Saturday, March 26, 2011

Bread for Each Day A Sermon based on Matthew 6:1-15, Luke 24:28-35. March 27, 2011 Humber United Church, Corner Brook, Newfoundland

A couple of years into my time at Glen Ayr United, I stopped using the Prayer of Jesus on a regular basis. There were the usual mutterings about the Lord’s Prayer being taken out of schools, and now being taken out of churches too. So I challenged them to tell me why the Lord's Prayer was so important that it had to be in every service. I didn’t want answers right there, but wanted them to take some time to think about it. The only rule was they could not give as a reason “That’s the way we’ve always done it."

Well, no one took up the challenge. So right when they thought I’d forgotten about it, I did a series of sermons. It is vitally important, I think, in this day and age, to stimulate our congregations to think about the words we say, so that each time we say it from now on, we see it differently.

Jesus was a devout Jew; everything he said and did was rooted in his traditions. He would have learned about prayer from Mary. The first prayer a Hebrew mother teaches her children is 'Into your hands, O God, I commend my spirit'. It is said by the child for the rest of his or her life before falling asleep, and before death. Jesus used these words on the cross before death. He would have heard Mary at sunset on the Sabbath eve, blessing the lamps; 'Blessed are you, O Lord, King of the Universe, who has given us your commandments and bids us light the Sabbath lights'. He would have heard Joseph say 'Blessed are you, O Lord, King of the Universe, who has given us this bread to eat, this wine to drink, fruit of the earth, of the vine, and the work of human hands'.

Instead of the Jesus Prayer, Mark 12 gives us the Jewish Prayer of the Good Name, the Sh'ma: "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is One."Then Mark speaks of God's name as blessed, and the kingdom as enduring for ever; then adds the prayer of loving God with all one's heart, mind, soul, and strength, from the blessed Tau Prayer (which is on the threshold of Jewish homes since the Exodus), and one's neighbour as oneself, phrases taken directly from Deuteronomy and Leviticus.

In the book “The Greatest Prayer”, John Dominic Crossan devotes an entire chapter to the phrase “Give us this day our daily bread.” and includes considerable cultural history. So let’s go on a mini-excursion into the history of Palestine. In 1985, remains of a small boat were discovered in Lake Kinneret. It was a very dry year, and the water levels in Lake Kinneret (also known as the Sea of Galilee, or Gennesaret in Jesus’ time) had dropped considerably, making the remains of a boat visible - a fishing boat from about the time Jesus would have lived. The discovery of that boat leads Crossan into an examination of the need for food, and the oppression of the Romans.

Herod the Great died in 4 BCE. Herod had been given the title “King of the Jews” by the Romans. When he died, Emperor Augustus divided Herod's kingdom into three parts, and gave them to his sons Archelaus, Antipas, and Philip. Antipas received Galilee and Perea. Everything was quiet under Antipas for 25 years, until the year 20 in the common era - when there was outright revolt. But why the preoccupation of the Biblical writers with fishing and fish, when Jesus came from an inland town. Lots of references we can name, including the fact that virtually all the disciples were fishermen by trade. Yet Jesus prays about bread. Why?

Herod Antipas tried three times to acquire the title “King of the Jews”, like his father. Between 14 and 37 CE he tried for the second time. His success depended on two things: for his Roman masters, he had to increase the productivity of the Galilee; for his Jewish subjects, he had to increase his popularity. He decided to follow his father’s model. So first, he had the great city of Sepphoris built - a “city built on a hill”, looking out over fields of grapes, olives and grains. He used Sepphoris as a centre for wringing all he could out of the land, for Rome.

Then, he decided to build another capital city - Tiberias - on the shores of the Galilee, and named after his father. He intended to commercialise fishing on the sea of Galilee, exporting dried and salted fish to Rome. He divorced his own wife, and persuaded Herodias to divorce her husband - and then he married her. Popularity with the Jewish subjects had been abandoned. Both John and Jesus were critical of this action - John was beheaded for his criticism. Jesus speaks about these actions openly - in his discourse on divorce - knowing it will get back to Herod.

Imagine what Herod’s plan would have done to the small fishing villages. There were already taxes on everything - nets, boats, and probably even a tax for fishing from the shore. More often than not, the catch had to be sold to the Romans. Is it any surprise that the two most prominent disciples - Mary and Peter - as well as the others - were from these villages. Magdala, where Mary came from, had been the most important fishing centre on the lake before Herod began building Tiberias. His plan would destroy Magdala’s economy.

Jesus’ message, underlying the simplicity of the words, was really about who owns the earth, the land and the lake - God or Rome. Remember, in Jewish belief “The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it, the world, and those who live in it.” So the question for the oppressed people around the lake becomes “Who owns the lake and all the fish in it.” Who controls the daily bread - the food needed for each day?

The story of the feeding of the five thousand sets up an interesting study. After the teaching is finished, it’s getting late, and the disciples realise all these people need to eat. Their solution is to send the people away, to find food on their own. Jesus replies “You give them something to eat.” The contrast is stark - Jesus reminds his disciples that it is *their* responsibility for the distribution of God’s food to God’s people. So then there is the matter of finding some food, which Jesus blesses and breaks; it is distributed to the people. Jesus gets his disciples to see that if the kingdom of God is here and now, they are responsible for the adequate distribution of food. For the disciples, the collaborative element of their theology centred on the teaching but not feeding; for Jesus the teaching is *about* feeding.

Four verbs become important in the Gospel narratives: Take-bless-break-give. Mark says “He took the loaves, and after giving thanks he broke them, and gave them to his disciples to distribute; and they distributed them to the crowd.”

So what is so important about that? Perhaps this - the story is indeed a miracle within a parable - to say that “there is more than enough food already present on our earth when it passes through the hands of divine justice; when it is taken, blessed, broken and given out; when food is seen as God’s consecrated gift.” Jesus *enacts* that parable of God as Householder of the World - the earth and everything in it belongs to God.

Throughout the Scriptures we see stories about bread, fish and the lake. The kingdom movement of Jesus, and his teaching, brought into question ownership of the lake. The lake becomes the microcosm for the whole of creation, and then the question of ownership of creation.

So it becomes clear that saying “Give us this day our daily bread.” is both about literal bread, and a statement about God’s world, God’s intention, and what we do. It is a question of ownership and a statement of discipleship.

Give us the bread we need for today....The word for bread is >lachma=, but the word also means >understanding=. We could say “give us the food for all forms of growth and for elementary life in general”. The root of the word demonstrates growing vigour, greenness, possibility, and generative power. It became the word >hochma= which translates as >Holy Wisdom=, the breath, the embodiment of the feminine principle in everything. This reminds us that as well as the grand picture of unity in creation, we also need just food or understanding for the moment. It stands within the context of Messianic expectation, and is quite radical. It is reminiscent of Solomon praying Agive us our apportioned bread@, or give us what we need for today. It makes a strong comment about having more than we need, over against those who have less.

The story of “daily bread” which begins back in Mark this time leads us to Luke. Two grief-stricken disciples walk along a road. How many times they must have walked that road from Emmaus to Jerusalem and back again. A stranger takes up with them, and begins to talk - and they pour out their hearts and end up in tears. They reach Emmaus, and persuade him to stay rather than walk a dangerous road after dark. A simple meal is set out: the stranger picks up the bread and says the words - “Baruch atah adonai, eloheinu melech ha olam, hamotzi lechem min haaretz.........", and then he breaks and shares it with them.

Suddenly they recognise him. The word “recognise” is rooted in the word “cognition”, and means “know again”. In the meeting on the road, and the meal around the table, their needs are met. They are fed with spiritual bread, and then they sit down and feed their bodies.

This simple sentence “Give us this day our daily bread” is a condensed symbol of the realm of God, in the here and now - on the everyday road of life, the road we travel so often and sometimes without even thinking. How often do we pick up bread and just stuff it in, without thinking. Or without realising that the faces around the table are Jesus? How often do we trust that we have enough? That we have been fed?

The story of the Road to Emmaus is a parable about community worship. The Scriptures are read first, but Jesus is truly known when food and household are shared - often with the unknown stranger. Only then can we say Jesus has been made known in the “breaking of the bread.” Now, each of the people around the table might have had their own bread, but the emphasis in the story is about the *sharing of communal food*.

It isn't enough, for me, to put the prayer in every week just because that’s the way it’s always been. On the surface this is a simple and ordinary prayer, which would have been understood well by its original hearers. It was also an incredibly radical prayer meant to change lives. If you look at the parables and sayings Jesus used, they always appeared incredibly simple, but never were. Jesus always, always pushed his followers not to be complacent - and his criticism of the religious leaders’ hypocrisy made him extremely unpopular. In some ways that’s the role of preachers - to push you sitting in the pews not to be complacent, even if it makes us unpopular. We is not enough just to rattle off the words from memory without thinking. The whole intent of the prayer and the actions we take is to make us new people, in the realm of God, in the here and now. Thanks be to God.


Sources:
1. www.jewishencyclopedia.com
2. Religion and Ethics: The Lord=s Prayer www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/christianity/prayer (Archbishop Rowan Williams)
3. Prayers of the Cosmos - Neil Douglas-Klotz
4. The Greatest Prayer:Rediscovering the Revolutionary Message of the Lord’s Prayer. John Dominic Crossan, HarperOne (HarperCollins). New York, NY. 2010.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Prayer, Petition and the Kaddish A sermon based on Matthew 6: 9-13 March 20, 2011 Second Sunday in Lent

Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.

Kaddish Prayer:
"Our Parent which art in heaven, be gracious to us, O Lord, our God; hallowed be Thy name; let the remembrance of Thee be glorified in heaven above and in the earth here below. Let Thy kingdom reign over us now and forever. The holy men of old said, remit and forgive unto all men whatsoever they have done against me. Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil thing. For Thine is the kingdom, and Thou shalt reign in glory for ever and for evermore."
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Most of us come to our scriptures, prayers, and liturgies assuming they are the way they always have been. But there is no such thing as “the way it’s always been.” Psalm 100 tells us to "make a joyful noise", Psalm 150 tells us to praise God with instruments, voice and dance. - with our whole self. These are the only instructions in all of the scriptures for how worship should be conducted. How many dance in church, or sing? How many find that strange? John Wesley said to sing "Lustily and with a good heart.” How many of us actually make a joyful noise?

When Jesus went to synagogue or temple, prayer was mostly public, as a call and response - that is, the person praying would make a statement or petition, the people around would respond. The Psalms show us that. Yet how often do we actually do open public prayer on an individual basis? It isn’t how we “do” worship.

Making an assumption that the words we say are the way it has always been, is in error. Consider how the Scriptures we read got to us....texts perhaps translated from Aramaic and then written down in Greek, translated to Latin, then into countless other languages. Consider how our own language has changed over the years. The English language came to us from a variety of other languages. English is truly the Heinz 57 of languages, with our major roots in Latin, Old Norse, and Old English. Even the meanings of words and usage changes with convention, with tradition, with time. Words we used as children are no longer in use today, or if they are, their meaning is quite different.

How many times have we heard someone say "It's right there in the Scriptures in plain English.?" Do we believe that these texts were dictated by God in the modern form of English we use today? So I think we are irresponsible in our faith if we just assume that the way it is on paper - whatever version we read - is the way it always was. And I think we need to be methodical enough in our faith to look at everything from all sides.

I want to take you on a translation mini-trip. Nowadays if we want to read a book, we can go to the store and buy one, and be sure that it is exactly like all the other copies of the book which are on the shelves. That wasn’t possible in earlier times. Any written material was painstakingly copied by scribes, letter by letter, by hand - no computers or printing presses. Sometimes the scribes made errors - perhaps by accident, but often they changed texts on purpose, and the changes they made also changed the meaning, sometimes quite significantly. Translators had the added problem of trying to provide words in their own language which might not exist in the original language - but somehow they needed to convey as closely as possible the intent, if not the letter, of the text. Did you know that the much-beloved King James Version was translated in the seventeenth century by a group of scholars who based their translation on a faulty Greek text. All of the translations, all of the texts we have today for the Bible, have been changed in some way. There are places where we don’t know what the original was. There are other places where complete pieces of text were added much later. Here are but two examples which were added hundreds of years later:

1 John 5: 7 - There are three that bear witness in heaven, the Father, the Word and the Holy Spirit, and these three are one.
John 8:7 - Let the one who is without sin cast the first stone.

Now - whether or not these were added later, they have become part of the fabric of our Gospels, and we work with them - and there is much good to be taken from them. But always we need to be mindful of where they came from, and take that into account.

When I was in seminary, first year, we took a class which was formally called New Testament 1, informally called Baby Bible. Our professor for the lecture on the Lord’s Prayer was the New Testament professor at Emmanuel College, Rev. Dr. Leif Vaage. His particular research focuses on early Christian practice and the historical Jesus. In one lecture, he began discussing the structure of the Lord’s Prayer, and how it was completely rooted in ancient Jewish religious practice. Several students got up and left in tears - and one yelled as she left “That wasn’t the way I learned it in Sunday School.” I never could get over that - the simple act of pointing out that the prayer of Jesus had a literary structure, made those students so upset they cried. For me, that was one of the most exciting lectures we had, because it added meaning to the prayer and the text.

The culture of Jesus’ time, and even Jewish culture today, is known as honour-shame culture. While one is Jewish by birth through one’s mother, the societal structure is patriarchal. So Jesus lived in a culture in which a man was the head of the household, and always honour had to be ascribed to the head of the household in any address. Jewish society was like a pyramid, with the power at the top, women and children a little further down, then slaves, and finally animals and other property.

The first section - father in heaven - is the address and location, which establishes rank in the pyramidal hierarchy of Jewish society. The second section - holy be your name - offers words of honour and praise. The third and largest section is petition, and the prayer in its original form ends with petition. Here=s a small example of what meanings can be attached and understood to words in their original context.

The very first word in the Aramaic version is "abwoon". The root of the word is 'ab', from which comes the word 'abba', - the more accurate translation of ‘abba’ is Daddy, rather than father. In this case, the word is intended to be a personal father; originally the word had no gender, and might have been understood as 'divine parent'. :"Bwoon" denotes the power which emanates from that original, and kind of transition from the potential to the actual here and now. So, it seems to me, far from establishing God as somewhere else, it says clearly that God the parent is right here, right now, with us. In essence, it really doesn't place God at the top, but as the origin from which everything else comes - the centre.

The first two petitions are 'your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as in heaven.' In this understanding, heaven literally comes to earth. They are not two separate places. The word 'tzevyanach' can be translated as 'will', but not in the sense of willpower, or strength of will. Rather it means 'desire' or 'heart's desire', harmonious cooperation among all things to bring about one goal. Heaven and earth become one, from potential to actual.

'Arha' means 'earth', and it is possible that this is the root of our word earth. The old root of the word carries the meaning of "all nature, all natural gatherings of mass and form produced by the universal force.” The root AR is power with movement, and it may also be the root of our modern word, ardor.

The request for God's realm to come is usually interpreted in the most literal way: the belief, that the Messiah would, with great power, bring about a Kingdom of God. Now, believe that God’s realm will come by the hands of those faithful to work for a better world. It is believed by these individuals that Jesus' commands to feed the hungry and clothe the needy are the Kingdom to which he was referring. Yet, scripture teaches that the "Kingdom of God is within you" (Luke 17:21). By such an interpretation, the petition in the Lord's Prayer asks for this inner kingdom, and not one dominated by selfish and egoistic desires.

Finally, the phrase "the Kingdom of God" is used more-or-less interchangeably in the New Testament with the "the reign of God". This suggests the petition is asking for a state of soul in which God reigns - a state of piety and humility, where one is directed by God, and does not rely on ones own devices, schemes, and imaginings

The fourth petition is “Forgive our sins as we forgive those who sin against us”. The word 'washboqlan' *can* be translated as 'forgive', but it can also mean 'return us to our original state', 'embrace with emptiness'. The prayer reaffirms that our original state is clear and unburdened, releasing those things which tie us down and prevent our growth. While Matthew's version of the prayer translated the word as 'debts' or 'offences', the word also means 'hidden past', 'secret debt' and any negative 'inner fruit'. Luke's version is translated as 'sins', but it could also mean 'failures', 'mistakes', 'accidental offences' or even 'frustrated hopes.'

The context of the prayer in Matthew is also critical. Jesus is asked by the followers how they should pray. He gives a lesson about people who pray ostentatiously, loudly, wordily; remember I said that prayer was often public in the synagogue - but not loud public prayer. People stood for worship - so someone praying would be overheard by others, even if the prayer were more quiet. However, Jesus says “And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by others. But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to God, who is unseen.” Jesus then instructs his followers to pray in the manner prescribed in the Kaddish prayer - something they would have been able to say without thinking - just as we tend to say the prayer without thinking too much. Taking into account its structure, subject matter and emphases, it could be seen as a guideline on how to pray rather than something to be learned and repeated by rote. The New Testament records Jesus and his disciples praying on several occasions, but never this specific prayer, so the application and understanding of the prayer during the ministry of Jesus is not completely clear. This is the only time it is mentioned, and as we’ve seen - only by Matthew and Luke, and not by Mark or John.

The comment from Jesus, to go away quietly and pray alone, is interpreted by some as a kind of personal “minhag”, which Jesus used for himself - based in traditions and practices of the liturgy and spirituality of that day. So Jesus offers something everyone would know, with some additions of his own.

I also think Jesus understood the really revolutionary nature of this prayer, and gave the disciples something they could use as a guideline for their own private prayer practice.

Now, what I have given you today is a lot - but it is also a really cursory beginning at picking apart the many meanings of this prayer. Needless to say, there is a lot more in it than we have thought - and I am absolutely positive that when we repeat it from memory on a Sunday morning, these meanings and thoughts have not gone through our minds. But I truly believe that if we really look closely at the meaning of this prayer, it should change our lives dramatically, and if it doesn't we are not paying attention. It is a prayer of great hope, great possibility, and affirmation of our place in the cosmos.


Sources:
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaddish
2. Ehrman, Bart. Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why. HarperSanFrancisco, 2007.
3. Crossan, John Dominic. The Greatest Prayer. HaperOne, New York, 2010.
4. Douglas-Klotz, Neil. Prayers of the Cosmos
5. Minhag (Hebrew) is an accepted tradition or group of traditions in Judaism. A related concept, Nusach refers to the traditional order and form of the prayers. The related Arabic minha-j also means custom or tradition.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

"Save Us from the Time of Trial" a sermon based on Matt. 4:1-11 and Matt. 6:9-13 First Sunday in Lent Humber United Church, Corner Brook, NL

Then Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted[a] by the devil. After fasting forty days and forty nights, he was hungry. The tempter came to him and said, “If you are the Son of God, tell these stones to become bread.” Jesus answered, “It is written: ‘Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.’[b]” Then the devil took him to the holy city and had him stand on the highest point of the temple. “If you are the Son of God,” he said, “throw yourself down. For it is written:
“‘He will command his angels concerning you, and they will lift you up in their hands,
so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.’[c]”
Jesus answered him, “It is also written: ‘Do not put the Lord your God to the test.’[d]” Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their splendor. “All this I will give you,” he said, “if you will bow down and worship me.” Jesus said to him, “Away from me, Satan! For it is written: ‘Worship the Lord your God, and serve him only.’[e]” Then the devil left him, and angels came and attended him.

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Matthew 6:9-13
"Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our
debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil."

Luke 11:2-4
"Father,hallowed be your name.Your kingdom come.
Give us each day our daily bread, and forgive us our sins,
for we ourselves forgive everyone who is indebted to us.
And lead us not into temptation."

Worldwide English Version
Our Father in heaven, may your name be kept holy. May your kingdom come. May your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us our food for today. Forgive us for the wrong things we have done, the way we forgive those who have done wrong things to us. Do not test us but help us, so that no one will make us do wrong. Deliver us from the evil one. The kingdom and power and praise belong to you for ever. Amen!

Ecumenical Version
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,
Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.
Save us from the time of trial and deliver us from evil.
For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours now and for ever. Amen
**************************************************************************
Jesus is beginning to come to terms with who he actually is. In both Matthew and Luke, he has just been baptised by John, and has had a deep spiritual experience at the moment he emerges from the water. He is starting to get a glimmer of this calling to ministry. So he goes off by himself to spend some time in discernment. What is different about this story is that it really is clearly all about Jesus, and about this particular event in his life.

The text tells us he went into the wilderness for forty days and forty nights. In the Palestine of Jesus, the wilderness was a harsh and unforgiving place, not a place for resting, relaxing, and having a comfortable discernment of a calling into ministry. If you look at photos of that area, it is mountainous rocky desert with barely a living thing in it - at least to the human eye. The text tells us he was “led by the Spirit into the wilderness” and there he was “tested”.

We are told Jesus was there forty days and forty nights. Any Jewish person hearing this would immediately draw a parallel with Noah being forty days and nights on the ark before landing on Mount Ararat, or Moses fasting on Mount Sinai for forty days and nights before he came face to face with God. Forty days and nights is not a literal interpretation, but symbolic of a long time. And people who enter into serious fasting often report that they begin to have visions, to see the world differently.

Jesus fasted, so by the end of forty days and nights with little other than some water, he then encounters himself in a very particular way. Bear in mind that he has been alone in the wilderness for a long with nothing to eat, and little to drink other than water. He’s going to be worn, tired, stinky, filthy, and disoriented. Yet it’s also significant that each time he is given a test, he responds with quotes mostly from Deuteronomy - from Moses.

John Dominic Crossan is one of the foremost Jesus scholars of today, Professor Emeritus at DePaul University and one of the co-founders of the Jesus Seminar in California. In the book “The Greatest Prayer: Rediscovering the Revolutionary Message of the Lord’s Prayer”, he gives some history of the context in which Jesus was living at the time. We have to step back, then, look at the wider context, and then narrow it down to Jesus in the midst of that context. There were continuous revolts against th Roman occupation. The first revolt was the year of Jesus’ birth, under Augustus in 4 BCE. The second was in 66 CE, near the end of Nero’s devastating reign.

Jesus lived in the tiny hamlet of Nazareth, about four or five miles from the big city of Sepphoris. In the destruction of Sepphoris, any of the small villages adjacent would have been raided of grain, produce and livestock; farms, houses and even trees destroyed. Those who were unable to hide would have been raped, if female; killed if male; and taken as slaves if young.

So Jesus is born sometime after this first violent incursion, and lives in a lull where non-violent resistance to the Romans is the action of choice. Crossan says it is critical that we ask the questions - even if there are no answers - where did the young Jesus make the choice between God and empire, rebellion and resistance, violence and non-violence? He ties it to the experience Jesus had in the wilderness, and then links it to the prayer.

Crossan gives us this translation of this part of the prayer:
“Do not bring us to the time of trial, but rescue us from the evil one.”

There are two points here as I go further: Matthew says Jesus was “led by the Spirit into the wilderness” and there he was “tested”. Crossan uses the translation “do not bring us to the time of trial”. He says that this prayer is deeply embedded in the concrete historical situation of Israel’s confrontation with the Roman Empire.

The Greek word for “temptation” is ‘peirasmos’, which can also be translated as ‘tested’. And I need to say I think that the “evil one”, the tempter, whatever we call it, was that part of Jesus himself which might have given in to reaching for that great physical and temporal power to control and rule. The struggle - the test - was within himself. He’s just heard a voice saying “this is my Son”, and then in the wilderness hears “IF you are the Son of God” you can do this....

So it is God who leads Jesus into the wilderness, and God who tests him. He is offered the power to turn stones into bread. Put this in context - his people would have been impoverished when they were overrun by Rome. Daily life, even for a bit of bread, would have been a struggle. Imagine being able to feed himself immediately, but then provide everyone with enough. Then he sees himself standing on the highest point in the city of Jerusalem - the most holy place for Jews - the pinnacle of the temple; and then the most powerful in all the earth. In each of these, he refutes the “evil one” by choosing honesty and commitment to God over personal advancement.

So I repeat that I don’t believe that “the evil one”, “the tempter”, or “satan” was a transcendent spiritual individual. Matthew has personified temptation for a reason. The word “devil” is a combination of two Greek words which mean “the one who misleads, deceives.” Well, who can mislead us or deceive us better than we ourselves. We are really good at rationalisation of our own motives and actions, aren’t we? And we note in Matthew’s text that the three temptations “progress from personal and individual, through corporate and communal to structural and systemic temptation.” which would have involved violence against someone to achieve those ends. Jesus, in this temptation, clearly chooses God and life, over immediate gratification and a giving in to that part of himself which *is* tested.

The timeline in the Scripture is also extremely important. In Matthew 4, following this experience, Jesus hears that John the Baptist is in prison; he picks up where John left off, and begins preaching repentance. By chapter 5 Jesus has begun the Sermon on the Mount, and as we get into chapter 6, he responds to the disciples question about how to pray. Matthew draws a direct line from the testing of Jesus to the Hebrew prayer.

What is there in this for us? I suggest that there is a very real lesson here. The “test”, the “temptation” is not necessarily something from the outside, a supernatural being leading us off down the garden path. It is the struggle with ourselves, in our daily life. Lent, in the church, has always been considered a time of reflection, personal introspection, We pray for many reasons, but in this case, I believe that this part of the prayer is asking for the wisdom and strength to resist those parts of our nature which find it easier to follow the ways of the world, to buy into the notion that we have to have many things, to buy more, to have more power and control. Jesus knew what he was talking about from real experience. When he gave this prayer to his disciples, he gave them something they all knew by heart - they could recite it without thinking. He gives it to them in the context of *thinking* about what they are saying, and living those words.

The Worldwide English version translates it this way:
Do not test us but help us, so that no one will make us do wrong. Deliver us from the evil one.

Sources:
1. (New International Version, ©2011) with footnotes.
a)Matthew 4:1 The Greek for tempted can also mean tested.
b) Matthew 4:4 Deut. 8:3
c) Matthew 4:6 Psalm 91:11,12
d) Matthew 4:7 Deut. 6:16
e) Matthew 4:10 Deut. 6:13

2. John Dominic Crossan “The Greatest Prayer”. HarperCollins, New York, 2010.

3. Essay by Robert Bryant, in “Feasting on the Word”. Westminster John Knox Press, Louisville, 2010.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

“Coming Down from the Light” March 6, 2011 Transfiguration A sermon based on Ex. 24:12-18, Matt. 17:1-9. Humber United Church, Corner Brook NL

God said to Moses, "Come up to me on the mountain, and wait there; and I will give you the tablets of stone, with the law and the commandment, which I have written for instruction." So Moses set out with his assistant Joshua, and Moses went up to the mountain of God. To the elders he said, "Wait here for us, until we come to you again; Aaron and Hur are with you; whoever has a dispute may go to them." Then Moses went up on the mountain, and it was covered in cloud. The glory of God settled on Mount Sinai, and cloud covered it for six days; on the seventh day God called to Moses out of the cloud. The appearance of God’s glory was like a devouring fire on the top of the mountain, in the sight of the people of Israel. Moses entered the cloud, went up on the mountain, and was on the mountain for forty days and forty nights.
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Jesus took with him Peter, James and his brother John, and led them up a high mountain, by themselves. He was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became dazzling white. Suddenly they saw Moses and Elijah, talking with him. Peter said to Jesus, "Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will make three dwellings here, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah." While he was still speaking, a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice said, "This is my Son, the Beloved; with him I am well pleased; listen to him!" When the disciples heard this, they fell to the ground and were overcome by fear. Jesus came and touched them, saying, "Get up and do not be afraid." When they looked up, no one was there except Jesus. As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus ordered them, "Tell no one about the vision until after the Son of Man has been raised from the dead."

TRANSFIGURATION

The path narrows, takes a forgotten turn as it disappears over a wooded hill
and into a deeper forest. We travel this road by heart.
The twisted trees, untended and overgrown, obscure our view,
grasp at us as we pass.
We will be wearied by the persistent wind and the gritty light,
wishing for some better company than our own twisted and untended selves.
Though some great-winged creature lurks at the edges of our sight,
still we shall push on. What is good in us will keep us from turning back.
This journey will try us, teach us, take us the long way home. Today there is time
for one more 'Alleluia' before we enter these Lenten lands.
Perhaps it will be when a crocus purples the morning,
or an early peeper rises from the mud to sing us a sign,
or when we look up to see our reflection in another pair of eyes,
then step back to marvel at that shining face which bids us go.
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Near the end of the Lord of the Rings trilogy, Sam tells Frodo he understands why they go on, through the mires and swamps, the dead lands - he says it’s because there is still some good in the world, something worth holding onto. In this journey they have gone through the “Lenten lands”, the valley of the shadow of death, and almost lost their lives. Together they climb to the very heart of Mount Doom, and there the One Ring of power finally finds its way into the fires and is destroyed. They believe they are at the end of all things.

But they were not. As it turned out, they went back down the mountain and had to go on living in the world of the Shire. There is not question that while their particular experience was horrendous, they were forever changed by it. Sam is able to make the adjustment, Frodo never does.

I have a friend in the United States, Anna Murdock, a lay person who finds her voice through writing and leading worship workshops. She talks about the ‘thin places’ of the world. Anna says “I have a dear friend who calls such a time a “heaven-touching-earth moment. I call this a God-moment.”

I think this is true. There are no words to give name to such a time when the Divine Veil has been lifted in one’s presence. The radiance, the glory, God’s Presence and our deep desire to put a time such as this into immediate words all cause some stammering on our part - even confusion as to what has taken place.” Anna says “I feel as if I have the word “PETER” written across my forehead, as my heart wants to blurt out words that will only prove themselves to be a jumbled-up mess. It is then that a holy finger presses against my lips and we hear “Shhhh - this is my son, my chosen. Listen to him.” and the Divine Veil is lifted if only for a moment.”

Have you ever experienced a transcendent moment, when time and reality are suspended, and you see and know everything, become a part of everything. I am going to describe a personal experience - and this is a big risk, because ever I am afraid to speak of it, other than with trusted people. Five years ago, I was awakened by a presence - the only way I can describe it - and felt rather than heard ‘Don’t be afraid.’ In a flash, the whole of the universe, the connection of everything became real. I was nothing more than a tiny mote - in fact, there was no “I” any more at all. For several days I was convinced I was losing my mind, and began researching mental illness. I finally went to a friend who is a Buddhist priest - who helped in working through it - and left me with these words: “Don’t try to hold on to it, to grasp it, don’t try to stay in that place or recreate the experience. Hold it lightly.”

To the Celtic peoples, thin places are incredibly real. One has to differentiate between a physical perspective and a spiritual one. In simple terms a ‘thin place’ is a place where the veil between this world and the Other world is thin - and the two can meet. This meaning assumes the perceiver senses the existence of a world beyond what we know through our five senses.

Truth abides in thin places; naked, raw, hard to face truth. Yet the comfort, safety and strength to face that truth also abides there. Thin places captivate our imagination, yet diminish our existence. We become very small, yet we gain connection and become part of something larger than we can perceive. The human spirit is awakened and will grow if the body and mind allow it. Simply put, a thin place is a place where one experiences that mysterious power.

Moses goes up a mountain to speak to God, and if you read further on in Exodus, he returns with his face shining like the sun. After that, he covers his face with a veil, except at those times when he goes alone before God.

Jesus and his three closest friends go up the highest mountain in the area. They stop near the summit, and sit down for a rest. The three begin to nod off, but then notice Jesus’ face radiating light; his clothes become glistening white. Could this have been what the Israelites saw when Moses brought the Ten Commandments down from Sinai and his face shone so that he had to cover it?

In both cases, I believe, Moses and Jesus have a transcendent experience which changes them right at the very heart of their spiritual core - and the experience is so profound it shines out of them. So do the three disciples.

The disciples had seen this glorious event in dumbstruck silence. Peter wanted to remain *in* this mountain-top experience and stop the clock. He had seen “Paree”; he didn't want to return to the farm. When he found his voice, he said to Jesus, "Master, it's a good thing that we are here; let us make three tents: one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah. Let’s stay here, where we've seen how glorious life can be. Let's preserve this glorious moment and not worry about going back from this light."

Jesus, you will note, didn’t even begin to try to answer. He had no words himself, and likely Peter’s stammering sounded like gibberish. It was a transforming experience which probably left him speechless. While he believed in the power of God, this was the real thing.

And yet, Jesus still comes to the others and says “Get up, and don’t be afraid.”

Moses, having been to one of those thin places and encountering the radiant presence of God, then has to come back down and try to explain to the Israelites. How mundane, to return from communing with God to explaining to this “stubborn and stiff-necked people” what God’s intent was. What a drag!

So Jesus and the three come back down with their eyes bugging out, Jesus probably wanting some quiet and reflective time; they get to the bottom of the mountain, find a crowd waiting, and a man with an epileptic son, who says he asked the other disciples to heal his son, but they could not. Jesus says the most human thing which ever came out his mouth, something like “How long do I have to put up with this? Bring the boy to me.” Can you hear the utter exasperation in his voice? After such an experience, isn’t this the last thing one would want to deal with? Jesus is still mentally and spiritually back there. How mundane and small it must have seemed. I can see him asking himself “Is this all there is? Is this what it’s about?” Was this experience to become only a dimly remembered high moment in a never-ending sea of need? Because after awhile the memory still is real, but we question ourselves.

Rev. Thomas Hall says that relating to this experience is most difficult, because it could never be repeated. Some Christians go to the Bible stories to try to replicate what they read. In the process, the Scriptures are turned into rigid formulae that dictate what our experiences can be. We reduce the stories to rules, truths, and doctrines; and when we think we've got the truth we become intolerant of others who understand the same truth in a different way. Yet even the gospel writers place different interpretations on the Transfiguration experience. Mark sees it as a mountain top experience, Matthew sees it as a vision, Luke as a prayer meeting.

So we let the experience of transfiguration stand as it is - one brief moment of clarity and revelation - a stepping into a thin place; we catch a glimpse of radiant and transcendent glory. Then we come back to earth, to the people around us who hurt and need healing, to the ordinary and everyday, things which look drab and mundane. The trick is to look at those ordinary, everyday things, remove the veil, and see the glory there as well.

It’s here that I want to lead in to the next three weeks of sermons. Almost right before this experience, Jesus had been asked how we should pray, and he responded with a prayer which we now call the Lord’s Prayer. On the surface, it seems simply enough - and yet it is a profound call to living, down here at the bottom of the mountain, in the ordinary and mundane - and to find a transforming experience within it. It seems significant that Jesus offers this prayer to them, then has a transforming experience himself - and then all of them, Jesus included, have to go back to the real world, and live that prayer.


Sources:

1. Poem “Transfiguration”, by Rev. Tim Haut, Deep River Pastoral Charge, 2011.

2. Sermon “A Mountaintop Experience”, by Dr. David Rogne, retired pastor United Methodist Church USA

3. Sermon “Prayer Mountain” by Rev. Thomas Hall, Mayflower UCC, Billings, MT.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

"Don't Worry, Be Happy" a sermon based on Matthew 6:24-34 February 27, 2011 Humber United Church, Corner Brook, NL

“No one can serve two masters. For you will hate one and love the other; you will be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money. That is why I tell you not to worry about everyday life - whether you have enough food and drink, or enough clothes to wear. Isn’t life more than food, and your body more than clothing? Look at the birds. They don’t plant or harvest or store food in barns, for your heavenly Father feeds them. And aren’t you far more valuable to him than they are? Can all your worries add a single moment to your life? Why worry about your clothing? Look at the lilies of the field and how they grow. They don’t work or make their clothing, yet Solomon in all his glory was not dressed as beautifully as they are. And if God cares so wonderfully for wildflowers that are here today and thrown into the fire tomorrow, he will certainly care for you. Why do you have so little faith? Don’t worry about these things, saying, ‘What will we eat? What will we drink? What will we wear?’ These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers, but God already knows all your needs. Seek the Realm of God above all else, and live righteously, and God will give you everything you need.”

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Here's a little song I wrote, you might want to sing it note for note,
Don't worry, be happy.
In every life we have some trouble, but when you worry you make it double,
Don't worry, be happy. Don't worry, be happy now.

*Don't worry, be happy.

Ain't got no place to lay your head, somebody came and took your bed,
Don't worry, be happy.
The landlord say your rent is late, he may have to litigate
Don't worry, be happy.

*(Look at me -- I'm happy.
Don't worry, be happy.
Here I give you my phone number. When you worry, call me, I make you happy.
Don't worry, be happy.)

Ain't got no cash, ain't got no style, ain't got no gal to make you smile
Don't worry, be happy.
'Cause when you worry your face will frown, and that will bring everybody down
Don't worry, be happy.

*Don't worry, don't worry, don't do it. Be happy.
Put a smile on your face. Don't bring everybody down.
Don't worry. It will soon pass, whatever it is.
Don't worry, be happy. I'm not worried, I'm happy...

In 1988, Bobby McFerrin recorded this hit song "Don't Worry, Be Happy," which brought him widespread recognition across the world. The success of the song was so great that his whole life was changed. McFerrin is now recognised as one of the most accomplished “a cappella” singers in the world. The song was used in the 1988 U.S. presidential election as George H. W. Bush's official presidential campaign song, without McFerrin's permission or endorsement. Bobby McFerrin publicly protested that particular use of his song, and stated that he was going to vote against Bush; he completely dropped the song from his own performance repertoire.

Unfortunately this song has been taken as a kind of “let everything go” mantra, which was never its intent. Bobby McFerrin is a highly trained and skilled musician, who wrote a piece intended to get people to think realistically about life. Look at the very first verse - “in every life we have some trouble, but if you worry you make it double.” or the last verse "When you worry your face will frown, then you bring everybody down."

When Norio and I were living in Viet Nam, we had pretty well decided that after the contract was up, he would find a teaching position overseas and do a Master’s degree at the same time. He was incredibly worried about how he would provide for the future - and I have to say that the Japanese are born worst-case-scenario people - as a culture - anyway. He sent out almost two hundred letters of application for teaching positions - and not one was a positive response. We went back to Japan with a reasonable savings, but nowhere to live. I was pregnant with our third child. We went to stay with his parents, and by the time we returned to Japan, his previous advisor had found him a job teaching South East Asian students to speak Japanese. Over our lifetime, we have begun to realise the truth of both the Scripture and McFerrin’s song: it doesn’t mean don’t plan and don’t think about things - it means there is only so much over which you have control, so learn when to let go. If you spend time agonising over things you can’t do anything about, you make everyone unhappy - or as the song says, you bring everyone down.

To put it another way - there’s a Zen Buddhist saying “Pain is inevitable. Suffering is a choice.” Jesus says “Don’t worry about things saying, What will we eat, what will we drink, what will we wear.”

United Methodist minister, Rev. Frank Schaefer, comments “... despite the tremendous achievements of modern civilization we are more worried about our lives than ever before.” Yet think about advances in medical science, or all the security devices we have, and, he says “my personal favorite: checking account overdraft-protection.” Here in Canada, we have our universal health care. Compared to many places in the world, we are wealthy beyond imagining. Yet the late 20th century was called the "age of anxiety" because people in the Western hemisphere tend to worry about our lives and future more than ever before.

Perhaps that's why the song was such a hit. Perhaps Bobby McFerrin echoes Jesus - that the cure for our worries needs to come at a deeper level. Allow me to ask you a personal question. Did you at any time during the last year worry? Did you at some point feel that you may not make it? We all know that life can be a living hell on earth. There are marital problems, problems at the workplace, the death of a loved one, the loss of a job, an illness, situations which seem impossible, tremendous struggles.

Jesus looks about and sees a couple of birds in a nearby tree. He says: Don’t worry. Nothing has ever been gained by worrying. Instead, he says "Look at the birds of the air; they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet God feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? Look at the beauty of the lilies - they don’t do a thing except grow and bloom, yet even Solomon, in his great temple and with all his riches, had nothing so beautiful."

This is a familiar argument of Jesus - if God provides for even the lesser things like flowers and birds, does God also have our needs in mind? Jesus adds to this three things: don’t worry about material things all the time; attend to the realm of God, working to bring it about in the here and now, God knows what is needed; finally, control of the future is an illusion - regardless of the most careful planning, each day brings something new.

In this Scripture, Jesus taps into human nature, specifically our desire for control and comfort - our desire to be able to have every duck right in its place in the row, to be able to know how the future will turn out, and make it turn out our way. We believe that we make choices out of rational thought, and then when things don’t work our way, we feel overwhelmed and frustrated. This leads to behaviours which are unhealthy and destructive - manipulation, greed, self-medication, and depression - to name a few.

Behind Jesus’ words of “don’t worry” is the question “When is enough, enough?” This is a critical question, because the TV, airwaves and churches are full of people - including clergy - who believe that God wants us all to be incredibly wealthy in terms of money. I think Jesus is saying God wants good for us - God knows what we need - but God also knows when enough is enough. Jesus is not saying there is a greater virtue in being poor , he is saying that there are other things more important than being rich.

On a day when we are settling in for another annual meeting, these are important words. And I put to you that McFerrin’s song reinforces that. The church as we know it today has only been around for a little more than 60 years or so. Up until the 1950's - just after WW II - churches did not have lots of money for large sanctuaries, or Christian Education facilities, or gymnasiums, or whatever. That was a one-time-only phenomenon, a flash in the pan in terms of the history of the Christian church. Yet we have come to think that we have to have everything, including huge numbers of people. And so we worry. How do we put more bums in pews, and more money in the plate? After awhile we forget that maybe - just maybe - God has something in mind for us.

That doesn’t mean don’t worry about building upkeep, or people in church. The big question is - are we more interested in the well-being of people around us, or do we just want them here to pay the bills? It means that as important as our building is, we have to ask what is the mission of this church, in this community? Why are we here, and what is it God wants us to do? We might not get answers - but we still have to ask the questions.

So - don’t worry, be happy - doesn’t mean sit back and wait. It means worry won't make anything better. It means do what you can, and trust that God knows what is needed. I cannot tell you how hard that is for congregations to do - to trust God, to accept that God’s ways are not our ways, and that sometimes the way isn’t clear to our human minds. Jesus tells us to trust, to take each day as it comes and do what we can to serve God. May it be so.

Sources:
1. “Don’t Worry, Be Happy”, song by Bobby McFerrin, 1988.
2. “Don't Worry--Be Happy!”, a sermon by Rev. Frank Schaefer
3. Essay by Rev Greg Carey, Professor of New Testament, Lancaster Theological Seminary, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. In “Feasting on the Word”, Year A Volume 4. David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor, eds. Louisville, John Knox Press. 2010.
4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_McFerrin

Saturday, February 19, 2011

"Turning the Cheek?" a sermon based on Matthew 5:38-48 February 20, 2011 Humber United Church, Corner Brook, NL

“Turning the Cheek?” A sermon based on Matthew 5:38-48

“You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.’ But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also. If anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt, hand over your coat as well. If anyone forces you to go one mile, go with them two miles. Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you.

“You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbour and hate your enemy.’ I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of God, who causes the sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? 47 If you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? Even those who are not Jews do that. Be perfect, therefore, as God is perfect.”

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Your loving mercy is as high as Heaven and your truth so perfect. I live in sorrow, imprisoned. You are my light, your glory, my support. Behold not with malevolence the sins of man but forgive and cleanse; and so, O Lord protect us beneath your wings, and let peace be our portion now and forever more. Amen.

This was a prayer of Queen Lili’ulokalani of Hawaii in 1895, while she was under house arrest in Iolani Palace. The Queen had, by request, drafted a constitution that would eliminate the Republic, and restore the monarchy's authority and allow Asians to vote. She was overthrown by a consortium of American and European businessmen, who then annexed Hawaii to the US by force.

This week's Gospel reading continues the Sermon on the Mount. Matthew draws upon the "Q Sayings” source, and structures the teachings as "antitheses", setting Jesus’ words over against the Law of Moses. We might be forgiven for thinking Jesus is saying something new. " In fact, he wasn’t. The principles of non-violent resistance were known in Babylon and Egypt, by Greek and Roman philosophers, and promoted in wisdom literature of the Hebrew Scriptures. Proverbs 25 says "If the one who hate you is hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he is thirsty, give him water to drink. For you will heap burning coals upon his head, and Yahweh will repay you." .

So let’s talk about “turning the other cheek”, “going the extra mile”, and “giving up your clothes”. We today have turned these into a kind of wimpy notion that Christians should be doormats. We have gone to extraordinary lengths to explain why, in the real world, being a doormat won’t work; then we rationalise our violence and retaliation. I put to you that Jesus was anything but a doormat. No one could get in people’s faces better than Jesus. He did it without malice or revenge, he never retaliated; he always spoke with truth, and always with love for the other person.

In “Engaging the Powers”, and “Jesus’ Third Way”, Rev. Dr. Walter Wink explains this passage as statements of non-violent resistance. The Jews were technically under the rule of the Romans, who grudgingly allowed them to practice their faith so long as they remained obedient to Caesar.

In Jesus’ culture, a back-handed slap to the right cheek was reserved for equals. The left hand was used for toilet functions, so would not likely be used for anything else, since that would shame the one doing the slapping. Usually, an open-handed slap with the right hand on the left cheek would be reserved for those people who were considered inferior. If that so-called inferior turned the other cheek, the perpetrator would be forced to do a back-handed slap, which was reserved for equals. So Jesus is saying two things - don’t resist your oppressor - turn the other cheek, which means your oppressor must then treat you as an equal.
It is a way of throwing the oppressor off-balance so that they have to look at their own behaviour.

Most people in Jesus’ time didn’t have more than two pieces of clothing - an outer garment which could be taken if one was sued. However, to surrender your inner garment as well, would leave you naked. Being seen naked would shame the perpetrator - and to see someone naked was more shameful than *being* naked.

Roman soldiers could force someone to carry their load for only one mile; they could not make a person do it for two miles. If that happened, the Roman could be in danger of losing his job, or maybe sent to outer Mongolia. So Jesus says if you are forced to carry it one mile, volunteer for two. Can you imagine the soldier chasing someone around trying to get his pack back so he won’t get into trouble?

There has been a lot of discussion in my clergy group this week about these actions making the oppressor look bad, and whether or not Jesus did this on purpose.

I believe that Jesus knew exactly what effect these actions would have, and wanted to be really clear with the people who heard him what this meant. So we get the further statement to love your enemies. Jesus is saying that if you do these things out of a desire to get revenge for the way you are being treated, you have lost sight of the principles. Love - and actions taken in love and compassion - can show the perpetrator the injustice of their actions, and bring about change and redemption. Jesus is telling us that the point is the action, not the reception.

Two people in our immediate history adapted these principles of non-violence from Jesus. One was Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, who led the struggle for freedom for blacks in the United States, and emphasised the need to resist out of love and compassion. To paraphrase Martin Luther King somewhat:

“From the very beginning there was a philosophy undergirding the Montgomery boycott, the philosophy of nonviolent resistance. There was always the problem of getting this method over because it didn’t make sense to most of the people in the beginning. We had to use our mass meetings to explain nonviolence to a community of people who had never heard of the philosophy and in many instances were not sympathetic with it. We had meetings twice a week on Mondays and on Thursdays, and we had an institute on nonviolence and social change. We had to make it clear that nonviolent resistance is not a method of cowardice. It does resist. It is not a method of stagnant passivity and deadening complacency. The nonviolent resister is just as opposed to the evil that he is standing against as the violent resister but he resists without violence. This method is nonaggressive physically but strongly aggressive spiritually.

Another thing that we had to get over was the fact that the nonviolent resister does not seek to humiliate or defeat the opponent but to win his friendship and understanding. This was always a cry that we had to set before people that our aim is not to defeat the white community, not to humiliate the white community, but to win the friendship of all of the persons who had perpetrated this system in the past. The end of violence or the aftermath of violence is bitterness. The aftermath of nonviolence is reconciliation and the creation of a beloved community. A boycott is never an end within itself. It is merely a means to awaken a sense of shame within the oppressor but the end is reconciliation, the end is redemption.”

Rev. Paige Besse-Rankin of the Church of Christ in Goshen, Indiana uses this illustration: In the documentary "Praying the Devil Back To Hell" the Christian and Muslim women of Liberia formed a prayer alliance to stop the civil war. Every day they gathered across from the presidential palace to pray for peace. At long last the country’s many factions met in neighboring Ghana for peace talks. After weeks of the talks getting nowhere, the women sat in the halls and in front of the doors, locking the "men" in until peace was agreed. When threatened with forced eviction, the women responded by threatening to remove the only thing they had left, their clothes. The men, who would be shamed at seeing their "mothers" naked, signed a peace treaty.

Rev. Marilyn MacDonald writes “Mahatma Ghandi not only 'drew from Jesus' but was very clear that his approach was a following of Jesus' way and teaching. His favourite hymn was 'When I survey the wondrous cross,'; he began each morning with a reading of the Beatitudes from Matthew. I remember, as a child in India when he was still alive, hearing that he would have become a 'Christian', except that when he decided to go to a church service, he was told that the church for coloureds was down the street. That was in South Africa.

Gandhi and King drew from Jesus - and without their actions, which eventually brought about emancipation and independence for India, and emancipation and integration for blacks, would those results have come about? King was clear where he learned non-violent resistance. So was Gandhi.

Now, the actions of Jesus put the Romans in a position where they were shamed. Gandhi's actions put the British in a position where they were shamed. Didn't Martin Luther King's actions do the same. I suggest that all three were well aware that their actions would shamed the oppressors. It doesn't mean that they did it on purpose to shame, nor does it mean that there is no care or compassion for the oppressors: it means the opposite, that they are converted by actions done out of love.

Neither Jesus nor Gandhi nor King talked about “eros”, romantic love, or “philia, love between friends. Again, quoting Martin Luther King: “. when we talk of loving those who oppose you and those who seek to defeat you we are not talking about eros or philia. The Greek language comes out with another word and it is agape. Agape is understanding, creative, redemptive good will for all men. Biblical theologians would say it is the love of God working in the minds of men. It is an overflowing love which seeks nothing in return. When you come to love on this level you begin to love men not because they are likeable, not because they do things that attract us, but because God loves them; here we love the person who does the evil deed while hating the deed that the person does.”

Far from being easy, the kind of love and the kind of call to non-violent resistance to evil is the most difficult thing to do. Could we do it? Could we refuse to retaliate in anger? Would we? Would we say that our anger was justified and therefore God would stand behind it? I think in these passages, Jesus is saying - there is a third way, and it’s hard. But just as God is perfect, so we are called to strive to do the same, no matter how difficult it may be. Jesus knew it was not easy, he knew what the actions could mean, he knew that loving one’s enemies might require even a loss of life. We are called to resist evil actions, and love those who do them. Just as God loves. May it be so.


Sources:
1. Pastor Karen Disney, Grace United Methodist Church
2. Pastor Greg Crawford, from the sermon “So What’s New?” February 20, 2011
3. 2008 Brazilian Documentary “Pray the Devil Back to Hell” directed by Gini Reticker
4. Rev. Dr. Walter Wink, Auburn Theological Seminary. “Engaging the Powers: Discernment and Resistance in a World of Domination” and “Jesus’ and Non-Violence: A Third Way” p. 101.
5. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “The Power of Non-violence”
http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=1131

Saturday, February 12, 2011

"Choose Life!" Based on Deuteronomy 30:15-20 and Matthew 5:21-37 Humber United Church, Corner Brook, Newfoundland

Deuteronomy
I set before you today life and prosperity, death and destruction. For I command you today to love God, to walk in obedience to God, and to keep the commandments; then you will live and increase, and God will bless you in the land you are entering to possess.

This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live and that you may love, listen, and hold fast to God. For God is your life, and will give you many years in the land promised to your fathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
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Matthew
“You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘You shall not murder, and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment.’ I tell you that anyone who is angry with a brother or sister will be subject to judgment. Again, anyone who says to a brother or sister, ‘Raca,’ (idiot) is answerable to the court. Anyone who says, ‘You fool!’ will be in danger of the fire of hell.
Therefore, if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to them; then come and offer your gift.

You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman with lust has already committed adultery in his heart. If your right eye causes you to stumble, gouge it out and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to be thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to stumble, cut it off and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to go into hell.

It has been said, ‘Anyone who divorces his wife must give her a certificate of divorce.’ But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, makes her the victim of adultery, and anyone who marries a divorced woman commits adultery.

Again, you have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘Do not break your oath, but fulfill to the Lord the vows you have made.’ I tell you, do not swear an oath at all: either by heaven, for it is God’s throne; or by the earth, for it is his footstool; or by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the Great King. Do not swear by your head, for you cannot make even one hair white or black. All you need to say is simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’.

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Yesterday as I sat thinking about pulling the different parts of this sermon together, I was watching one of the Harry Potter movies, the “Half-Blood Prince”. At the end of the movie there is a scene where the headmaster of Hogwarts Academy of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Professor Dumbledore, is killed. He willingly gives himself, in fact, in order to save a student from becoming a murderer. There above the school, in the sky, is the face of the Dark Lord, gloating over the death. One by one, students and teachers raise their wands, light coming from the tip of each, until the shadows of the Dark Lord are forced to retreat, and the light wins.

At the same time as I was watching this movie, another favourite, called “Whale Rider”, was on television. This is a New Zealand movie, about a Maori village where the old ways are dying, and the village leader cannot break out of traditional ways. The leader is busy training his sons to step in. He has a daughter, but he refuses to see that she might be called into that role. Until one day, she is able to ride a beached whale back into the ocean, and almost loses her life. Maori folklore says that the saviour of the people will be the one who rides the whale. This is a moving story of a village caught between two cultures and two ways of living - and a people dying - until a twelve-year-old girl shows them how to choose to live.

In the reading from Deuteronomy today, Moses is giving his final speech to the people of Israel. Shortly after he speaks these words, he will die. Moses will not see the land promised by God, but will die before they set foot over the border. He says to the people “ Today I have set before you blessings and curses, life and death. Choose life!

The Israelite people were on the boundary of the Promised Land. God had brought them from slavery in Egypt, led them through the wilderness, provided for them miraculously there, disciplined the unfaithful ones who wanted to return to Egypt, taught the people God’s will and God’s ways, repeated the ancient promise of the new land, and brought them to the boundary.

They are at the boundary. They are leaving the wilderness, and will enter a new land under their new leader, Joshua. They will be tempted by things they cannot anticipate. They are excited that their journey is at an end, but anxious about what it will really be like.

The people are at the boundary. Probably these words come into their final form long after the time of Moses. The people are at yet another boundary. They have been conquered by the Babylonians, their leading citizens taken, no land, no temple. Are they still God’s people? Will they ever go home? Can they trust God? They hear the message again, at this new boundary. The times have changed, but the message does not: “Choose life.”

Perhaps it’s fair to say that God’s people are always at some kind of a boundary and always need to make choices - for life or death.

God’s promises! Even when it seems you must wait and wait, trust that God is with you in your waiting. And even that is a blessing, my people! God is with you, and that is blessing enough. So choose God. Choose life!”

Today I decided to include the reading from Matthew, continuing the sermon on the mount. A colleague, Stew Clarke, suggested looking for Jesus’ sense of humour in this text. If you listen and look closely, and put this piece of writing into its context, you will find the humanness that we all are.

Picture Jesus, on this particular day sitting with the disciples as they begin to expound to one
another about the theology of ‘at least I am better than that guy’. We all do that, don’t we? Well, there they are sitting with their morning cuppa and bread. One nudges another as they see a man in the crowd moving in on a young woman. “Look,” he whispers loud enough to be heard by several, “those two will be grinding corn together before this night is over.” “What a fool she is
if she lets him in.” There are several not so lovely chuckles that ensue. “Doesn’t he already have a wife?” “Yes!” “He’s had several.” “Chucks them aside when they can’t seem to satisfy his appetites.” “Has several brats running about looking like starvelings.” “It is a pity.” “I bet Jesus will bring out the fire and brimstone this morning.”

So Jesus, listening in, decides to give a short lecture - a tiny smile in the corner of his mouth."You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, "You shall not murder'; and "whoever murders shall be liable to judgment.' I say that if you are angry with a brother or
sister, you will be liable to judgment; if you insult a brother or sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, "Idiot,” “Raka” you will be liable to the hell of fire.”

Can you hear the sound of breath being sucked in? Can you see reddening faces? Then he goes on to the subject of divorce. "It has been said, 'Anyone who divorces his wife must give her a certificate of divorce.' But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for marital unfaithfulness, (in the original Greek, prostitution) causes her to become an adulteress, and anyone who marries the divorced woman commits adultery.”

The women hear and understand that Jesus knows their plight. A woman can be stoned to death for such an offence, but a man would not even be held accountable in practice. A man, in Jesus’ time, could have several wives both individually or at the same time. A woman was a piece of property owned by her husband, with no rights. As Jesus speaks of removing a straying eye, the men hear that they need to divorce not wives, but the very straying of their eyes. Even among the disciples maybe there was one. Jesus looks and smiles, knowing that these men too are only human. And so it goes, on this morning. The brimstone bit is tied to both personal accountability and Jesus’ acknowledgement that even his closest followers are human, fallible, and imperfect. He uses the word “judgment” - but not the way we think of it. Usage has changed over time. In the Hebrew, a judge was someone who righted wrongs - not by physical or moral punishment, but by wisdom and love.

It seems to me that Jesus is echoing Moses, pointing out that every single day, choices of death or life are set before us. He isn’t saying that if you divorce, or murder, you’re going to be sent to hell and God will abandon you. He is saying it goes deeper than those things, to the wagging of tongues and making judgments of others instead of reflecting on ourselves. He is pointing out what it means to choose abundant life, and to celebrate that life. He says don’t swear an oath on the throne, or the earth, or your sainted mother, or anything else - he’s saying you have the choice set before you. You have the power to choose, yes or no - choose life.

What about today’s world? The world of relationships, of politics, of daily dilemmas. Why is the rate of divorce, abuse, child prostitution so high? Why are people elected to represent the best interests of their country, and then become dictators? How can we live well, and make choices for life, in the world of today?

There are so many examples which could be listed, but I will take one from today’s world. My colleague Paula Morse writes in her sermon “I look at Egypt and rejoice with them. This is their response to the teaching of Jesus. This predominantly Muslim country has heard the voice of Jesus and responded in a non-violent, spiritual way.” Joining with the minority Christian brothers and sisters, they have brought low the mighty, and begun the process of exalting the lowly. They have made a choice for life.”

The people following Moses were given the choice. Jesus points out to his followers that the law was meant to guide the people into choosing life. The people in the Harry Potter stories had set before them blessings and curses, death and life. Some chose the death of the soul, others chose clearly - without saying a word - life. The Maori people of in the story had a choice of death or life, and were able to see, finally - the choice for life.

We have to remember that God understands far more than we do, and that God wishes always abundant life for us. We have the choices. God will go to almost any lengths to help us make the right choice, but God will not choose for us and make us do something. God has given us brains, hearts, and wills. God has set before us this day, and every day, blessings and curses, death and life. We have to choose.


Sources:
1. “Thanks for Grace” a sermon by Rev. Paula Morse, Barefoot Pastor of Lovell and Deaver in the almost wilds of Wyoming
2. “Choose Life!” a sermon by Rev. Rick Thompson