Sunday, November 24, 2013

Absolute Power That Is Not Corrupt

Last Sunday after  Pentecost, Cp29, November 24, 2013  Christ the King
Jeremiah 23:1-6  Ps. 46           
Col. 1:11-20    Luke 23:23-33   


  On the playground one can find children playing all sorts of imaginative roles.  Castles, kings, princesses and dragons and monsters, and it is a delight to see them have so much fun with unreality.  Perhaps it is necessary part of learning abstract thinking; perhaps in play acting heroic roles against monsters and dragons, they are internalizing coping patterns with real life situations.  Perhaps in being a monster or a dragon it is a way of believing that one can optimistically negotiate the situations of one’s life.
  All fine and good for children, but what about the followers of Jesus confessing and hoping that Jesus would be a king both when he lived and in the decades after Jesus left this world?  When adults project their imaginations of a king upon someone who really does not look like a king what are we to think about them?  What are we to think about the founders of our faith community?  How are people to think about us as we project kingship upon a person who is not kingly in the earthly ways of thinking about monarchies and political power?
   From the appointed Gospel of the day: “The soldiers also mocked him, coming up and offering him sour wine, and saying, "If you are the King of the Jews, save yourself!" There was also an inscription over him, "This is the King of the Jews."  One of the criminals who were hanged there kept deriding him and saying, "Are you not the Messiah?”
  The Passion Gospel includes the mocking scorn of the kingship of Christ by the Roman soldiers and one of the criminals crucified with Jesus.
  Why would the early Christians retain in their recited story this incident of scorn?  The Passion liturgy includes an honesty about scorn for what happens often in life.  Things of value, people of value, justice values often get defeated.  Good people get snuffed out before their time.
  The powers that be often mock the values of love and justice.  People who believe and practice very good things often are crushed.  But in the Passion of Jesus we find the agents of the true king of Palestine, the Caesar, crushing to death one who bore the local myth of being a king.
  What this Passion narrative reveals in an entirely counter-logic to the earthly notion of kingship.  Lord Acton once wrote, “"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”  By this definition, if one believes that God has absolute power, then God would be corrupt.  But the teaching of the kingship of Christ was a teaching about thinking about power in a different way.
  Absolute power corrupts mainly because it must rely upon the limitation of the freedom of others.   To dominate one must shut down the freedom of others.  Limit what they can do and what they can think not as a program of temperance or self-control but so that the will of the one or the few can make the energy of freedom into the energy of oppression and suppression.
  The death of Jesus on the cross literally meant that his freedom to live was taken from him.  His freedom to teach and to heal was taken from him.
  What kind of king was Jesus?  And why did his early followers persist in the belief of his kingship?  Why did they continue to perform the mockery of his kingship each time they performed a reading of the Passion narrative?
  The absolute power of God is not like the absolute power of human government.  The absolute power of God is completely permissive of the freedoms within the limits of each creature and entity.  People have freedom within their limitations.  Animals have freedoms within their limitations.  Wind and weather, flowers and rock and molecules and atoms have freedoms within their limitations.  And the absolute power of God is permissive of all the kinds of freedom which exist.
  The way in which this absolute power of God became known and manifested in the life of Jesus was through winsome, persuasive, charismatic love.  The followers of Jesus believed that Jesus had the power of a king; he had the power of clemency.  “Father forgive them.”  Pardon them, commute their sentences; they do not know what they are doing. 
  They believed that Jesus had the ability to usher a repentant criminal into a kingdom life called Paradise.  Today you shall be with me in Paradise.
  Whenever the church and Christians have tried to become a kingdom of this world in a direct way, the church and Christians have partaken of the corruption of power.  Whenever the church has respected power as propelling the energy of service, the church has best expressed the kingship of Christ.
  Today we are invited to the irony of Christ the King.  Indeed our liturgy is like children playing on the playground because we must become child-like to perceive the kingship of Christ in this world where we see so much of the corrupting effects of people who have too much power.
  What kind of king says, “Blessed are the poor.”  “Love your enemy.”  “If someone needs your coat, give it to him.”  “If someone hits you on one cheek, turn the other.”  The kingdom of Christ is a totally ironic kingdom and it forces us to see our lives differently.
  I believe that the impact of the resurrection appearances upon the lives of the disciples was so pronounced that they believed they had evidence of a strength and a power over death itself.  Their experience of the resurrection appearances of Jesus made the disciple confident in presenting the narrative of the death of Jesus because they believed that kingship would be defined by the one who triumphed over death.
  The resurrection of Christ means that it is possible for us to perceive another kind of kingdom and another kind of living and lifestyle even as we live within the corrupting and corruptible kingdoms of this world.  As we perceive the kingdom of Christ in our world we don’t live in naiveté about the kingdoms of this world but we are able to receive a Spirit of peace and innocence as a counter balance to our lives in an often harsh world of the conflict of power.
  Today, you and I are invited to the kingship of Christ and to his kingdom.  We are invited to God’s forgiveness and to the Paradise of knowing that we are ever invited to new excellence in our lives.  Let us celebrate Christ as our king today but let us not make Christ as king in the images of typical earthly power, let us understand the reality of the kingdom of Christ as a new creation, as a new and peaceful way to live and serve.  We are here today to celebrate Christ as King and believe that the Absolute Power which is not corrupt is the power of winsome, persuasive, charismatic and never-ending love offered to people who are free to be convinced  to know that compassion, care, justice, love and service is the perfect expression of our freedom and power in life.  Today we are invited again to the irony of knowing Christ as our King. Amen.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

The Comfort and Analgesic Function of Salvation Language

26  Pentecost, Cp28, November 17, 2013
Isaiah 65:17-25 Ps. 98:
2 Thes. 3:6-13     Luke 21:5-19   

    As one who you know to be very hung up on words and language, I am often disappointed by the misuse of language or the ignorance of language or the rather lack of lyricism in how we use language in our lives and more specifically how biblical language is misinterpreted in mode and context and application.
  One of my goals in life is to get people understand the broad and deeply rich spectrum of language and word use.  Language is perhaps the greatest truth of human experience.
  The Bible is a book of language; it is a book of words that have derived from the experiences of people who struggled with the common questions of humanity that pertain to life between cradle and the grave, and the possible life beyond the grave.
  I would ask that we understand genre and use of language and not misapply in inappropriate ways the various applications of language which function for our orientation in the great stories of humanity.
  A mother who may comfort a fevered baby with words like, “there, there little one; all will be better in the morning” could be confronted by literalist, “Mom how can you speak such untruthful things; you have no proof that all will be well in the morning.”  And what would you say to such a literalist before you smacked him in the mouth?   You would probably say, “You unfeeling idiot, do you not know a discourse of comfort does not need to be infallible predictive scientific discourse?”
   This lack of language finesse accounts for most biblical disputes by those who defend the Bible wrongly and by those who attack Bible language wrongly as being something that is does not purport to be in its use and function.
  If the Bible can be called salvation history, we could understand the word salvation to mean “health.”  The function of the Bible in its origin and now in its use is to be words of health for the community.
  How were the words of the Bible readings, words of health for people in their times of composition and how can they be words of health for us today?
  Words of health might include the functions of education, comfort and pain management.  Words of comfort and pain management might not necessarily be literally true, probable or even possible.  The mom who sings to a restless baby, “Hush little baby don’t say a word, momma’s goin’ to buy you a mockingbird.”  Well, no momma’s not going to buy a mockingbird; a mockingbird can be a teasing mischievous noise maker.   Momma’s trying to create a rhyme to comfort a restless baby.
  The Isaian prophet had some major comfort to achieve within the community.  The comfort also included some major pain management and so the words of comfort had to be downright analgesic.  They had to be escapism; they had to be fantastic.  And what were the conditions like that required analgesic words?  Not just simply Tylenol words but they had to provide the most effective pain-killers of all.
  What conditions could call for such escapism?  The Isaian writer was implying that the world was so bad that God needed to start all over with a new creation.  Jerusalem was so bad that a new Jerusalem had to be built.  The Isaian writer was doing what we all do when we’re in pain; we generalize to the entire universe.  Well, if life is so dreadful for me, it must also be for the entire universe.  When life is really bad, we can want to be somewhere else with a complete new discontinuity from the way things are.  Denial is a form of pain management.  These Isaian words are similar to John Lennon’s song, Imagine:  Denying words, utopian word, analgesic words.
  What else was happening?  The beasts had taken over the world.  The lambs were getting eaten up by the wolves; “O wouldn’t it be nice if wolves and lambs were friendly playmates?”  In a predator and prey world, the predators were winning.  Only the extremely fit were surviving.   Wouldn’t it be nice if people could enjoy the labor of their own hands, their own homes and gardens?  Infant mortality was staggeringly high.  “O, wouldn’t it be nice if young people lived to the very minimal age of one hundred.”  There is an incredible amount of wishful thinking in such analgesic discourse.  Such discourse may only be relevant when it is needed.  (Take as directed). We should not criticize its use in the situations when it is needed.  On the other hand, we have modern day literalists in America who live in a comparative lap of luxury trying to literalize these Isaian words as an escapism future for themselves.  I would submit to you that they misuse and misapply such language.
   The writer of the Gospel of Luke was also using words of health for comforting people in beleaguered times.  By the time that the Gospel of Luke had come to its final textual edition, what had happened in the world and in the lives of some of the followers of Jesus?
  The Temple had been destroyed and all Jewish sects, including the rabbinical sect of Jesus, had fled Jerusalem for safer places.  When you've been scattered and your homes destroyed and Chernobylesque conditions prevail, you have to start up elsewhere and you need to maintain community and identity.   In a time of crisis the conditions of vulnerability prevail.  There is a power and leadership vacuum and there are those to step up to try to give explanation for why things happen and what should be done because of the crisis.  After the destruction of Jerusalem there was a leadership vacuum and pretenders arose to fill that vacuum.  People who want to be leaders during a crisis try to give answers as to why the crisis happened and how to get out of the crisis.  Some people will try to predict catastrophic outcomes.  While others will say  catastrophic and cataclysmic events will continue to happen until the big one, the final one occurs.
   The writer of Luke knew about conflict in various communities; such conflict led to suffering.  Obviously the Roman authorities had power to persecute.  On more local levels, members of various Jewish sects and their synagogues had power to excommunicate and to let their theological disagreements break out into actual community disciplinary actions and physical punishment.   When members of different Jewish sects disagreed with each other, families could be divided.  Former Sadducees, Pharisees, Zealots and members of the community of John the Baptist who were persuaded about the interpretation of Jesus as the messiah experienced the wrath of the members of their former communities.  The writer of the Gospel of Luke knew about the inter-Judaic conflicts between the different sects of Judaism.  This writer knew how passionately people could disagree with each other.
  A particular discourse of comfort would involve the risen Christ to be presented as an oracle of comfort for the community.  The risen Christ would have known about the destruction of Jerusalem; he would have known about splintering of Judaism into various communities.  The risen Christ as one who would have predicted all of this would be an oracle of comfort to those who had to live through the devastations.  We do not have to be literal about the words of the Gospel of Luke to understand the truth function of words of comfort.  Words of comfort arise in the form that is needed to sustain the community during difficult times and that is the greater truth.
  Words still function that way for us today.  I hope that you and I do not need the powerful analgesic words for our lives today.  I hope we can be generally pain free.  What I would pray for us to become today are words of comfort in our actions.  The United States Constitution is a document of comfort for disagreeing religious people in that it does not permit people of different religious persuasion to burn each other at the stake.  It is a more ideal language of comfort for our language to be the body language of love and justice.  What kind of language of comfort is needed today in the Philippines?  In Viet Nam?  The body language of people delivering rescue teams and supplies from concerned people all over the world.  On the ground in the areas of devastation,  the people might need the language of escape from their exigent distress even while the world tries to mobilize the corporate body language of a world organizing to bring relief.
  Whether the time of Isaiah or the time of Luke, the language of comfort and analgesia is often needed.  Such words are discourses of hope and we should not despise such language, even as we should complement such language with the body language of active justice, love and compassion.
  This is the language of comfort that the risen Christ inspires in us today.  Let us be people who receive comfort in all the ways that we can but let us generate in all of the ways we can, a full language of hope, care, love, justice, comfort and salvation today.  Amen.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Have You Hugged a Sadducee Lately?

25 Pentecost C  27    November 10, 2013          
Job 19:23-27a   Psalm 17:1-9
2 Thes.2:13-3:5     Luke 20:27-38


  I should get one of the worst puns ever out of the way from the outset; The Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection, that is why they were Sad, you see.
  You and I should have pity for the Sadducees because they fare only second to the Pharisees in how we have come to characterize them as evil opponents of our hero, Jesus.
  Let’s deconstruct.  Let’s you and I be like a Sadducee today to find points of empathy.
  The Sadducees during the time of the writing of the Gospel of Luke were facing great transition and change in their lives.
  We too are people of transition and change.  Life, by definition makes us nomads; the only question is how fast we are moving from place to place or having to change our thinking because of new events and circumstances in our lives.
  How many of us here today are cradle Episcopalian?  How many of us have been in and out of various faith communities?  How many of us have been in Episcopal parishes that are significantly different from each other?  How many of us have tried agnosticism?  Atheism?  Humanism? Yoga?  Tai Chi?  TM? Zen Meditation?  Veganism?  Paganism? Fantasy football?  What are the circumstances that have forced us to move our location or forced a change in the habits of our mind?
  How many Roman Catholics have felt “kicked out” of their church when they went through the excruciating experience of divorce?  How many of them have looked to another faith community because of this?  How many Protestants have married Roman Catholics and Orthodox and ended up in the Episcopal Church as place of compromise?  How many gay and lesbian persons have felt kicked out of their religious communities?  How many people have changed churches after getting a college education and doing some critical thinking?
  We are nomads by virtue of our existence.  So let us pity the poor Sadducees or better yet let us invite people like them to journey with us.
  Why should we pity the poor Sadducees?  The Sadducees were a religious sect of Judaism. And even in the occupied city of Jerusalem, they probably fared the best of all of the Jews.  They were in charge of the Temple in Jerusalem.  They were the priestly caste; they also had a political role of negotiating the well-being of the Jewish people with the Roman occupiers.  So you can imagine what happened to the Sadducees in and around the year 70.  The chief identity of the Sadducees came from the Temple.  So what identity did they have after the Temple was destroyed?  They essentially were unemployed.  There was nowhere to do sacrifices.  The Sadducees sort of died out and became extinct like the Shakers did in America, albeit for different reasons.
  What is the point of bringing up a debate between Jesus and Sadducees after the year 70 when the Temple was destroyed?  Was it for the purpose of just rubbing it in?  I would suggest to you that the writer of Luke was more interested in inviting Sadducees to become followers of Jesus.  We are so used to treating the Gospels as a negative polemic against so called antagonistic opponents of Jesus; we can easily forget that the followers of Jesus were Jews and that they wanted to invite all Jews into the fellowship of Christ.
  Who needed a fellowship more than the Sadducees after the Temple had been destroyed and after Jerusalem had been leveled to the ground?
  Let us switch our thinking about this Gospel reading today and see it as an invitation of the early followers of Jesus to invite the Sadducees into community after they had suffered the most devastating blow of all to their community life with the destruction of the Temple.
  The encounter between Jesus and the Sadducees is presented as a highly ironic debate.  The Sadducees are presented as sort of Harvard trained lawyers who are going to take this Matlock-like country bumpkin rabbi Jesus to the intellectual woodshed.  So a mockingly scornful highly improbable scenario in a case study is presented to Jesus.  The Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection because they did not believe in “legislating from the bench.”  Why?  To establish religious case law one could only use the Torah; Sadducean scholars could find no evidence, no textual precedence for the resurrection and so it could not be declared or held as an official belief.  Pharisees and other Jewish sects accepted more writings in their Scriptures than just the five books of Moses for setting precedence and so they found support for the resurrection in these writings, including this writing that we’ve read from Job today.  (A writing often used in funerals and memorial services).  If one did not believe in the resurrection how does one believe in the meaning of one’s life beyond death?   For the Sadducees, it would be more practical to be made objectively immortal in one’s offspring.  Having a child was the way to become objectively immortal.  And so do you see how the case study mixes the objective immortality of having children with the subjective immortality of the afterlife of the resurrection?
  The case study involved the ancient Mosaic notion of the Levirate Marriage.  If a married man died without children, his brother was obligated to marry the widow to have a child that would be designated as his dead brother's offspring.  Apparently, if the two had become one flesh, the widow retained something of that one flesh to be able to have a child for her departed first husband even though her new husband was a former brother-in-law.  You could also see how this Levirate law protected the social welfare of a widow as well.
  The Levirate practice in the time of Jesus was not practiced, not even by the Sadducees and so you can see the hypocritical play that was involved in posing the case study to Jesus as a way of questioning his validity as a teacher.
  Jesus invited the Sadducees to see their future in other ways;  just as the Lucan church was inviting the Sadducees to see a new future after their very life identity had been destroyed with the destruction of the Temple.  What was the objective immortality of the Sadducees after the Temple was destroyed.  In a strange way the words of Jesus invites the Sadducees to see their future in a different way.  Does a Sadducee have any future life at all without the Temple?
  What is the point about quibbling about the afterlife about which no one can have specific empirical knowledge?  The function of the metaphors of the afterlife is to inspire faith, hope and comfort now.  And the issue is not really about marriage in the afterlife, or being like angels, it really is about us not limiting God in our present or in the future.
  If God is a living God, if God is a Plenitude that was before us who was with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and Moses; if that God is a Plenitude in whom we live now, then that same Plenitude will be the future after we are gone.  That same Plenitude is able to be all of our possible imaginations of a future and even more.  If we can dream a future, then God as Plenitude is even more.
  I believe this dialogue between Jesus and the Sadducee was a wisdom dialogue about having faith in a living God.  We are limited as humans in our life span because we cannot endlessly preserve our lives in their extant conditions.  To believe in the living God is to believe in someone who can preserve more than we can preserve.  In computer hard drives we are talking terabytes; God or Plentitude must include ultimate memory of all things in such a way as to at least permit the possible narratives of a preserving resurrection life. This is to believe in God as the realm of the possible.  And resurrection is an imagination of the possible.  It is a narrative of hope that is true because having hope is true.
  So, my question today is, Have you hugged a Sadducee lately?  Let's not demonize the Sadducees.  Have you given hope for the future to someone whose life circumstances has just been changed by devastating events?  Have you offered new community to the one who has lost community, location and identity due to the terrible crises of loss?
  Have you and I ever been in a situation of one like a post-70 A.D. Sadducee when we have needed hope beyond what our own system of belief could provide?  We, too, often have been needy like the Sadducees who need new hope and a new future offered to us through invitation and acceptance within a community.  
  A Sadducee could come to believe new things through an encounter with Jesus.  A Sadducee could add a different nuance to his or her Judaism through an encounter with the risen Christ.  We, too, know the risen Christ to be with us today as representing the Phoenix who rises out of the ashes of what is lost and gives us new hope and new possibility.  And as the church and as a parish family, we are to be a place where possible hope becomes actual hope for people who need it.  Amen.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Zacchaeus, a Voyeur for Salvation

24  Pentecost, Cp26, November 3, 2013
Habakkuk 1:1-4; 2:1-4 Psalm 119:137-144
2 Thessalonians 1:1-5 (6-10) 11-12 Luke 19:1-10
  
 Perhaps you remember the Romantic Comedy movie from 1997 entitled,  As Good As It Gets?  In this film a reclusive, omni-phobic, misanthropic, obsessive compulsive writer, Melvin is falling in love with a waitress, Carol who is the only person who put in an effort to tolerate him.  Melvin, played by Jack Nicholson, is so pessimistic that he cannot say anything positive about anyone or anything.  With almost Tourette-like compulsion he says offensive things.  He is falling in love with Carol and he does something wonderful to help her son who has health problems; but even Carol can only take so much of his negativism.  She is at her wits end with him and she challenges Melvin to say something nice about her.
  And what is the nice and winning thing that Melvin finally says about Carol?  “You make me want to be a better man.”   And the word better means several things for Melvin.  Carol made Melvin be better by seeking some help for his panic condition; but she also made him better to understand the give and take of winsomeness that one has to practice to be successful in relationship and community.
  You make me want to be a better person.  This might sum up the dynamic of the encounter between Zacchaeus and Jesus of Nazareth.  Zacchaeus was more than tolerated by Jesus; he was invited by Jesus to a relationship and the end result was that Zaccheaus was inspired and motivated to become a much better person.  Jesus said about Zacchaeus:   “Today salvation has come to his house.”
   The quest for salvation might be seen to be a selfish quest in that salvation means that we become better people.  But this is the benefit of salvation; we become better people and the community becomes better for it as well.
  I was always partial to Zacchaeus.  He was stereotyped forever as being the short guy who had to climb the tree to see Jesus.  As a height challenged basketball player, I think Zacchaeus should be the patron saint of short persons; why not we have a saint for everything else?  Some traditions tells us that Zacchaeus was surnamed Matthias and became the twelfth disciple who replaced Judas Iscariot.   
  On All Saints Sunday, we trace the notion of saintliness to Jesus Christ.  Jesus was one who made Zacchaeus and others want to be better persons.  Zacchaeus became a better person first by amending his life.  He had cheated people out of money in his profession as a tax collector and after meeting Jesus he said, “Look, half of my possessions, Lord, I will give to the poor; and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I will pay back four times as much."
  What could be the literary function of this story about Zacchaeus in the literature of the early Christian community?
  It is a classical salvation story.  A very dubious person who was caught between the Jewish community and the Roman government was able to find a new status in his life.
  When people are desperate enough they become salvation voyeurs.   They start to become peeping toms for a better way of living.  “I will sneak a peek at Jesus just to see what he is all about.”   There is another incident in the Gospel of a voyeur for salvation.  You remember the woman with the issue of blood was in a crowd around Jesus and she thought, “If I just touch the hem of the garment of Jesus perhaps I will be healed.”  And she was healed and Jesus said, “Who touched me?”  And his disciples asked why would he say that with so many people around him.  And Jesus said that he felt power go out of him.
  Zacchaeus was too short to see over people and so he climbed into a tree to see Jesus.  His eyes made contact and with Jesus.  And in the crowd, Jesus was aware of the staring eyes from the seeking heart of Zacchaeus.  Jesus looked at him and said, “Hurry down for I must stay at your home today.”
  A subtext of this and other Gospel stories is that Jesus entered into fellowship with dubious characters.   Tax-collectors Jews who worked for the Romans in collecting taxes; they were called publicans and that made them automatic sinners in the eyes of the Jewish religious establishment.
  To whom did Jesus and salvations belong?  Jesus and salvation belonged to the people in need and who wanted him and the inclusive experience of salvation.  This is why we call the Gospel good news.  People catch a vision of what becoming better means.  They look for the people, the community and situation where they can become better.  Salvation is the experience of being affirmed and received into a community who support this quest of the heart to want life to be better.
  Today on All Saints Sunday, we acknowledge that saintliness comes from Jesus of Nazareth and it is still present with us in the risen Christ who is in our community.
  We as the community of the risen Christ need to be a community where saintliness means that we want to become better people and that by being together we help to make each other better people.  As we look at the role of the Christians in the community at large we need to ask this question, “Do people see Christians and want to be better people?”  There are many voyeurs for salvation in this world.  There are people looking on without us knowing it who are looking for a place of salvation.  There are people in quest to find people who would help make them be better people.
  This is our challenge as a parish community: To help each other be better people because we are together and as we do this we can become an inviting community for others to join us as they discover our parish community to be a place of salvation, a place where they can become better people.

  Let the salvation of Christ be known today in our parish community.  And let us live in such a way that we invite other people know that we are a community where they can become better people in every way.  Amen.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Thank God We're Sinners?

23 Pentecost, Cp25, October 27, 2013
Joel 2:23-32 Ps. 67
2 Tim. 4:6 8,18    Luke 18:9 14  


   We can be led to some very bad conclusions and even bias from reading some good things in the Bible, and in the Gospels, or even from the words of Jesus.
   Jesus told a parable to some people whom he perceived to be treating others with contempt.  And in this parable there were two people who went to the Temple to pray.  A Pharisee offered thanks that he was not like the poor tax collector.  And the poor tax collector simply beat his breast and said,  "Lord, have mercy on me a sinner."
  One of the wrong conclusions that we can reach about this parable of Jesus is “All Pharisees were shallow hypocrites.”  We have essentially adopted in common language a pejorative use of the word Pharisee.  In ordinary English language if someone calls you a Pharisee, it is meant to judge you as a low down hypocrite of the highest order.
  This is a wrong reading of the words of Jesus and a wrong judgment on the Pharisees.  It is like saying because I’ve had unfortunate interaction with five Episcopalians, all Episcopalians are bad and if I call you an Episcopalian I am not giving you a compliment.
  We also can read the Bible and the Gospels for the purpose of locating people whom we think are the real sinners.
  I think that the parable of Jesus about the Pharisee and the tax collector is basically about the judgmental attitudes that I might have if I  live as though my social class training is better than the background of someone else.  The parable of Jesus is told to show us that sin is not a matter of association with a class of people; sin is a very positive notion if it is understood with the attitude of knowing moral direction and orientation in life.   Sin and being a sinner are very important insights in the teaching of Jesus.  Knowing about sin and being a sinner are important personal insights which everyone needs to have.
  We get the impression from some preaching that the Bible is all about God convincing us about how bad we are as sinners so that we can really appreciate how good God is in offering us forgiveness and grace.
  The attitude of knowing that one is a sinner and that one has sinned is a most important insight in life.  In fact, it is a very positive insight in life.
  What Jesus criticized was the notion of goodness that is believe to have been attained by pedigree, nature, hard work and merit.
  I am better than you because of the pedigree of my family.  I come from an important family, therefore I am important.  This pedigree could be defined as being a Pharisee, an Episcopalian, a Baptist or a Blue Blood.  I have the breeding for goodness.  It’s in my nature to be good and better than people who were not born as good as I was born.
  I am better than you because I am smarter and I work harder than you.  So by my merits, by my work and study, I am in a position to make comparative judgments on others who are not as smart and who have not worked as hard as I have.
  The problem with this kind of thinking is that if we think in this way we can always be subject to the same judgments of people who think that they are better than us by pedigree, nature, hard work and merit.
  So this kind of thinking only encourages endless comparisons.  This kind of thinking does not get at what is needed in learning the art of living well.
  So how do we learn to live well?  We first learn from Jesus about the positive notion of sin and the positive vocation of sinning.
  If we cannot help but sin because it is unavoidable then we must begin to believe that God has given us sinning as an important vocation in life.
   How can sinning be an important vocation in life?
   The Greek word for sin comes from archery and it means missing the target.  We are on the archery range or we’re hunting with bow and arrow, we shoot and we miss.
  In the Greek language, the archer would say in the English translation, “Oh no, I sinned.”
  Missing targets in archery only means we missed to try again.  We retrieve the arrows and we keep on shooting.
  And herein is the positive notion of sin.  In our lives we keep on, keeping on at shooting for the perfect.  And sometimes we get close but we always miss the mark because there is always another future shot to take.  We may have come to approximate love and justice in significant ways today and yet because there is a tomorrow, we cannot rest on our laurels nor can we judge the archery of others.  We cannot judge the sin life of others.
  The positive notion of sin as propounded by Jesus is that each of us has our own targets based upon our own situations.
  The tax collector in his situation had a different target of excellence than did the proverbial Pharisee.  The Pharisee, instead of looking at his next target of excellence, took a pot shot at the tax collector for “not being in the same archery class as he was in.
  And this is the second positive insight that we can take from this parable of Jesus.  Sin is not about comparing my life with yours.  Sin is about comparing my life now with what my life will be in a future state.  The question is not whether I will ever be able to say or know whether I am better or worse than you;  but will I be able to say that I surpassed myself in a future state?
  In the positive notion of sin offered to us by Jesus, we are not allowed to compare ourselves with others, we are to accept our own path and we are to look to be better today than yesterday and better tomorrow than we are today.
   The positive notion of sin and being a sinner is to avoid comparison and to be on the path of having oneself in a future state be the only person in one's comparison.
  So indeed this makes sin and righteous relative and adaptable to the life situation of each person.  The Pharisee of the parable is one who had lost sight of the target.  And what is the target?  It is found in the words of Jesus when he said, “Be perfect as my Father in heaven is perfect.”  If we know that the unreachable is the target then we are always aware of the moral direction and we know that we always need mercy.
  So let us embrace this positive notion of sinner and sin.
  Welcome to the Episcopal Church.  A place where you can know that being a sinner is a very positive notion.
  Let us embrace this positive notion of sin today.  I do not know what targets you have been shooting at in your lives; your targets are different than mine.  But we are here today to encourage each other in mercy and forgiveness and wish each other well in the effort to surpass ourselves in excellence in future states.   We need mercy and forgiveness to tolerate ourselves until we get to where we think we need to be in excellence.  And may God grant us the sense of being justified through the experience of God’s mercy.  We are justified by having the attitude of knowing that we need mercy.  And this is the positive insight about sin and being sinners.
   We do not judge a child for not having adult knowledge and experience; we hope to mentor them in surpassing themselves daily in the path of knowledge and more experience.  From the wisdom of Jesus we can learn that this is how a loving God mentors each of us in the individual circumstances of our life experience as we grow in excellence.  We hope for excellence.  We hope for what we do not yet have in excellence and we accept mercy for not having it yet.
  Sin is mainly positive; it is only negative when we willing give up the quest for excellence or when we believe our targets of excellent should be other people’s specific targets too.
  Let us embrace the positive notion of sin and mercy as healthy attitudes to have in our lives today.  Amen. 

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Prayer as Holy Nagging?

22  Pentecost, Cp24, October 20, 2013
Jeremiah 31:27-34 Psalm 119:97-104
 2 Timothy 3:14-4:5   Luke 18:1-8a


   Welcome to our weekly session of dealing with puzzles from the Bible.  Perhaps one might regard the Bible to be too out of date to be the regular choice for reading pleasure.  However, we have inherited this book as the inspired textbook of our tradition and so it is “required” reading on Sundays and is recommended for our daily reading as well.
  How do we regard this requirement to read the Bible when it now exists in the midst of an ocean of other literature?  The Bible has come into disfavor because of the ways in which Christians have used the Bible.  Why cannot we regard the Bible to be an inventory of human situations that bear universal patterns for us to look to for insights for our lives?  Too many Bible preachers regard the Bible to be a museum of final human products that we go to revere as having final inspiration.  I would say that the Bible is inspired, but not yet.  Why, because the future of Bible reading is still open.  The Bible includes the inspired principles of love and justice which need to find future occasions of application.  Remember too that the Bible as an inventory of human situations means that all of the inventory is not applicable in all places at all time.  Just because we have a wardrobe full of clothes does not mean we try to wear them all at one; we chose the apparel for the current occasion of our lives.
  Jesus was a wisdom teacher and he used parables as an indirect method of teaching.  In the parable that we have read for today, Jesus encodes within a human scenario a common human condition of need.
  A widow needs justice; the judge who can provide justice does not adjudicate justice but the widow just keeps nagging the judge until the judge is worn down and finally rules for justice even when he is not otherwise inclined to do so.
  Herein is a situation universal to humanity.   It is a fact that there is an uneven distribution of injustice throughout the world.  And when we are on the receiving side of injustice it hurts.  Injustice can be so prolonged that it begins to gain power to unseat justice as the normal condition of life.   From the situation of injustice we can easily give up and begin to think that since injustice is so common that injustice becomes what is regarded to be what is normal about life.
  And this is the petitionary situation for the practice of prayer.  Jesus provided the punchline of the parable before he told the parable:  We should always pray and not lose heart.
  But Jesus what is the use of prayer?  Why should we not take up armed resistance?   Why should we not become terrorists to strike out against injustice?   Do we not have the right to oppose with our lives the practice of injustice?  Is not prayer just rolling over and accepting injustice?
  Do you see how the parable of Jesus anthropomorphizes the situation of injustice?  When we experience things that do not seem to fair to the normalcy of justice, health and goodness we can feel powerless to do anything.  The situation of injustice seems to have a personality to it.  We take all of the events in our lives personally.  It seems as though all of the free agents in life account for the situations of uneven justice and injustice to occur in life.  It is very hard not to take life personally but in situation of oppression by other human beings, we take life doubly personally.
  And what is our personal response to the uneven situations of injustice that occur in life and in our lives in particular?  Jesus said that we should pray always and not lose heart.  It seems as though prayer is the continual expression of nagging.
  Is this really what prayer is, a perpetual holy nagging to get what we want?  Holy nagging?  Is that what the prayer life is all about?  From the Gospel parable aftermath it does not seem that such holy nagging necessarily has timely outcomes from the point of view of the petitioner.   God, we need help and justice now!  Well, just keep nagging and it may or may not come but you are obligated to keep asking for justice.  And the future Son of Man stands to us as one who guarantees justice.
  What do we think about this holy nagging theory of prayer?
  First of all, what this parable acknowledges is the conditions of freedom in this world which accounts for the uneven spread of justice and injustice.  Judges have power and authority over helpless widows.  But just because there is freedom in this world for injustice to occur, that does not mean that we have to accept injustice as the recommendable condition of life.  And this is where the significance of holy nagging comes in; we must protest injustice continuously and not let it be asserted as the normal condition of life.
  Where slavery and discrimination were once regarded to be the norm in our country, voices of justice arose to challenge the status quo of injustice.  Nagging prayers actually became a very great Civil War to challenge injustice.  In more recent times the nagging prayer of peaceful and non-violent resistance became the practice of Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr. and others who kept up nagging against injustice.
  Prayer as perpetual nagging against the practice of injustice is a worthy occupation.  With such nagging we do not let ourselves accept injustice as normal.  With nagging prayer we create energy of resistance against the practice of injustice.  With nagging prayer we hope to wear out the opponents who themselves are enslaved by their very oppressive practice of injustice because ignorance has often become the accepted status quo of those who practice injustice.  “What’s   the fuss about, haven’t we always done it this way?   Women voting?  People of color riding wherever they want in the bus?  Gay and lesbian people full human rights?   Holy nagging for justice hopefully will eventually bring a fuller experience of justice.
  Prayer as holy nagging in situations where goodness, health, love and justice are not experienced is a witness both within the one who prays and within their settings that health, goodness, love and justice are what is humanly normal; and we are going to protest everything to the contrary with our nagging prayers.
  My friends, let us not be ashamed of our prayers as holy nagging today, especially if we are asking that this world experience the meanings of health, goodness, love and justice today.  With holy nagging we will never accept illness, evil, hatred and injustice as the normal conditions of life.  With holy nagging we will rally ourselves to practice justice and demand justice for all in our world.
  So, let us go forth and do some holy nagging today.  Amen.

Saturday, October 12, 2013

The Invitation of Jesus Overcomes Wellism and Discrimination

21 Pentecost, Cp23, October 13, 2013
2 Kings 5:1-3, 7-15c   Ps.66:1-11
2 Tim. 2:8-15   Luke 17:11-19    


  Today I would like for us to consider how differences amongst people have been the occasion for great human failure.
  I say this because the fearful ways in which we often experience differences, lead us to practice victimization.  Victimization creates oppression and oppression is not just an external force, it is also an attitude that we can take on ourselves and use against ourselves.  The forces of victimization are quite damaging.  Habits of victimization can even get embedded in our institutional and cultural life in blatant or subtle forms of discrimination.
  We know that victimization can start early on the playground when children make fun of the way someone looks, their size or how they are dressed. It can be institutionalized in slavery and sexism and many other cultural forms of discrimination.  We know that it can become institutionalized even in religious practices.  History reveals many examples where religious laws and practices reinforced and solidified discriminatory practices.
  During the time of Jesus and during the period of the early church there were questions that were being addressed in the religious communities.  Did God’s grace and favor and healing extend to people outside of the official religious communities of Judaism?  And would people outside of the communities of Judaism even know how to respond to God grace and favor if they received it?
  If you understand these two questions, perhaps you can understand how the Gospel story functioned when it was told and read in the early Christian communities.
  What Jesus found in the religion of his time was a religion that discriminated against people who were “sick” as designated by religious establishment that dabbled in medical definitions of disease in a way that Jesus found unacceptable.  The official religion of his time also excluded poor countryside folk and foreigners.
  Within the Judaism of his time there was a very well defined purity code that was practiced for the “safety” of the community.  People who had certain diseases were quarantined from their communities until they could be ritually cleared to be safe to appear in the general public.  The lepers suffered from what we know today as psoriasis or eczema and yet because of their appearance they were deemed unworthy or infectious to the general community.  One of the ten   lepers who approached Jesus had a second strike against him; he was also a Samaritan.  A Samaritan was something of a “mongrel” Israelite; Samaritans were northern tribal Israelites who had entered into marriages with the Assyrians, a conquering nation.  They had even retained a Torah based religion but they were not a pure ethnic group.
  It is interesting to note that the Samaritan leper was traveling with nine lepers from Judea.  When one shares a common crisis with other people, perhaps in a dire situation, one is willing to forgo some basic biases and prejudices because one understands that the hatred, fear and ignorance that drives victimization is essentially the same whether one is talking about ethnic prejudice, prejudice against the impaired or ill, or any other social group.
  In this Gospel story Jesus stands as the one who countered the religious authorities who were upholding the rather irrational purity codes.  Jesus gave permission to the stranger and the social outcast to re-enter the common community.  Health is not just about being cured of a disease; health is about having access to a significant community of support and care.
   There are non-believers and skeptics today who will tell us that they are not Christians, because they have found religious people and religious authority to be creating victims rather than inviting people to the church as a significant community of support.  And that criticism should cause all of us some soul searching about the openness of our own hearts.
  The nature of Christ is to invite all people to fellowship and community.  Many people understand religion to be like a club that has rules to tell us who belongs and who doesn’t belong.
  The Gospel of Christ is preached today to tell us that all people belong equally in the dignity of God.  The Gospel is preached so that the response of the Samaritan leper can be the true religious act of all people.
  The true religious act of all people is to take time to say thanks to God for being included in the wonderful family of God as sons and daughters of God and as brothers and sisters of Christ.
  We have accrued so much baggage in how Christianity is practiced that we can easily forget how simple and basic the Gospel is:  Wherever we are made to feel quarantined or isolated from community, Jesus stands as the gate and the door to invite us to the community of God and to the community of people who practice this ever generous invitation.
  I do hope that we will understand the mission of our parish is to practice this ever-generous invitation of Christ to all persons into our midst.
  If we can agree on this, then all of the other details that constitute what it is to live together in community will take secondary priority.
  The generous invitation of Jesus Christ should help us to give up all of the little purity codes that we have learned in our society that keep us from offering friendship to all people.
  Let us be thankful today that God is a God who invites all persons to know that they are in the family of God.

  And let us be a friendly people who are committed to let everyone know about the generous, winsome and loving invitation of God in Christ.  With the love of Christ we can celebrate our differences and overcome the habits of victimization.  By welcoming all to the love of God, we can encourage all people to make the most authentic religious act of worship of all, which is saying, “Thank you God.”  By the way, you do know what Eucharist means?  It means “Thanksgiving.”   Amen.

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