Introduction
Last Saturday, Dianne and I took a trip up to Mass MOCA – that incredible jewel of a museum dedicated to contemporary art in our own backyard –and as is often the case I left in awe. It regularly blows my mind the way a creative soul can take the ordinary stuff of everyday life – things I might take for granted or even throw away – and in the presence of inspiration and imagination, transform into something of beauty.
· After pondering what it means to live in a
society that is changing as rapidly as China – a land enveloped in industrial,
economic and social transformation – he spent two years harvesting discarded
wreckage “from construction sites in urban China, including demolition debris,
steel beams, tools and remnants of the daily lives of migrant laborers (like
hard hats to create two 12 ton metal birds.) At once fierce and strangely
beautiful, these mythic Phoenixes bear witness to the complex interconnection
between labor, history, commercial development and the rapid accumulation of
wealth in today's China.”
· Did you get that? Xu Bing took the garbage from construction
sites and created a thing of beauty and awe.
And when you witness it, you can’t help but stop and rethink what it means
to be alive at this moment in time because these birds are 90 and 100 feet
long! Their physical presence is
arresting, their symbolic story is sobering and their artistic splendor is
provocative: beauty from garbage – who
would think it possible?
Visual artist, Mako Fujimura, wrote that: “September 11th taught us again that we can use our imagination either to destroy lives or to save lives. On 9/11 we had on the one hand militant hijackers who turned their imaginative vengeance into determined evil acts. On the other hand were firefighters who climbed the falling towers. We have to realize that before any of these terrorist acts were committed, they were imagined. We swim in the ecosystem of imagined actions. We are responsible for how we respond to that power. We do have a choice between saving lives and destroying lives. And if we do not teach our children, and ourselves, that what we imagine and how we design the world can make a difference, the culture of cynicism will do that for us. If we do not infuse creativity, if we do not take the initiative to help our children imagine better neighborhoods and cities, despair will ruin their imaginative capacities and turn them into destructive forces.”
Insights
That’s what I see Jesus doing in today’s text – using his imagination to provoke our own – in ways that are holy. Taking tradition like an artist and playing with it creatively and respectfully, so that when we look and listen and respond to what he has designed, we sense something of God’s gracious potential within and among us. It may make us weep – lament is often how the prophets break through our well-developed veneer – but it could also make us smile or rejoice in beauty.
· Synagogue is a Greek word, not Hebrew, which
literally means the assembly. Tradition has it that Ptolemy, one of the
Pharaoh’s of ancient Egypt, had the first five books of the Hebrew Bible
translated into everyday Greek for the Jews of the Mediterranean who didn’t
speak or read Hebrew sometime 200 hundred years before Christ was born.
· A synagogue needs 10 Jews to gather for
prayer. Usually the building contains
the Aron Hakodesh – a cabinet to hold the Torah scroll – and a Ner Tamid – an
eternal light that is always shining to symbolize God’s constant presence.
This is the form – a sacred place of prayer and teaching – into which Jesus brings the content by taking the scroll and reading the appointed passage for the day from the prophet Isaiah – and also sharing his insights about it. You see both the written and the spoken word are valued – both the sacred text and the contemporary interpretation are important – for “a Jew comes to the synagogue for the comfort and grounding nature of what is familiar and for the insight and spiritual challenge” offered in the teaching. This is our model – not one or the other, but always both/and – neither simplistic fundamentalism nor opinions without profound spiritual context.
So let’s first be clear about what the text tells us so that we can then playfully bring our own creative wisdom and interpretation to it, ok? And I’m going to try to frame this for us with some questions that I hope will help us appreciate the significance of this reading for this day – our annual meeting – when we rededicate ourselves to the mission God has given us for our time.
· Question
number one: why does Luke’s gospel show us Jesus reading the ancient words
of the prophet Isaiah and then interpreting these words for his people as the
first public action in Christ’s ministry?
Why do you think this is significant?
· One scholar put it like this: the words of Jesus are not just important
for what they say but also because of their source… Jesus isn’t just
making this stuff up. Jesus’ situates
his ministry in the ongoing promise and commitment of God, to the lowliest of
God’s servants, to those who fear God from generation to generation, to the
hungry, to God’s people Israel, to Abraham and Sarah. The promise and prophecy
of Isaiah provides the theological trajectory that Jesus will articulate and
embody in the Gospel of Luke. (Karoline
Lewis, Working Preacher)
· Question
number two: besides the poetry of
the prophet Isaiah, do the words of Jesus sound like anything else you’ve heard
or read in the gospel of Luke?
· Does anybody recall the poem attributed to Mary
– the Magnificat – after she received the promise that she would give birth to
God’s messiah through who body? We sang
it during Advent and it appears bright and early in Luke’s gospel – chapter one
– listen again:
My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God
my Savior,
for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant.
Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed;
for the Mighty One has done great things for me and holy is his name.
His mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation.
He has shown strength with his arm; he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts.
He has brought down the powerful from their thrones and lifted up the lowly;
he has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty.
He has helped his servant Israel in remembrance of his mercy,
according to the promise he made to our ancestors,
for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant.
Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed;
for the Mighty One has done great things for me and holy is his name.
His mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation.
He has shown strength with his arm; he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts.
He has brought down the powerful from their thrones and lifted up the lowly;
he has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty.
He has helped his servant Israel in remembrance of his mercy,
according to the promise he made to our ancestors,
to Abraham and to his descendants forever.
Over the years as I accepted that God’s mission for my ministry was very different from what I first wanted, I also began to see that if I am going to follow the way of the Lord, I don’t know how to do it very well all by myself. I need others to help me: I need others to help me see my blind spots when I think I know it all, I need others to help me find the words necessary for facing our empty times with courage and grace, I need others to encourage and pray for me when I feel afraid and I need to be a part of the body of Christ with me because I really need others to help me do this ministry.
· Ministry and mission changes over time – it is
always grounded in gospel – but it takes different shapes and forms. Clearly that’s been true for me and I know it
has been true for this church. Once this
was a place of glory – just look at it – big and powerful and well-connected to
the movers and shakers of another age.
· But things are different now – today we’re
called into something more quiet and humble – something more gentle and even
sustainable. And as we accept and honor
this different calling into mission, it can set us free and liberate us by the
Spirit of the Lord.
Edward Markquart, put it like this in his book Witness for Christ:
As I listen for Christ’s creative and liberating word for my life – and for our ministry and mission together – my hunch is that it has more to do with being a quiet, loving, humble and real community of compassion than anything else.
· Small acts of compassion shared every day – a
few modest encounters with bringing healing and hope to our community – a
potluck theology of presence rather than anything more glorious – a lot more
quiet and listening to one another and the Lord.
· I wonder if you sense that, too – that our
mission and ministry has something to do with being more tender in a world
filled with harshness? More gentle
amidst the pain? More kind-hearted, quiet
and even musical in an era that has become saturated with relentless sounds,
messages and information?
As we go into our annual meeting, I hope you’ll consider this as part of God’s Spirit calling us into a deeper ministry… take a few moments now in the safety of this place to listen for what the Lord may be saying to you in light of my words.
The words I have to say may well be simple
but they’re true
Until you give your love, there’s nothing
more that we can do
Love is the opening door, love is what we came here for,
Love is the opening door, love is what we came here for,
No
one could offer you more
Do you know what I mean? Have your eyes really
seen?
You say it’s very hard to leave behind the life we knew
But there’s no other way and now it’s really
up to you
Love is the key we must turn, truth is the flame we must burn,
Love is the key we must turn, truth is the flame we must burn,
Freedom the lesson we must learn
Do you know what I mean? Have your eyes
really seen?
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