Happy are those whose help is the God of Jacob,
whose hope is in the LORD their God,
who made heaven and earth,
the sea, and all that is in them;
who keeps faith forever;
who executes justice for the oppressed;
who gives food to the hungry. Psalm 146:5-7
One of the classic problems of religion is its tendency to become utilitarian. Faith easily becomes about getting God on the side of me and mine. God becomes a resource to be employed and even exploited for my good. "God bless America" does not necessarily fall into this trap, but it does whenever the petition contains an unspoken "and not them."
Utilitarian religion invariably imagines that God is more like us and less like them. This, of course, is the beginning of creating God in our own image. Religious people on both the left and the right presume themselves to be in the right, and so it only stands to reason that they are more like God than those who disagree with them. But this presumption that we are in the right is seldom a judgment dispassionately arrived at by considering the attributes and will of God. Often our "rightness" is relatively unexamined and based in little other than the fact that it is our position.
Christian faith, along with many other faiths, speaks of being made new and transformed. For Christians, this is a matter of becoming more Christ-like, which we understand as the ultimate human embodiment of godliness or being like God. Yet most of us Christians fall so short of being Christ-like that our critiques of other Christians who are not as in the right as we are border on being a farce.
Today's morning psalm touches on a few attributes of God "who executes justice for the oppressed." As the psalm continues we hear more about what God is like and cares about.
The LORD sets the prisoners free;
the LORD opens the eyes of the blind.
The LORD lifts up those who are bowed down;
the LORD loves the righteous.
The LORD watches over the strangers;
he upholds the orphan and the widow,
but the way of the wicked he brings to ruin.
I've seen a few articles this week critiquing the Church for its failure to really address some of the great societal problems in our culture. Of late, the problem of racism comes easily to mind. These critiques were aimed more at the progressive sorts of congregations where I am most at home, and that might seem more likely to engage issues such as racism. Yet somehow much of our energy ends up going elsewhere. There are so many places where we do not much resemble the body of Christ, yet so much of what we do and how we do it remains unexamined and simply assumed to be right and correct.
The Apostle Paul writes, "If anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation." Lord, make it so. Reshape us in your image. Trying to cast you in ours is not working out so well.
Click to learn more about the 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, August 26, 2014
Monday, August 25, 2014
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Sermon: Giving Up Control; Letting the Spirit Lead - Empowerment through the Spirit: The Charismatic Tradition
John 14.15-17, 25-26, 15.26-27, 16.7-15
Giving Up Control; Letting the Spirit Lead
Empowerment through the Spirit: The Charismatic
Tradition
James Sledge August
24, 2014
The
Christian faith has its share of pithy sayings and proverbs that people can
pull out in particular situations. They are a mixed bag. Some are helpful, and
some are not. Some do a reasonably good job of capturing some facet of the
Christian faith and life. Some distort it terribly. Some of these take on
quasi-biblical status. Many people think
the saying “God helps those who help themselves,” is in the Bible. It’s not, of
course. It is in Poor Richard’s Almanac
by Benjamin Franklin, but the saying itself predates him. And it’s contradicted
by many biblical teachings.
One
of my least favorite of such sayings is one you’ve surely heard. “God never
gives you any more than you can handle.” I suppose that some find this helpful,
but I also know that it can inflict a great deal of pain to people who are
already suffering, telling them that the experience that is leaving them broken
and shattered is no more than they can handle. I wonder what Jesus on the cross
would have said to someone who “comforted” him with this after he cried out,
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
Another
of these little sayings gets trotted out when church people are in recruiting
mode. When someone is asked to coordinate Vacation Bible School, teach a class,
or take some leadership role but responds, “Oh I don’t think I have the gifts or
abilities for that,” the recruiter may come back with, “God doesn’t call the
equipped; God equips the called.”
If
you’re not familiar with that one, you may want to write it down. “God doesn’t
call the equipped; God equips the called.” It can come in quite handy when
someone is on the fence, interested in helping but not certain she has what it
takes. And while it can certainly be misused, unlike the previously mentioned
sayings, this one is not only true but also biblical.
Our
gospel reading this morning says as much. The Advocate, the Spirit will come
and abide in Jesus’ followers. The Spirit will “teach you everything,” says Jesus. “(The
Spirit) will guide you into all truth.” As wonderful as it must have
been to have been taught directly by Jesus, he says that it is to his followers’
advantage that he leaves them. They will be better off with God’s presence
dwelling within them via the Spirit than they were having Jesus with them. And
if Jesus is to be believed, those first disciples have no advantage at all over
us. We can know all they knew, experience all they experienced, through the
Spirit.
It’s
only hinted at in our scripture this morning, but other places in the New
Testament make clear that the Spirit empowers Jesus’ followers to do all sorts
of things they could never have done on their own. Writing to the church in
Corinth, the Apostle Paul says, “To each is given the manifestation of the
Spirit for the common good.” Everyone is given some spiritual gift that is an
essential part of the body of Christ. And these are totally distinct from
natural talents or abilities. They are, if you will, supernatural abilities.
I’m
guessing that this term makes some people a bit nervous. Supernatural is not a
word you hear bandied about very often in Presbyterian churches. For a variety
of reasons, the Spirit has been the neglected member of the Trinity in Mainline
churches over the years. We talk about God and Jesus, but we’re not quite sure
what to do with the Spirit. Recent years have seen a big uptick in talk and
interest in spirituality and so the Spirit. But even here, it is sometimes
relegated to a very private, personal sphere, about my spirituality but not so
much about the body of Christ and the work and ministry of the Church.
I
recall a conversation I once had with a church leader about my wanting the
Session, our Presbyterian governing council, to become a become a more
spiritual body, one that spent less time discussing and debating what to do and
spent more time seeking God’s will and guidance, discovering what God was calling
us to do and so would bless and empower us to do. The person I was talking to
looked very befuddled as I said this. She simply could not conceive of any way
that church leaders could make a decision other than discuss it and do our very
best to figure out what the right decision was. “God gave us minds and our
reasoning ability,” she said. “We’re supposed to use those.”
I can certainly agree with that, but I
can’t agree that there’s not more. God did not simply give us minds and some
information in the Bible for us to do our best with. Jesus promises the Spirit,
a presence who will be with us, teach us, guide us, and empower us.
Friday, August 22, 2014
Ferguson, Repentance, and Noble Lost Causes
Out of the depths I cry to you, O LORD.
Lord, hear my voice!
Let your ears be attentive
to the voice of my supplications! Psalm 130:1-2
There are a lot of depths out there right now. From the terrorist force ISIS to the situation in Ukraine to the Ebola epidemic to the situation in Ferguson, there is much in the world to shake your head about and wonder what to do. Of course when it comes to doing, we Americans are enamored with the quick fix, and we imagine we can fix things with a different plan, a new leader, a new formula, or a few air strikes.
When problems are far too complex for quick fixes, we tend to declare them intractable or deny them altogether. And so the situation in the Middle East is one where "They've been fighting for centuries and they'll be fighting centuries from now." But in Ferguson, MO it's simply a matter of a few "thugs and hooligans" because racism is no longer that big of a problem.
In his remarkably short, second inaugural address, Abraham Lincoln reflected on a war in which both sides read the same Bible and prayed to the same God for aid in defeating the other. And he wondered if the Civil War was not God's punishment on both North and South for the horrible sin of slavery.
I grew up in North and South Carolina in the 1960s and 70s. I did not really witness the Jim Crow era but my childhood was still very segregated. And the Civil War I learned about had nothing to do with America's atonement for her original sin of slavery. Instead it was a noble, lost cause. Even in the North, this sentiment often went unchallenged. And obviously, there is no need to repent of noble, lost causes.
Repentance is fundamental to Christian faith. When Jesus begins his ministry his first public words are, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near." The good news Jesus brings requires a repenting, a turning from old ways, which naturally requires an acknowledgement that these old ways were the wrong way. But that never really happened with America's sin of slavery. Especially in my native South, this failure allowed us to replace slavery with institutions nearly as bad. Our unwillingness to confess and repent allowed the continued treatment of African Americans as less than fully human. It allowed white pastors to preach that segregation was ordained by God. And it continues to allow white Americans to underestimate, ignore, or deny the advantages and privileges we enjoy and the disadvantages and hurdles faced by African Americans to this day.
I do not know all the "facts" in the shooting of Michal Brown by a Ferguson police officer. But I do know that the Ferguson police have engaged in plenty of questionable behavior. I know that being young, male, and black puts one at considerably more risk of being confronted and killed by the police. And I know that a lot of whites would like to deny that this is so.
A fuller repenting of slavery by white Americans and especially by white southerners would not fix the racial problems in American, but it could change the dynamics. The failure to repent, to admit that the Confederate cause was not just a lost cause but also an evil one, is a refusal to acknowledge our sin. This shields us from blame for circumstances that emerged because of that sin and absolves us of a duty to help correct the problems. Our inability to repent denies that we or our forebears could have been part of a monstrous evil, and so it keeps us from recognizing the need to turn from the ways of our past in order to move toward the good news Jesus proclaims - a new day when all peoples and races and clans are one family, a new day with none of the "us versus them" divisions that we are so good at perpetuating.
Out of the depths I cry to you, O LORD.
Lord, hear my voice!
Amidst all the troubles in the world, it is easy to despair that God is not paying much attention, that God is ignoring our cries and pleas. But it seems equally plausible that a bigger problem is our inattention and our ignoring Jesus' plea to repent, to turn from our ways and embrace his.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Lord, hear my voice!
Let your ears be attentive
to the voice of my supplications! Psalm 130:1-2
There are a lot of depths out there right now. From the terrorist force ISIS to the situation in Ukraine to the Ebola epidemic to the situation in Ferguson, there is much in the world to shake your head about and wonder what to do. Of course when it comes to doing, we Americans are enamored with the quick fix, and we imagine we can fix things with a different plan, a new leader, a new formula, or a few air strikes.
When problems are far too complex for quick fixes, we tend to declare them intractable or deny them altogether. And so the situation in the Middle East is one where "They've been fighting for centuries and they'll be fighting centuries from now." But in Ferguson, MO it's simply a matter of a few "thugs and hooligans" because racism is no longer that big of a problem.
In his remarkably short, second inaugural address, Abraham Lincoln reflected on a war in which both sides read the same Bible and prayed to the same God for aid in defeating the other. And he wondered if the Civil War was not God's punishment on both North and South for the horrible sin of slavery.
Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said "the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether."Lincoln understood that the grievous sin of slavery had brought terrible and lasting consequences, ones for which quick fixes provided no real remedy. Firmly in that context did he conclude his address with a line often quoted, but not always connected to the quote above, which it immediately follows.
With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.I have to believe that Lincoln's assassination just a month later greatly impeded efforts to achieve a just and lasting peace.
I grew up in North and South Carolina in the 1960s and 70s. I did not really witness the Jim Crow era but my childhood was still very segregated. And the Civil War I learned about had nothing to do with America's atonement for her original sin of slavery. Instead it was a noble, lost cause. Even in the North, this sentiment often went unchallenged. And obviously, there is no need to repent of noble, lost causes.
Repentance is fundamental to Christian faith. When Jesus begins his ministry his first public words are, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near." The good news Jesus brings requires a repenting, a turning from old ways, which naturally requires an acknowledgement that these old ways were the wrong way. But that never really happened with America's sin of slavery. Especially in my native South, this failure allowed us to replace slavery with institutions nearly as bad. Our unwillingness to confess and repent allowed the continued treatment of African Americans as less than fully human. It allowed white pastors to preach that segregation was ordained by God. And it continues to allow white Americans to underestimate, ignore, or deny the advantages and privileges we enjoy and the disadvantages and hurdles faced by African Americans to this day.
I do not know all the "facts" in the shooting of Michal Brown by a Ferguson police officer. But I do know that the Ferguson police have engaged in plenty of questionable behavior. I know that being young, male, and black puts one at considerably more risk of being confronted and killed by the police. And I know that a lot of whites would like to deny that this is so.
A fuller repenting of slavery by white Americans and especially by white southerners would not fix the racial problems in American, but it could change the dynamics. The failure to repent, to admit that the Confederate cause was not just a lost cause but also an evil one, is a refusal to acknowledge our sin. This shields us from blame for circumstances that emerged because of that sin and absolves us of a duty to help correct the problems. Our inability to repent denies that we or our forebears could have been part of a monstrous evil, and so it keeps us from recognizing the need to turn from the ways of our past in order to move toward the good news Jesus proclaims - a new day when all peoples and races and clans are one family, a new day with none of the "us versus them" divisions that we are so good at perpetuating.
Out of the depths I cry to you, O LORD.
Lord, hear my voice!
Amidst all the troubles in the world, it is easy to despair that God is not paying much attention, that God is ignoring our cries and pleas. But it seems equally plausible that a bigger problem is our inattention and our ignoring Jesus' plea to repent, to turn from our ways and embrace his.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Sunday, August 10, 2014
Sermon: Drawing Near - Intimacy with God: the Contemplative Tradition
Mark 14:32-42
Drawing Near
Intimacy with God: The Contemplative Tradition
James Sledge August
10, 2014
I’ve
mentioned before that while in seminary, I had the opportunity to visit the
Middle East. It wasn’t the typical tourist trip, but we still did plenty of the
typical tourist things. That included a visit to the Garden of Gethsemane. Not
that anyone knows exactly where this famous garden was, but that’s the case for
a lot of sites in the Holy Land.
The
Garden of Gethsemane is on the list of popular tourist stops because most
Christians are familiar with the story of Jesus praying there prior to his
arrest. It is a famous event that has been depicted in countless paintings and
movies. But as familiar and well known as it is, I had never noticed something
remarkably obvious about the story until just the other day.
Mark’s
gospel gives us an intimate picture of that night. We see sleepy disciples who
cannot manage to stay awake in support of their friend and teacher at his
moment of greatest difficulty. We see an anguished Jesus who struggles to
fulfill his call, hoping and praying repeatedly for some other way to complete
his mission. “Abba, Father, for you all things are possible; remove this cup from
me; yet, not what I want, but what you want.”
Abba.
It’s an Aramaic word that is a lot closer to “Daddy” than it is to “Father.” Abba
was used by little children, a warm, familiar, intimate term. Jesus approaches
God not as some far off, distant deity, but as someone with whom he has a
close, intimate relationship. There is no religious formality here. Jesus pours
out his heart to one he knows intimately as a tender and loving parent. He does
so repeatedly, but Mark says nothing about God answering Jesus.
That’s
the thing I had never noticed before. “Daddy,” Jesus prays and pleads. He gets
up to check on the disciples, then comes back and prays and pleads again, “Daddy.”
After another check on the disciples, Jesus prays again, but we never hear from
God.
Mark’s
gospel doesn’t say exactly how much time passed. Jesus mentions an hour, but I don't know how literal that is. Does he pray thirty minutes, an
hour, two hours? We do not know, but in the end, Jesus is once again focused on
his purpose. “Get up, let us be going. See, my betrayer is at hand.”
What happened during Jesus’ prayers? Why
doesn’t Mark, or the other gospel writers for that matter, tell us anything
about what Jesus heard in those moments? What reassured him? What steeled his
resolve? Does Mark not know? Or is it simply a level of intimacy not meant to
be shared? Is it enough for us to know that Jesus has drawn close to God in
prayer, as he had on so many previous occasions, and in those moments, what he
must do became clear?
Wednesday, August 6, 2014
Prisons of Meritocracy
Reading today's meditation from Richard Rohr, I was struck by this.
As a pastor trained in theology, I know all about the unmerited gift of God's grace, about "the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world." But I also imagine that I'm somehow better at understanding and receiving this grace. It is a Christian version of American exceptionalism, at least the form of it that understands such exceptionalism as residing in our being "better" than others.
Perhaps you've noticed that being good is hard to do all the time. Being "better" is even harder. Trying to live into the notion of being better and therefore deserving is indeed prison-like. There is no freedom to relax and simply receive love from another or from God. It must be earned. There is no freedom to embrace the portions of self and others that seem not so good or deserving. They must be purged, but when that proves impossible, they must be denied.
Surely some of the partisan nastiness in present day America arises from our need to be right and deserving. We must get things right, and once we do we must guard against those who are wrong, in other words, who disagree with us. If people who are wrong get elected, things will fall apart because it all hangs on us getting it right. We get what we deserve, after all.
Living in the DC metro area, one thing I see scarce little of (and I include myself in this) is serenity. Rarely do I encounter people with an abiding sense of inner peace or shalom. Prison will do that to you.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
The mentality that divides the world into “deserving and undeserving” has not yet experienced the absolute gratuity of grace or the undeserved character of mercy. This lack of in-depth God-experience leaves all of us judgmental, demanding, unforgiving, and weak in empathy and sympathy. Such people will remain inside the prison of “meritocracy,” where all has to be deserved.It was that phrase, prison of meritocracy, that really captured my attention. I think it aptly captures much that is askew with the American psyche these days. It is why we can blame victims, assume that the poor are such because they are lazy, and we are not poor because we are not lazy. It is why the suffering of some people doesn't impact us as much as others -- they clearly are implicated in their own suffering by virtue of some flaw or miscalculation on their part. But this prison of meritocracy is also why we may be devastated by our own suffering or that of someone close to us. It is so unfair (unlike other people's suffering).
As a pastor trained in theology, I know all about the unmerited gift of God's grace, about "the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world." But I also imagine that I'm somehow better at understanding and receiving this grace. It is a Christian version of American exceptionalism, at least the form of it that understands such exceptionalism as residing in our being "better" than others.
Perhaps you've noticed that being good is hard to do all the time. Being "better" is even harder. Trying to live into the notion of being better and therefore deserving is indeed prison-like. There is no freedom to relax and simply receive love from another or from God. It must be earned. There is no freedom to embrace the portions of self and others that seem not so good or deserving. They must be purged, but when that proves impossible, they must be denied.
Surely some of the partisan nastiness in present day America arises from our need to be right and deserving. We must get things right, and once we do we must guard against those who are wrong, in other words, who disagree with us. If people who are wrong get elected, things will fall apart because it all hangs on us getting it right. We get what we deserve, after all.
Living in the DC metro area, one thing I see scarce little of (and I include myself in this) is serenity. Rarely do I encounter people with an abiding sense of inner peace or shalom. Prison will do that to you.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
On Our Own
In the somewhat humorous account of events leading up to Gideon's victory over the Midianites (today's Old Testament reading), God repeatedly trims the number of Gideon's warriors so that there is no way the Israelites can take credit for the victory. An initial force of 32,000 men is whittled down to 300. The final cut produced by sending home all who drank water from a stream by scooping it with their hands and keeping only those who lapped the water with their tongues, "as a dog laps." If this tiny force is able to defeat an army of more the 100,000, clearly it will not be simply because of their military might or cunning.
As I read this ancient story, I couldn't help thinking about how rarely those of us who serve as leaders in churches attempt things we can't possibly do on our own. Perhaps the story of Gideon engages in a bit of typical Middle Eastern overstatement and hyperbole to reinforce its point, but that is no reason to dismiss its lesson. After all, it is a lesson Jesus seeks to teach many times.
Jesus speaks of the gift of the Spirit that will allow us to know the same closeness to God that Jesus knows, that will empower us to continue his ministry to the world. The first followers of Jesus spread his message across the Mediterranean world in a manner that can only be described as explosive. People with no real training in management, leadership, or organizational skills somehow manage to spread churches throughout the Roman Empire, a feat nearly as impressive as Gideon's.
I once stumbled across a quote that I cannot seem to relocate which suggested that the seeming absence of the Spirit in many modern, American churches had much to do with our never attempting anything that required the Spirit's power to complete. To borrow from the Gideon story, we don't take on anything unless we are reasonably sure our forces are sufficient and our resources are adequate. 300 against 100,000 plus? Never! We might not even try it with 80,000.
I'm working on a sermon about being empowered by the Spirit. An obvious question for such a sermon is, "What have we done as followers of Jesus that we could never have have imagined doing on our own?" What have you or your community of faith done? And if you are struggling to come up with something, what might you be able to do if you knew that the Spirit would assist you?
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
As I read this ancient story, I couldn't help thinking about how rarely those of us who serve as leaders in churches attempt things we can't possibly do on our own. Perhaps the story of Gideon engages in a bit of typical Middle Eastern overstatement and hyperbole to reinforce its point, but that is no reason to dismiss its lesson. After all, it is a lesson Jesus seeks to teach many times.
Jesus speaks of the gift of the Spirit that will allow us to know the same closeness to God that Jesus knows, that will empower us to continue his ministry to the world. The first followers of Jesus spread his message across the Mediterranean world in a manner that can only be described as explosive. People with no real training in management, leadership, or organizational skills somehow manage to spread churches throughout the Roman Empire, a feat nearly as impressive as Gideon's.
I once stumbled across a quote that I cannot seem to relocate which suggested that the seeming absence of the Spirit in many modern, American churches had much to do with our never attempting anything that required the Spirit's power to complete. To borrow from the Gideon story, we don't take on anything unless we are reasonably sure our forces are sufficient and our resources are adequate. 300 against 100,000 plus? Never! We might not even try it with 80,000.
I'm working on a sermon about being empowered by the Spirit. An obvious question for such a sermon is, "What have we done as followers of Jesus that we could never have have imagined doing on our own?" What have you or your community of faith done? And if you are struggling to come up with something, what might you be able to do if you knew that the Spirit would assist you?
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Sunday, August 3, 2014
Sermon: Curing Restless Acquisition Syndrome - Sabbath and the Tenth Commandment
Exodus 20:8-11, 17
Curing Restless Acquisition Syndrome
Sabbath and the Tenth Commandment
James Sledge August
3, 2014
For
all the attention that the Ten Commandments have received in recent years via
court cases and movements to affix them to public buildings, I’ve never heard
much discussion of the final commandment on the list, the one against coveting.
That’s too bad because it’s one of the more interesting commandments. But it’s
also understandable. What do you do with a commandment against wanting things
that other people have?
Does
God really get upset if I look at my neighbors nice, new Lexus and say to
myself, “Man, I’d really like to have that car.”? What if someone finds her
neighbor’s husband attractive and does a little flirting with him at a party?
Where exactly are the lines with coveting? What exactly is the point of this
command?
In
truth, the command is not really a prohibition on wanting things that belong to
others. The word translated “covet” refers not simply to desire, but inordinate
desire, desire that leads to action and undermines the neighborly community that
God dreams for humanity.
I
think a lot of people assume that coveting is about people with less wanting
what people with more have. But in the Bible, coveting usually works the other
way round. It is about those with a lot wanting – and seizing –what belongs to
those with little.
There
are a number of coveting stories in the Bible. Some prominent ones involve
kings, who have a lot. King David murders Bathsheba’s husband because he
coveted her. But perhaps the epitome of coveting stories is the tale of
Naboth’s vineyard, one of the cycle of stories around the prophet Elijah.
Naboth
was just an ordinary guy who had the terrible misfortune to own a vineyard next
door to King Ahab’s palace. Ahab thought it a choice spot to acquire, a great
place to add a garden. And so he offered to purchase it. No real problem with the
story so far.
But
Naboth doesn’t want to part with his land, telling Ahab, “Yahweh forbid that I should give
you my ancestral inheritance.” Naboth invokes God’s name because
ancestral land was God’s doing. It was part of God’s design for a unique,
neighborly community in which the wealthy would not acquire more and more, and
the poor would not become destitute because hard times forced them to sell the
family farm. God’s law even required that such land revert back to its
ancestral family every fifty years, insuring that everyone would maintain a
rightful share of the land. But of course the powerful and the wealthy, and
especially kings, could usually find loopholes and ways around such
regulations.
Ahab
is none too happy that Naboth won’t sell, and he begins to pout. This allows
Ahab’s wife, Jezebel, to enter the narrative. Jezebel is quite the villainess.
I don’t know if that’s accurate history or if her nastiness is overplayed by
the men who wrote the Bible. Always nice to have a woman around to blame. Just
ask Eve.
Anyway,
Jezebel points out the obvious. Ahab is king and can get what he wants. She then
proceeds to manufacture a scenario where Naboth is falsely accused of cursing
both God and Ahab, crimes punishable by death. And so poor Naboth ends up
losing his life and his land, and Ahab, with Jezebel’s help, acquires what he
was after, what he coveted.
Now Ahab has been a rotten king from the
get go. And Jezebel had once tried, unsuccessfully, to have the prophet Elijah
killed. But it is the events of Ahab and Jezebel’s coveting that finally cause
God to pass judgment. Because of Naboth, Ahab’s lineage will no longer rule
Israel, and Jezebel will suffer a particularly gory fate.
Thursday, July 31, 2014
God in the Coin Toss
"And they cast lots for them, and
the lot fell on Matthias; and he was added to the eleven
apostles." So ends today's lectionary passage from the book of Acts. Matthias, who is chosen by lot (something akin to drawing straws or flipping a coin) is to replace Judas as one of the twelve, the inner circle of Jesus' followers.
Using chance to make choices is hardly unknown to us. There was a close local election here recently requiring a recount, and the article explaining the process noted that a tie would have to be broken by coin flip. But this is a last ditch move when everything else has failed to produce a decision. We trust our own logic and decision making over chance in most instances.
In the Old Testament covenant established at Mt. Sinai, there was something called the Urim and Thummin, apparently a pair of stones that were used to "inquire" of God, that is some sort of holy dice that gave answers to burning questions such as whether to go this way or that, whether the king should make a certain decision or the other such as wage war or sue for peace. As I general rule, I doubt many of us would want our leaders throwing dice to make such important decisions.
I'm not arguing against careful and deliberate decision making, but I am wondering about how wisdom from outside of ourselves can be heard in our deliberations. I've seen far too much of the dark underbelly of Presbyterian decision making. We say that our Church Councils, whether the small ones in each congregation or the large one that oversees our denomination, are instruments of listening for God's voice. But all too often, especially in the larger councils, they look little different from the partisan politics of our day. Sides martial resources in order to win, and very little listening goes on. Each side already "knows" it is correct. In such a scenario, where is it possible for God to speak something that we don't already know? Maybe we need to bring the Urim and Thummin out of retirement.
Many centuries ago, St. Augustine said something along the lines of, "If you believe what you like in the Gospel, and reject what you don't like, it is not the Gospel you believe, but yourself." In a fundamental sense, faith is about trusting an authority outside of yourself. There is no avoiding the need to interpret an authority such as Scripture, but if, in our attempts to interpret, understand, and apply what we hear Jesus saying to us, what we hear never challenges or overturns some of our deeply held assumptions and certainties, I'm reasonably certain that God can't get a word in edgewise.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Using chance to make choices is hardly unknown to us. There was a close local election here recently requiring a recount, and the article explaining the process noted that a tie would have to be broken by coin flip. But this is a last ditch move when everything else has failed to produce a decision. We trust our own logic and decision making over chance in most instances.
In the Old Testament covenant established at Mt. Sinai, there was something called the Urim and Thummin, apparently a pair of stones that were used to "inquire" of God, that is some sort of holy dice that gave answers to burning questions such as whether to go this way or that, whether the king should make a certain decision or the other such as wage war or sue for peace. As I general rule, I doubt many of us would want our leaders throwing dice to make such important decisions.
I'm not arguing against careful and deliberate decision making, but I am wondering about how wisdom from outside of ourselves can be heard in our deliberations. I've seen far too much of the dark underbelly of Presbyterian decision making. We say that our Church Councils, whether the small ones in each congregation or the large one that oversees our denomination, are instruments of listening for God's voice. But all too often, especially in the larger councils, they look little different from the partisan politics of our day. Sides martial resources in order to win, and very little listening goes on. Each side already "knows" it is correct. In such a scenario, where is it possible for God to speak something that we don't already know? Maybe we need to bring the Urim and Thummin out of retirement.
Many centuries ago, St. Augustine said something along the lines of, "If you believe what you like in the Gospel, and reject what you don't like, it is not the Gospel you believe, but yourself." In a fundamental sense, faith is about trusting an authority outside of yourself. There is no avoiding the need to interpret an authority such as Scripture, but if, in our attempts to interpret, understand, and apply what we hear Jesus saying to us, what we hear never challenges or overturns some of our deeply held assumptions and certainties, I'm reasonably certain that God can't get a word in edgewise.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Faith Is for Losers
In today's gospel, Matthew shows us Jesus on the cross. Crucifixions were very public affairs, meant as horrible deterrents to those who dared defy Rome. They were usually located for maximum exposure, on a main thoroughfare or at a crossroads, insuring lots of people would pass by and get the message. Matthew tells us that those passersby taunted Jesus. The gospel doesn't identify them. We don't know if they were opponents of Jesus prior to this point. We know only that they passed by and said things such as, "Let him come down
from the cross now, and we will believe in
him."
I don't know, but I suspect that taunting of this sort was a common feature back in the days of public hangings. Such a person is, by definition, a "loser" of some sort, and we humans often take pleasure in piling on when someone is down.
"Let him come down from the cross now, and we will believe in him." It's just a taunt, but I wonder if there's any truth to it. Would people have believed had Jesus miraculously descended from the cross? Surely they would have stopped taunting him.
My own conversations with God sometimes bear some similarities to those taunts against Jesus. In my case I'm not taunting so much as begging. "Do something impressive, and I'll have more faith. Fix some big problem in the world, and I'll find it much easier to do as Jesus says." Would I really?
Theologians and scholars have a fancy term known as "the scandal of the cross" that speaks to my problem and that of the passersby who taunted Jesus. Crosses are for losers, and we want winners. Getting crucified means you're weak, and we like those who have power and know how to use it.
I wonder if we can fully embrace Jesus, or fully know God, until we can fully embrace weakness and crosses and those the world thinks are losers.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
I don't know, but I suspect that taunting of this sort was a common feature back in the days of public hangings. Such a person is, by definition, a "loser" of some sort, and we humans often take pleasure in piling on when someone is down.
"Let him come down from the cross now, and we will believe in him." It's just a taunt, but I wonder if there's any truth to it. Would people have believed had Jesus miraculously descended from the cross? Surely they would have stopped taunting him.
My own conversations with God sometimes bear some similarities to those taunts against Jesus. In my case I'm not taunting so much as begging. "Do something impressive, and I'll have more faith. Fix some big problem in the world, and I'll find it much easier to do as Jesus says." Would I really?
Theologians and scholars have a fancy term known as "the scandal of the cross" that speaks to my problem and that of the passersby who taunted Jesus. Crosses are for losers, and we want winners. Getting crucified means you're weak, and we like those who have power and know how to use it.
I wonder if we can fully embrace Jesus, or fully know God, until we can fully embrace weakness and crosses and those the world thinks are losers.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Monday, July 28, 2014
Sabbath and the Gods I Serve
"Put away the foreign gods that are among you." So says Joshua shortly before his death. It is his last act of leadership to the people of Israel, renewing the covenant with Yahweh, the covenant first articulated at Sinai with Moses. But where do all these foreign gods come from?
Other gods and idols were expressly forbidden at Mt. Sinai. Moses had reiterated these prohibition to another generation of Israelites at the end of his career, just as Israel was about to enter the land of promise. And if you know the Old Testament at all, you know that this problem pops up repeatedly. Israel is almost never able to entrust itself totally to God. People are always hedging their bets, finding others things that promise security, happiness, fulfillment, and so on.
Not that the Israelites are so different from me. There's always something that seems like a better thing to organize my life around than God or Jesus, something better to chase after than God. The Old Testament often speaks of this in concrete, golden calf form. The New Testament often equates idolatry with greed. I'm not as motivated by money as some folks, and so my greed is not always financial. I want acclaim. I want to be "recognized." I want to see results and make a difference.
Not that making a difference is such a bad thing, but it can become a substitute for God, something I pursue, something that drives me, and something that, ultimately, leaves me frustrated, disappointed, and unfulfilled.
I've been doing a sermon series on Sabbath of late, something inspired by Walter Brueggemann's book, Sabbath as Resistance: Saying No to the Culture of Now. It has led me to think a lot about the restlessness and busyness that characterizes our society. Very often this restlessness can't seem ever to stop and truly be still. And I am increasingly convinced that this is a telltale sign of serving one of those other gods the Bible keeps telling people to "put away." I say that because the God of the Bible both rests and commands rest.
When pastors such as myself serve a restless god who doesn't allow rest, our congregations are never quite good enough for us. Surely a better congregation would help us achieve what we want to accomplish. In such a view congregations become obstacles to pastoral success or stepping stones on the way to something better. And the living God who promises renewed life and daily bread gets lost along the way.
And so for me, Joshua's words on putting away foreign gods don't sound like archaic instructions to folks who may have picked up an idol at the local, Canaanite temple. Instead they are fresh, life-giving words that free me from the stressed out, anxious striving that too often characterizes life. They are gracious invitation that draws me once more into the rest and peace of God's provision.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Other gods and idols were expressly forbidden at Mt. Sinai. Moses had reiterated these prohibition to another generation of Israelites at the end of his career, just as Israel was about to enter the land of promise. And if you know the Old Testament at all, you know that this problem pops up repeatedly. Israel is almost never able to entrust itself totally to God. People are always hedging their bets, finding others things that promise security, happiness, fulfillment, and so on.
Not that the Israelites are so different from me. There's always something that seems like a better thing to organize my life around than God or Jesus, something better to chase after than God. The Old Testament often speaks of this in concrete, golden calf form. The New Testament often equates idolatry with greed. I'm not as motivated by money as some folks, and so my greed is not always financial. I want acclaim. I want to be "recognized." I want to see results and make a difference.
Not that making a difference is such a bad thing, but it can become a substitute for God, something I pursue, something that drives me, and something that, ultimately, leaves me frustrated, disappointed, and unfulfilled.
I've been doing a sermon series on Sabbath of late, something inspired by Walter Brueggemann's book, Sabbath as Resistance: Saying No to the Culture of Now. It has led me to think a lot about the restlessness and busyness that characterizes our society. Very often this restlessness can't seem ever to stop and truly be still. And I am increasingly convinced that this is a telltale sign of serving one of those other gods the Bible keeps telling people to "put away." I say that because the God of the Bible both rests and commands rest.
When pastors such as myself serve a restless god who doesn't allow rest, our congregations are never quite good enough for us. Surely a better congregation would help us achieve what we want to accomplish. In such a view congregations become obstacles to pastoral success or stepping stones on the way to something better. And the living God who promises renewed life and daily bread gets lost along the way.
And so for me, Joshua's words on putting away foreign gods don't sound like archaic instructions to folks who may have picked up an idol at the local, Canaanite temple. Instead they are fresh, life-giving words that free me from the stressed out, anxious striving that too often characterizes life. They are gracious invitation that draws me once more into the rest and peace of God's provision.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Sunday, July 27, 2014
Sermon: Divided Attention and Cluelessness - Sabbath as Resistance to Multitasking
Amos 8:4-8
Divided Attention and Cluelessness
Sabbath as Resistance to Multitasking
James Sledge July
27, 2014
There’s
an old joke about a preacher who, just before the sermon, performs the weekly
ritual of taking off his watch and balancing on the pulpit so that he can see
the watch face. A young boy, unfamiliar with this ritual, whispers to his
father, “What does that mean, Daddy?” To which his father replies, “Absolutely
nothing, son. Absolutely nothing.”
We
preachers can sometimes drone on and on, oblivious to the need to wrap things
up. But clock watchers in the pews are not always reacting to long winded
preachers. Sometimes they simply have “more important” things they’d rather be
doing.
Of
course it’s difficult really to listen when you’re clock watching or paying
attention to other things. I’ve heard claims that millennials, who grew up with
the internet and cell phones, have brains that are wired for multitasking, but
study after study has shown that when people, even young people, multitask, all
tasks suffer.
Are
you familiar with “phone stacking.” That’s when people who get together for a
meal or coffee take out their smartphones and stack them on top of each other,
agreeing not to check them until it’s time to go. If someone can’t hold out
that long and must check email or update his Facebook page, he has to pay for
everyone.
I’ve
never actually seen this done, but it’s an intriguing idea. I say that as
someone who has too often been guilty of checking my phone while in the midst
of conversations with family or friends. More than once I’ve found myself
embarrassingly lost in a conversation because my attention has been elsewhere. I’m
trying to break free of my phone addiction because I know that I can’t really
have a conversation while I’m checking my phone.
We
all know that. We cannot be fully attentive to another while multitasking. Not
everything requires our full attention, but you cannot really worship if you’re
checking your watch, you can’t really make love while watching the game on TV, and
you can’t really pray while checking stock quotes. Multitasking is a hazard to
most anything intended to be deep and intimate. That’s especially of true of
relationship with God and the life God wants for us.
In
our scripture verses this morning, the prophet Amos is upset with wealthy people
over multitasking.. They are keeping up with the expected religious
obligations. They are marking the sabbath, but all the while they’re watching
their clocks and keeping one eye on their profit margins. Outwardly they are
attending to God, but inwardly they are making business plans, figuring out
what corners they may be able to cut, what deceptive practices they might be
able to get away with, in order to make a bit more.
Amos
lived in a time when things were going well for Israelites in the upper tier of
society, owners and CEOs and those with big stock portfolios. But it was not
going well for the poor, and Amos warns that this will be the undoing of Israel
because Yahweh is a God with special concern for the poor and oppressed.
In our day, a lot of people, even
religious people, doubt that God actually intervenes in history. But I don’t
know that this makes us much different from the wealthy of Amos’ day. They obviously
didn’t worry about God intervening or listen to Amos. He was amazed at how
oblivious they were to the plight of the poor, but such cluelessness is a
common trait of multitaskers who always have one eye on profit margins or their
bank account.
Thursday, July 24, 2014
Acquiring a Jesus Accent
I mentioned in a post earlier this week how even skeptical, non-Christian scholars can accept Jesus' betrayal by Judas as an actual, historical event. Why make something like that up? And surely the same can be said of Peter's behavior in today's gospel.
Matthew tells us that all the disciples deserted Jesus following his arrest. But it seems the Peter does slink along behind, at a distance, wanting to know what will happen to Jesus. And so it is that Peter gets spotted.
Someone remembers seeing Peter with Jesus. Peter denies it, but I imagine he was getting a bit nervous at this point. Then another person recognizes him, and Peter must deny it even more forcefully. He looks a bit a like a politician whose been caught in some misdeed but still hopes repeated denials will make it all go away. But then it happens again, and this person points out Peter's telltale accent. Now I have no idea what a Galilean accent sounded like, but it must have been distinctive. I'm guessing it was also looked down on by folks in Jerusalem, the same way some people look down on an accent from West Virginia or the rural South.
Peter is feeling cornered, and so he begins to curse and swear. Surely no one believed his denials at this point, but it didn't matter. The crowing rooster recalled for Peter his earlier boasts of bravery, and how Jesus had said he would act precisely as he had just done. And Peter exists the stage, weeping as he goes.
Like Peter, most of us are better followers of Jesus in our minds than we are in reality, but unlike Peter, we rarely get cornered. There aren't many times when people want to catch us for following Jesus. We're free to make public pronouncements of our loyalty to him within the safe confines of a church sanctuary, knowing full well that no one at work or school is likely to cause trouble by accusing us of hanging out with Jesus. We will have no need to swear and curse. We can "believe in" Jesus privately and live our lives in ways that don't betray the rather strange ways he teaches.
Very often, we have nothing of a distinctive, Jesus-like accent like the one that gives away Peter. Our lives may not betray any significant association with Jesus or the way he lived and called his followers to live. I know mine often doesn't. I think that's why I was so struck by a blog post with the admittedly hyperbolic title, "The Only Two Questions Any Pastor Should Be Asking Right Now," by Lawrence Wilson. These two questions are: "How do I get people to imitate Jesus in daily life as opposed to giving intellectual assent to Christian ideas without exhibiting life transformation?" and "How do we transform the public perception of Christians as judgmental, anti-intellectual, and mean-spirited to welcoming, hopeful, and helpful, which is how the ordinary folk of Jesus’ day perceived him?"
Wilson says that there is a single answer to both questions, and it is to begin living as Jesus did. Or, to use my analogy from above, to begin acquiring a distinctive, Jesus accent as opposed to some beliefs about Jesus. That leads to what Wilson calls a "modest proposal" for transforming church and world.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Matthew tells us that all the disciples deserted Jesus following his arrest. But it seems the Peter does slink along behind, at a distance, wanting to know what will happen to Jesus. And so it is that Peter gets spotted.
Someone remembers seeing Peter with Jesus. Peter denies it, but I imagine he was getting a bit nervous at this point. Then another person recognizes him, and Peter must deny it even more forcefully. He looks a bit a like a politician whose been caught in some misdeed but still hopes repeated denials will make it all go away. But then it happens again, and this person points out Peter's telltale accent. Now I have no idea what a Galilean accent sounded like, but it must have been distinctive. I'm guessing it was also looked down on by folks in Jerusalem, the same way some people look down on an accent from West Virginia or the rural South.
Peter is feeling cornered, and so he begins to curse and swear. Surely no one believed his denials at this point, but it didn't matter. The crowing rooster recalled for Peter his earlier boasts of bravery, and how Jesus had said he would act precisely as he had just done. And Peter exists the stage, weeping as he goes.
Like Peter, most of us are better followers of Jesus in our minds than we are in reality, but unlike Peter, we rarely get cornered. There aren't many times when people want to catch us for following Jesus. We're free to make public pronouncements of our loyalty to him within the safe confines of a church sanctuary, knowing full well that no one at work or school is likely to cause trouble by accusing us of hanging out with Jesus. We will have no need to swear and curse. We can "believe in" Jesus privately and live our lives in ways that don't betray the rather strange ways he teaches.
Very often, we have nothing of a distinctive, Jesus-like accent like the one that gives away Peter. Our lives may not betray any significant association with Jesus or the way he lived and called his followers to live. I know mine often doesn't. I think that's why I was so struck by a blog post with the admittedly hyperbolic title, "The Only Two Questions Any Pastor Should Be Asking Right Now," by Lawrence Wilson. These two questions are: "How do I get people to imitate Jesus in daily life as opposed to giving intellectual assent to Christian ideas without exhibiting life transformation?" and "How do we transform the public perception of Christians as judgmental, anti-intellectual, and mean-spirited to welcoming, hopeful, and helpful, which is how the ordinary folk of Jesus’ day perceived him?"
Wilson says that there is a single answer to both questions, and it is to begin living as Jesus did. Or, to use my analogy from above, to begin acquiring a distinctive, Jesus accent as opposed to some beliefs about Jesus. That leads to what Wilson calls a "modest proposal" for transforming church and world.
One: Begin to think of salvation as the transformation of your entire self from death to life rather than as mere forgiveness for sin with a ticket to heaven.
Two: Stop telling people outside the church how they ought to behave and give full attention to the transformation of your own soul.
That’s it.
When Christian people live lives marked by hope, joy, and a fresh, new way of living, we will be transformed people, and we will transform the world.Not sure I can say anything to improve on that.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Convincing Others to Sin
(Apologies for the obscure Reformed humor.) |
Americans tend to think freedom means being able to do whatever we want, but Paul has a very different view. Paul has been freed to love as God loves, and so his freedom can never be the cause for any other person' harm. In a sense, Paul's new freedom has bound him and made him captive to his neighbor. The issues Paul worries about, clean and unclean foods, circumcision, and whether Saturday or Sunday were special days, don't get us very worked up. And so Paul's statement, "Everything is indeed clean, but it is wrong for you to make others fall by what you eat,"has little contact with our lives. Still, the concept is easily transferable.
I think Paul's warnings especially applicable to those of us who fancy ourselves good theologians. It is an admirable thing to struggle with the Bible and faith seeking fuller understanding. "Eureka!" theological moments can be deeply gratifying and even life-changing. They can also lead to no small amount of arrogance.
When we've figured something out or gotten where others haven't yet gotten, we naturally want to help them join us. But there is also a tendency to look down on those who don't see things as we do, to view them as theological simpletons. Even if we are correct, little good is likely to come of such arrogance. I wonder how often my own attempts to shape someone into my view of theological purity did more harm than good as I ignored "what makes for peace and for mutual upbuilding" in order to get people to do what I "know" is right. And according to Paul, if I somehow manage to cajole them into going along with me, but in their hearts they aren't convinced, I've actually led them into sin. So much for theological purity.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Humility and Doing the Right Thing
Today's gospel reading features Judas' betrayal of Jesus. It's an event that even the most skeptical scholars are inclined to view as historical. Why, after all, would Jesus' followers ever make up such a story? It's difficult to put a positive spin on the fact that Jesus hand-picked a follower who turned on him.
Presumably Judas' actions were well enough known that all the gospel writers felt the need to make some sense of what he had done. I take it that the different and sometimes contradictory ways the gospels describe Judas, his act of betrayal, and its aftermath, reflect varied attempts to understand such events.
Despite the various pictures of Judas, I feel comfortable saying that he wasn't simply an evil monster. He clearly was drawn to Jesus and his ministry. He clearly had some affinity for Jesus and his teachings. Who knows whether he became disenchanted with Jesus or if he thought he could force Jesus to act decisively by placing him in jeopardy. Perhaps he was even motivated in part by financial gain, but surely he had some "good" in mind. He saw his actions as the right thing to do, just as some of the Jewish authorities most certainly did.
It's a sobering lesson in just how wrong people can be while doing what they are certain is correct. Consider how Paul, the most prolific evangelist in the New Testament, saw followers of Jesus as a threat to true faith with God prior to his own dramatic encounter with the risen Christ.
Right now, many Christians "know" that same sex marriage is a dire threat to our society while others "know" that discrimination against their LGBT brothers and sisters is an affront to the gospel. Many Democrats and Republicans "know" that the other party is hellbent on ruining our country. Many Israelis and Palestinians are sure that the other is the bad guy. And most all of us "know" that if we could get others to see things our way, the world would be a lot better off.
None of this relieves us of the need to make our best judgments about right and wrong, moral and immoral, true to the way of Jesus and not. But it does recommend to us a humility that does not traffic well in the civil, political, religious, or international discourse of the day. Hubris gets much better traction. Not too long ago, some Americans were expressing their admiration of Vladimir Putin because of his.
I have no illusions about teaching the ways of humility to any of the world's powerful people. I'd be content if I and other leaders in my congregation could learn it. And if we could do that, who knows what it might start.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Presumably Judas' actions were well enough known that all the gospel writers felt the need to make some sense of what he had done. I take it that the different and sometimes contradictory ways the gospels describe Judas, his act of betrayal, and its aftermath, reflect varied attempts to understand such events.
Despite the various pictures of Judas, I feel comfortable saying that he wasn't simply an evil monster. He clearly was drawn to Jesus and his ministry. He clearly had some affinity for Jesus and his teachings. Who knows whether he became disenchanted with Jesus or if he thought he could force Jesus to act decisively by placing him in jeopardy. Perhaps he was even motivated in part by financial gain, but surely he had some "good" in mind. He saw his actions as the right thing to do, just as some of the Jewish authorities most certainly did.
It's a sobering lesson in just how wrong people can be while doing what they are certain is correct. Consider how Paul, the most prolific evangelist in the New Testament, saw followers of Jesus as a threat to true faith with God prior to his own dramatic encounter with the risen Christ.
Right now, many Christians "know" that same sex marriage is a dire threat to our society while others "know" that discrimination against their LGBT brothers and sisters is an affront to the gospel. Many Democrats and Republicans "know" that the other party is hellbent on ruining our country. Many Israelis and Palestinians are sure that the other is the bad guy. And most all of us "know" that if we could get others to see things our way, the world would be a lot better off.
None of this relieves us of the need to make our best judgments about right and wrong, moral and immoral, true to the way of Jesus and not. But it does recommend to us a humility that does not traffic well in the civil, political, religious, or international discourse of the day. Hubris gets much better traction. Not too long ago, some Americans were expressing their admiration of Vladimir Putin because of his.
I have no illusions about teaching the ways of humility to any of the world's powerful people. I'd be content if I and other leaders in my congregation could learn it. And if we could do that, who knows what it might start.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Monday, July 21, 2014
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Sermon: Remembering, Amnesia, and Salvation - Sabbath as Resistance to Coercion
Deuteronomy 5:12-15 (Matthew 19:23-26)
Remembering, Amnesia, and Salvation
Sabbath as Resistance to Coercion
James Sledge July
13, 2014
One
of the more poignant movie scenes I’ve watched is the end of Saving Private Ryan. It takes place a
half century after World War II, long after Private Ryan has been rescued so
that at least one of the four Ryan brothers will return from the war. The mission
to save him cost other soldiers their lives. Now a much older Ryan, children
and grandchildren with him, visits the Normandy military cemetery where the
captain who led his rescue is buried.
He
finds the grave and falls to his knees, weeping. His wife runs up to comfort
him, and he says to her, “Tell me I’ve
lived a good life. Tell me I’ve lived a
good life.”
The
movie tells us nothing about Ryan’s life between the war and this visit to a
Normandy cemetery. We know almost nothing about him, whether he was a good
husband or father, whether he was a model citizen or a shady businessman who grew
wealthy on crooked deals and questionable ethics. We don’t know, but we can
make pretty good guesses because we do know that he remembers how it was he got
to go home and have a life and a family and a chance to make it in the world.
Memory
is a powerful thing that shapes our identities. That’s why we cherish family
stories. That’s why history is never simply about what happened. That’s why
there’s propaganda and “spin.” That’s why all societies have epic tales. What
we remember about ourselves and who we think we are forms our identities.
Many
of us have known someone with Alzheimer’s and have seen the way the disease
steals away a person’s identity. It’s much less common that Alzheimer’s, but you’ve
probably heard about or read about someone with amnesia, who has all her
faculties, but not her memories. In cases where these memories never return, it
can destroy family and marital relationships. A mother who cannot remember her
children being born or growing up may find it nearly impossible to love them as
she did when she remembered. A husband may find it difficult or impossible to
love his wife of 20 years when the memories they shared vanish.
Moses
is worried about memories and remembering in our scripture this morning. The
people are about to enter into the land of promise, the land flowing with milk
and honey. It is a land where they will prosper and develop an impressive
civilization, and Moses knows that prosperity has a way of giving people
amnesia. As some become wealthy and use that wealth to acquire more wealth,
they will forget how it was they came to this land. They will forget that they
were once slaves in Egypt, that the land was not something they acquired by
hard work or ingenuity but had received as a gift. Later generations will
forget that the land is an inheritance and will claim, “We built this.”
When
Israel prospers in the land of promise they will come to think of that land as
a possession rather than an inheritance, something acquired, bought, and sold
rather than birthright that belongs to all Israel. And the land Yahweh gives to
all Israel will become the private possession of the few.[1]
Moses
and Yahweh understand the consequences of forgetting for Israel and their call
to be God’s people in the world, and so Moses does some remembering, and he
commands remembering. This is critical because his audience is already a
generation removed from slavery in Egypt and God’s words at Mt. Sinai. No doubt
forgetting is already going on and amnesia is setting in. And if they forget
entirely, they will end up creating a society that looks little different from
Pharaoh’s oppressive system from which their parents had been rescued.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Groping for God
It doesn't happen very often, but there are occasional nights when I can't sleep because my brain won't stop. Most often this happens because I'm worried about something at work or struggling with a sermon. Last night was something of an oddity. My "worry" was the lyrics to a Mountain Goats song. I was struggling to recall a song in its entirety, but couldn't quite coax all the words out into the open. And the not quite complete lyrics played over and over.
My wife doesn't understand my affection for and, from her perspective, near obsession with the Mountain Goats. Some of John Darnielle's lyrics can indeed be dark, depressing, sad, defiant, and unnerving. Yet they often have a cathartic effect on me. Perhaps that would not happen if not accompanied with his distinctive style and voice. I don't know. But I find some of his least uplifting lyrics to be a balm for my soul at times.
Perhaps that is why I couldn't sleep last night as I tried to recall words that would not come. I was reaching for a balm I could not lay my hands on. It was frustratingly close yet just out of reach. God feels like that to me at times, so maybe there was a little transference at work.
I wonder if the author of Psalm 12 is reaching for a balm that can't quite be grasped. The writer is clearly frustrated with the situation. Hyperbole is a big part of Hebraic speech, but still...
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus says, "Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled." Righteousness is an almost exclusively religious word in our day, perhaps obscuring some of Jesus' meaning. The paraphrase, "Blessed are those who long for a world set right," may come closer to that meaning than what some hear when they read from the Bible. Jesus describes a frustration not so different from the psalmist's and says such unfulfilled longing is somehow blessed, that such frustrations are not forever.
It seems that frustration, longing for God's presence and action, is part of faith. The life of faith will experience dissonance with a world that allows the poor to be despoiled and lets the needy groan. And it will speak, perhaps confidently, perhaps longingly, of a God who acts.
My wife doesn't understand my affection for and, from her perspective, near obsession with the Mountain Goats. Some of John Darnielle's lyrics can indeed be dark, depressing, sad, defiant, and unnerving. Yet they often have a cathartic effect on me. Perhaps that would not happen if not accompanied with his distinctive style and voice. I don't know. But I find some of his least uplifting lyrics to be a balm for my soul at times.
Perhaps that is why I couldn't sleep last night as I tried to recall words that would not come. I was reaching for a balm I could not lay my hands on. It was frustratingly close yet just out of reach. God feels like that to me at times, so maybe there was a little transference at work.
I wonder if the author of Psalm 12 is reaching for a balm that can't quite be grasped. The writer is clearly frustrated with the situation. Hyperbole is a big part of Hebraic speech, but still...
Help, O LORD, for there is no longer anyone who is godly;We later learn that the plight of the poor and needy is a part of the psalmist's frustrating situation. The psalmist places the words about the poor and needy on God's lips. “Because the poor are despoiled, because the needy groan, I will now rise up,” says the LORD. I wonder if it is certainty or frustration that drives the psalmist to speak for God. Is the psalmist confident God will act or longing for God to act?
the faithful have disappeared from humankind.
They utter lies to each other;
with flattering lips and a double heart they speak.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus says, "Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled." Righteousness is an almost exclusively religious word in our day, perhaps obscuring some of Jesus' meaning. The paraphrase, "Blessed are those who long for a world set right," may come closer to that meaning than what some hear when they read from the Bible. Jesus describes a frustration not so different from the psalmist's and says such unfulfilled longing is somehow blessed, that such frustrations are not forever.
It seems that frustration, longing for God's presence and action, is part of faith. The life of faith will experience dissonance with a world that allows the poor to be despoiled and lets the needy groan. And it will speak, perhaps confidently, perhaps longingly, of a God who acts.
Wake and rise and face the day and try to stop the day from staring back at meClick to learn more about the lectionary.
Busy hours for joyful hearts and later maybe head out to the pharmacy
Won't take the medication but it's good to have around
A kind and loving God won't let my small ship run aground
If you will believe in your heart
And confess with your lips
Surely you will be saved one day - The Mountain Goats
Sunday, July 6, 2014
Sermon: Sabbath Hangovers and the Neighborly Community - Sabbath as Resistance to Anxiety
Exodus 20:12-17; Matthew 6:25-31
Sabbath Hangovers and the Neighborly Community
Sabbath as Resistance to Anxiety
James Sledge July
6, 2014
When
I was a young boy in Spartanburg, SC, America’s cultural version of Sabbath was
still quite prominent. There was no Sunday Little League baseball, and, as we
had not yet discovered soccer, no Sunday youth leagues. At my house and most others
there was no cutting the grass. And people might cast a judgmental glance at
the odd person who did.
Most
stores didn’t open on Sunday. Those that did waited till afternoon. Indoor
shopping malls were a new thing. We didn’t have one in Spartanburg, but there
was one in Charlotte where my grandparents lived, dutifully closed on Sundays.
But things were changing.
In
their book Resident Aliens, Stanley
Hauerwas and Will Willimon write about the day the Fox Theater in Greenville,
SC defied blue laws and opened on Sunday. Willimon, then a youth at Buncombe Street Methodist, joined a
few others in his youth group who snuck out of the youth meeting to see John
Wayne at the Fox Theater. They write,
That evening has
come to represent a watershed in the history of Christendom, South Carolina
style. On that night, Greenville, South Carolina—the last pocket of resistance
to secularity in the Western world—served notice it would no longer be a prop
for the church. There would be no more free rides. The Fox Theater went head to
head with the church over who would provide the world view for the young. That
night in 1963, the Fox Theater won the opening skirmish.[1]
For
many of you, it’s hard to envision the Christendom that began to fade in the
1960s, a world where legal statutes and longstanding custom worked together to
maintain a Christian hegemony. This particular form of Sabbath had little to do
with the one commanded at Sinai. It was more about guarding churches’ special
place in our culture, a culture where it was hard to grown up without being Christian, at least one day a week.
It
is vastly different today. Sabbath, at least as I knew it as a child, has
almost entirely disappeared. But we still live with a Sabbath hangover, the
residue of a potent mix of Puritan severity and blue laws against movies,
dancing, drinking, or anything suspected of being too enjoyable. And this
hangover affects people who never actually drank a Sabbath brew. Even folk who
grew up play soccer on Sunday mornings may reflexively recoil at the mere mention
of Sabbath.
But
this hangover is from a bad imitation of Sabbath. True Sabbath is not about
keeping people from having fun or weighing them down with lists of prohibitions.
It is about rest and refreshment. Most of all, it is about creating a community
of genuine neighborliness.
If
you want to experience the opposite of such neighborliness, simply drive around
metro DC. I’ve shared with many of you a Facebook post by Diana Butler Bass, author
of Christianity for the Rest of Us, that
captures this well. She’d just returned from conferences in Hawaii and the US
Southwest and experienced the drive from National Airport to her home in
Alexandria, prompting this. “Have just returned from the land of Aloha and
‘Thank you ma’am’ to the land of ‘Get out of my way, I’m more important than
you.’ ”
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