Proverbs 9:1-6
Holy Wisdom,
let us listen to your voice as you call out to us, and help us to walk in the
way of insight. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Over the past few
weeks, I’ve heard several people say that they don’t really know what they
believe.
Some of us aren’t sure how we feel about God,
or the Trinity, or the resurrection, or the virgin birth, or various other
primary tenets of the Christian faith.
Guess what?
It’s OK.
You don’t have to
have all the answers to be part of this community of faith.
In fact, you don’t even have to be confident
about your own personal faith in order to be part of this community. You and
your doubts and
your questions are
welcomed here.
All that we ask is
that you come along for the journey, and that you share your questions – other
people might learn something from the questions that you bring to the table.
About a year and a
half ago, as part of a confirmation class, another pastor and I had an entire
session when we answered the questions of students and their parents. Any
question at all was fair game, for either of us.
Some of the questions were predictable – what
made you want to become a pastor?
Some of the questions
were lighthearted – have you ever gone fishing?
And some of the questions made it hard for us
to keep a straight face. When did you memorize the Bible?
Seriously. I
appreciate that our confirmation students thought
that we had the Bible memorized, but really, I don’t. I’ve read the whole
thing, and studied it, even translated some parts of it from the original
language, but memorized? I don’t think so.
There are parts of the Bible that I don’t
know well, or even at all, and that’s OK. I don’t have to know everything in
order to be a pastor.
And you don’t have to
know everything in order to be a worshipper.
Today’s first reading
includes an invitation to follow in the way of Wisdom.
You that are simple, turn in here!
Lay aside immaturity, and live, and walk in the way of insight.
Wisdom makes the
invitation not to people who are
already wise, or to people who have lots of knowledge or life experience.
Wisdom
invites the simple people to come, be
part of her community.
There are no
prerequisite classes for walking into Wisdom’s house.
You don’t have to know certain things about
God, understand anything about church history, or have verses of the Bible
memorized.
During worship every
week, we speak an affirmation of faith together, confessing things about God
that Christians over time have determined to be true. But you don’t even have
to be confortable saying the creed or any other affirmation of faith in order
to belong here.
Just take a step.
That’s all that matters.
Step out onto the
path of Wisdom, and you’ll learn what you need to know as you go along.
If you worry that you’re not good enough or
don’t know enough, you’ll never take that first step. So put your worries aside
and simply follow. Listen to the voice of Wisdom calling out to you.
This doesn’t mean
that we should follow blindly, of course.
We’re not
asked to leave reason at the door.
It is Wisdom that’s calling after all – we are
still supposed to use our brains as we travel through our journey of faith.
When we listen to Wisdom’s voice, we should
be learning things about ourselves and the world around us. Wisdom is what
helps us make decisions in our daily lives, and also what helps us see the big
picture of human history, and where we fit into that picture.
There’s a new book by
a Christian author named Brian McLaren, called We Make the Road by Walking.
That’s what the life
of faith is like. There’s no pre-planned route for how things are supposed to
go in your relationship with God and God’s people. With each step we take, we
are drawing a piece of our own map, our own path of faith.
Brian McLaren writes in the preface to his book,
“You are not finished yet. You are ‘in
the making.’” (page xi)
Each one of us is a
work in progress.
By listening to the
voice of Wisdom, and by following where she leads, we keep taking steps toward
becoming the person that God created us to be.
Brian McLaren goes on
to write, “faith was never intended to be a destination, a status, a
holding tank, or a warehouse. Instead, it was to be a road, a path,
a way out of old and
destructive patterns into new and creative ones. As a
road or way,
it is always being extended into the future.” (page xii)
Now, I’ll be honest with you. I haven’t read
the whole book. I’ve only seen reviews and read the preface, because that’s
available online.
But I think that Brian
McLaren makes a great point when he reminds us that we have never arrived in our journey of faith.
In other words, if
you are waiting until you know enough about Communion before you start to
receive – if you are waiting until you know enough about Lutheranism before you
join this congregation – if you are waiting until you know enough about the
Bible to become a Sunday School teacher – you will be waiting for a very long
time.
You will never know enough to satisfy
your own prerequisites.
But what you already
know, is enough for God to work with.
Wisdom calls you into her house no matter how
much previous knowledge or faith or certitude you bring with you.
And, by the way, do
you know who this Wisdom is?
Wisdom is
God, calling out to you.
Earlier in the book of Proverbs, we are told
that God created the world through Wisdom. Wisdom is one face, one aspect of
the divine.
When you follow the
voice of Wisdom into her house, you follow the guidance of God into Christian
community.
You don’t need to be whole and complete to walk through
these doors.
But we
do hope that as you continue to walk through these doors time and time again,
and as you participate in worship and serve with outreach ministries and learn
from Bible and book studies, we hope that Wisdom will keep guiding you along
the path and forming you into the person that she created you to be.
One retired seminary professor puts it this way:
The slogan “God
loves us unconditionally” is only half right. God loves us with the
expectation and hope that love will transform us into believing and righteous
people.
(Ralph W.
Klein, http://fontes.lstc.edu/~rklein/Documents/PentecostB.htm#Pent11)
According to today’s
reading, you can replace “love” in that last sentence with “guidance” or
“wisdom.” God guides us with the expectation and hope that Wisdom will
transform us into believing and righteous people.
Because God loves us, God offers us the gift
of Wisdom. Her voice calls us to be the best that we can be, and to do our best
for the sake of other people and all of creation.
With each step you take in response to God’s Wisdom,
you are making a decision – a decision to keep following and learning in faith,
or a decision to stop and fall back into the ways of ignorance.
The next
passage in the book of Proverbs, right after the one we heard today, is about
the way of folly.
Folly cries out to passersby just like Wisdom does,
and she also invites people into her home for a meal. But Folly’s meal is
secret and stolen, and her path will lead to destruction. That’s what the next
few verses go on to describe.
Unlike Folly, Wisdom is good for you. Even if you
don’t have much in the way of knowledge or understanding, you can still follow
the path of Wisdom.
God can
still reach you, give you faith, use you for good works, and enrich your life
even if you don’t understand how it works. All you have to do is listen to the
voice of Wisdom calling, and ignore the voice of Folly.
Let me share a great example of what it’s like to step
out in faith, even if you don’t know very much about where you’re going or why.
How many
of you have seen Indiana Jones and the
Last Crusade?
Towards the end of that film, Harrison Ford – Indiana
Jones – is trying to reach the Holy Grail. He can see the door that he needs to
go in, but all he can see in front of him is this deep crevice in the rock,
that is way too wide to jump across. So, he steps out in faith. And he finds
himself supported by a bridge that was invisible until he was standing on it.
That’s
sort of like what Wisdom’s path is like. You don’t always know where it is, or
even what is going to meet you along your journey, but as long as you try to
follow where Wisdom leads, you’ll be supported.
You don’t have to
have all the answers. Just listen to Wisdom’s voice.
You that are simple, turn in here!
Lay aside immaturity, and live, and walk in the way of insight.
Amen.