NOTE: Here are my worship notes for this coming Sunday,
November 10th. I found great wisdom - and help - in David Lose's reflections in Working Preacher and have used many of his insights. I am grateful. (I have NO idea why I am having trouble with the font size today... but it is late and I am calling it quits for today.)
Introduction
November 10th. I found great wisdom - and help - in David Lose's reflections in Working Preacher and have used many of his insights. I am grateful. (I have NO idea why I am having trouble with the font size today... but it is late and I am calling it quits for today.)
Introduction
We are 25 days out to
Thanksgiving and just six plus weeks until Christmas. We are in the middle of our Stewardship
Campaign for 2014 with just two weeks to go before Pledge Sunday. And, if you are following the liturgical calendar
of Western Christianity, we are three weeks away from Christ the King Sunday –
the close of the Christian year – and the final feast day before the start of
Advent.
· I tell you this today because time is a funny thing – we
always want more – and we are often stressed-out about all the pressures and
demands that time places on us.
· But here’s the thing: we already possess all the time that
there is, right? None of our fretting,
worrying, obsessing or all the rest makes time move any slower or faster. It doesn’t buy us one extra minute of life
nor does it alter the laws of creation.
And while many of us FEEL
like Dr. Seuss when he said, “How did it get so late so soon…” the key to living a life of gratitude and real thankfulness has to do with staying grounded in the present moment. Mother Teresa had a helpful way of
paraphrasing both Moses and Jesus when she said: “Yesterday is gone.
Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today, so let us begin.”
· Let us begin to love one another in an unhurried way – let us
begin to carry one another’s burdens without complaint – let us begin to unplug
ourselves from the rat race that makes so many of us so frenzied and crazy – and let
us begin to live like we authentically follow Jesus rather than just tip our
hat at him as we check our email on the way to yet another appointment.
· This morning’s gospel provides a good starting point when Jesus says:
Given the big picture, although marriage – and business
and politics and our children’s sports schedules and the latest electronic
gadgets – have become major preoccupations here, they are not all the important
in the life to come. Those who are included in the resurrection of the dead
will no longer be concerned with marriage – or business or politics or a lot of
the other things that ensnare us now – nor, of course, with death. They will
have better things to think about, if you can believe it. All ecstasies and
intimacies then will be with God. Remember even Moses exclaimed about
resurrection at the burning bush, saying, ‘Lord you are the God of Abraham, the
God of Isaac and the God of Jacob!’ So listen: God isn’t the God of dead men,
but of the living”
This morning I want to put
our lessons from Scripture into a context of real time – as well as the real pressures of 21st
century living – but I want to try to do this from a sacred rather than a harried
perspective. Every week – and this is
not one of my Celtic exaggerations but a real fact of life – every week
somebody says to me something like this: “I am just so busy these days – it is making me
crazy…” Then they go on to tell me all the things they CAN’T do because of
all the stuff they HAVE to do.
· And I’m going to take the risk of sounding like a total old
grouch in telling you this, ok? I used
to feel sorry for people who were frenzied and frazzled and running themselves
ragged. Their anxieties evoked empathy –
their worries broke my heart – and I used to try to come up with strategies to
help out. I mean, that’s what all young
pastors do – we want to be useful and helpful – so I used to offer ideas and
suggestions and strategies to help anxious and stressed-out people try to manage
things better.
· But I don’t do that too much anymore – yes, yes a little bit
when I’m really co-dependent – but not so much anymore because most people
don’t really want to change. You see, no matter what they say, in contemporary culture busyness makes us feel important or valuable. So some
people get affirmation by burning the candle at both ends and no matter what I
say they aren't going to stop.
· Also, as hard as this is to say, some people need to hit bottom, really crash and burn before
they are ever going to be ready, willing and able to slow down and start living at a pace that
is holy and human. And while I hate this fact, I know that I don’t have all
that much time left to waste offering insights and strategies to people who
don’t really want to change.
Does that make me
cranky? Does that mean my heart is too
tough and I’m not as loving a pastor as I could be? Somebody will surely say yes but one of my mentors
as a maturing pastor has been Fr. Martin – a recovering alcoholic Roman Catholic priest – who used to work
with other addicts – and busyness is as much an addiction, beloved, as booze or
dope. And what Fr. Martin taught me was that some people are not ready to make deep and life-giving changes. And while that
doesn’t mean that they are bad people or any more of a sinner than the rest of us, it mean they are caught in a rut.
Fr. Martin used to say to all those who came to him for
counseling something like: Look, I love you – and I will pray
for you every day – I want to assure you that God loves you and aches for
your healing. But if you aren’t going to
seriously try to implement my hard won advice for your life, you are wasting
both of our time. So, unless you are going
to DO what I ask, let’s bring things to a close right now because there are
OTHERS who are really ready to make a change. And that
has become one of my pastoral mantras most of the time, too.
You see, it is all about honoring God as fully as possible
within the constraints of the time we have. It is all about living truly grateful lives. So if it is true that we already have all the time that there
is, then it is up to us to use it well.
I like this old saying: Time
is too slow for those who can’t wait, too swift for those who fear, too long
for those who grieve and too short for those who rejoice. But for those
committed to God’s love, time is eternity.
As our calendars push us towards Christ the King Sunday
and Thanksgiving and even Christmas, let’s look at an alternative to the stress and anxieties offered in today’s
texts. Specifically, let’s be clear
about two insights:
· First the context of Christ’s lesson in his time – what he
was trying to communicate to whom – and why it offered healing and hope in his
day.
· And second what these ancient words might mean for you and
me in the 21st century, ok?
Insights
The gospel lesson today involves a fight between Jesus and the
Sadducees. So if we are going to have any clue about why these words and ideas
matter, we have to first grasp who the Sadducees were and second how the wisdom
of Jesus was different from their perspective, ok? The biblical scholar and preacher, David
Lose, makes these points about the Sadducees.
· The Sadducees were sometimes rivals to the Pharisees but were also
united with them in their opposition to Jesus. The Sadducees had primary
authority over the Temple in Jerusalem. They recognized only the original five
"books of Moses" as fully authoritative, and for this reason did not
believe in the resurrection of the dead (as that is not referenced in the
Pentateuch). (Working Preacher)
· The law they were arguing about with Jesus is called levirate
marriage from the Latin levir("brother in law") and
is found in Deuteronomy 25:5-10. The goal of this law was to insure the
preservation of one's family name by stipulating that a man should marry the childless
widow of his brother. Are you with me? Do
you see how such a thing might be valuable in the realm of ancient Israel?
The question the Sadducees were addressing was meant to make
Christ’s words about the resurrection seem foolish. So, while Jesus chose to
engage them in this battle, he also chose not to waste his own time. And there were three things they did not
understand about the true meaning of resurrection.
· First, he said that life after this life is NOT a
continuation of what we already know – everything is totally different in the
resurrection – not a continuation of the present. It is a time of ecstasy with God that will
last forever. The Sadducees believed that once this life was over, that is all she wrote; Jesus said that God is not that stingy - there is more to come.
· Second, because resurrection life is so different – and we
can’t even imagine what it means to be with God perpetually in ecstasy – we
ought not get caught up in fights about things that waste our time in the present. Like Moses learned at the burning bush, God
yearns for us to be fully present and alive right now for the Lord is the God
of the living not the dead. Mostly Jesus was about loving and healing people in the present and helping us stop wasting our time.
· And third, if it is best not to waste our time fretting and
worrying about what life after life will be in ecstasy with the Lord forever,
it follows that we not waste our time doing stupid or cruel things in the days
that remain right now, right? Why not learn to
live in the wisdom of the Lord NOW – honoring love, nourishing hope, practicing
patience, prayer and beauty – instead of running around like a chicken with our
head cut off and complaining about our busyness without making any changes?
That’s the
first challenge and first part of my message: so let me as if that was clear? Do you have any
questions about what Jesus was arguing about in his context?
The second part of my message builds on the first: if resurrection living is going to be beyond our comprehension – filled with ecstasy and intimacy with God forever – “if time itself and death will have disappeared forever” so that whatever we experience beyond this world comes through God rather than our limited senses, somebody is probably wondering: why bother talking about it at all? Let’s face it, none of us have been there yet, right? So why waste our time talking about heaven and resurrection and all the rest when there are so many other pressing matters demanding our attention?
The second part of my message builds on the first: if resurrection living is going to be beyond our comprehension – filled with ecstasy and intimacy with God forever – “if time itself and death will have disappeared forever” so that whatever we experience beyond this world comes through God rather than our limited senses, somebody is probably wondering: why bother talking about it at all? Let’s face it, none of us have been there yet, right? So why waste our time talking about heaven and resurrection and all the rest when there are so many other pressing matters demanding our attention?
· Here’s my hunch:
learning to trust Jesus about the life to come is another way of
encountering his peace and living in the present with gratitude. Different ages
have different themes – there was the ice age – there was the age of fear – the age of
disease and the age of famine – ours has been labeled the age of anxiety. So do you know the difference between fear and anxiety? Fear has a focus – it has a name – while
anxiety is a free-floating sense of dread. It isn’t grounded in anything specific, so it can’t be addressed or
healed.
So what Christian resurrection thinking points to is the assurance
that not only will our loved ones be embraced by God’s grace and ecstasy, but
that we, too will be reunited with them in ways that are greater and more holy
than anything we might imagine in this life.
Today's gospel passage tells us something essential, I think:
· + Jesus doesn’t say that we won’t know our spouses, friends
and family members in our resurrection life. “He only says that resurrection
life will not be marked by the same features as this one. Indeed, given his
next statement about Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, it seems that the relationships
defining our current life may persist” but they will be saturated and defined
by God’s grace. (Working Preacher)
· + Are you still with me here? I often turn to Revelation 21 for a
hint at what all of this means as we look through a glass darkly…
Jesus also goes on to make it clear that there is a
distinction between immortality and resurrection. And while that may seem like an arcane
difference – and many, many people affirm the immortality of the soul as a
source of comfort – the truth of Jesus is even sweeter. You see, rather than say some indistinct part
of my loved one lives on into eternity beyond the physical body, Christians
confess that while all of us really die – it is not an illusion – the promise
of the resurrection is that the whole person “will in some way be united with
God." (Working Preacher) St Paul put it like this in I Corinthians 15:
Some skeptic is sure to ask, “Show me how resurrection works. Give me a diagram; draw me a picture. What does this ‘resurrection body’ look like?” If you look at this question closely, you realize how absurd it is. There are no diagrams for this kind of thing. We do have a parallel experience in gardening. You plant a “dead” seed; soon there is a flourishing plant. There is no visual likeness between seed and plant. You could never guess what a tomato would look like by looking at a tomato seed. What we plant in the soil and what grows out of it don’t look anything alike. The dead body that we bury in the ground and the resurrection body that comes from it will be dramatically different. You will notice that the variety of bodies is stunning. Just as there are different kinds of seeds, there are different kinds of bodies—humans, animals, birds, fish—each unprecedented in its form. You get a hint at the diversity of resurrection glory by looking at the diversity of bodies not only on earth but in the skies—sun, moon, stars—all these varieties of beauty and brightness. And we’re only looking at pre-resurrection “seeds”—who can imagine what the resurrection “plants” will be like!
Our hope is not fragmented, you see, but full bodied. Again, David Lose’s words are helpful based upon a conversation he had with a grieving widow:
Some skeptic is sure to ask, “Show me how resurrection works. Give me a diagram; draw me a picture. What does this ‘resurrection body’ look like?” If you look at this question closely, you realize how absurd it is. There are no diagrams for this kind of thing. We do have a parallel experience in gardening. You plant a “dead” seed; soon there is a flourishing plant. There is no visual likeness between seed and plant. You could never guess what a tomato would look like by looking at a tomato seed. What we plant in the soil and what grows out of it don’t look anything alike. The dead body that we bury in the ground and the resurrection body that comes from it will be dramatically different. You will notice that the variety of bodies is stunning. Just as there are different kinds of seeds, there are different kinds of bodies—humans, animals, birds, fish—each unprecedented in its form. You get a hint at the diversity of resurrection glory by looking at the diversity of bodies not only on earth but in the skies—sun, moon, stars—all these varieties of beauty and brightness. And we’re only looking at pre-resurrection “seeds”—who can imagine what the resurrection “plants” will be like!
Our hope is not fragmented, you see, but full bodied. Again, David Lose’s words are helpful based upon a conversation he had with a grieving widow:
After teaching an adult forum on resurrection… a parishioner
came to me afterward very upset. Her husband had died the previous year and her
belief in the immortality of the soul had brought her comfort. As gently as I
could, I said that I didn’t want to take that comfort away, but rather to make
it stronger, more complete. “What I want and hope for you,” I said, “is more
than the wispy essence of your husband. I want the whole person for you, the
whole person created, loved, and now redeemed by God in and through Christ.” Over
time, it seemed like that affirmation helped her reckon with her grief, not by
denying it but by promising that there would be an end to it – and, indeed, an
end to all of our grief, tears and suffering -- when God creates a new heaven
and new earth and invites us all to live there together with God and in the
fellowship of the saints. (Working Preacher)
Conclusion
The promise of the resurrection is the assurance of the end
of our grief and suffering forever. It
challenges the anxieties of this age with hope and grace and offers us an
alternative that doesn’t waste our time (or our energy or our love.) Want to live a life of gratitude and thanksgiving: get
grounded NOW, Jesus tells us, in the love of God.
Pay attention NOW to what is most important. And leave the rest – especially the
anxieties, fretting and busyness – to the Lord. God is in control whether we
trust that or not – and our worrying doesn’t help the cause of Christ one iota! At this point in my journey, that's the good news for today for those who have ears to hear.
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