Introduction
The more I trust God’s intimacy and grace for me – and all of creation,
too – the less I need or want things – or busyness – or distractions to fill my
head. You may recall that at the start
of Lent I invited you to join me in a simple spiritual practice. Every time we used water – in any way – we
were invited to inwardly say: “I am
God’s beloved and my life has meaning.”
Do you call that exercise?
The genesis of this prayer comes from our roots in Judaism – from the
practices of the heirs of Abraham and Sarah as well as Moses and the prophets –
who regularly lift up short prayers of thanksgiving to the Lord for all manner
of things. They are called berakah
from the Hebrew word barak that means
blessing.
· Blessed are you,
O Lord our God, who gives to us nourishment in times of silence and solitude.
· Blessed are you,
O Lord our God, who brings to us the rising of the sun each day .
· Blessed are you,
O Lord our God, who from our mother the earth shares with us our daily bread.
Before the sharing of the wine at the Passover Seder, the host
prays: Blessed are you, O Lord our God,
who creates the fruit of the vine. (Baruch Atah Adonai Eloheynu Melech
Ha-Olam borey p’ree ha-gaw-fan.) Our
simple Lenten exercise was in essence a 21st century version of an
ancient practiced designed to help us see everything as potentially holy and
precious. Well, as the result of praying
this blessing maybe 20 or 30 times each day during Lent, two things have taken
place in my life:
· First, I am still
doing it! Whenever I wash my hands – or
fill the dishwasher – or even flush the toilet, I say to myself: Remember, I am God’s beloved and my life still has meaning. On good days and bad days, when people love
me or forget me, when I feel like a million bucks and when I feel like…
garbage, the blessing prayer keeps me grounded in the truth that I am a child
of God – beloved of the Lord – and my life has meaning.
· And the second
thing that has happened is that I find myself turning off more and more stupid,
mean-spirited or simply ugly and violent television programs. During Lent I told you that I felt inspired
to quit watching cable news, right?
Those cats are just too vile and vicious to advance the cause of
learning what’s happening in the world.
So, much as I once loved them, I haven’t spent any time with CNN, MSNBC
or Fox News in five months.
And now I find I’m turning off some of the overly
violent and gory mystery shows that I used to love, too. I am a mystery junky – I probably should go
to mystery junkies anonymous – because I LOVE ‘em. But what I’m discovering these days is that
some of the shows I used to enjoy look more and more to me like brutal
pornography than entertainment. And I
don’t want to fill my head and heart with images and ideas of cruelty and
destruction. Because… I am God’s beloved
and my life has meaning, right?
The apostle Paul once told his friends that those who
seek to live into the blessings of God should turn their thoughts “to whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is
just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable, if there
is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about* these things. And keep on doing the things that you have learned and
received and heard and seen in me and the God of peace will be with you.” (Philippians 4:8-9)
Towards the end of his life, he also
advised those he loved to avoid being conformed to the habits and goals of this
world: be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may
discern the will of God— what is is good and acceptable and mature – so that
you can do it in your everyday lives.
Eugene Peterson’s reworking of Romans 12 is pure gold:
So here’s what I want you to do, God
helping you: Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating,
going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an offering.
Embracing what God does for you is the best thing you can do for him. Don’t
become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even
thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You’ll be changed from the inside
out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and quickly respond to it.
Unlike the culture around you, always dragging you down to its level of
immaturity, God brings the best out of you, develops well-formed maturity in
you.
Insights
Well, in both of the lessons assigned for today, there is a similar
theme that boils down to this: I am a beloved child of God – and that’s all that matters to the
Lord. In fact, it matters so much to God
that the One who is Holy is committed to finding ways to heal and nourish us –
make us whole – even when we are wounded, broken, afraid, shamed and alone. Let me give you three particulars that
underscore this point.
First, from the words of St. Paul who tells us that from the sacred
perspective of God, there are NO
distinctions between people regardless of what society would have us
believe. He writes that now “there is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave
or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ
Jesus. And if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s
offspring, heirs according to the promise.” What Paul was
originally talking about here has to do with social class – not contemporary
notions of ethnic equality or gender liberation – but spiritual equality among
the various social classes of Jews who wanted to follow Jesus. And while I believe that we can extrapolate a broader
message of freedom and equality from Paul’s insight, we should be careful not to attribute 21st
century ideals upon 1st century words. That would be an anachronistic mistake and
intellectual dishonest.
· So let’s be
clear: in Paul’s world, to speak of
someone of the Roman Empire as a Greek meant they were well-educated, civilized
and a part of the in-group who followed “Hellenized culture, customs and
ideals.” (Malina/Pech, A Social Science
Commentary: Letters of Paul, p. 372)
· In the first
century, you see, there was no
Greek nation – it had been destroyed – and all that was left were ethnic city
and locations like Thessalonika or Macedonia.
That’s easy to forget as we often superimpose a contemporary context
upon the ancient world, but it would be misleading, ok?
So what Paul seems to be talking about here has to do with the social
and spiritual relationships between people of very different classes and
perspectives who now find themselves in the same church: there
were the cultural and political insiders – the Greeks – who celebrated a lofty
and sophisticated Hellenistic culture, and, there was everyone else – who in
the binary analysis of the Mediterranean world were simply known as…
barbarians. To be Greek was to be civilized
– and everyone else was an unsophisticated outsider.
· Are you still
with me? Have I been clear about this? Paul isn’t talking about ethnicity or gender
justice; he’s addressing social status within the church.
· And the same social
stratifications are applicable to the other two categories Paul addresses – men
and women and free and slave – wherein one group wields power and status over
the other who live at the bottom of the heap.
Do you hear what I’m trying to say here?
Inside the community of God’s loving grace, Paul was telling his
friends, there can be NO social stratification:
there are no insiders and outsiders, no bosses or peasants, no beautiful
people and slobs, no conservatives or liberals, no winners or losers – because
EVERYONE here is a beloved child of God – and that is all that matters. Paul wasn’t a social revolutionary. He didn’t take on the Roman empire in a
modern political sense, although you can see how once people who had been
treated as dirt all their lives started to be honored and celebrated as beloved
children of God in church might want to expand this blessing into the realm of
social justice and political dignity, right?
So that’s one insight. A second
comes from the story of Jesus restoring to wholeness the young man who had been
possessed by demons. Most of us in this time and culture don’t’ experience
demons in the way they are described in the Bible and are really troubled and uncomfortable
with these stories. They sound
superstitious and simple-minded. But one
writer put it like this: “If
we define “demons” as those forces which have captured us and prevented us from
becoming what God intends us to be, we are as surrounded by – and even
possessed by – as many demons as those whom Jesus encountered. Our demons can
be of many kinds: mental illnesses, schizophrenia, paranoia, addictions,
obsessions, destructive habits” (Michael Rogness, Working Preacher.org)
and all the rest. And if we look at the
narrative of the story carefully, it becomes painfully contemporary:
· The young man was
totally cut off from his family, society and culture. We was not only one of the “walking wounded”
in a far away and, he was living in a graveyard like a zombies.
· And his demons
were destroying him – so much so that the young man no longer had any real
identity and couldn’t even speak when Jesus came near him – it was the demons
that recognized and named Jesus, not the walking dead.
Because they were Legion – more than 6,000 based upon the understanding
of a Roman legion in Christ’s day – which is why Peterson’s calls the demons a
MOB. And the heart-breaking truth of
this story is that this mob of wounds had robbed this child of God of his
identity and name. When Jesus speaks to
the boy, he is unable to speak his own name.
He is “not Elijah, or Isaac, or John, or Frank, or Jo-Jo; he has become
Legion… completely defined by what
assails him, by what robs him of joy and health, by what hinders him and keeps
him bound, by all those things that keep him from experiencing life in its
abundance.” (David Lohse, Working Preacher.org)
So what does Jesus do in this situation? What happens to this child possessed by
demons that restores him to his true identity as a beloved child of God? Jesus heals him – casts out the demons – and
restores this child to wholeness. The
word used in the Greek text is sozo that is sometimes translated as
“saved” – other times as “healed” – but always could be rendered as “made
whole,” too.
· So what
distinctions do you make between being saved, healed and made whole? They all have to do with being rescued from
forces that cut us off from living as God’s beloved but each word is used
differently, yes?
· For example, has
anyone ever asked you, “Have you been saved?”
What do they mean by this?
Usually there is a very narrow definition that has to do with making a
doctrinal commitment to Jesus as your personal Lord and Savior, right?
And while I am not at all uncomfortable with speaking about Jesus as
Lord and Savior, what’s the catch or problem with this question? It’s all about
determining who’s in and whose out, right?
It’s all about restricting God’s grace to the in-crowd – and that is
fundamentally flawed because… we are ALL the beloved children of God – and
that’s all that matters. We are not
insiders and outsiders – saved and unsaved – saints and sinners. That’s why I love what one Greek Orthodox
monk replied when asked by a young American fundamentalist if he had accepted
Jesus Christ as his personal Lord and Savior:
“Personal” said the monk? “Oh no,
I prefer to share him with everyone.”
The words we use to speak of holy things matter. That’s why in these demon stories I think it
makes more sense to talk about being restored to wholeness rather than
saved. Because then, if you are anything
like me, you too can connect with the deeper truth of this story. You may not have been possessed by a demon in
an antiquated or superstitious sense, but I bet dollars to donut holes that you
do know something about being made whole by God’s love.
· If you have been
restored from an addiction – if you have been forgiven a betrayal – if you have
found meaning by sharing compassion or doing justice – you, too have been made
whole so that you can live as a beloved child of God whose life has meaning.
· In fact, you
could even say that you were born again and mean it – not in a narrow or
judgmental sense – but rather as somebody who was lost but now is found, was
blind but now you see, right?
And the third insight is simply this:
after the child is restored and made whole – after the disciples share
both clothing and food with the young man and Jesus tells him to go back home
and make things right there – Jesus sails away.
Now think about that for a minute:
Jesus makes the effort to travel into Gentile country and then after
bringing wholeness to this wounded child he turns right around and sails
away. Why? Why doesn’t he spread a little more love and
grace around? Why does the story end
with his rapid departure? One wise old
preacher said
All
he did in the land of the Gerasenes was heal this one possessed man. Which might mean that Jesus’ whole detour
into this strange and unfamiliar place was to do just that: to rid this one man
of his demons and transform him from being Legion to being a human being again,
a human being who was also a beloved child of God.
The ministry of Jesus – his life, death, resurrection and ascension –
shows us something of the character of God - it is about restoration and wholeness. And what does God calls us? Beloved.
Conclusion
Our God is not about insiders and outsiders – setting up divisive loyalty
tests to judge who is worthy to receive grace and mercy – that is wicked and
destructive. No, our God comes to us to
restore us to wholeness – and the good news for today is that:
Jesus is still crossing boundaries to do just
that. He is still coming into the strange and unfamiliar world of our
failure-ridden and lack-driven lives to cast out our demons. Jesus says to us
again and again that we are more than the sum total of our past failures and
disappoints. We are God’s beloved children, forgiven of our sins, healed of our
disappointments and blessed with an open future. (Lohse)
So, beloved, let those who have ears to hear… hear.
credits
2) sweet oxygen @ michellepower.tumblr.com
3) Into the wilderness @ pastorblog.cumcdebary.org
2 comments:
See the words of Sheikh Bilal on my blog, James.
Which one, Peter? I can't find an update... ugh!
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