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Sunday, June 19, 2016

Silence

God of love, teach us to be like you. Amen. 

Sisters and brothers in Christ…
This is a difficult time to be a woman.
When rapists can be sentenced to incarceration for less time than the raped woman would have to endure pregnancy, should it result from the assault – there is something seriously wrong with our ideas of justice and retribution and rehabilitation.

This is a difficult time to be of Hispanic origin.
When people show up to Latinx night at a club – Latinx is meant to be a gender-inclusive term for people with Latin American heritage – when attendees at a Latinx event are attacked by a gunman and over a hundred of them end up either dead or seriously wounded, there is something seriously wrong with our definitions of culture and violence and tolerance.

This is a difficult time to be queer, to be transgender, bisexual, lesbian, or gay.
When the place that your community has developed as a sanctuary from prejudice is violated, so that an entire demographic of our population now feels that there is nowhere safe for them to be themselves, there is something wrong with our ideas of relationship, romance, and socially appropriate behavior.

This is a difficult time to be Muslim.
When the faith of your forefathers has been distorted in the public eye by extremists, beyond all recognition… when none of the goodness and humility you were raised with is ever part of the public discourse about your religion… when every adherent is suspected to be a terrorist, so that even when you are mourning the murdered members of your community, you also have to defend yourself and your actual faith at the same time – there is something wrong with the way that we listen to one another and learn from one another.

This is a difficult time to be a person of color in America.
When you have to have “the talk” with your children to train them to hide from the police rather than turning to them for help, because too many people you know have been wrongfully accused and incarcerated for no reason other than the color of their skin – there is something wrong.
When we have reached the anniversary of a shooting of nine innocents in a black church, who were doing nothing more sinister than praying and studying their Bibles, and we realize that nothing has changed since that tragedy – there is something wrong.

There is something wrong with the way that we are treating each other in this society. According to all the news headlines, in general, we are living in dark times, guided not by love, but by hate.

Hello darkness, my old friend
I’ve come to talk with you again
Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence*

Elijah encountered dark times in his ministry.
He was the only prophet of God left in the land. He was marginalized and oppressed, and he felt overwhelmed by the burden to turn the people back to faithful worship of the one true God.
Then, he performed an amazing miracle, defeating the prophets of the false God in a contest on a mountain.
We heard the story a few weeks ago. Elijah was triumphant.
But the people in power didn’t appreciate his miraculous feat. He was a threat to their establishment. So Elijah suddenly found himself persecuted and pursued by the powers that be, and he fled in fear.
This is where we meet Elijah today.

He was so frustrated with his ministry, he was ready to give up entirely. He couldn’t see any point in moving forward. He laments to God, “I have been working my tail off for you! But no matter how faithful I am and how much you are with me, God, the people are against me. They’re trying to kill me. They don’t want to hear your Word. And I just don’t have the energy to go on anymore, God. I may as well be dead.”
It’s easy to relate to Elijah’s frustration – especially for those of us who are women or Hispanic or queer or Muslim or black, or a member of any other group that has experienced senseless violence in the recent past.
We’ve been working our tails off! And nothing we do seems to make any difference. No one else seems to care.
We may as well give up.

In restless dreams I walked alone
Narrow streets of cobblestone
'Neath the halo of a street lamp
I turned my collar to the cold and damp
When my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light
That split the night
And touched the sound of silence*

But God doesn’t let Elijah off the hook that easily.
And God doesn’t let us off the hook that easy either.

Elijah is met by a messenger from God who gives him food for the journey to come, and then he is met with the very presence of God.
Elijah remains in hiding throughout this story – he does not go back to re-engage his enemies right away. Instead, he retreats to a cave, where he is told that the Lord will pass by.
There is a windstorm, strong enough to split stone. But God is not in the windstorm.
There is an earthquake, but God is not there either.
There is a fire – remember, just a few weeks ago we celebrated the presence of God in the fire of Pentecost – but this time around, God is not in the fire.

Elijah experiences these powerful, world-changing events – but cannot find God in any of them.
And then, there is the sound of sheer silence.
And God is in the silence.
When all the drama and terror and hatred and power and fears of the world have been spent, all that is left is silence.
And God.

When the world has raked us across the coals, when we have been mistreated and mistrusted, when we don’t feel like we can make a difference, when we are ready to give up, sometimes all that is left is silence.
And God.

Silence can be powerful. It can be refreshing, comforting, peaceful and invigorating. Silence can bring us strength and renewal, and even the very presence of God.
Since the times of Elijah, people of faith have been seeking God in silence all over the world. Jesus went alone to pray in the wilderness.
Monks have set up monasteries in remote locations, where silence is the rule of the order.
Mystics like Augustine of Hippo, Hildegard of Bingen, Francis of Assisi, Julian of Norwich, Saint Ignatius, John Donne, Dag Hammarskjöld, Thomas Merton, even Mother Teresa – all of them understood the power of silence for restoring the soul and growing closer to God.

Silence is powerful.
But silence becomes impotent if you stop there.

The silence of meditation is different than the silence of inaction.
Even Elijah wasn’t allowed to stay in his silent mountaintop retreat. God gave him a message and sent him back to society.
He had a chance to refresh himself, yes. But he didn’t get to stay self-centered. If he was going to do God’s work, like a prophet is called to do, he needed to get down off that mountain and get to work among the people.

And in the naked light I saw
Ten thousand people, maybe more
People talking without speaking
People hearing without listening
People writing songs that voices never share
And no one dared
Disturb the sound of silence*

Our call, as followers of Jesus, is to disturb the sound of silence.
This week we had a powerful example of someone disturbing the sound of silence – speaking truth to the indifference in the world.
When congress was in session, the assembly was asked to observe a moment of silence in honor of the people who died in last week’s shooting in Orlando.
But some of the senators weren’t happy with that. They knew that the time had come to break the silence.
And one of the senators from the state of Connecticut, while congress was in session, took the floor and didn’t yield it for 15 hours, until leaders on both sides of the aisle agreed to finally, actually, and hopefully honestly, discuss and consider bills to control the sale of firearms in this country.
When a change needs to be made in the world, and yet no one is willing to put themselves on the line for the cause, sometimes it seems like nothing is happening.
The silence can be deafening.
When change is required and people need to speak, but they dare not, then we are living in dark times.
Like Elijah.

But, like Elijah, we are also given the tools we need to more forward from our place of shock and indifference and inaction.
In our worship together, we share food for the journey to come, food that we believe holds the very presence of God, in the meal of Holy Communion.
When we pause to listen for God, like Elijah and Jesus and Origen and Merton and Mother Teresa did... we are inspired, and we can emerge from our silent reflection with more vigor and enthusiasm than ever.

As you know, Jesus had to endure silence and trials in the desert over the course of his ministry. He was tempted by Satan after spending time in the wilderness. But he emerged stronger than ever.

Elijah was ready to give up on ministry. But he took time out to experience the silence. And then God sent him back into the fray, because there was work yet to be done.
         And that is where we find ourselves, also.
If we need to pause and observe a moment of silence in the face of the world’s horrors, we can do so. But we can’t stay there. God needs us to head back into the fray, to go in the strength of the food we have shared, to speak truth into the silent and scary places in the world.

Now is not the time to remain silent. Now is the time to speak out and act out against injustice!
It is time to combat homophobia and racism and fear of our neighbor. It is time to cast out the legion of demons that have been possessing our society.
Now is the time to expel the demons of self-hatred, of sexism, and of gun violence. Now is the time to follow the example of Jesus – when we see suffering, to do something about it.
We can use a break in the silence to refresh ourselves. But then we need to emerge from that silence as a prophet, with a message for the world, like Elijah did. The silence is only useful for as long as it takes us to find our voice. And then, God calls us to speak truth into the silence.

Elijah gives us the inspiration today to feed on God’s Word in silence, and then to speak God’s Word to society.
Paul’s letter to the church in Galatia gives us the words to speak.
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.
There is no longer Latinx and Muslim, victim and perpetrator, white and person of color. Yes, these characteristics make us who we are. But in Christ Jesus, all of us are equal. There are no second-class citizens. There is no place for hatred and violence.
There is only room for love.
Let us love one another, for God is love.
Let us make it a better time to be a woman, a person of Hispanic origin, queer, Muslim, or a person of color. Let us follow Elijah’s example as a prophet, and Jesus’ example of casting out demons, and share God’s love with the world.

My prayer for us today is that God would feed us as Elijah was fed, and then send us into the world to break the silence, to bring light to the darkness, to speak God’s truth to the world, and to cast out the demons of hatred and fear, like Jesus did.
My prayer is that all people would find a way to learn the truth, that God loves them and cares for them, and created them perfectly in God’s image, and they do not need to change, and they do not need to fear assault by others of God’s children.
That is the society that I hope for.
And may God help to make it so, using us as instruments of change.
Amen.


 Pentecost 5C 6/19/16
1 Kings 19:1-15a; Luke 8:26-39; Galatians 3:23-29


*Lyrics for “The Sound of Silence” from http://www.metrolyrics.com/the-sound-of-silence-lyrics-simon-and-garfunkel.html, © UNIVERSAL MUSIC PUBLISHING GROUP

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Generous Response

God of grace, help us to love and support one another as your followers supported you. Give us grace today to hear your word and respond to it, in your name. Amen.

The Gospels tell us about a man who did some amazing things.
He fed thousands with minimal resources.
He walked on water.
He cast out demons.
He thwarted corrupt authorities.
He healed lepers and paralytics and blind people.
He even raised people from the dead!
Jesus’ ministry was incredible.

But you know what? The guy still had to eat. And as awesome as walking on water might be, it doesn’t do much to put bread on the table.
Today’s Gospel lesson reminds us that Jesus didn’t always eat through the miraculous multiplication of loaves and fish – his ministry was financed by some generous donors.
And as it turns out, those donors were women.

Jesus went about his ministry, proclaiming and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God. The twelve were with him, as well as women such as Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Susanna, and many others, who provided for him out of their resources.
Luke 8:1-3, edited

Jesus was able to do generous, compassionate, out-of-the-box ministry because of the selfless women who supported his work.
Without the ministry of women, Jesus would never have reached the audience that he did in his life, and he would never have had the impact that he did in his death and resurrection.
In the church, so often we hear about our forefathers in the faith.
I am here today to tell you that our foremothers in the faith were at least as important as our forefathers, and perhaps even more instrumental in spreading the Gospel to the world than the men were.

Women were the first witnesses to the Resurrection, and the first to share the news that Christ was raised from the dead.
Women were the ones who accompanied Jesus all the way to the cross. When all the male disciples had abandoned Jesus, except maybe for John, the women watched and followed him until the moment of his death.
Women were the ones who allowed Jesus to carry out his itinerant ministry, who made sure that he was fed and clothed and housed in every community that he visited, sharing from whatever resources were at their disposal to ensure that the ministry of this amazing man could continue. 

What do you think it was that inspired these women to support Jesus so selflessly?
Perhaps they heard a few lines from the Sermon on the Mount and thought – yes! That’s the God that I know! I will support any preacher who speaks those words in God’s name.
Do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will bring worries of its own.
Do not judge, so that you may not be judged.
Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.
Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
In everything do to others as you would have them do to you; for this is the law and the prophets. (excerpts from Matthew 5-7, NRSV)
How can you hear such emphatic teachings and not be compelled to respond?

Some of the women who supported Jesus – Mary Magdalene in particular – had experienced his healing power first hand.
If you’ve had demons cast out of you, or have been healed from blindness or given the ability to walk for the first time, or restored to life after crossing the bridge into death – how could you not want to support the person who had made possible such wonderful miracles?
Perhaps the women who supported Jesus caught a glimpse of the vision that he was imagining – they were picking up what he was laying down, smelling what he was cooking – these women felt his passion for the kingdom of God. They wanted to see his vision come to fruition.
         And so they gave generously to make sure that it could happen.
The ministry of Jesus was made possible thanks to the philanthropy of the women who supported him.

One woman in today's Gospel story gave so generously, that the Pharisee who had invited Jesus to dinner that night was offended at her gift.
         This woman was a sinner, he thought. Whatever that means.
Nothing she could give was good enough for the Jesus, the Messiah, the chosen one that this man had invited to dinner.
Simon the Pharisee didn’t realize that Jesus had healed people from much greater things than sinfulness.
OK, so this woman was a sinner.
Big deal! She still wanted to support the ministry of Jesus.
And Jesus accepted her support with grace and gratitude.
The ointment this woman poured on Jesus’ feet was the most precious thing, the most valuable gift, that she had to offer. And her way of showing appreciation to Jesus was by giving him the thing that was most valuable to her.

The Pharisee didn’t appreciate the sentiment behind the gift.
But Jesus did.
He even learned from it.
In Luke chapter 7, we hear about Jesus having his feet anointed by this woman, and Jesus appreciated her action as the act of generosity and servitude that she intends it to be.
In chapter 22, Jesus shares the Last Supper with his disciples.
Now, in Luke, this meal is a Passover observance and nothing more.
But in the Gospel of John, at the same meal, we hear about Jesus washing his disciples’ feet.
Where else did Jesus experience footwashing as a sign of extravagant hospitality, except from this woman? Nowhere that we know of in the Gospel accounts, that’s for sure.
Women who Jesus encountered in his ministry were the ones who supported him selflesslessly and generously, and who even taught him things that he later used in his own ministry to others.

These women can serve as examples to us.
What do you do when you hear an impassioned speaker and feel moved to respond?
Do the words of the speaker influence how you give? When you volunteer? Where you shop? How you vote?
Do you respond as enthusiastically to the word of God as the women in the Gospels did?

OK, that’s not a fair question.
Each person’s response to Jesus can only be measured against their own ability to give, not that of another person.
It’s not fair for someone who makes six figures and has a couple of million in the bank to look at someone who lives paycheck to paycheck, and say – hey! I’m giving as much as they are! So I must be doing all right.
         That’s not what a faithful response to Jesus is supposed to be about.

What we can learn from the women in today’s Gospel lesson is that all people have something to contribute, and no matter how big or small that “something” is, it’s important to the kingdom of God that we both give and honor others’ gifts with integrity.

No one deserves to be cast aside and disregarded, and that includes women at all stages of life, regardless of what the news headlines might tell us.
A woman should not be discredited simply for her gender when she becomes a player on the political field.
A woman should not be discredited when she has become the victim of assault at the hands of a drunk college student.
A woman should not be discredited simply for her gender when she becomes a migrant worker or a pastor or a mother or a medical worker or an immigrant or a widow or anything else.
Each and every woman who walks the face of this earth was created in the image of God.
Every single one of us has the potential to support the ministry of Jesus, and to teach the world something about sacrificial love, as the women did in today’s Gospel reading.

Do we take seriously the contributions of all people?
Prisoners and rape victims have something to teach us about the kingdom of God. Are we listening?
Wealthy benefactors and sinful women have something to teach us about the kingdom of God. Are we listening?

We can’t know how these women were inspired to support Jesus’ ministry. But today, I invite you to consider why you are here in worship today, and what compels you to follow the teachings of Jesus.
Where do you see God at work in the world?
How do you respond to an impassioned speaker, or to a miracle worker?
Does your experience with Jesus influence the way you manage your money and other possessions? Does it have an impact on the organizations you support with volunteer hours? Really, now – does your faith change where you shop or how you vote?

For the women in today’s Gospel reading, the ministry of Jesus influenced all these things, to whatever extent these women had the right to independently choose anything in the ancient world. They made their decisions with Jesus at the forefront of their minds.
And that is the model that they leave for us today.

Praise God for the women who fed, clothed, housed, and supported Jesus and his disciples.
And may God give each one of us the will and the inspiration to support the ministry of Jesus in today’s world.
You know, we can give generously like those women did.
We can make a difference in the world.

It doesn’t take a huge amount of wealth, or knowledge, or experience. Mostly, it just takes courage.
The courage to stand up in court and speak the truth.
The courage to face an oppressor and call him out in public.
The courage to believe that whatever small thing you have can be transformed by God into something bigger and better than you can ever imagine.
That’s what happened with the gifts of the women in the Gospel story today. God took their resources and turned them in to a ministry that became revolutionary for the whole world.
And that is what God can do with your time, your abilities, your possessions, your family, your self – if you just give God the chance to work.

Praise God for the faithful women who made Jesus’ ministry possible.

And praise God for all the faithful people who continue to make ministry possible, in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Pentecost 4C, 6/12/2016
Luke 7:36-8:3