Introduction
The wise and humble servant of God, Frederick Buechner, the bard of
Vermont, is one of my all-time favorite writers. This week he turns 87 and I want to return
thanks to God for his ministry of letters because they have enriched and,
indeed, changed my life. St. Frederick
once wrote: “Listen to your life. See it for the fathomless mystery it is. In the boredom and pain of it, no less than in
the excitement and gladness: touch, taste, smell your way to the holy and hidden
heart of it, because in the last analysis all moments are key moments - and
life itself is grace.”
To my mind, more than many, Buechner both understands and explains
what it means for us to trust that Christ became God’s word in the flesh – full
of grace and truth – and it has to do with knowing that every moment and every
thing is saturated with the sacred. “Listen
to your life – all moments are key moments – not just the sweet and lovely ones
but also the harsh and confusing ones – they too offer us a taste of the holy
because all of life is grace.”
Not just the so-called spiritual things, but all things – the fleshy
things, the political things, the sexual things, the artistic things – the
things that make you weep as well as laugh, the dark as well as the light – all
things – for all of life itself is grace.
Thinking about Buechner, I came across this insight that speaks to our
readings from the Bible for today. As
you heard, the lessons for the 10th Sunday of Ordinary Time invite
us to consider the healing ministries of the Hebrew prophets: from the mystical Elijah of ancient Israel to
the works of grace given shape and form by both Christ Jesus and St. Paul. And here’s what Buechner has to say about
miracles:
The fact that I did not understand (the truth of one
of my dreams)did not keep it from being in some sense also a blessed dream, a
healing dream, because you do not need to understand healing to be healed or
know anything about blessing to be blessed.
· Did you get that? As in blessings, so too in healing: we need not understand healing to be healed
any more than we need know anything about blessings to be blessed.
· They are both
beyond our control and of the Lord – signs of grace, truth and love – shared out
of divine compassion not obligation, debt or necessity.
That’s why I’ve come to believe that for most of us it takes most of a life
time before we’re able to simply and joyfully receive God’s gifts of healing or
blessing with anything like gratitude.
If you are like me, you’ve been conditioned to believe that no matter
what the Bible says about grace, you really need to EARN God’s love in your
life. You have to work hard at being a
good person, obeying the commandments, following the rules, practicing obedience
and all the rest. And if not that then some of us have been so shamed and
wounded that we don’t – and even won’t – accept and trust God’s grace when it
is freely offered. There are even some
of us who are so addicted to our brokenness that we can’t even imagine an
identity beyond the shadows.
· All of which is
wrong when it comes to God’s compassion:
we can’t earn it, we rarely deserve it and it is totally beyond our
control.
· It is after all a
gift – a sign that God loves us beyond all reason and worth – because that is
who God is regardless of whom we are and how we might act
And God’s prophets – whether we’re talking about
Frederick Buechner or Buddha, St. Paul of Jesus Christ – point to the Lord’s
identity and truth not our limited wisdom, perspective or insights,
ok? Is that clear? God’s prophets point to the Holy – and that’s
what each of our appointed readings for today have in common – they herald
something of God’s amazing gift of grace.
So I want to try to share with you this morning two broad insights:
· First, I want to
use part of the Apostle Paul’s autobiographical statement in Galatians to give
you some background into the role of prophet in our tradition – and why that is
important.
· And second to
playfully suggest how the prophet can help us become ever more receptive to
grace and gratitude rather than all the alternatives, ok?
Insights
Now the key sentence for me in all of the
readings for day is this funny and obscure line from Paul’s letter to the
church in Galatia that says: But when the God who set me apart from my mother’s womb had called
me through his grace and was pleased
to reveal his son in me, so that I might be his herald among the nations, at once I did not confer with flesh and blood, nor did I go up to
Jerusalem to those who were apostles before me,
but rather I went away into Arabia and then returned again to Damascus.
I am fascinated by the little details in this
passage that tell us that Paul not only understood his life and ministry to be
that of a prophet, but that after he had mystically encountered the Spirit of
Jesus while on the road to Damascus, he spent three years in solitude in Arabia
before returning to Syria. What
is that all about? At first
blush, if we read these lines without any biblical background, it would be easy
to conclude that Paul was going on retreat to get himself ready for this new
phase of ministry – and that would be completely wrong – as is often the case
when we try to read the Bible without a context. So let me break this down for you in three
steps because each one reveals to us something that is related to the other
readings, too.
First, the words, God had set me apart
from my mother’s womb, are not just Pauline
poetry in pursuit of autobiography, rather they are part of a rhetorical
formula used by all of Israel’s prophets to describe their unique calling.
· The prophet
Jeremiah, writing about 400 years before Jesus was born, speaks of God’s
calling him as a prophet like this:
“Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you; before you were born, I
consecrated you.” (Jeremiah 1: 5)
· Likewise the
prophet Isaiah, writing about 100 years later, observed that: “The Lord called me through his grace from
the womb.” (Isaiah 49: 1)
· Psalm 139, a song
from the harp of David, tells us: For it was you, O Lord, who formed my inward parts; you
knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for I am fearfully and
wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; that I know very well. My frame was
not hidden from you, when I was being made in secret, intricately woven in the
depths of the earth. Your eyes beheld my unformed substance. In your book were
written all the days that were formed for me, when none of them as yet existed.
This is the same prophetic formula and
truth that the birth narratives of Jesus point towards, too: that before time God had set Jesus apart for
a sacred ministry. And so what Paul is
doing is claiming the same truth for HIS life:
like the prophets before him – including Jesus – he, too was set apart
for ministry even in his mother’s womb.
And
the reason this is so important to Paul is the second insight: prophets do not receive their calling from
other human beings – that is they are directly inspired by the Sacred – and their
calling is for all time - an eternal vocation. Now why would that be important to Paul? Why
would he insist that from the beginning of time – from his gestation in the
womb through his service to God as a rabbi and now an evangelist – he had
received NO guidance from human beings?
Do you have any thoughts?
· If
Paul was influenced by people, rather than directly inspired by God, those in
the synagogues could dismiss his new ministry as misguided and those in the
early churches could do likewise. You
see, Paul was doing something radical – we was bringing together civilized and
cultured people with those who were unschooled and sometimes barbaric.
· He
was inviting outsiders into the inner core of God’s grace – and NOT because
they had earned it or proven themselves special, but because this was God’s
plan since before the beginning of time.
Are you still with me?
· Paul
insists in his autobiographical testimony that after his change of heart –
after his mystical encounter with Christ and a profound change of heart born of
grace and forgiveness – Paul literally and figuratively changed directions.
Remember his story: he once was a prophetic rabbi filled with
zeal following the image and intensity of Elijah. Paul was living in bold opposition to the new
Jesus movement; in fact, he was committed to killing the prophets of this new
spirituality. And if you know anything
about the prophet Elijah, who lived about 800 years before Jesus, he too was a
man of zeal who was committed to killing the false prophets of Baal. N.T. Wright makes a strong case for saying
that Paul saw himself as one of a long line of Hebrew prophets who were on fire
for the Lord. They used rhetoric and
violence to oppose God’s enemies when necessary and I think this accurately
describes Paul throughout his life.
With one important exception: Paul realized at some point in his life –
namely when he met the Spirit of Jesus on his way to do violence to some
Christians – that he had become confused about God’s will. The way of the Lord was NOT about slaying and
destroying those who did not agree, but rather loving and embracing them in the
very way God loves and embraces us.
· In
fact, even Paul’s change of heart is related to the story of the prophet
Elijah. It seems that after Elijah had
done battle for the Lord God of Israel, and was certain that his ministry
involved even more acts of violence and destruction, he was sent out into the
wilderness where Elijah reconsidered his ministry.
· During
that time he encountered all manner of powerful symbols – earthquake, wind and
fire – but in none of them did he find the presence of the Lord. No, only after he was quiet and completely
surrendered to the mystery of the holy was God revealed in the “still small
voice of solitude.”
And this, of course, is
where that weird little Arabian detail takes on deeper significance for Paul –
and I hope for us, too. After Paul heard the still, small voice of
Christ offering him grace and forgiveness on the road to Damascus what does he
do but… goes to Arabia for three years before heading back to Damascus, Syria. And in this, Paul’s story parallels the story
of the prophet Elijah, too. In 1 Kings
19 God also tells Elijah to first go to the wilderness – and then return to
Damascus.
· So
what does this zealous prophetic rabbi who understands his life as shaped by
the zeal of Elijah do but head to the wilderness, right? And not just any wilderness – any desert – or
barren border land. Paul tells us he
went to Arabia which is where the prophet Elijah went, too in order to refocus
his prophetic work.
· But
once again careful biblical context is important lest we think this means he
was wandering around modern Saudi Arabia – he wasn’t. In his time Arabia was short hand for the
vast desert regions both south and east of Palestine. Paul clearly tells us that he didn’t go to
Jerusalem after his change of heart, rather he went to Arabia like Elijah.
· And
most scholars have come to conclude that just like Elijah, Paul’s sojourn to
Arabia meant he had made pilgrimage to Mt. Sinai. Later in chapter four of Galatians Paul
writes that Mt. Sinai – where Moses received the 10 Commandments and the
covenant between God and Israel was struck – is a mountain in Arabia. So it is very likely that this zealous
prophetic rabbi wanted to return to the source of his tradition’s spiritual
inspiration in order to sort out the new direction God had called him to
celebrate.
He had heard the still small voice of God – and needed
time to grasp what this meant. He had
experienced deep forgiveness for his failures and sins needed time to accept
God’s grace as a free but costly gift.
And just like you and me, Paul needed time to honor this gift and make
it real in his life because it is so totally upside down. To bring St. Buechner back into the picture,
after a life of moving in one direction – only to discover it was off track –
Paul was confronted and saturated with grace that was unearned, undeserved and
totally beautiful. Buechner puts it like
this: “There's
no way to earn it or deserve it or bring it about any more than you can deserve
the taste of raspberries and cream or earn good looks or bring about your own
birth."
And as Paul gave himself time to savor this gift – to embrace its
radical joy on Mt. Sinai – he discovered something else that Buechner got right
– what it means to be called. St.
Frederick wrote: The place God calls you to is
where your deep gladness and the world's deep hunger meet.
Conclusion
And that, of course, is why all this Bible study matters. As Christians – those who follow the way of
grace and joy, discipleship and compassion as made flesh in Jesus – our calling
is the marriage of our deepest gladness and the world’s deepest hungers. Our calling has NOTHING to do with being good
– although being good has its place. It
has NOTHING to do with converting others to our way of thinking or praying or
understanding the holy. And it has
absolutely NOTHING to do with forcing our moral insights and codes down anyone
else’s throat. All of that has broken
the way of Christ and his grace in the world – and we have a lot of work to do
in reparations.
No our calling is about spreading grace – and healing – and justice and
compassion. And we can learn a lot from
St. Paul because truth be told we’re a lot like him. I know some of you will hate me for saying
that, but I think it is true:
· We’re
at LEAST as wrong as St. Paul was most of the time, but still cock sure we’re
right.
· We
know what it means to go off into the world dead certain we’re on the right
path only to wake up some years later to realize: OMG I’ve blown it.
· We
have experienced what it feels like to look at ourselves in mirror and
say: I don’t know how any of this works
anymore and I don’t even know who I am.
To which the legacy of Paul says
softly: that’s ok, I’ve blown it,
too. Why not let the gentle and quiet
Spirit of Jesus bring you grace? Why not
trust him to heal you? You don’t have to
understand his healing to be healed any more than you have to know anything about
blessing to be blessed. It is a gift.
And like any gift, all that is required is that you open your hands and receive
it.
So I’m going to ask you to do something with me right now that
some might think is too crazy – or too Christian – or too who knows what: I want you to try a little prayer exercise
with me that’s all about receiving. And
here’s what you have to do:
· First, put down everything you have in your hands –
free them up – and put your feet firmly on the floor so you can be totally
relaxed.
· Second, close your eyes – and make a tight fist with
your hands. And you have to close your
eyes so you won’t see anyone and they won’t see you because as intellectuals we
often don’t want to let anybody see us being prayerful, right. So close your eyes and make a tight fist with
your hands.
· And then as you sit there, when you are ready, say to
yourself – and to the Lord – Come, Lord Jesus and heal me as you know
best. And when you say that release your
fists so you let go whatever you’ve been holding on to. Open your hands like you are throwing it all
away and letting it go forever.
Three simple steps: get
comfortable and quiet, close your eyes and make a fist and then pray
saying: come Lord Jesus heal me as you
know best – and let it go. Will you try
that with me now? Oh, I know someone is
already thinking, “This is so random – this is a child’s prayer – and I’m a
grown adult.” But remember: unless we become like a child – innocent and
trusting – we shall not taste the blessings of God’s grace. So let’s give it a try: close your eyes, make a fist and then release
it with the prayer, “Come Lord Jesus and heal me as you know best.”
Quiet moments for prayer
9 comments:
Wonderful ! Thanks RJ.
Thanks, Phil... blessings right back to you. Loving the homilies of Francesco I - a real answer to prayer for me.
Thanks for your comments ... this IS the passage I'm preaching Sunday ... and this IS the piece of the passage that struck me, too. I was going to research what Paul's 3-year side-trip venture was all about and now I've done my research with you. Initially, his 3-year side-trip made me think of seminary ... Paul had to step away for study and preparation in order to re-enter the world and then to go and follow where God was calling him. In a way, he did just that ... except his education was hands on, practical, and spritual ... field ed, if you will! Thank you very much for your insight. Grace and peace to you.
Hey I'm so glad this was useful. I've been fascinated by this little detail for years and had to do some background work. Blessings to you, Susie, as the Spirit leads on Sunday.
RJ - how best to cite you? Thanks!
Hmmm.... I guess Pastor James Lumsden of Pittsfield, ok?
Good, Thoughtful stuff, James. Thanks!
Thanks ... I quoted your phrase, "Most scholars have come to conclude .... so it is likely that this zealous prophetic rabbi wanted to return to the source of his tradition's ... " And, proper citation is given! Thanks much!
Totally my honor, Susie: blessings.
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