And Simon and his companions
hunted for him."
That sounds harmless enough, but I fear the Bible translators have let the disciples off easy here. It sounds as though the disciples are simply looking for Jesus, but the Greek word Mark uses usually presumes hostile intent on the the part of those doing the looking. This is a word used to speak of "pursuing" an enemy. But why would these 4 disciples be chasing Jesus in such a manner?
I suspect that, like most of us, these guys have expectations of Jesus. They've seen his charisma, seen his healing power, and they know they have winner on their hands. But Jesus has up and disappeared on them. They need to find him and bring him back. Perhaps they can even set up a little center at Simon's house. Jesus has already packed them in. This has all the makings of a huge religious enterprise.
But Jesus is not going to cooperate. Even when they find Jesus, he refuses to be captured. The disciples plead, "Come on back, Jesus. Everyone is searching for you." But Jesus replies, "Let us go on to the neighboring towns, so that I may proclaim the message there also; for that is what I came out to do." Jesus has work, a mission, and it doesn't fit with his followers' religious ambitions.
An inherent problem with all religious endeavor is the desire to get God in a box so the divine becomes manageable. We want God to assist us in our plans and schemes. All too often, we want to capture Jesus and tell him, "Come with us." But only a Jesus we imagine actually does. God's Living Word will not follow us. Instead he says, "Deny yourself, let go of your agenda, stop trying to drag me where you want to go, and take up the cross and follow me."
We resist. We say, "No, Jesus, come with us. We know the way." But I'm not sure even we believe that.
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
That sounds harmless enough, but I fear the Bible translators have let the disciples off easy here. It sounds as though the disciples are simply looking for Jesus, but the Greek word Mark uses usually presumes hostile intent on the the part of those doing the looking. This is a word used to speak of "pursuing" an enemy. But why would these 4 disciples be chasing Jesus in such a manner?
I suspect that, like most of us, these guys have expectations of Jesus. They've seen his charisma, seen his healing power, and they know they have winner on their hands. But Jesus has up and disappeared on them. They need to find him and bring him back. Perhaps they can even set up a little center at Simon's house. Jesus has already packed them in. This has all the makings of a huge religious enterprise.
But Jesus is not going to cooperate. Even when they find Jesus, he refuses to be captured. The disciples plead, "Come on back, Jesus. Everyone is searching for you." But Jesus replies, "Let us go on to the neighboring towns, so that I may proclaim the message there also; for that is what I came out to do." Jesus has work, a mission, and it doesn't fit with his followers' religious ambitions.
An inherent problem with all religious endeavor is the desire to get God in a box so the divine becomes manageable. We want God to assist us in our plans and schemes. All too often, we want to capture Jesus and tell him, "Come with us." But only a Jesus we imagine actually does. God's Living Word will not follow us. Instead he says, "Deny yourself, let go of your agenda, stop trying to drag me where you want to go, and take up the cross and follow me."
We resist. We say, "No, Jesus, come with us. We know the way." But I'm not sure even we believe that.
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Spiritual Hiccups - Pelvic Issues and Immature Faith
Richard Rohr's meditation this morning opened with this observation. "In recent elections one would have thought that homosexuality and abortion were the new litmus tests of Christianity." I should add that Rohr is a Catholic priest who I presume does not like the idea of abortion. But he also recognizes that focus on sexual purity and morality tends to distract us from the bulk of Jesus' teaching (Rohr says 95%). Jesus is much less worried about personal purity and more concerned with "issues of pride, injustice, hypocrisy, blindness, and what I have often called 'The Three Ps' of power, prestige, and possessions," says Rohr.
I read today's lectionary texts after reading Rohr, and the absence of sexual morality or purity issues was striking. I'm not suggesting that the Bible has no interest in such issues, but they are hardly primary, although one might think they are after hearing political candidates talk about their faith-based stances. But today's texts included more typical biblical concerns. The psalm talked about the prisoner, the blind, the stranger, the widow, and the orphan. And Jesus proclaims nearness of God's kingdom, which is then demonstrated by calling some fisherman to follow him, teaching, and restoring a tormented soul to wholeness.
If you dropped open your Bible anywhere in one of the gospels, there's a very good chance Jesus would be healing, or talking about how greed and money causes us huge problems, or telling us to love enemies, or reaching out to those that religious folks found repulsive. So how is that Christianity often ends up looking so little like Jesus? How is it that a casual observer of American culture could easily conclude that Christian faith is obsessed with what happens in people's bedrooms?
I'm not sure why this is, but people's religious views often seem to get stuck in a very childish state. In many traditional churches, religious education is almost entirely for children, and it seems that our faith often does not advance much beyond those rudimentary Sunday School lessons. Much of Jesus' teaching does not translate easily into a third grade Sunday School class, and so all too often, Jesus' message gets distorted into, "Be good little boys and girls."
I can't seem to stop mentioning Rohr today, but he has an interesting observation about immature faith. Speaking of the aforementioned focus on sexual purity he says that "early-stage religion has never gotten much beyond these 'pelvic' issues." I kind of like that one. And I think it is a helpful measuring stick as well. If your faith spends a great deal of time on "pelvic issues," that's a pretty sure bet that it is ignoring the core of faith, that it is rarely following Jesus where he calls us to go.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Spiritual Hiccups - I Don't Understand
It's curious how a line of Scripture will sometimes strike me. I only got one verse into this morning's psalm before I found myself wondering what understanding had to do with learning God's commandments. The line in question, from Psalm 119:73 reads, "give me understanding that I may learn your commandments."
Learning the commandments seems more a matter of memorization than understanding, but the psalm doesn't ask for a better memory. It asks for understanding.
People often want faith to be a simple matter, and I regularly hear people say that things would be much better if we just did what it says in the Bible, if were returned to being a Christian nation, if we "got right with God." It couldn't be more simple, at least not until you get into the details. What's that saying about the devil being in the details?
I've always felt that if faith were a simple thing, if living as God's people were a simple thing, the Bible would be a pamphlet or brochure. As it is, the Bible sitting on my desk is over 2000 pages long. (The Catholic Bible is even lengthier than mine.) But even when you consider only a brief section of Scripture, the simple versus complex and nuanced issue can arise.
There have been a number of court cases in recent years regarding public display of the 10 Commandments. Those who support such displays argue that they are the basis for our civil laws and that we are a "Christian nation." But such arguments quickly founder when we actually examine the commandments. How does Sabbath keeping fit into a 24/7 culture, and what does idolatry have to do with civil law? Wrongful use of God's name is particularly problematic, and perhaps that is why people often trivialize this one into a prohibition against swearing. But if God is serious about us not invoking the Divine to further our own agendas, a lot of Christian political candidates are in deep trouble.
Even the second half of the commandments, those that correspond more easily to civil law, can create problems. The support of Newt Gingrich by some Christian Right pastors comes to mind here. And the one about not coveting anything that belongs to your neighbor would seem to undermine a basic motivation for the American consumerist culture.
But I don't mean to speak only against simplistic, conservative takes on faith. In my experience, most all of us tend to think that the articles of faith we hold dear are simple. Liberal, progressive, social justice Christians sometimes act as though there is nothing in the Bible but social justice. The disturbing fact is that Christians of all stripes like to simplify what being faithful means so that it fits neatly within the issues that motivate us.
Life is complicated. Relationships are complicated. Anyone who tells you they have life and relationships all figured out is likely delusional. Surely living in relationship with God is no different. Understand?
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
Learning the commandments seems more a matter of memorization than understanding, but the psalm doesn't ask for a better memory. It asks for understanding.
People often want faith to be a simple matter, and I regularly hear people say that things would be much better if we just did what it says in the Bible, if were returned to being a Christian nation, if we "got right with God." It couldn't be more simple, at least not until you get into the details. What's that saying about the devil being in the details?
I've always felt that if faith were a simple thing, if living as God's people were a simple thing, the Bible would be a pamphlet or brochure. As it is, the Bible sitting on my desk is over 2000 pages long. (The Catholic Bible is even lengthier than mine.) But even when you consider only a brief section of Scripture, the simple versus complex and nuanced issue can arise.
There have been a number of court cases in recent years regarding public display of the 10 Commandments. Those who support such displays argue that they are the basis for our civil laws and that we are a "Christian nation." But such arguments quickly founder when we actually examine the commandments. How does Sabbath keeping fit into a 24/7 culture, and what does idolatry have to do with civil law? Wrongful use of God's name is particularly problematic, and perhaps that is why people often trivialize this one into a prohibition against swearing. But if God is serious about us not invoking the Divine to further our own agendas, a lot of Christian political candidates are in deep trouble.
Even the second half of the commandments, those that correspond more easily to civil law, can create problems. The support of Newt Gingrich by some Christian Right pastors comes to mind here. And the one about not coveting anything that belongs to your neighbor would seem to undermine a basic motivation for the American consumerist culture.
But I don't mean to speak only against simplistic, conservative takes on faith. In my experience, most all of us tend to think that the articles of faith we hold dear are simple. Liberal, progressive, social justice Christians sometimes act as though there is nothing in the Bible but social justice. The disturbing fact is that Christians of all stripes like to simplify what being faithful means so that it fits neatly within the issues that motivate us.
Life is complicated. Relationships are complicated. Anyone who tells you they have life and relationships all figured out is likely delusional. Surely living in relationship with God is no different. Understand?
Click to learn more about the Daily Lectionary.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Sermon - A Glimpse of God's Heart
Genesis 9:8-17
A Glimpse of God’s Heart
James Sledge Lent 1 - February 26, 2012
I saw in the paper the other day where the friendly folks from Westboro Baptist Church planned to protest at Whitney Houston’s funeral. These are the same people who protest at the funerals of American soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, who parade around with signs that read “God Hates Fags.” They reason that since “God hates fags” and American tolerates them, then God hates America, too. Hence the protests at military funerals.
Now to be honest, I’m not sure why the news media even cover these folks anymore. There are a tiny group, with less the 50 members, and the attention they garner is way out of proportion to any influence or following that they have. But even though they are a tiny, fringe group, they do share something in common with quite few people of faith. They believe that God hates some folks and that God has it out for these folk.
When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans a few years back, it wasn’t just the Westboro whackos who were talking about whom God hates. Quite a few Christian preachers suggested that New Orleans was a particularly appropriate target for God’s wrath. With its drunkenness and revelry, no wonder God decided to punish them.
And even Christians who have a hard time imagining that God singled out New Orleans sometimes shake their heads at the state of the world and wonder how long God will tolerate it all. “Surely someday God will say, ‘That’s enough.’ ”
The Noah epic, despite is popularity as children’s story and nursery decoration motif, is a story about a someday when God has had enough.
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