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"It doesn’t get any easier..." -- Leviticus 19:1-2, 8-18, Matthew
5:38-48--Feb. 23, 2014

"It doesn’t get any easier..." -- Leviticus 19:1-2, 8-18, Matthew 5:38-48--Feb. 23, 2014

 

For the past several weeks we’ve been reading along in what has come to be known as "the Sermon on the Mount," that collection of sayings and teachings of Jesus that Matthew arranges together and sets it in the context of Jesus’ teaching his disciples "on the top of the mountain."  Luke, as I mentioned last week, gathers up these teachings with his own twist, and sets Jesus’ teaching on a plain; thus, the "sermon on the plain."   Matthew, writing to a mostly Jewish audience, puts Jesus on "the mountain" to remind his community of that other great prophet and lawgiver, Moses, who went up "the mountain" to receive the law from God.

We talk about "the sermon on the mount" rather casually, referring to it as the core of Jesus’ teachings and maybe even claiming to try to live according to it, but as we’ve discovered, one might not be so casual about it if one had actually read it.  Who was it that said that "it’s not that Christianity has been tried and failed, but rather that Christianity has never been tried"?

Indeed, the more we read this "sermon," the more impossible it seems for anyone but Jesus to live that way–not only must we not murder, but we mustn’t get angry...not only must we not commit adultery, we must not experience lust... we must never divorce or swear anything more than yes, yes, or no, no; and here today, we read that we must turn the other cheek when someone strikes us, give even our undergarment to someone who sues us for our coat, walk a second mile with someone who forces us to walk a mile with them, and we are to love and pray for our enemies. Oh yes, and we are to be perfect, as God is perfect. It all sounds perfectly lovely and I’m sure the world would be a better place if we all lived this way, but get real, Jesus!  Who can really live that way?  Are these just the rules for the kingdom of heaven which we’ll experience "in the sweet by and by" because in our world, it would seem that living this way will get you beat up or killed, which, by the way, Jesus, happened to you.

On the left and on the right, the sermon on the mount is dismissed as an impossible, naive way to live. Ayn Rand, the philosopher and author and darling of the Tea Party, writes, "If any civilization is to survive, it is the morality of altruism that men have to reject."  (Cited by David Lose, WorkingPreacher.org, 2/18/14) Karl Marx, the father of socialism, wrote, "The social principles of Christianity preach cowardice, self-contempt, abasement, submissiveness, and humbleness." (Lose, op cit.)  So it would seem, and so according to the rules of "the world," Jesus’ Way of living is foolishness.  Which is why we need to take these teachings seriously enough to wrestle with them, dig deep into them, argue with them and, yes, even try them out, if we are to discover any treasure they might hold for us mere mortals.

"Jesus is ‘at his ornery best here,’" writes one commentator [Jason Byassee, cited by Mark Suriano in Samuel, ucc.org for 2/23/14], "offering ‘advice’ that makes no sense divorced from the nature of the one giving it."  Jesus is speaking to people who, for generations, have experienced the Law as being associated with the powerful and elite, who are guardians of the precise way to follow it, so that it has become little more than a burden and an obligation.  Seen this way, the Law will not lead to any kind of transformational relationship with God, which is what Jesus is about.

I have spoken before about Walter Wink’s brilliant insights into this passage, where he discovered the Biblical roots of non-violence.  It’s a review for some of you, but worth repeating, if only because the alternative–an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth–is rapidly turning ours into an eyeless, toothless world.

Walter wondered why Jesus would have made a point of saying, "If anyone strikes you on the right cheek..."  Did it matter which cheek?  So, after having done some research about hand to hand conflict in that time, he had his students act out the scene.  The only way that you could be struck on the right cheek by someone standing opposite you would have been with the back of the right hand, since the left hand was used only for matters of hygiene and there were even penalties for using it otherwise.  So this was a slap of humiliation or domination, something Jesus’ audience would have been quite familiar with.  To turn the other cheek would have required the hitter to use his right fist, which in turn would have implied a fistfight between peers.

And it clicked [Walter wrote]: Because the action robs the oppressor of the power to humiliate.  The person who turns the other cheek is saying: ‘Try again.  Your first blow failed to achieve its intended effect.  I deny you the power to humiliate me.  I am a human being just like you.  Your status does not alter that fact.  You cannot demean me. [Walter Wink, Just Jesus, pp. 66-7]

Similarly, indebtedness was probably the singlemost social issue in first century Palestine.  So, "if anyone wants to sue you and take your coat," you were most likely a peasant, with little more than the clothes on your back.  The outer garment or coat would have been the only thing you could put up for collateral, but the law said it had to be returned by nightfall, since it was a poor person’s only protection against the cold.  "Give your cloak as well," Jesus said, which at first seems ridiculous.  The "cloak" was actually the undergarment, the only other piece of clothing a poor person had, and so following Jesus’ advice would leave them naked.

Put yourself in the debtor’s place

[Walter writes] and imagine the guffaws this saying must have evoked.  There stands the creditor, beet-red with embarrassment, your outer garment in one hand and your underwear in the other.  You have suddenly turned the tables on him.  You had no hope of winning the trial; the law was entirely in his favor.  But you have refused to be humiliated [there was no shame in nakedness, only looking upon nakedness], and at the same time you have registered a stunning protest against a system that spawns such debt.  The creditor is revealed not to be a ‘respectable’ moneylender but to be a party in the reduction of an entire social class to landlessness and destitution...This message, far from being a counsel of perfection unattainable in this life, is a practical, strategic measure for empowering the oppressed. [Wink, op cit., p. 79]

Likewise, the saying about going the second mile with the one who has forced you to walk a mile, referred to the practice of Roman soldiers enlisting a local person to carry his heavy pack for one mile.  There were actually strict rules about not going any further, to keep the locals from becoming too outraged, so by generously offering to carry the soldier’s pack another mile, you would not only catch the soldier off guard but might even force him to beg you to give his pack back, again, demonstrating your humanity and refusal to be humiliated.

This way of regarding the Law requires more of ourselves and the community supporting us.  This is not simply an eye for an eye justice, which does have its own balance and fairness.  This way of looking at the Law appeals to more than our primitive, reptilian brains, which lash out and demand revenge.  This way goes deeper, to restorative justice, appealing to the higher function of Love which includes Justice and reconciliation, bringing both offender and the one offended into a new relationship and both, ultimately, into a transformative relationship with God. The rules of the world are not interested in that, but Jesus is beginning the revolution here to call those rules into question, proclaiming that we are created not just for so-called "justice"–an eye for an eye–but also for Love and Life.  Indeed, that is our only hope.

The word Jesus uses for "perfect" here–"Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect" is telos – which means complete, mature, what your purpose is, what you are created for.  Your true being, your essence, he is saying, is love and life, which is served neither by simply acquiescing to humiliation and injustice or by becoming the evil and violence that has hurt you.

A.J. Jacobs, a writer for Esquire magazine, decided to take on the project of "living Biblically for one year."  He had grown up non-religiously–"I was Jewish the way Olive Garden is Italian," he said–and he was concerned about rising fundamentalism. He wanted to find out what the appeal was. So he made a list of all the rules in the Bible–more than 700, by his count–and set out to follow as many of them as he could for one year.  He found it to be both challenging and life-changing.  At the end of the year, he came up with 6 lessons he had learned–

1. Thou shalt not take the Bible literally. It’s impossible he said and talked about the ridiculous measures he had to go to observe of the rules.  He spoke with extremely intelligent creationists who had to go through the most amazing mental gymnastics to take everything literally.

2. Thou shalt give thanks.  I’ve learned this through positive psychology.  It’s amazing the number of the things that go right in a day, Jacobs said, compared to the few things that go wrong.  Giving thanks makes a difference in how you experience your life.

3. Thou shalt have reverence.  Even though he considered–and still considers–himself an agnostic, there is something beautiful about sacredness, Jacobs says, something beautiful about taking time for sabbath, whether or not there is a God.

4.  Thou shalt not stereotype.  He spent time with various religious groups, including Mormons, evangelicals, Quakers, all sorts of folks.  He said he discovered that evangelicalism is much wider than he had thought, including those who call themselves "red letter Christians" who point out that Jesus had absolutely nothing to say about homosexuality and a whole lot to say about caring for the outcasts.  He said he was even able to out-talk the Jehovah’s Witnesses, who after 3 or 4 hours finally said they had to go.

5. Thou shalt not disregard the irrational.  Religious rituals may be irrational, he said, but so are many of the things we do non-religiously–like blowing out candles on a birthday cake.  Don’t disregard mystery.

And finally, Jacobs concluded after a year of living biblically, Thou shalt pick and choose.  Choose the right parts, the parts about compassion and tolerance, rather than the parts about violence and intolerance, all of which are in the bible.

Perhaps most importantly, "My behavior changed my mind," Jacobs concluded.  Living this way changed the way I experienced the world.  What if we actually tried living the Sermon on the Mount for a week?  For the season of Lent?  What if we worked at being mindful of our thoughts and intentions, our anger, our desires, our grudges?  What if we engaged those who had wronged us not by "getting even" but by finding ways to appeal to their intrinsic humanity and transforming both their and our actions into a different relationship?  What if we prayed for the jihadists and terrorists, not just that they might be struck down, though perhaps thwarted in their attempts at violence, but rather to understand their deepest longings, their love and passion for God and their families?  It probably won’t change them–though it might–but it will most probably change us.

"We could pray vehemently [in worship] for the passing of the old order," one commentator suggests, "and quietly live our lives the rest of the week, or we could pray vehemently for the passing of the old order and plant the seeds of the new by the living of our lives the rest of the week as Jesus preaches in the gospel today." [Mark Suriano, op cit.] As one who put into practice these teachings of Jesus, Martin Luther King Jr. concluded, "Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that.  Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that."  The Sermon on the Mount is full of that kind of light and love.  We are all too familiar with the shadows and hate.  Let’s give Light and Love a try.  Amen.

 

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 
test for announcements

test for announcements

Highlighted Events and News:

  • 5pm Sunday Supper – every Sunday! This supper is open to the community

  • The office will be closed on Monday, February 17th and Tuesday, February 18th.

  • Wednesday, February 19th at 4:30-6pm Habitat Meeting in Room 6 regarding Southshire Pownal Build.

  • Meditation/contemplation and conversation meet on Thursdays in Room 2 at 10:30am.

  • All Church Fellowship would like to encourage folks to sign up to host Sunday Fellowship.

  • Per Capita envelopes went out in the Open Door this week. Please consider covering the cost the church pays for our adult members. Where else can you be a member of such a wonderful group for $12.50 a year.


School Bags for Church World Service

  • It is time to begin sewing school bags for Church World Service. We have many bags precut and ready to be put together. The precut bags will be available on Sundays in the social hall or ask Trudy Durfee or me to find you some to do. They are fairly easy to do. Thanks Pat Lafontaine.

  • CWS Baby Kits: There is plenty of yarn and patterns for you to take and try your hand at knitting a small sweater or blanket. If anyone would like help with a pattern, Fran Broomhall or Sue DeLucia will be happy to help you.


Looking Ahead:

  • Saturday, February 22nd Food Swap in Webster Hall at 6-8pm.

  • First meeting of the Administrative Council is Tuesday, February 25th at 7pm in the Clayton Room


Planning Ahead:

The following is a list of things to have on hand in case of a storm emergency:

  • Water (1 gal/person/day),

  • Food (non-perishable and easy to prepare and/eat–don’t forget a can-opener),

  • Flashlight and extra batteries, Battery-powered or hand crank radio,

  • First-aid kit that includes a pain reliever,

  • Sanitation and personal hygiene items (toothbrush, toothpaste, anti-bacterial hand-sanitizer),

  • Copies of important personal documents,

  • Family and emergency contacts (written down, not just in your cell phone),

  • Blankets. Additional items depending on your family situation: extra doses of medications, diapers/baby food, games for children, pet food/medication, etc.

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"The glory of God is the human being fully alive!"


Whoever you are and wherever you are on life's journey, YOU are invited to join us on the journey at Second Congregational – a church for young and old and in-between. A progressive church, with opportunities for questioning and seeking, musical and mission-minded, we were Vermont's first “Open and Affirming” congregation and welcome - into the worship, fellowship, membership, and full life of our church - all persons of faith and those seeking faith, regardless of race, social or economic status, physical abilities or sexual orientation.
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Lent and EAARTH

Lent and EAARTH

Lent and EAARTH (1)

There are a number of ways to live Lent. One is to suffer a bit, to take on an extra burden or to give something up to emulate Christ's taking up the cross and giving up his life. Another is to spend the time feeling guilty because you have not always been the fully alive human that God would have had you be. A third is to acknowledge all the great blessings God has provided, including this wondrous planet, and actually do something, however small, to mitigate the dreadful damage being done to it; damage that has already changed it from the earth past generations knew to a new one symbolized by a change in spelling to eaarth. Doing such things is not only a mitzvah (good deed) to the environment but to another great blessing we have, the children around us now and children yet to come.

Jesus did not take up the cross because he felt he needed to suffer, but because he was called to it for a higher purpose. Acknowledging shortcomings is important but it is only healing if it leads to effort to overcome them. Each of the first two ways to live Lent mentioned above is fuller life only if it has a greater purpose than voluntary suffering. The Eaarth Advocates group will be offering a number of suggestions of different ways we can all “do something” this Lent. Suggestions will be keyed to the environmental challenge area Mary will focus on in her sermons during Lent.

(1) http://www.billmckibben.com/eaarth/eaarthbook.html
Our Congregation's Responses to questions about the Earth's Environmen

Our Congregation's Responses to questions about the Earth's Environmen

Our Congregation's Responses to questions about the Earth's Environment:

Questions were posed and responses invited on posters in Webster Hall. |Environmental awareness and activities will be a focus for 2CC during Lent 2014.

What are your concerns about the world's environment?

- loss of species due to global warming
- loss of habitat
- loss of wild scenic places
- changes in weather patterns
- pollution of air, water, land
- the effect of acid rain on the environment and historic man-made places
- garbage in the oceans and washing up on shore
- medication-resistant organisms






What do we need?

- sustainable farming to help avoid loss of affordable food available to all. There is enough for all if we learn to conserve and share.
- make better use of what we have
- clean drinking water for everyone

What are you doing to help care for the earth's environment?

- recycling, re-using, reducing
- composting
- growing a garden for human edibles and of flowers to attract and feed honeybees
- using a mulching lawnmower
- reusable shopping bags
- traded in truck for Prius plug-in
- opening windows instead of using air conditioning
- insulating our home properly
- avoiding bottled water (to reduce waste plastic)
- having fewer garbage cans (to reduce number of garbage bags used)
- using LED bulbs instead of incandescent or fluorescent
- sweeping instead of vacuuming
- combining errands to use less gas
"If you don't preach about climate change every 3-4 weeks,”

"If you don't preach about climate change every 3-4 weeks,”

"If you don't preach about climate change every 3-4 weeks,” I read in one of my preaching journals, “the time will come soon when you'll have to preach about grief every week.” Wow. Overly dramatic? I don't know, but it sure got my attention.

Many environmentalists say we're already past the tipping point where we're entering uncharted territory with our atmosphere and the effects it will have on climate change. Others find that too alarmist and say there are things we still can do to reverse some of the changes. The thing beyond dispute is that we as people of faith must absolutely consider our care and stewardship of the planet as a spiritual discipline to which we are called. And the vows that we as a community make to the children who are baptized in our midst must include the vow to live in such a way that they and their children might grow up in a world full of beauty and wonder, able to support and sustain life that is diverse and sufficient for the health and dignity of all its creatures.

As you can read elsewhere in this issue, there is a group of folks in our church family who feel passionate about our need to respond to the growing evidence of climate change. They have proposed that during Lent – the traditional season of taking on practices that will help us in our spiritual journey -- we focus on those practices that will also develop our spiritual disciplines of earth care. From small, individual practices to the more demanding life changes, needing the support of a community, we will explore how we might more faithfully “tend the garden'' to which God has entrusted us.

Lent begins this year on Ash Wednesday, March 5, with Easter almost as late as it can get -- April 20. 1 Invite you to give some thought ahead of time as to how you will observe this holy season, what passion or heartbreak or hope you will allow to inspire and guide your journey and what disciplines or practices will aid you along the way.

Know that you do not journey alone!

Grace and peace,
Mary
"You have heard it said..."-- Deut. 30:15-20, Matthew 5:21-37--Feb. 16,
2014

"You have heard it said..."-- Deut. 30:15-20, Matthew 5:21-37--Feb. 16, 2014

 

Jesus started off so gently–"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.  Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted..."    The writer of Matthew’s gospel arranges these teachings of Jesus into a sermon, beginning with what we call "the beatitudes," or blessings.  All those gathered around Jesus could hear him speaking directly to them–"Blessed are [you] the meek, for they shall inherit the earth...Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all sorts of evil against you falsely on my account..."  "You are the salt of the earth...you are the light of the world..."

But then he gets into the crazy talk–"You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, ‘You shall not murder’‘ and ‘whoever murders shall be liable to judgment.’  But I say to you that if you are angry with a brother or sister, you will be liable to judgment; and if you insult a brother or sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, ‘You fool,’ you will be liable to the hell of fire.’"   OK, now Jesus is talking directly to me.  Really, Jesus?  I can’t even be angry?

He’s far from finished.  "You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust has already committed adultery with her in his heart.  If your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away; it is better for you to lose one of your members than for your whole body to be thrown into hell.  And if you right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away; it is better for you to lose one of your members than for your whole body to go into hell."  Really, Jesus?  If we’re so convinced we’re a "Christian nation," it seems to me there ought to be a whole lot of spare body parts piled up around here.

"It was also said, ‘Whoever divorces his wife, let him give her a certificate of divorce.’ But I say to you that anyone who divorces his wife, except on the ground of unchastity, causes her to commit adultery; and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery."  Even though this is clearly directed at men, it still makes me incredibly uncomfortable.  How many marriages have come to a place where they are no longer life-giving, in fact, where Death and destruction have already essentially parted the two people?  No divorce, Jesus?

And finally–for today!–"Again, you have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, ‘You shall not swear falsely, but carry out the vows you have made to the Lord.’  But I say to you, Do not swear at all...Let your word be ‘Yes, Yes’ or ‘No, No’; anything more than this comes from the evil one."  Wow.  Is our language really that important?  It seems like every other conversation I overhear on the street uses the "f-word" for every part of speech imaginable.  No swearing, Jesus?

On one level, this all just seems to reinforce the stereotypical image of God as the stern judge looking down upon us, making sure that nobody’s having too much fun.  And in fact, these are not wimpy texts.  They show us, as one writer put it, that loving God is costly love [Sharron Blezard, Stewardship of Life, 2/6/11] .

Beyond that, though, what these texts tell us is that our "relationships matter to God" [David Lose, Working Preacher, 2/11/14] .  God is not some Unmoved Mover who is detached from the day to day interactions of human beings.  In fact, it would appear that God would rather we did the work of reconciling our relationships rather than come to worship – "so when you are offering your gift at the altar, if you remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother or sister, and then come and offer your gift."  Imagine if, before the offering, we were to pause so that everyone who had a complaint or grudge or misunderstanding with another member of the community could go and clear things up!

Episcopal priest Suzanne Guthrie writes, "Jesus brushes past the surface stuff (murder, adultery) to get to the tendrils of evil rooting within the heart.  It isn’t enough just to refrain from killing or from infidelity but to uncover the anger and lustful impulses that form into thoughts, desires, and then deeds.  Purity of heart is called for."  (Edge of the Enclosure, Epiph. 6A)   And she recalls what an impact reading the Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh’s book, Peace Is Every Step, made upon her.

There is a term in Buddhist psychology that gets translated as "internal formations," or "fetters," or "knots".   These formations or fetters or knots may get tied up within us when we don’t understand the cause of someone’s anger or hostility, when we allow someone or something to "get to us."   This doesn’t mean that that person shouldn’t take responsibility or even be disciplined for their actions, but when we are not tied up in knots, our response will at least be coming from a place of compassion and understanding, rather than anger and retribution.

[I find it interesting that the Aramaic word which Jesus uses in the Lord’s Prayer– "forgive us our trespasses or sins" also has the meaning of "tangles or knots."  "Untangle the knots within so that we can mend our hearts’ simple ties to each other," is the way one scholar translates that phrase from the Aramaic (Neil Douglas-Klotz, Prayers of the Cosmos).   ]

"Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets," Jesus said just before today’s reading. "I have come not to abolish but to fulfill."  He does not really "brush away" murder, adultery, divorce, or swearing oaths, but he does broaden the law and uses hyperbole or exaggeration to heighten the importance of our relationships, how we treat one another in community.

In a small, relatively endangered community like Israel, like Jesus’ community, the consequences of murder are devastatingly obvious.  In that same community, bound by codes of honor and shame, and where a man’s wife was considered his property, adultery was less a crime of passion and more an attempt to shame another man.  It was also disruptive to the community where the ideal mate was one’s first cousin.  Divorce customs, where a man could simply write a certificate of divorce for his wife, made women objects of property and left them without shelter or resources.  And oaths were most often given in the context of selling–I swear this is good, or where it came from, that sort of thing.  So oaths implied that one might not be honest and so needed to swear.  A small group depending on its members for survival will quickly disintegrate if honesty and truthfulness do not underlie all their dealings with one another.

So this, Jesus was saying, is the distinctive character of life in God’s new age. We don’t live in the same small, endangered community, but if we seek to live in God’s new age, the guidelines are the same.  Our thoughts and intentions matter, as they give rise to our desires and deeds.  Be mindful of them, pay attention to your anger, to your lust.  Every day you must make the decision to stay married, if you are married, for it happens all too often that one day we discover that we have lost touch with our commitment to that one we had pledged our life to.  We have let a wall of resentments, grudges, hurts, and apathy grow up between us.  Other life commitments seem more appealing.  Our relationships matter to God.  Studies show that the number one factor in determining well-being is not health or wealth or possessions but the quality of our close relationships.  They matter.  They’re worth our attention and care.

So, you might think of one relationship that is good and important to you.  Think about why it is good and why it is important.  Give thanks to God for this person and be sure to express your gratitude to that person.  Think also of a relationship that is wounded or broken.  Without blame, hold that relationship in prayer, invite God into that relationship, and see how you might untie some of those knots that have tangled you up.

"You have heard that it was said, .... but I say to you."  Jesus deepens and expands the law given to sustain and enrich the community, woven together in relationship with God.   It is not the law that earns us relationship with God; God’s Love guarantees that.  But live into more deeply and fully into that Love, Jesus says.

Sometimes the old wisdom needs to be set free.  Listen to part of this performance poem by Christopher Burkett, based on the form Jesus used.

You have heard it was said
Charity begins at home
Your care
confined by what you know.
But I say to you
love is not bound,
it stretches your will,
enlarging your soul,
confounding constraint

and making you bleed.
For if you care alone for those near,
what have you learnt
but to subsist?

You have heard it was said
You can’t teach an old dog new tricks
Your learning of life dulled by your age.
But I say to you
the tree grows until its dying day,
living is learning,
experience and the new knocking on each other,
making discipleship true.
For if you know only yesterday’s answer,
where will you meet
the risen Christ anew?
...

You have heard it was said
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it
Your imagination held tight by what is.
But I say to you
a better way there may be
sight isn’t vision,
what’s comfortable can be a sham,
how things are
excludes too much.
For if you let what is, be all
where do you see
the Kingdom’s changing call?

...

You have heard it was said
Blood is thicker than water
Ties of birth determine who’s kin.
But I say to you
kin is belonging
that’s given by God,
ties that bind
are as wide as
sovereign grace.
For if you make your clan sole affinity
where then is God’s plan
for inclusion that heals?
...

You have heard it was said
Children should be seen and not heard
For they have yet to earn a place in the world.
But I say to you
now is the time
to live and respect,
not tomorrow and not yet,
joy is for now
it’s not an adult’s sole inheritance.
For if you deny the children voiceshow may you know
the things that you’ve lost?

...

Here is the notion,
Here is the action
In the realm where grace is all:
Not commonplace, not easy,
Not ‘as was said.’
Nor what’s agreeable,
Just the enigma of a God
With an earthly frame
Calling us on --
Not to abolish but to fulfil
And to seek in all things
The Divine will.

["You Have Heard It Said," a performance poem by Christopher Burkett, PreacherRhetorica, 2014.]

May we live into all that God intends and is creating even now.  So may we live in God’s

kingdom on earth.    Amen, and amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 
“God-Colors and -Flavors” -- Isaiah 58:1-9, Matthew 5:13-20 -- Feb. 9,
2014

“God-Colors and -Flavors” -- Isaiah 58:1-9, Matthew 5:13-20 -- Feb. 9, 2014

In what seems to be our typical fashion, we have taken too much of a good thing and made it too much.  We have taken salt–a natural flavoring and preservative and component of our bodies–and put tons of it in our food, especially our processed food, so that millions of us now have to avoid salt.  It raises our blood pressure, causes us to retain fluid, opens up our taste buds so spices are enhanced but also whets our appetites for more salty foods.  Too much of a good thing.

Salt has been a part of human life for as long as we’ve been around.  Not only is it a component of our bodies, as I said, but some even say it allowed for human civilization.  It was a seasoning and a preservative.  It was a commodity–our word “salary” comes from the root word for “salt.”  It was used in rituals, “used to seal covenants, sprinkled on sacrifices, and understood as a metaphor for wisdom.”  (Kate Huey, Weekly Seeds, 2/9/14) In the Orthodox Church today, newborns are rubbed with salt along with the blessing, “May you be preserved for eternal life.”  (Nancy Rockwell, Bite in the Apple, 2/9/14)

“You are the salt of the earth,” Jesus told his disciples, the ones upon whom he had just delivered the blessings, or beatitudes–the poor in spirit, the meek, those who mourn, the peacemakers, the merciful, those reviled and persecuted for righteousness’ sake– you are the salt of the earth.  When we say that about someone– she’s the salt of the earth, or he’s the salt of the earth– we mean that person is deeply good, dependable, nothing fancy or showy about them, but someone you want to have around and can count on.  “You are the salt of the earth.”

Peterson puts it this way–
“Let me tell you why you are here.  You’re here to be salt-seasoning that brings out the God-flavors of this earth.  If you lose your saltiness, how will people taste godliness?  You’ve lost your usefulness and will end up in the garbage.  Here’s another way to put it [Jesus said]: You’re  here to be light, bringing out the God-colors in the world. [You are the light of the world.] God is not a secret to be kept.  We’re going public with this, as public as a city on a hill.  If I make you light-bearers, you don’t think I’m going to hide you under a bucket, do you?  I’m putting you on a light stand.  Now that I’ve put you there on a hilltop, on a light stand–shine!  Keep open house; be generous with your lives.  By opening up to others, you’ll prompt people to open up with God...”    [Eugene Peterson, The Message]

You are salt and light, Jesus says to his disciples. That’s who you are, but when you aren’t who you really are–when you try to be someone or something else–you lose your purpose for being here.  Are we–21st century disciples–are we still salt and light?  Do we bring out the God-flavors and God-colors in the world?  And in a world that suffers from salt overkill and 24-7 artificial light, what does it mean to be salt and light in a good way, in a life-giving way?

Preaching professor Tom Long puts the problem for the church this way–
The church, for all of its vision, is overpowered, outnumbered, and often overlooked; the challenge is indeed formidable for a small group trying with mixed results to live out an alternative life, set down in the midst of a teeming, fast-changing culture that neither appreciates nor understands them...The hardest part is not in being Christ for a day, but being faithful day after day, maintaining confidence in what, for all the world, appears to be a losing cause. (Cited in Huey, op cit.)

You are the salt of the earth...the light of the world.  This is who we are and what we are called to do.  But this is not about institutional survival.  This identity and this call is much larger than that.

In Jesus’ time, “each village had a common [clay] oven,” explains Biblical scholar John Pilch.  The common fuel for the oven was something more plentiful than wood: camel or donkey
dung.  One of the duties each young girl had to learn was to collect the dung, mix salt in it, and mold it into patties to be left in the sun to dry. [This is still a common fuel source in the Middle East and many 3rd world countries.] A slab of salt was placed at the base of the oven and upon it the salted dung patty.  Salt has catalytic properties which cause the dung to burn.  Eventually the salt slab loses its catalytic ability and becomes useless.  Or as Jesus says, ‘It is good for nothing but to be thrown outside where it can still provide sure footing in a muddy road [or, trampled underfoot].  (Pilch, The Cultural World of Jesus, Year A, p. 31)

“You are the salt of the earth.”  In Hebrew and Aramaic, the language of Jesus, the same word is used for “earth” and “clay oven.”  “You are the salt of the clay oven.”  You are what causes the fire to burn, that allows the food to be cooked, to feed the people, to make life possible.  You are the catalyst for ignition.  Do we think of ourselves this way?  Do we even want to?  What fires have you or we set lately?  What might that even look like?–demanding more resources for the neediest among us and giving sacrificially of our own resources?  Inviting a methadone clinic or a halfway house for ex-prisoners to use our building or our property? I’m just brainstorming here, thinking of “incendiary” options–I’m sure we could come up with a few others.  But my guess is, most of us would rather not get burned that way.  We all appreciate a good stepping stone during mud season, so maybe there’s value in being used that way.  “You are the salt of the earth.”  Who knew that Jesus could be such a trouble-maker?

You’re here to be light, he also said, bringing out the God-colors in the world.  God is not a secret to be kept.  But most of the time, we do, don’t we?  Keep God a secret?  Once again in yesterday’s paper, we were reminded that Vermont is the #1 least religious state in the union.  Sshh...be very quiet...we don’t want to bother anyone...don’t want to challenge anyone else’s business of the idols they worship, whether they call them idols or not, but whatever they devote their time, talent, money, and energies to, wherever they look for confirmation of their worth.  Even if it’s killing them, even it leaves them in despair and debt, we don’t want to intrude or shine a light on an alternative way to be. We don’t want to appear “too religious.”

“We’re going public with this,” Jesus says in Peterson’s version.  “Now that I’ve put you there on a hilltop–or a hillside–on a light stand–shine!  Keep open house; be generous with your lives.  By opening up to others, you’ll prompt people to open up with God....”

We do keep open house, by and large, which has risks of its own.  Items disappear from our walls and our cupboards.  But there is no such thing as risk-free Christianity.  How might we go even more public?  Some have urged us to broadcast our worship services on CAT-TV, to “go public” that way.  We’ve got t-shirts, bumper stickers.  So many members of this church family are “generous with your lives.”  But let us continue to think about ways that each of us might bring out the God-colors, be windows of God’s light, in the world–epiphany moments in ourselves–prompting others to open up to and with God.

These are dynamic, ever-changing metaphors, not static, etched in stone commands.  We are salt and light.  How we are to live out that identity is an ever-changing, fluid challenge.  But it is clear that simply going through the motions of the old ways–of fasting for the sake of quarrelling and humbling ourselves for the sake of being noticed, as Isaiah accused Israel–going through the “religious” motions is worse than useless.  “Such fasting as you do today will not make your voice heard on high,” Isaiah says.

Is not this the fast that I choose [God asks]: to loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke?  Is it not to share your bread with the hungry, and bring the homeless poor into your house; when you see the naked, to cover them, and not to hide yourself from your own kin?  Then your light shall break forth like the dawn, and your healing shall spring up quickly...

We’re not just talking about making the world a little tastier or a little prettier, although living with all our senses is part of being “fully alive,” which, as Irenaeus said, “is the glory of God.”  But just as salt and light are essential for life, so is our witness to the good news of God’s reign essential to life on earth.  Day after day, the news is relentless about the devastating effects of not living in God’s Way.  Look at what living without it results in–without a reverence and faithful stewardship of the earth and its creatures, the earth is poisoned, depleted, warmed, and destroyed; without a sense of connection and oneness with all our neighbors, all our brothers and sisters, wars and violence ravage the planet; without a sense of justice and righteousness, the systems and structures within we live continue to keep people oppressed, held captive in poverty, despair, hopelessness, ignorance; without compassion and a willingness to suffer and sacrifice, human beings are discarded and used as objects, suffering needlessly and in isolation; without a sense of the Reality of Love that is at the heart of the universe and our very lives, people feel worthless, seek meaning and escape in substances, habits, and enterprises that are ultimately unsatisfactory and destructive.

You are salt and light.  That is who we are.  All around us are God-flavors and God-colors waiting to be brought out, revealed, enjoyed, shared.  And all around us, the fires of justice and healing and hope are waiting to be ignited.  “One enkindled soul can set hundreds on fire,” a wise man once pointed out (William Danforth).  Let the fire begin with us.

Amen, and amen.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark
"Super Blessing"--Micah 6:1-8, Matthew 5:1-12--February 2, 2014

"Super Blessing"--Micah 6:1-8, Matthew 5:1-12--February 2, 2014

Not only is the clash in this evening’s Super Bowl between the Seattle Seahawks and the Denver Broncos; there also couldn’t be a more clear clash of values between the Super Bowl and the Beatitudes, which happen to be the reading from Matthew’s gospel this morning.

Consider this: I read that the average ticket price at today’s game in the Meadowlands is $4,084.  The average weekly salary in the U.S. is $831.  The current going rate for a level 3 suite @ the Metlife Stadium is $800,270.  The average cost of a new home in the U.S. is $340,300.  Last year, an estimated 3.9 million people bought new furniture for Super Bowl parties.  Over 3.5 million people experienced homelessness.   A 30-sec. Ad spot for the Super Bowl goes for an average of $4 million, for a total ad revenue of $300 million. $300 million could educate 272,727 kids for a year.  As one commentator wrote, "Enjoy the Super Bowl.  Be suspicious of its values."  (Matthew Skinner, Odyssey Networks, 2/2/14)

"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.

Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.

Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.

Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.

Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.

Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account.  Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you."

This sounds more like the Super Bowl of Losers.  "Christianity for Dummies," somebody has called these beatitudes, after the series of books that "make intimidating subjects approachable." (David Sellery, This Week’s Focus, Epiphany, Year A)   And, I don’t know about you, but there are times when I’m trying to live out this way laid out for Jesus, that I feel like a loser or a dummy.  I remember reflecting on a situation I’d been in when I said to myself (I thought): "I feel like a chump."  And then the words came to me, "Yes, but you’re my chump."

 

Blessed are all these people, Jesus said, and yet we can hardly imagine a less blessed group of people–the poor (as Luke has it) or poor in spirit?  Those who mourn?  The meek? Those who are persecuted and reviled?  In our Super Bowl culture, these are the least blessed.  The word translated as "blessed" here is the Greek word makarios, which means blessed, or happy, as our pew Bibles translate it.  The Rev. Robert Schuller famously called these the "Be Happy Attitudes."  To be blessed means to be "fortunate," or "well-off."  Another source says it also means to have special favor, unique standing, empowerment, endowmentThat’s what it means, maybe, but what does being "blessed" feel like?

Lutheran preacher David Lose suggests, "To be blessed feels like you have someone’s unconditional regard...like you are not and will not be alone...like you will be accompanied wherever you go... Being blessed feels like you have the capacity to rise above the present circumstances, like you are more than the sum of your parts or past experiences.  Being blessed feels like you have worth–not because of something you did or might do, but simply because of who you are..."  (Working Preacher, 1/26/14)

Another writer defines "beatitude" as an "enduring, existential state of serenity found only in harmony with the will of God."  (David Sellery, This Week’s Focus, Epiph. Yr. A) Being blessed then isn’t the adrenaline rush of a victory lap.  It doesn’t necessarily produce celebrity or adulation.  In a culture of honor and shame, Jesus offered blessing.  Someone has suggested that we live in a culture of affirmation and blame[Lose, op cit.] , of empty praise in service of "self-esteem," or of blame–it’s always someone else’s fault, as the current state of our politics demonstrates.  These beatitudes of Jesus come to those considered least blessed by our culture, and they may be the ones most open to the blessing.  There is nothing we can do to be blessed like this.  Blessing is sheer gift and grace.

Several years ago, Fred Rogers, the Presbyterian minister known to most of us as "Mr. Rogers," was invited to Hollywood to receive a special Emmy honoring his lifetime of work.

When Fred Rogers stood up to speak, he said that he knew the room was filled with so many stars and celebrities

, men and women who had achieved much. [people whom our culture would consider "blessed."] Rogers then took out a pocket watch and announced that he was going to keep thirty seconds of silence, and he invited everybody in the room to remember people in their past–parents, teachers, coaches, friends, and others–who had helped them along the way, who had paid the price for their success, who had made them into the people they were today.  It was a call to a particular testimony of steadfast love. And then Mister Rogers stood there looking at his watch and saying nothing.  The room grew quiet as the seconds ticked away, and before Fred Rogers tucked away his watch, one could hear all around the room people sniffling as they were moved by the memories of those who had made sacrifices on their behalf and who had given each of them many gifts. [ that is, all the people who had blessed them]. [cited by Mark Ramsey in Journal for Preachers, Lent 2014, p. 36]

Blessed are the poor in spirit, those who mourn, the meek, the merciful, the pure in heart, the peacemakers, those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, those who are persecuted for Christ’s sake, who are reviled falsely.

"The Beatitudes draw our hearts out of themselves into a new way of understanding our lives," writes Brendan Freeman, a Trappist monk from Iowa.  "They are deliberately incomplete [he says.  Who are these people?  The poor in spirit...the meek...the pure in heart...those who hunger and thirst for righteousness...? and when do they receive the blessing?].  They await the inclusion of our lives.  Each person fills in the blank space with the details of his or her own life situation." (Cited by Patricia Farris, Christian Century, 1/26/05) Where do we fit into these verses?  Do we even want to fit in, other than feeling blessed?  Who of us wants to mourn or to be poor, in spirit or otherwise?  Who of us wants to be persecuted or reviled?  This is not necessarily a call to seek out persecution or pain or sorrow, but it does assure us that when we find ourselves in these situations, and when we are in relationship to people who are in these situations, that the steadfast love of God will be with us, and we will experience that blessing, if we are able to be open to it.

"What of us," asks Bruce’s and my seminary classmate the Rev. Patricia Farris, "What of us, we who would be disciples of Jesus Christ and servants of the kingdom in this time of war and violence, of hunger and homelessness and greed, of death in war abroad and in our streets at home?...What gestures are we to make now to accompany these words?  What commitments?  What risks?  What dreams?"

She turns to a prayer of the late William Sloan Coffin for answer–

Because we love the world, we pray now, O [God], for grace to quarrel with it, O thou whose lover’s quarrel with the world is the history of the world...Lord, grant us grace to quarrel with the worship of success and power...to quarrel with all that profanes and trivializes [people] and separates them...Number us, we beseech Thee, in the ranks of those who went forth from this place longing only for those things for which Thou dost make us long, ‘those  for whom the complexity of the issues only served to renew their zeal to deal with them, [those] who alleviated pain by sharing it, and [those] who were always willing to risk something big for something good...O God, take our minds and think through them, take our lips and speak through them.  Take our hearts and set them on fire.

[Farris, op cit.]

 

May this be our prayer as we come to the table, as lovers of the world and yet who are engaged in a lover’s quarrel with the world.  May this be our prayer as we come to the table to share the Bread of Life and the Cup of Blessing.  And so may we be blessed.

 

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 

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