Hate?

4 September 2016
Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 18C (RCL)
Jeremiah 18:1-11
Psalm 139:1-5, 12-17
Philemon 1-21
Luke 14:25-33

We don’t like this passage from Luke: hate father and mother? What can Jesus possibly mean? We associate (in this time and place, at least) Christianity with the nuclear family. The family that prays together stays together. This grates on our sensibilities. But I think Christianity in its original form would grate on more than just our sensibilities about nuclear family. Right now, Colin Kaepernick is in the news for refusing to stand during the National Anthem. Christians of the third century would be stunned that Christians now would consent to stand for the hymn of empire. Many of them would have gone to their deaths rather than sing the praises of the empire. So, what does Jesus mean by hating father and mother, and even one’s own soul? Continue reading “Hate?”

Community currency

28 August 2016
Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 17C (RCL)
Jeremiah 2:4-13
Psalm 81:1, 10-16
Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16
Luke 14:1, 7-14

This passage from Jeremiah lays out the sin of the people in vivid terms; they have exchanged the spring of living water for cisterns they have made themselves, and cracked cisterns at that. God has led them into a plentiful land, not a land of deserts and pits. The juxtaposition of life, and water, and abundance over against dryness, drought and famine runs throughout the passage. Alongside this juxtaposition is a second one: of dependence on the goodness of God over against a mistaken self-reliance. The prophet equates worshiping the Baals with an attempt to manipulate nature for one’s own ends. Throughout the prophets, this is connected with the corruption of the monarchy. Continue reading “Community currency”

The signs of the times

14 August 2016
Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 15C (RCL)
Isaiah 5:1-7
Psalm 80:1-2, 8-18
Hebrews 11:29-12:2
Luke 12:49-56

Many people react strongly to this reading from Luke’s Gospel. We have the picture of “gentle Jesus, meek and mild,” and an understanding of the Kingdom as peace on earth. And yet, here is Jesus telling us that houses will be divided against one another. This saying fits in with other sayings such as “If you do not hate father and mother, brother and sister, you cannot be my disciple.” We’ve been trained that Christianity is about loving our neighbors and especially our family. Don’t we go to Church together as families?

But here, Luke reminds us that the reconciliation of the kingdom requires a commitment to the message of the covenant, and not everyone will share that commitment. Continue reading “The signs of the times”

Fear or hope?

7 August 2014
Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 14C (RCL)
Isaiah 1:1, 10-20
Psalm 50:1-8, 23-24
Hebrews 11:1-3, 8-16
Luke 12:32-40

At first sight, the passage from Luke’s Gospel looks like Luke just strung some several loosely related sayings of Jesus to make this unit. The saying, “Do not fear, little flock,” seems to belong to what came before, which was a set of saying about not worrying about what to wear or what to eat, but it then shifts to an emphasis on incorruptible treasure. Then follows the saying about good slaves waiting for the return of the master from the wedding feast. If he finds them ready when he returns, he will have them recline at table and serve them. Then, we shift to the thief coming in the night. In both instances, returning master and thief in the night, Jesus (or the Son of Man) is the one who arrives.

This poses an odd contrast. Is Jesus’ return something to be anticipated with hope, or with fear? Continue reading “Fear or hope?”

For the common good

31 July 2016
Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 13C (RCL)
Hosea 11:1-11
Psalm 107:1-9, 43
Colossians 3:1-11
Luke 12:13-21

Hosea contains some of the tenderest imagery for God, along with some of the most calamitous prophecies. God is torn between tenderness and punishment — I suppose like many a parent. “I was to them like those who lift infants to their cheeks. I bent down to them and fed them.” God is portrayed as a mother lifting her child to nurse it. Even though Israel has continued in its unfaithfulness, God is unable to give vent to the divine anger. The prophet Hosea seems to be turning away from the imagery of the vindictiveness of God. The New Testament will complete this turn.

The two New Testament lesson seem to focus on greed, though that term might need some definition. Continue reading “For the common good”

One for the road

25 July 2016
Tenth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 12C (RCL)
Hosea 1:2-10
Psalm 85
Colossians 2:6-19
Luke 11:1-13

We continue with the long narrative arc in our Old Testament lessons of the work of the prophets in Israel. Hosea is remarkable for his use of the metaphor of marriage for the covenant between God and the people. God tells Hosea to take a prostitute for a wife. This is probably a cult prostitute associated with the worship of Baal. Baal is a loan word in Hebrew which simply meant husband. Baal was one of the Canaanite gods of fertility. The cult of Baal was meant to secure the fertility of the land, and of flocks, and of the community. There would be a certain amount of irony in using Hosea’s marriage to Gomer as a metaphor for the relationship between God and the people. Continue reading “One for the road”

Famine for the Word

17 July 2016
Ninth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 11C (RCL)
Amos 8:1-12
Psalm 52
Colossians 1:15-28
Luke 10:38-42

Amos is a cheery fellow. His fourth and final vision is a bowl of summer (ripe) fruit. There is a word play here, which the NIV captures by translating “The time is ripe for my people Israel”: ripe and end are cognates in Hebrew. Amos paints a very grim picture of the day of the Lord. For her treatment of the poor and the helpless, God will make an end of Israel. The crowning crime is the sale of the poor for a pair of sandals. The exchange of sandals served to finalize a land transaction (see Boaz’s purchase of Elimelech’s land in the book of Ruth). The rich are buying the land of the poor in exchange for food. This is precisely the situation Joseph initiated in Egypt which led to the slavery of the people. Israel is becoming Egypt. Continue reading “Famine for the Word”

Neighbors

10 July 2016
Eighth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 10C (RCL)
Amos 7:7-17
Psalm 82
Colossians 1:1-14
Luke 10:25-37

Amos was not a polite man. Rage seldom expresses itself politely. Amos expresses God’s indictment of the various lands surrounding Israel and Judah, and a reader who believed that God had chosen Israel and Judah as God’s special possession would expect Amos to shift from indictment to consolation when her turns his words toward God’s chosen. Instead, he includes them in the list of indicted nations, and on the same charges: oppression and abuse of the poor and helpless. When, in God’s name, the prophet finally says, “You alone have I favored among all the families of the earth,” it is only to tell them that God will punish their crimes more severely, because they should have known better. Not what they would have wanted to hear. Continue reading “Neighbors”

The kingdom has come near

3 July 2016
Seventh Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 9C (RCL)
2 Kings 5:1-14
Psalm 30
Galatians 6:1-16
Luke 10:1-11, 16-20

Apparently, the kingdom looks like accepting the hospitality and help of others. The lesson from 2 Kings makes the point with some delicious irony. A slave girl, captured as the spoils of war, remains faithful to her God — more faithful in fact than the king of the land she was taken from. And Naaman, her captor, ends up being faithful to her instructions. Continue reading “The kingdom has come near”

Demons

19 June 2016
Fifth Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 7C (RCL)
1 Kings 19:1-15a
Psalms 42 & 43
Galatians 3:23-29
Luke 8:26-39

I had not heard about the Orlando massacre before church this past Sunday, or I would have set aside my sermon and addressed that situation somehow. As it is, the readings for this coming Sunday couldn’t be better suited for trying to bring theology to bear on our national fascination with gun violence.

The story of the healing of the Gerasene demoniac is part of a larger structure. It follows immediately on the story of the calming of the sea, and is followed by the healing of the woman with the flow of blood, and Jairus’ daughter. The whole structure is then closed by the feeding of the 5000 in the wilderness. The couplet of sea crossing and wilderness feeding calls to mind the story of Moses and the people crossing the Red Sea and the manna in the wilderness. The healing of the Gerasene demoniac adds a little humorous resistance story into this Moses typology. Just as Moses drowned Pharaoh’s army in the Red Sea, so Jesus drowns a legion of the Roman army in the sea as a herd of pigs. The hearers of this story would have rejoiced to imagine their oppressors meeting such an appropriate end.

But once the humor has opened a space for reflection, the story does its real work. Jesus and his disciples come to shore on the side of the lake opposite Galilee — on the wilderness side in the old stories. The hearer of the story is forced to wonder why people living in that region would be raising pigs in the first place. If they were Jews (or even Galileans, likely), pig would not be in their own diet. These pigs were for the occupying Roman army. The occupation had completely shattered the economy and social structure of the region. People are no longer subsistence farming, but raising foreign animals for sale to foreigners.

Anthropologists suggest that demon-possessions occur in societies undergoing great dislocation. This would certainly be true in this story. The demon-possessed are always already marginal persons. We don’t hear what makes this man marginal, but his habiliment (or lack thereof), and his dwelling among the tombs attest to his marginality. Despite his position at the margins, the demoniac/demons recognize Jesus as the Son of the Most High God. Jesus commands the demon to leave, and then begins a bargaining process, by which the demon(s) enter the herd of pigs. The swineherds, now in serious financial trouble, run off to tell the townspeople what has happened. When they townspeople arrive, they see the demoniac, now clothed, and in his right mind, seated at the feet of Jesus. They are terrified — indeed they are — what will the Romans say when they learn that their source of pork is gone? When the man begs to come with Jesus, Jesus will not allow him to, but instead sends him back to the town to tell his story.

After the initial humor of imagining the occupying army thrown into the sea as a herd of pigs, the story requires its hearers to examine their own implication in the shattering of the social system that allowed this man to be demon possessed. Who was he, that he was cast out to live among the tombs? And now that he is back in town, telling his story, how are others going to react to him. It would be easy to blame him for the loss of capital represented by the herd of pigs, and his very existence will shame those who were raising the pigs for the benefit of the Romans (their own oppressors).

It would be easy to talk about gun violence in America in demonic terms. The level of violence, the heat of our rhetoric, the anonymity of insults allowed by the internet, all look like the work of a demon. Which then immediately raises the question of what social structures have been shattered and by whom. Who is it we would like to see plunge over the cliff into the sea as a herd of pigs? But once we’ve answered that question, we have to ask about our complicity in the system we allow them to create. What are we selling to the Romans? And then, once the demon is gone, what do we do with the once-possessed?

I suspect the system that feels broken in our current situation is the system that used to guard the privilege of straight white men. We want to exteriorize that threat, make it the fault of the Muslims, the gays, the blacks, anyone but us. And so, we end up with Donald Trump, possessed by this demon of fear that the system we are complicit in will collapse. And so, we fetishize guns — guns will keep us safe, will keep the system from collapsing. We let our senators and representatives accept the gifts of the occupying force — we sell our pigs to the Romans.

The good news for the Church, the Gospel, in this is that the demon recognizes the power of Jesus, and Jesus in fact sends it packing. The Roman Empire no more disappeared with the telling of this story than gun violence will disappear in this country. But as hearers of the story, we can recognize where true power lies. We can also promise to do the hard work of disentangling ourselves from our dependence on the pig market, and also of welcoming the now-healed demoniac back into our midst.

When Elijah arrives at Mount Horeb, God does not appear to him with any of the standard equipment of a theophany — wind, earthquake, fire. God appears in sheer silence. We don’t like silence — we are always trying to fill it with noise. In silence, we have to sit with ourselves and begin to contemplate ourselves in the divine light. No wonder Elijah threw his mantle over his face! God then asks a second time, “What are you doing here?” Elijah protests his devotion to God, who then gives him three do-able tasks, only one of which he will complete. He is not expected to solve the problem, only see his part, and do his part. The silence strips away our excuses, our dreams of grandeur, and brings us face to face with our insignificance before God, but then leaves us with a much clearer sense of the power of God, and of what we can do. Then we can go and do that without any pretense that we can succeed on our own.