4
Pentecost Cycle B Proper 7 June 24, 2012
Job
38:1-11 Psalm 107:1-3, 23-32
2
Corinthians 6:1-13 Mark 4:35-41
One of the chief tasks in the art of living
is learning how to deal with the human phenomenon of fear. We are reminded of FDR’s famous words in his
first Inaugural Address, “we have nothing to fear, except fear itself.” Wisdom in life requires that we have a right
relationship with fear and the energy that drives fear in our lives. Fear need not be something entirely bad; it
can actually be human respect based upon a rational and scientific
understanding of probabilities. We need
not fear all snakes while at the same time we don’t encourage our babies to
play with rattle snakes in the desert.
Knowledge of probability in conflicting events of different life forms
is based upon a respectful fear. People
who build homes on the ocean front in areas visited by hurricanes and tropical
storms know about the potential conflict based upon the strength of the storm
and the structural limits of the material of their homes; they still decide to
buy and build on the waterfront and are willing to gamble the probability of
their home being destroyed for the grandeur of the view. Our knowledge of probability requires us to
constantly transact with the possibility of fearful interactions with forces
that might threaten our temporary or permanent well-being.
There
are all kinds of experiences with fear; some are paralyzing to the point of
being designated as “phobias.” A phobia
occurs when a possible particular occurrence becomes generalized or
universalized by an individual to become treated as a likely particular
occurrence. The fact that snakes do
bite does not mean that because I know that snakes are in the county or on the
block means that a snake is probably going to bite me. How do we learn to co-exist with every
possible bad outcome in our actual lives without being fearful? How do we take the power out of a possible
bad event in influencing how we act and live in our lives now? We know the proximity in time to an actual
bad event, does influence our lives in significant ways. When I experienced a cat burglar at the foot
of my bed at 2 a.m. in the morning, it affected my ability to sleep for several
months. That it had happened and the
thought that it could happen again suddenly began to affect my ability to
sleep.
So, how do we live with the knowledge of
actuarial negative possibilities without it affecting the quality of our lives
or becoming gleeful insurance sales people?
How is it that Jesus was able to sleep in a
boat on a stormy sea while the disciple fisherman were fearful? Could it be that Jesus already knew what was
the afterlife of death and so he could sleep with an unworried mind?
I remember in my travels seeing street people
sleep on crowded city streets with seemingly no fear at all. How could they sleep without fear? I thought perhaps, that they slept easily
because they had nothing to lose. They
had nothing of worth to be stolen from them.
They were unfettered with any sort of baggage to make them anxious for
their lives and so they slept like babies on some very crowded sidewalks.
How many times in our lives do we want to cry
out to an apparent “sleeping” Jesus?
Jesus, you are sleeping through way too much in this life? How can you sleep through the abject poverty
of the peoples of this world? How can
you sleep through all of the starving children in this world? How can you sleep through all of the
selfishness of those who possess the most without the willingness to share their
wealth with those who have little?
Jesus, you just seem to be too content in your sleep in the midst of
some major storms in our lives.
That some very bad things can happen in life
is the possibility of genuine freedom that is obviously at work. On the small scale sometimes we think that we
can locate a cause and effect chain where human freedom is involved; on a
larger scale we cannot discover with precision the cause and effect involved in
certain events. Flapping butterfly wings
may affect weather patterns in negligible ways; but in such a grand mixture of
everything how could we measure or know precise cause and effects?
A great wisdom book of the Bible is the book
of Job; it is a treatise on suffering.
It is a rebuke to anyone who thinks that they know why we have
particular suffering. After all of Job’s
suffering and dealing with all of the cliché answers of his friends, Job is
confronted by God in the form of a whirlwind; God confronts Job in a stormy wind. God reminds Job of how small he is in face of
the immensity of all. Job, how can you
know the infinite number of relationships between an infinite number of things
in the play of freedom? Job, let your
fear of the particular event give rise to awe in the face of magnificent
immensity. Magnificent Immensity dwarfs
you Job, so let your fear become awe, just plain shut-your-mouth Awe.
I believe that Jesus Christ came to help
humanity convert their capacity of fear into the capacity of awe, because to
live is to live with Magnificent Immensity.
But how do we co-exist with Magnificent Immensity, as it touches us in
the particular events of our life?
We co-exist with Magnificent Immensity as it
is known in the particular events of our lives in the attitude of faith. Faith is the experience of being personally
valued in the midst of an Immensity that could quite easily leave us
anonymously forgotten. Jesus, in another
Gospel is quoted as saying that God is aware even when a sparrow falls to the
ground, and so God is mindful of each and every person.
Faith is the result of transforming our lives
of fear and anxiety into incredible awe in the face of Magnificent Immensity,
and then funneling awe into the specific events of our lives in the personal
sense of being valued and loved and cherish by another. Faith is the sense of having distinction and
value and not being diluted into total anonymity in the face of Magnificent
Immensity.
What this means for you and me is that we
need to be at the work of coming to faith in our lives. Do we have faith to be able to sleep during
the storms of our lives? Do we have
faith to co-exist with all possibilities in this life believing that our lives
are valued by God? Most all of us come
to know the value of our lives because there have been people in our lives who
made us feel valued.
The work of faith is the work of the
church. Jesus Christ needs us to be
those who help people know that their lives are valued and wonderful. We have important ministry in helping the
people of this world come to faith, to know the value of their lives and to
know that they are not lost in anonymity.
We have a mission in our lives to experience God with awe and wonder but
also to move from awe and wonder to encourage others to come to the experience
of being valued by God through us.
May God bring us from fear to awe to faith
so that even in life’s storms, we too can sleep with godly assurance of the
value of our lives both now and in the eternal memory of God. Amen.