Thursday, October 10, 2013

New directions out of our old ways...

NOTE:  Here are my worship notes for New Directions Sunday.  Usually I work on them at the start of the week but I was away in Brooklyn sharing in the birth of my first grandson, Louis Edmund, so I didn't get to work until today. I am working from the texts found in Jeremiah 32 and Luke 16.


Introduction
This morning I want to speak with you about stories:  sacred stories, shared
stories, private and personal stories as well as collective and cultural stories, stories that heal and stories that hurt, stories that empty our hearts of fear and shame and stories that bind up our wounds and even redeem our pain.  I take my cue from this morning’s story in the Hebrew Bible; it is an odd one that simultaneously contains elements of hope and dread, trust and doubt, grace and judgment as well as action as well and contemplation.

·      Fundamentally it is a story of discerning new directions from out of old ways – learning to live tenderly in the confidence that God makes a way in the wilderness for us even when all we can see is a dead end – walking by faith in the ways of the Lord rather than relying only upon the limitations of our comprehension.

·      It has been said that Christianity, Judaism and Islam are religions of the book – faith traditions rooted in the stories and commentaries of the Bible, the Torah and the Qur’an – and at their best these books contain what Huston Smith calls” the distilled wisdom of the human race.”

Curiously, this distilled wisdom mostly takes on the form of stories – not rules or moral and ethical guidelines – but rather shared stories about how real people live.  That means that the Bible is always more descriptive than prescriptive, right?  It is essentially a nuanced document in need of loving interpretation because most of the texts are evocative tales about what people like Abraham and Sarah, Jeremiah and Judith, Jesus, Mary and Joseph along with Peter, Paul and Mary Magdalene actually do when they discover that they are in the presence of the Spirit of the Lord. 

·      Yes, there are a few chapters containing things like the Ten Commandments and the Sermon on the Mount.  And it is true that Torah includes Deuteronomy and Leviticus – but even the Law includes Genesis, Exodus and Numbers.

·      So let’s be clear:  mostly, we are a people of the story – shared stories, discovered stories, sacred and profane stories – and stories that demand loving and nuanced interpretation.  Because like Huston Smith once said:  “Most of the words in our holy books tell us things we already know but refuse to learn.”

Take today’s story from the poetic prophet Jeremiah as a case in point:  it speaks of buying a farm in the middle of the chaos of a war.  It tells us about a God who is at work in our lives whether we’re living in an era of construction or destruction.  And it invites us to discover what we have in common with our ancient ancestors in faith and thus make this story our own. So this morning I propose to share three concerns with you:

·      +  First I would like to briefly review the foundation and context of Jeremiah’s story for us so that we’re all on the same page.

·      +  Second I want to tease out at least one of the sacred insight of the Lord buried within the details of this mysterious tale.

·      +  And third I hope to explore why and how I think this story matters to us as we prepare for a new year of mission and ministry in the Spirit of Jesus Christ at First Church.

Is that clear?  In a word I hope that together we might discover new directions from out of our old ways. And to do this, I need to start with prayer:

Lord God, help me to communicate.  Amen.

Insights
One of my favorite writers, Ernest Kurtz, frames the challenge of discovering our place within the sacred story like this in his book A Spirituality of Imperfection.  He notes that when people who really belong together genuinely hear a story in community, they fashion a safe place for one another though the story.  He calls it a “narrative home… where our anomalies of behavior, our ambivalences of thought and feeling, the ambiguities of our human being all fit in” and feel right.

In such a place, we look not for explanations or causes of our behavior; rather we discover forgiveness… and mutuality… not simply by sharing our thoughts, feelings and stories… but (rather) discovering the story that we already share… People sharing their separate stories (does not create community)…no true community requires the discovery of a story that is already shared… it is not something we can create or control – it is something that happens, an experience serendipitous and unbidden; and when it happens (all we can do is express) gratitude for this dis-covering of our shared story.

·      Do you grasp the distinction Kurtz is making between simply sharing random stories, thoughts and feelings in a group and discovering a shared story that creates community?  The theologian Mary Daly put it like this:  “The deepest possible community is the one that is discovered rather than formed when we meet others who are on the same voyage.”

Kurtz illustrates his point like this:  “About noon one working day, an itinerant clown stood at the edge of New York City’s Central Park juggling and engaging passers-by by calling out questions, inviting them to sit down and making them laugh.”

Little by little a crowd gathered and after a time a man in a three-piece suit looked at his watch and realized he had to return to work. Moved by the clown’s performance, he went to drop a $20 bill into the hat at the clown’s feet when the clown called out, “Don’t give me $20.  Why not buy us all some apples instead?”  The man in the three-piece suit was startled but receptive – and within 10 minutes came bag with a bag of apples for everyone in the group.  And with those apples a little community was discovered in the heart of Central Park: 20 people surrounding a juggler, eating apples together. And here’s the thing:  when others came by to watch, the only way newcomers could be transformed from confused outsiders to members of this group would be if somebody told them the story of the apples.

·      Hearing the story – and probably sharing the apples, too – helped very different people find common ground in the middle of an ordinary working day.
And this “narrative home” gave birth to a safe place where people could discover what they held in common without erasing any of their differences.

That’s what the Biblical stories hope for, too – the discovery of common ground – a safe place where we can practice trusting our best selves in the presence of God’s grace whether we’re in good times or bad.  So let’s turn to Jeremiah’s story, which takes a bit of interpretation to know what’s going before we can discover our place within it, and here’s what I think is important:

·      Jeremiah did not want to become a prophet – he avoided and argued with the Lord – but the Spirit assured him over and again that even before he was born the Lord God had chosen him to speak the truth to power.  So, reluctantly, Jeremiah did as God encouraged but for most of his life no one wanted to hear what he had to say.

·      You see, the politics of the day were ugly.  Early in Jeremiah’s life, Israel was under the authority of Egypt and had relative autonomy.  But in 605 BCE, the Pharaoh Neco was defeated by Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon and Israel’s king, Jehoiakim, decided to rebel. This led to warfare and in 598 BCE Jerusalem “was besieged, the Temple was plundered, the fields were burned and thousands of deportees including the royal family, nobles and the prophet Ezekiel” along with the rest of the best and the brightest were taken into captivity in Babylon.

·      A puppet king, Zedekiah, was installed in Israel – and for a few years the siege of Jerusalem was interrupted by other battles – during which time the prophet Jeremiah told his king that he needed to get the people ready for even more trouble and exile.  But this was considered treason, so Jeremiah was arrested and held under house arrest. And during this arrest the siege of Jerusalem resumed and things went from bad to worse for everyone.

That’s the context:  terror, destruction and rampant fear.  And as the walls of the city are being destroyed, Jeremiah doesn’t quit for he tells his king that there was no escaping reality.  Death and tragedy were inevitable at the hands of Babylon.  At which point in time King Zedekiah demands to know why Jeremiah doesn’t tell him some good news?  Listen to what the prophet says:  For now there is no good news to share.  What we have to do is face our reality honestly and deal with it. It is like the Serenity Prayer tells us:  God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; the courage to change the things I can; and the wisdom to know the difference.

But after Jeremiah’s reality check, he tells the king something else:  even in
the middle of all of this pain, the Lord had sent my cousin Hanamel to me and he wants me to buy his farm.  Now I have to tell you I think this is one totally weird request while the walls of Jerusalem are being destroyed.
And if that isn’t weird enough, Jeremiah insists that he it is the will of the Lord for him to buy his cousin’s farm because it is an embodied act of hope pointing to a time when the tragedy and pain would be over.  God’s people, he tells the king, must start to live in ways that point to the hope even while accepting the reality of the tragedies – so Jeremiah literally buys the farm.

·      Now is that story clear:  do you get what’s going on in it and what Jeremiah is trying to accomplish through buying the farm?  All around him is violence, chaos and fear – and nobody can do anything to make it go away – and at the same time he understands that to live as people of the Lord means we do real things that point beyond the pain towards God’s promises.

·      So can you think of where you know something of this story?  Can you articulate a time in your life when you shared something like the prophet’s buying the farm?

Part of the challenge of faithful living has to do with acceptance: nobody escapes suffering – nobody avoids the consequences of sin – and everybody hates to acknowledge that this is true.  We want to be the exception to the rule.  Fr. Richard Rohr recently put it like this:  the upside-down perspective of our story as people of faith does not fit with the popular cultural and political stories of America.  We want to believe that progress is always possible – that upward mobility is truly the will of the Lord – and that if we just work hard enough we can really  fix all our problems.

To which the testimony of the prophets, the stories of our mothers and fathers in faith and the witness of Jesus Christ say, “Sorry but that is wrong – it is dangerous – and even destructive.” Sometimes, you see, there is simply NOTHING we can do to fix things – or people – or events. And I mean NOTHING.  Sometimes life is just going to be tragic and painful and ugly. 

·      And part of the human condition is that we hate this: we hate not being able to fix things and we hate not being able to take pain away from our loved ones, right?

·      We hate when the bad guys win and the poor and defenseless are wounded in ever more vicious ways and we hate our impotence –we hate our powerlessness – and we hate our fears and confusion.

So here’s the sacred irony of all this hatred:  until we make peace with what we hate in ourselves – our fears and our powerlessness – there won’t be room in our hearts for God’s grace to move through us.  St. Paul teaches that it is in our weakness that God is strong – in our littleness that the Lord becomes great – and in our emptiness God’s will fills us full.

I think that’s what Jeremiah realized:  he couldn’t stop the war.  He couldn’t heal his people from their sins.  And he couldn’t take away anybody’s suffering.  But he could buy the farm – he could invest in the future in a loving way that pointed to grace beyond the tragedy – so that when the hard times passed his people could rebuild and renew their lives in the place they loved.

Conclusion
And that takes me to how I understand Jeremiah’s story in relationship to our own at this moment in time.  We come out of a story of power – a story of being in control – a story of being in charge.  That’s what it meant to the historic first church of our town:  our members called the shots and set the social, spiritual and economic agenda for the whole community.

But 250 years later that is no longer true:  we are NOT the movers and shakers, we are NOT those in control and we are NOT ever going to be in charge again (thanks be to God!) When we are honest, our nation is becoming a post-Christian society – our small city is becoming a truly multi-cultural and multi-faith town – and Pittsfield is never going back to a manufacturing and industrial economy no matter how strong the nostalgia for General Electric’s heyday might burn in some hearts.  So now that the old realm is over, what is our new story?  How do we discover new directions from out of our old ways and live into actions that point towards God’s hope and peace?  Well, I have a few clues:

·      +  First, as we continue to give up any illusion of control in our community, I believe God is giving us permission to exchange power for tenderness. More than anything else at this moment in time I see people who are aching for compassion and gentle love.  We don’t need more loud voices or pushy leaders insisting on their own way:  we need tender women and men who can hear the stories of those who are hurting the most.

·      +  Second, as we cast off our delusions of grandeur, God is teaching us to simply share small acts of mercy with our neighbors.  We aren’t in charge any more – nobody notices or even cares what we do – so now we have the freedom to be insignificant.  We can sit and listen to those who are lonely.  We can just hold one another’s hands when we are afraid.  We can bake a loaf of bread – or maybe a few hundred pies – so that some body’s else’s day is just a bit brighter.  We know that there is almost nothing we can fix, so now we have the freedom to do just what we can.

·      +  And third, because we are increasingly on the periphery or sidelines of our society, God is encouraging us to be playful while the world rushes by in all seriousness to an early graveWe don’t have to hurry – or get addicted to the latest gadget – or pay attention to the most recent trash.  Rather, we can put our compulsions on the cross and become like children who, Jesus said, are really the ones who know how to enter and live in the kingdom of God.

Our sacred story is changing:  from out of our old ways, new directions are being discovered. And the more we listen to the invitation to be tender, small and unhurried, the more we will be blessed and empowered by God’s grace and peace.  Beloved, Jeremiah came to understand that all he could do was buy the farm – to invest in small acts of tenderness beyond the raging madness of the moment – and point with his life towards God’s hope. 


Like Jesus said in today’s other story:  we already KNOW what the Lord requires – we already have Moses and all the prophets – and they all urge us to nourish tenderness, mercy and playful patience.  Today our story resonates with the sacred story – and the stories of countless others all around us – if we have ears to hear.  Let this be for us a time of listening – and discovery – and quiet acts of tender mercy for so sayeth the word of the Lord now and forever more.  Amen.

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