All-Saints A: Thin Places

This Sunday we are using the Lectionary readings for All-Saints so that means that we are actually “skipping” the readings for Proper 27A this year.  The Feast of All Saints is one of the major festivals of the church. In our United Methodist tradition, while we have specific readings for this day, they do change between the lectionary years (A, B, & C)  All-Saints Day (actually dated November 1st), probably dates back as far as 373, when the festival was mentioned in the writings of Ephrem Syrus.  The original emphasis was to honor the saints and martyrs who had no specific commemoration day.  As the festival transitioned to Protestantism (who obviously do not have the plethora of saints of our Roman Catholic and Orthodox brothers and sisters), it became a time of remembrance of those who had passed away in the last year. 

cliffs051FIRST READINGRevelation 7: 9-17
The Book of Revelation, which, despite its name, is the most veiled text of all in the Bible, makes great demands on those who read or hear it.  There is usually a temptation to move too quickly to interpret or translate its imagery into something that is more accessible and more easily understood.  To attempt to “decode” Revelation, as if it were Morse code, fails to take the medium that way it was given.  This is not a narrative.  It is not prophecy.  It offers instead a new view of reality.  Those with whom the Revelation was originally shared were much more comfortable with it and the mystery that it holds than we are.  There was not such a need to “prove” or to “figure out” every detailed meaning.  They were satisfied, rather, with the idea that God has been throughout history and will continue to be and that God has a greater vision of what is to come than any one of us can even attempt to imagine.  Isn’t that enough?
Albrecht Bengel was an eighteenth-century commentator, wrote this about Revelation: 
The whole structure of it breathes the art of God, comprising in the most finished compendium, things to come, many, various; near, intermediate, remote; the greatest, the least; terrible, comfortable; old, new; long, short; and these interwoven together, opposite, composite; relative to each other at a small, at a great distance; and therefore sometimes as it were disappearing, broken off, suspended, and afterwards unexpectedly and most seasonably appearing again.  In all its parts it has an admirable variety, with the most exact harmony, beautifully illustrated by those digressions which seem to interrupt it.  In this manner does it display the manifold wisdom of God shining in the economy of the church through so many ages.
In verse 4 (prior to this reading), the writer speaks of 144,000 from the children of Israel who are sealed.  (Just as an aside, this is where the traditions such as The Jehovah’s Witnesses get their number and their notion of “sealing”. But the number is thought to possibly refer to the twelve tribes of Israel times twelve times 1,000.  It connotes an infinite number.)  So, this is a much larger group, a great multitude.  They are identified and distinguished by their relationship with the Lamb.  Clothed in white, they hold palm branches (a symbol of victory) and they sing of salvation.  God is described as “hovering over them”, where God tabernacles and envelopes the people, as the Spirit hovers over Jesus at his baptism.  They are protected with a new freedom from hunger and thirst and the heat of the sun.  (Isaiah 25:8 is fulfilled)  Now this inclusive vision of the eschaton (the end) was a challenge to many late first century believers (when this was probably written) and it continues to be a challenge to many of us.  But these are meant to be words of encouragement.  They are meant to remind us of the ever-present God who walks with us through whatever comes and walks with us to whatever is waiting for us later in our journey.   And who knows?  God has surprised us with who has shown up at the banquet before!
The graciousness of God is evident.  The passage injects a theme of tenderness and comfort, and God’s sustaining promise of enduring witness to Christ in the midst of death and destruction.  The inclusiveness of the vision is striking (which is why it is used as a lection for All Saints Day.)  The multitude includes Jews and all those who have washed their robes in the blood of the Lamb, thereby identifying themselves with the way of the Lamb.
For us, our struggle with Revelation probably has more to do with the fact that we are trying to “figure it out”.  It’s probably meant to be symbolic metaphor and as metaphor it is contingent upon the context in which it was written.  We do not live in the late first century.  Even those of us who are well-versed historians can not appreciate the nuances that existed politically, emotionally, and even spiritually during that time for those who were living it.  We have never met John of Patmos, or whoever the writer was.  It’s a mystery.  But in that mystery, in these things that we do not understand, that do not make sense to us, we might have the gift of ever-so-slightly brushing up against the holy and the sacred and experience even a momentary glimpse of what is to come.  That’s all it is.  And whatever happens between now and when whatever is to come is revealed to us, the Book of Revelation tells us that God walks with us.  The Ancient Celts would have called it a “thin place”, a place where the distance between now and what is to come, between our “earth” and “heaven”, between the ordinary and the sacred becomes so thin that one can almost see through it; indeed, that it is only thinly veiled.  It is those times when one realizes that he or she is indeed on holy ground and that eternity stretches before us. Now we just need to not worry so much about figuring it out and get on with the journey!
Where is God in this picture?  God is all over the place.  God is up there, down here, inside my skin and out, God is the web, the energy, the space, the light—not captured in them, as if any of those concepts were more real than what unites them—but revealed in that singular and vast net of relationship that animates everything that is.  God is the web, the connection, the glue, the air between the molecules…As of God’s plan?  You know, whether God has a file I can break into and find out what I should be doing ten years from now?  The more I learn about chaos theory, the more I favor the concept of life with God as a dance instead of a blueprint.  God makes a move, humankind makes a move, then humankind makes a moved based on God’s move.  (From “Waltzing With the God of Chaos”, by Barbara Brown Taylor, in The Life of Meaning:  Reflections on Faith, Doubt, and Repairing the World, ed. by Bob Abernethy and William Bole, p. 47, 48)
a.      What does this passage mean for you?
b.      What image of God does this reading leave for you?
c.       What does the holy and the sacred mean to you?
d.      What are those “thin places” in your life?
NEW TESTAMENT:  1 John 3: 1-3
John Wesley said of the First Epistle of John, “How plain, how full, and how deep a compendium of genuine Christianity!”  Very little can be said with great confidence about the author of these three letters.  The First Epistle of John is written anonymously.  There is some similarity between these epistles and The Gospel According to John, but some point out that it lacks evidence of Semitic style characteristic of the Gospel and appears more “Greek” or Hellenistic in nature.  While most agree that 2 and 3 John are actually letters, the First Epistle of John is not as clear.  They really don’t know how to classify it.  It may even be some sort of commentary on the Gospel According to John itself.
The third chapter is part of a continuous expression of confidence in Christ’s coming.  It expresses a kinship in Christ, a relationship to God.  It encourages a present endurance as preparation for the future and a calling to become perfect in Christ.  There is clear evidence of God’s grace, bestowed freely and undeserved.  And, again, there is the reminder that we do not know everything about God, that we CANNOT know everything about God.  (I mean, really, would you want to?  Where would that leave God then?  Where would that leave our faith?)
There exists in this passage the notion that God’s presence and God’s love is both present and future, already realized and not yet revealed.  So which is it?  Yes…that is the point.  This is the Alpha and the Omega and everything in between.  It is the love that we know now and the love into which we are growing.  Again, don’t try to figure out which it is.  Just live it and live into it.  It has to do with who we are AND what we will be.  Those are not separate things.  In this passage, the writer reminds us that we are God’s children now and always.  God loves us and God wants to be with us.  The earth is God’s family.  We are all God’s children.  We are all growing into what we were created to be—the very image of God—pure and loving and holy.  And when we see that Love in which we were created and in which we live, then it all comes together.  THIS is the sacredness and the holy.  THIS is that wonderful “thin place” where we can see things the way they are meant to be seen.
a.      What does this passage mean for you?
b.      What does it say to you about that becoming perfect in Christ?
c.       So what are we called to know about God?
GOSPEL:  Matthew 5: 1-12
Well, this is the only Scripture this week that we have even a remote idea who the author is!  Most scholars agree that the core of what is known as the Beatitudes goes back to Jesus.  It is essentially a reversal of the usual value system that was in place in the first century.  The Beatitude was present in the Jewish tradition as a form of proclamation found in wisdom and prophetic writings.  They declare an objective reality as the result of a divine act.  Here, the opposite of “blessed” is not unhappy but cursed.
One thing to note is that the form of these Beatitudes use two verbs:  are and will.  Each beatitude begins in the present and moves to future tense.  They are, then expressions of what is already true in the Christian community not, necessarily, for individuals, but in community.  The move to the future tense indicates that the life of the kingdom must wait for ultimate validation until God finishes the new creation.  There is a resistance, then, against Christianity as a philosophy of life that would make one healthy, wealthy, and wise.  It is not a scheme to reduce stress, lose weight, advance one’s career, make one financially successful, or preserve one from illness.  It is, rather, a way of living based on the sure and firm hope that one walks in the way of God and that righteousness and peace will finally prevail.
In Year C of the Lectionary (which we looked at last year), the Lukan version of the Beatitudes are used. There are several differences in the two versions.  In Matthew (the more familiar one), there are nine beatitudes; in Luke, there are four.  The Matthean beatitudes are spoken from a mountain, probably since, as one writing to the Jewish community, this would depict that it was something important.  (Reminiscent of Moses on Mt. Sinai.)  The version told by the writer of Luke is spoken from a “level place” (sometimes called the Sermon on the Plain.  Matthew’s beatitudes are spoken to a “crowd”.  When Jesus speaks in the Lucan version, he speaks specifically to his disciples.  Matthew’s version has no corresponding “woes”.  In Luke, there are four “woes” corresponding to four “blessings”. 
Dietrich Bonhoeffer said this:  Humanly speaking, we could understand and interpret the Sermon on the Mount in a thousand different ways.  Jesus knows only one possibility:  simple surrender and obedience, not interpreting it or applying it, but doing and obeying it.  That is the only way to hear his word.  He does not mean that it is to be discussed as an ideal; he really means us to get on with it.
We read this in this week of All-Saints Sunday because it is about that New Creation that God has shown us.  It is a Creation that, again, is both already and not yet.  It has already begun and we are called to its work (to, as Bonhoeffer said, “get on with it”).  It is different from the things of this life—a Holy Reversal, of sorts.  And there is a future tense to it.  We walk in hope.  Blessing is just up ahead.  But blessing here is not meant to be something that we get as a reward for doing all these things.  As you know, God is much more nuanced than that.  It’s, rather, undeserved, unmerited.  Blessing is grace.  This is not God dangling some sort of treat in front of us to make sure that we run the right traps.  This is God revealing a vision of what will be—a life of comfort, abundance, mercy, and God’s ever-abiding Presence.  It’s what is here for us now and what we will always have.  We just have to learn to see things in a different way.  Once again, it’s about paradox.  We read it and we think we have it figured out.  In this world, “blessed” often means having wealth, or security, or ease of life.  It often means that things are going well.  But “blessedness” for Christ has nothing to do with the quality of this life at all.  It is about being one with God and one with others.  Perhaps being Christian, itself, is about being paradox, about looking at the world in a different way and being open to seeing things one has never seen before.  Perhaps being Christian is about daring to call oneself “blessed”.
                                                              i.      What does this passage mean for you?
                                                            ii.      What is the most difficult Beatitude for you to grasp?
                                                          iii.      How does this passage speak to our world today?
                                                          iv.      What does it mean to you to be “blessed”?
                                                            v.      Why do you think this passage is appropriate for our All-Saints reading?
Some Quotes for Further Reflection:
The future belongs to those who give the next generation reason for hope. (Pierre Teilhard de Chardin)
The saints are those who, in some partial way, embody—literally incarnate—the challenge of faith in their time and place.  In doing so, they open a path that others might follow.  (Robert Ellsberg)
The past takes us forward.  (Diana Butler Bass) 
Closing
As we discussed, All-Saints is about both today and tomorrow.  And we are thankful for those who have come before us, who have walked this same journey that we travel now.  We are all part of the same conversation that began when God spoke Creation into existence.  As we celebrate the memories of those who have gone before us, let us also honor their memories by journeying with hope and courage toward the one that we have been called to be and the One that calls us home.
For those who walked with us, this is a prayer.
For those who have gone ahead, this is a blessing.
For those who touched and tended us, who lingered with us while they lived, this is a thanksgiving.
For those who journey still with us in the shadows of awareness, in the crevices of memory, in the landscape of our dreams, this is a benediction.  Amen.
                                                                        (Jan L. Richardson, in In Wisdom’s Path, p. 124)

Proper 10A: Sowing Lessons

TheSowerOLD TESTAMENT:  Genesis 25: 19-34

To read the Old Testament Lectionary passage, click here

Jewish midrash says that “when Rebekah was carrying the twins, Jacob would become very active whenever she would pass by a house of study (of Torah).  On the other hand, Esau would act up whever she walked by a place where idols were worshiped.  It may be important to note that for the rabbis who told these stories Esau was identified with Rome and its emperors, while Jacob was Israel, of course.” (From The Storyteller’s Companion to the Bible: Volume One (Genesis), by Michael E. Williams, ed., P.131)

The story begins with some interesting parallels.  First, Rebekah is barren, like Sarah—Here, “barrenness” is not really infertility, but childlessness.  But, once again, the promise of God is in danger.  And second, like Abraham, Isaac is old when he becomes a father. The difference, though, is that both Isaac and Rebekah demonstrate the importance of God in their lives.  They both pray.  God answers the prayers by enabling conception, but the reason for the painful pregnancy (twins) can be interpreted as a sign of the future relationship between the descendents.  When the twins are born, there is a uterine struggle to be born first, a struggle that Esau wins, (making him the “firstborn” and in line for the birthright).  The birthright implies a leadership position in the family and establishes a claim regarding inheritance.  Once again, God’s mission is forward by things NOT going the way that they should have gone according to expectations and tradition.

This story is almost cartoon-like on some level.  But somehow the story survived through centuries upon centuries of oral tradition.  It is the story of the beginnings of a family rivalry that eventually escalated into a hatred between two nations—the Israelites and the Edomites.  Esau is almost depicted as a caricature of reality, a cave man of sorts.  But, keep in mind, that history is always written by the winners.  And yet, things can be dysfunctional and awful and ridiculous and God can still move through and in its midst.  God can still accomplish what God has set out to accomplish.  Once again, God does not just choose the A-list winners to make things happen.  God chooses ordinary people to do extraordinary things and live to write the story.

And even in our struggles–even when we do stupid things like giving up our birthright or tricking someone out of theirs, God is always present working toward the reconciliation of all of Creation. (Although I have visions of God daily having cause to look at someone, including me, and ask, “Really?”…”Are you kidding me?”)  (And looking ahead, Esau is not tossed out of the Middle East.  He prospers and is able to provide for his clan.  Then in Genesis 33, the brothers reconcile and together they bury their father.)  The point is not that God gets what God wants.  After all, why would God have WANTED Jacob to trick Esau into giving up leadership in the family?  It’s just what happened.  Families do strange things sometimes.  Sometimes, in fact, we’re pretty awful to each other.  I’m not sure if that is God’s plan at all.  Maybe grace just always makes it all work out.  Maybe THAT’S the birthright that we’re supposed to claim.

All of these Abrahamic family stories that we are reading in this Lectionary year are probably difficult for us because we do not understand the word “blessing”.  Blessing is not about receiving good things or being showered with lots of stuff or being spared from some random catastrophe (while your next door neighbor’s house gets the roof blown off!).  Blessing is not about what we receive; blessing is about becoming who we’re supposed to be.  Blessing is about God’s grace.

 

  1. What is your response to this passage?
  2. So, which of the twins acted the most reprehensibly?
  3. As with most historical accounts, it is the victor that gets the chance to write history.  This is no different.  How would the story different if it were told from Esau’s perspective?
  4. So what does this passage say to you about God and God’s grace?

 

NEW TESTAMENT:  Romans 8: 1-11

To read the Lectionary Epistle passage, click here

The main theme on the surface of Romans 7 and the first part of Romans 8 is the Jewish Law, the Torah and what it really means to live under God’s law.  And for some scholars, the passage that we read lies at the very heart of this section on the Torah.  In fact, Romans 8 is said to have been Paul’s greatest masterpiece, the epitome of his work.  For us, the passage may almost be TOO familiar.  There have been a multitude of prayers that have been created from it and Bach made it the backbone of a whole cantata.

In verse 5, Paul lays out the two ways of living—two mindsets—of the “flesh” and of the “Spirit”.  For Paul, of the “flesh” is not as humans but rather a perversion of who we should be as humans.  But it is the “way of the Spirit” that brings life.  And since, as followers of Christ, the Spirit of Christ dwells in us, we do have life.  If we live in the “way of the Spirit”, the essence of God will be breathed into us and bring us to life.  That is the way to true freedom.  Here, for Paul, living within the “law”, living within the Spirit, is living within the power of love.

Often the idea of the “mind” is set against the idea of the “Spirit”, as if the two are not compatible existing together.  But here Paul admonishes the reader to “set the mind on the Spirit”.  For Paul, the “body” (GR. soma) is inherently neutral.  It is not “bad”, per se, the way we often try to make it.  But without the Spirit, the essence of Life, breathed into it, it remains neutral and ultimately dies.  The two belong together.  God’s Spirit brings breath and life.

We tend to get wrapped up in those things of the “flesh”—our needs, our desires, our fears.  Paul is not saying that we dispense with them as bad.  Paul is making the claim that God’s Spirit, rather than the law, can breathe new life into them.  There is no sense in fighting to sustain our identity apart and away from God.  It will ultimately die.  Paul has more of a “big picture” understanding than we usually let him have.  He’s saying that the flesh in and of itself is not bad but the Spirit brings it to life.  I don’t think he is drawing a dividing line between darkness and light, between mind and Spirit, between death and life; rather, he is claiming that God’s Spirit has the capability of crossing that line, of bringing the two together, infused by the breath of God.  It is a spirituality that we need, one that embraces all of life.  It is one that embraces the Spirit of Life that is incarnate in this world, even this world.  I mean, really, what good would the notion of a disembodied Spirit really do us?  Isn’t the whole point that life is breathed into the ordinary, even the mundane, so that it becomes holy and sacred, so that it becomes life?

Once again, there is no place that God is not.  God’s Spirit moves in the midst of all of life, in everything that is “us”.  Maybe becoming aware of that is what brings blessing into our life.  Maybe it is that grace that brings us closer to God.

 

  1. What meaning does this passage hold for you?
  2. What, for you, is the Spirit of God in you?
  3. What does that mean for our lives?
  4. What happens when we separate the “mind” and the “Spirit” in our lives?

 

GOSPEL:  Matthew 13: 1-9, 18-23

To read the Lectionary Gospel passage, click here

Episcopal priest Robert Capon calls this parable the “touchstone” of all the other parables.  It is found in all three synoptic Gospels as well as the non-canonical Gospel According to Thomas.  To set the stage, this parable was probably told at a time well into Jesus’ ministry.  The disciples and the other followers had come on board excited and rejuvenated by their new-found faith and their wonderful, loving leader.  They joyfully spread his message of hope to those around them.  But things just weren’t turning out the way that they had originally envisioned.  The response had been meager at best and they felt like they were hitting brick wall after brick wall.  They were tired and some had actually considered quitting altogether.  Jesus probably realized the seriousness of this situation.  Because you know how it works.  Once despair and disappointment begins creeping into a society, it is contagious.

So Jesus got up and went outside the house in an effort to address the largest crowd that he could.  He even got in a boat and paddled just far enough out into the water so that the entire crowd could stand around the shoreline and see him. And then he told them a story.  Now this was not the first time that this crowd had heard a story about seeds.  The sowing of seed was a fairly common image in the Bible and in Jewish literature.  It generally referred to God’s interaction with the world.  And here the sowing of the seed becomes a metaphor for the Word, which is wonderfully and extravagantly showered upon the world.

But this image of the seed being precariously thrown about is probably bothersome to us.  After all, what a waste!  But this story is MEANT to shake us up a bit.  Perhaps the sowing of God’s reign SHOULD be done without reservation because isn’t that, after all, what God has offered us?  So perhaps there is not some specific pre-determined way to sow the seeds of the Kingdom.  Perhaps seeds and their harvest come in all shapes and sizes.   It also makes us realize that there are many factors that affect the harvest.  Some seeds will be immediately snatched away as they fall on ears that refuse to even hear them.  Others will be sown on rocky ground, sprouting with a burst of jubilant enthusiasm and then becoming disheartened and discouraged with faith when life does not turn out the way that they would like.  Then there are the seeds that sprout through the thorns, only to be choked out by the cares and pleasures of this earthly life.  To put this one in a modern context, the cares, riches, and pleasures of life may be jobs, professional advancement, houses, luxury vacations, financial investments, expensive leisure, and perhaps even our religions themselves—those things in our life that get in the way of our relationship with God and spoil the harvest that could be.

The three reasons for failure are not necessarily meant to be the point of this parable though.  They are simply illustrations of the frustrations one must face in order to reap a harvest.  It is true that there will be failures.  Some years everything will wither away in drought.  The Spiritual Life is not about success.  Being an instrument of God’s grace does not guarantee easily-attained rewards.  It doesn’t even promise that we will see the results in this lifetime.

Most of the parables that we read in Scripture have been given sort of arbitrary title that is not Scriptural or even canonical.  They’re just named because that was the title that was in our childhood Bibles above the story.  But this one Jesus actually names.  In verse 18, Jesus, says, “Hear the parable of the sower.”  I think I always read this assuming that Jesus was the sower throwing out the seeds of faith and discipleship.  But Jesus doesn’t say, “Hear the parable of my work” or “Hear the parable of my life”.  God is the sower.  God has sown the seed, the Incarnate Word, the Logos, Jesus Christ, into the very depth of Creation.  With totally reckless abandon and unimaginable grace, God has sown the seed absolutely everywhere—in all conditions of life.  The Word made Flesh, as the writer of the Gospel According to John says it, has been sown into good soil and bad, among rocks and thorns, and it is present in every breeze that we feel.  The entire Creation has been sown.  It has already been done without any participation on our part at all.

The truth is that it’s not about us.  It’s not about our making ourselves “good soil”.  The four types of soil do not depict four types of hearers; rather, they depict the human condition.  Sometimes life includes pain and grief. Sometimes we have to endure rocks and feel like we are not rooted.  Sometimes we live in such a way that we do have things that choke out our joy and our peace, things that cloud our image of who God is and what we are called to be.  And sometimes in the midst of a long and deep drought, we effectively wither and die.

If you read this parable in its context, “bearing fruit” does not mean getting everyone on your side or getting everyone to agree with you.  This is not a call to converting the world.  “Bearing fruit” means living out the Kingdom of God.  It means following the way of Christ, who is present in all aspects of life. “Bearing fruit” means realizing that it’s not about us or the way we think it should be.  God has already sown seeds in each and every one of us.  “Bearing fruit” simply means letting them grow into what God envisions them to be.

The truth is that I don’t think this is a story about our faith.  I think it is the story of God’s faith in us.  It is the story of grace—undeserved, unfettered, unending grace.  It is everywhere that we can imagine and everywhere that we cannot, thrown throughout Creation with reckless abandon and extravagant generosity.  Let anyone with ears listen!  Anyone!  (Not just the “good soil” people as we see them, but ANYONE!) It is this grace that has conquered sin and death and all the perils of life that we may encounter.  It is this grace that has made us all drought-resistant.  We will all wither and die and then when the seasons change, we will bloom forever.

 

  1. What meaning does this passage hold for you?
  2. What changes about this parable when you look at the soil types as facets of the human condition rather than as separate types of people or separate types of hearers?
  3. What image of God does this hold for you?
  4. So what does it mean for you to “bear fruit”?

 

Some Quotes for Further Reflection:

I just want to do God’s will.  And [God’s] allowed me to go up to the mountain.  And I’ve looked over.  And I’ve seen the promised land.  I may not get there with you.  But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land.  And I’m happy, tonight.  I’m not worried about anything.  I’m not fearing [anyone].  Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord. (Martin Luther King, Jr.)

 

Faith isn’t faith until it’s all you’re holding onto.  (Unknown)

 

It’s when we learn faith that happiness comes—real happiness, that underlying descant of the soul that tells us over and over again that what is, in some strange, unexplainable way, is good.  Most of all, faith tells us that what is, is more than good.  It is becoming always better.  In ways we never thought possible.  And how can that be?  Because God’s ways are not our ways.  It is in the depths of darkness that we learn faith; it is in retrospect that we come to recognize love in darkness. (Joan Chittister, “Called to Question”, 213)

 

 

Closing

In the name of the God who creates, sees, and calls each one good;

In the name of the God who knows the dangers of weeds and thorns;

In the name of the God who carries us safely to good soil, now and forever;

In the name of the God who sends us to go forth from this place to blossom and bear fruit. Amen.

Katherine Hawker, 1999, Evangelical UCC, available at http://liturgyoutside.net/APr10.html, accessed 6 July 2011.