Monday, April 25, 2022
April 24, 2022 Easter 2 Luke 24:13-35
A personal injury lawyer was on vacation in a small rural town. While walking through the streets, he spotted a car that had just been involved in an accident. As expected, a large crowd gathered. Going by instinct, the attorney was eager to get to the injured, but he couldn’t get near the car. Being very clever, he started shouting loudly, “Let me through! Let me through! I am the son of the victim.” The crowd made way for him. Lying in front of the car was a donkey.
So what relevance to our gospel reading could a lawyer comment possibly have? The truth is, nothing. And it is the nothing that is really something! While Christianity can be an immensely complex faith, it is at its heart, deeply simple. Jesus died for you. End of story. That’s all there is to it. You don’t need a lawyer. And you don’t even need a religious expert; which makes me irrelevant too. Look at Jesus’ twelve disciples. They were mostly tradesmen. They weren’t scholars or lawyers. They certainly weren’t religious experts.
It is perhaps dangerous to make comparisons between Christianity and other religions, but I think it helps to make a point. Both Judaism and Islam have legal codes and requirements written right into their scriptures. Any time you have a code, a requirement, a set of laws, or anything similar you need to have experts to interpret those guidelines. Why? Because life is complicated. If you are Muslim you are to live by the Five Pillars of faith. They are: profession of faith, prayer, almsgiving, fasting during certain periods, and a pilgrimage to Mecca. It seems simple enough. And yet what about a person who cannot afford to make a pilgrimage to Mecca? What about a person who is destitute? What about a person who has blood sugar issues that mean extensive fasting is dangerous?
There are always complications. There are always exceptions. And how to you follow the intention of the law without being confined to the letter of the law? At its best, those are the times you need scholars, lawyers and religious experts.
You are certainly familiar with the many laws of ancient Judaism from our own reading of the Jewish scriptures, which Christians call the “Old Testament.” Simple as they can be, they can also be immensely complex.
I’m not enough of an expert on eastern religions, nor pagan nature religions to say much about them. Some, like the nature religions, are so thin on substance that there seems to be nothing there at all. And others, like Hinduism, certainly do have plenty of rules and regulations.
In contrast to all of this, and without trying to sound superior, Christianity is deep in substance and has an incredibly simple core. We see that in our gospel reading for today. It is the evening of the resurrection. Two men are walking away from Jerusalem toward the town of Emmaus. The fact that they are walking away puzzled tells us that the Jesus movement was dying out and dispersing. The followers were all going back to their normal lives, their hopes ended.
On the surface the text does seem complex and it can leave us scratching our heads. Do we need an expert to make sense of it for us?
How can these two followers of Jesus not recognize him?
And how come Jesus just disappears as soon as they do recognize him?
This sounds more like a fairy tale than anything that’s trying to present itself as historically reliable.
We’ll actually tie some of that up later in the chapter, which is next week’s gospel. For today though let’s say Luke has a reason for it.
The arrest and crucifixion of Jesus as God’s Son, as the anticipated Savior, is absurd. Those who are life-long Christians don’t get how absurd the idea is. It is helpful to again make a contrast with Islam. Jesus plays a significant role in Islam. He is a major prophetic figure, a messenger of God. Islam cannot in any way shape or form accept that one of God’s messengers would be killed in service to God. Rather, their beliefs are that God will divinely protect the messengers. Of course, Christianity says the exact opposite.
Luke tells us that when Jesus is talking with these two guys he begins with Moses and the prophets and interprets to them the things about himself in scripture. The central question, and the whole point of this story, is Verse 26, “Was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer these things and then enter into his glory?” From the perspective of Jesus’ followers the answer is clearly “No!” Indeed, if you know the Old Testament at all you know there is nothing that suggests the Messiah is to suffer and die. But according to Jesus the perspective of the scriptures is very different.
We are not told what passages Jesus actually referred to with these disciples. But we don’t need that. A look through Luke’s gospel shows us the new scriptural trajectory Jesus has been trying to establish.
Jesus puts himself in the same line as most of the prophets. There is a very strong precedent for prophets to be persecuted. Moses, Elijah, Elisha, Jeremiah, Isaiah, and pretty much all the prophets faced plenty of grumbling and persecutions. Some of them were killed. Earlier in the gospel (but in a part we haven’t read yet) Jesus laments the way Jerusalem has treated the prophets who have come to it over the millennium. (Luke 13:35)
Those whom God sends are generally not well received and not triumphant. Despite the fact that they bear the word of God, they are rejected. People don’t want to hear what God has to say. They don’t like what God has to say. God’s words have a way of upending human plans for success.
So, when Jesus comes proclaiming the good news of God’s kingdom, good news though it may be, it upends the money and power systems of many people. They want to get rid of the troublemaker.
Though anointed by God, though righteous according to the laws, though innocent, he is put to death. Rejected by people he is raised by God – with both the rejection by humanity and the resurrection all under the same divine purpose.
The challenge for God is how to make people truly righteous? Should God give us rules and regulations to follow?
Tried that.
Didn’t work.
That would be the path of Judaism or Islam.
Should God change the fundamental nature of humans to make them naturally “better” or more loving? How could God do that and have us be anything more than puppets?
No, the only way God can truly preserve our integrity, and get across to us in a way that we could understand how we are supposed to love, is to show love by dying. Jesus says in John’s gospel that no one has greater love than this, than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. Many soldiers scratch that citation on their dog tags.
Then right relationship is truly based on love. Love is doing whatever is in your power for the betterment of the other person. There are no rules and regulations for that. You do not need a lawyer or a religious expert to tell you how to love other people. You love other people by sensing their needs and then seeking to equip them to meet those needs. Notice I did not say you fix their problems for them. That’s very different. No, I said you equip them to meet those needs.
Last week I heard an interview with radio host Brandt Hanson. (Typology podcast “Redefining Masculinity with Enneagram 5”) He was talking about what true masculinity is. What he said goes for both men and women, even though his focus was on men. He said that true masculinity is when a man uses his power to equip the people around him to be their truest, fullest, most capable selves.
I would say that is love, even though it has nothing to do with romance. I would say that is what the ministry of Jesus was all about – all the way to his death and resurrection. It was about showing people what love is so that they could be their truest, fullest, most capable selves.
No laws or rules will ever make you capable. Following laws and rules may keep you safe and out of trouble, but they will never make you into your best self.
When are the two men in the gospel able to see Jesus? In the breaking of the bread. Remember back to the feeding of the 5000, and remember the Last Supper. In both cases you have an expression of God’s abundant love.
You don’t need an expert to tell you how to love. Just do the best you can for others. Even if you don’t know whether it’s actually helpful or not, just critically generously do what you can. And good will truly have been done.
Monday, April 18, 2022
April 17, 2022 Easter Luke 24:1-12
There are many four-letter-words in the English language that we’re not supposed to day. One that seems to trip us up in particular is the word “dead”; or its five-letter companion, “death”.
Scroll through the obituaries and see how often dead and death appear! You’ll read that someone “passed”, as if they’ve managed to get a high enough grade on a particularly difficult math test; or as if they’ve passed through an airport. Also frequently is that someone has “passed away”. Think about that for a second. Does that even mean anything at all? Passed away…?
Theologian Peter Marty asks, “Can’t we be more straightforward about the two bookends of life? We’re born. We die.”
Jesus overcame death and the grave. On Easter morning we do not proclaim, “Passed away has been swallowed up in victory.” Where, O passed away, is your victory? Where O passed away is your sting?”
Do you realize how absolutely absurd the phrase, “passed away,” is?
And yet we will use it to dance around the four letter words of “died” and “dead”, and their companion “death”. But those are the words that actually have power.
St. Paul had no fear of words when he wrote to the Corinthians, “Death has been swallowed up in victory. Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?” (1 Corinthians 15:55)
Call the thing by its name. Let it be true. And then let God have the final word.
What does “passed away” mean? It makes it sound like we journey from one life to the next.
Ah, that may very well be how you think; to think that eternal life is just an extension of this one. But I wish to disabuse you of such foolishness.
Think about it. Do you really want eternal life just to be an extension of this one? Do you hope that in eternal life it will be the same, just without the hardships, going from one fun thing to the next forever and ever?
Let me tell you something. You will get bored with it. I guarantee you. If you think that heaven will be like being on a sunny beach forever and ever and ever, you will get bored with it. Doesn’t everything become boring after a while? How many times have you wanted something in life, and wanted it really really badly, and worked hard for it, and eventually you got it. And indeed it was fun for a while, but sooner or later it gets boring. You want something else.
Many people love going to the Disney theme parks. They can make for a fabulous vacation. But there’s no way even Disney could create something so magical that it would satisfy us forever. It just can’t.
Entertainment, like theme parks and movies and concerts, are really only fun because they are a break from work. If you didn’t have to work even the things that are entertaining would cease being fun. And do you really think heaven involves jobs and burdens.
We will get bored. We will get restless.
You cannot pass away out of this life and into a better continuation of it that will keep you joyful forever.
You have to die.
Dead, died, death. These are truths.
I like the way St. Paul puts it to the Corinthians. (I usually insist on only using literal translations of the scripture in worship, but I like the paraphrase Eugene Peterson created which we read earlier.) Paul writes:
Some skeptic is sure to ask, "Show me how resurrection works. Give me a diagram; draw me a picture. What does this 'resurrection body' look like?" If you look at this question closely, you realize how absurd it is. There are no diagrams for this kind of thing. We do have a parallel experience in gardening. You plant a "dead" seed; soon there is a flourishing plant. There is no visual likeness between seed and plant. You could never guess what a tomato would look like by looking at a tomato seed. What we plant in the soil and what grows out of it don't look anything alike. The dead body that we bury in the ground and the resurrection body that comes from it will be dramatically different.
This image of planting a dead seed and raising a live plant is a mere sketch at best, but perhaps it will help in approaching the mystery of the resurrection body - but only if you keep in mind that when we're raised, we're raised for good, alive forever! The corpse that's planted is no beauty, but when it's raised, it's glorious. Put in the ground weak, it comes up powerful. The seed sown is natural; the seed grown is supernatural - same seed, same body, but what a difference from when it goes down in physical mortality to when it is raised up in spiritual immortality!
You have to die, truly die, before God can bring about the resurrected body. You do not pass away.
Jesus also used seed imagery. In John 12:24 he says, “Very truly, I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.”
Perhaps think of all of this life as a seed. In the same way a seed has all the genetics necessary to grow a full plant, so you now do have all of who you are. And yet it is potential that is not at all fully activated. You have to die first. Then God can bring about resurrection.
Death is ultimate loss. It is ultimate failure. No matter how successful you are in life, or how smart you are, or how much you produce, you will ultimately end up a complete and total failure. This is true. Yet something in that total loss is what God needs to grow us into our full potential.
I get frustrated when people talk about someone “going to heaven.” I understand the idea. But it assumes it is just a passing away off this earth into something else; like it’s automatic. It is all tame, controlled, and within human thinking.
But death and resurrection are a bigger and more powerful thing entirely.
We see hints of that in the scriptures. It’s ironic to me that Jesus is the main character in the gospel of Luke, which we’ve been reading from all year. And his resurrection is the big triumph. Yet Jesus doesn’t show up at all in our gospel reading! It’s reading a story where the main character is triumphant but isn’t present!
Next week though in our gospel reading we will indeed encounter the risen Christ. The other gospels have resurrection appearances too. And if you know them well you know that Jesus is indeed real. He can be seen. He talks. He eats. He lets people touch him. But he also comes and goes through locked rooms. He appears and disappears. His resurrected body is not a resuscitated corpse. It is the same yet entirely different.
What and how is a mystery. We will never understand it this side of death. What we do know is that in eternal life we do not lose our sense of selfhood, yet somehow we are spectacularly more of what we already are.
Death is an unknown. It makes sense that we fear the unknown. But you will die.
You were born. You will die. Guaranteed. These are the bookends of life.
Resurrection life will be unbelievable. I wish I could preach about it. But I can’t. All I can say is that it will be beyond what our current imagination can ever come up with. That is an incredible hope, and incredible promise. And it is true.
And so I speak to the promise, which gives us hope. And it gives us a perspective on our lives today. This world and this life is important. Embrace it and engage it fully. The fact that God came in the form of Jesus, and that God lived a lifetime in our shoes, and that Jesus died so that all may be reconciled to God is theological testament to how important this world and this life is. But also do everything from the perspective of eternity. That will guide you well every moment of every day.
When the day arrives for us to shutter our eyes for a final time and breathe our last, what will be said? Those who have confidence in God’s power to give life to the dead only need these words: Our loved one died in faith, like Jesus. And like Jesus, they will be raised to eternal life.
Monday, April 11, 2022
April 10, 2022 Palm Sunday Luke 19:28-48
You’ve
sure heard some of these before:
-Bright as a burnt out lightbulb.
-A
few sandwiches short of a picnic.
-Not
playing with a full deck.
-When
they were handing out brains you thought they said “trains” and you said, “No
thanks. I already have a set.”
-When
the good Lord poured in your brains he used a teaspoon, and someone shook his
hand!
-Dumb
as a rock.
This
last one actually takes us into our gospel reading. While dumb literally means not being able to
speak, we often use it to refer to brainlessness. When applied to our gospel it can refer to
both.
As
Jesus is coming into Jerusalem he is riding a donkey and his followers have
spread their cloaks on the road. They
are praising God with a loud voice proclaiming, “Blessed is the king who comes
in the name of Lord!” Some of the
Pharisees in the crowd said to him, “Teacher, order your disciples to
stop.” He answered, “I tell you if these
were silent, the stones would shout out.”
Let’s
jump to verse 44 where Jesus is later lamenting the eventual demise of
Jerusalem. “…they will not leave within
you one stone upon another; because you did not recognize the time of your
visitation from God.”
We
realize that even the stones of Jerusalem cry out to Jesus; both in lament and
in recognizing their creator’s presence.
We
haven’t read it yet because we’ve skipped over ten chapters in Luke’s gospel
since last week, but in 13:35 Jesus is being warned by some Pharisees not to go
to Jerusalem because Herod wants to kill him.
Jesus replies, “I must be on my way, … Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city
that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often have I desired to gather your
children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not
willing! See, your house is left to
you.”
Putting
all this together we realize that the religious experts, the ones who we would
expect to understand God’s ways most fully, are completely clueless. Are they in fact, ‘dumb as rocks’?
You
know me well enough to know that whenever I say something critical of the
Jewish religious leaders I do so knowing that I could easily fall under the
same condemnation. That’s not because I
am a religious leader in the church of today.
It is because so often the religious leaders present a point of view
that is highly logical and practical. I
suspect that on the whole they’d be the sort of people we’d like: hard working,
reliable, ethical, and even kind.
I
find their sort of thinking at work within myself and the society around
me. I am a highly practical person,
perhaps too practical. But if I don’t
see the productive value of something I tend to dismiss it. If I come across a wonderful idea, but it
isn’t workable, I’ll say ‘nice thought but so what?’
I
am an engineer. While I find scientific
discovery to be fascinating, if it can’t be applied to solve a real world
problem I ask what was the point? Was
the time and money spent in research worth it?
If yes, then well and good. But
if not, then no.
Quite
often the religious leaders took a highly practical point of view. They were an occupied nation. The Romans tolerated them. They danced a delicate dance between keeping
their faith alive and not being further oppressed.
Sometimes
we scoff at the way they wanted to maintain rules, laws, and traditions, but
keeping those things undiluted were what kept Judaism alive for centuries. They also had a very logical understanding of
how God worked. I find that same sort of
thinking prevalent in America today.
Many people call this a “Christian nation.” As I’ve personally studied the religious
history of America I’d say it never was, but many do. They say that our nation’s laws and actions
need to reflect God’s will. They say
that if America is God’s chosen nation to be an example the world we need to
live that way. Otherwise God will
abandon us.
The
exact same thinking was at work in the Jewish leadership. Why follow all the laws perfectly? Because that’s what God wants. “Why,” they would ask, “would God want to
come a save an unfaithful people?”
They’ve
got a very good point!
But
their point is based on human logic.
I
want you to notice something very important about the way Luke describes Jesus’
entry in Jerusalem. Yes, Jesus
criticizes the religious leaders for their criticism of his disciples. And yes Jesus goes into the temple compound
and causes a stir when he drives out those selling things. But he does all of it with a spirit of
lament. Jesus is not on a rampage of
unleashed fury.
It
comes down to this. Do we trust the
limits of human thinking, or do we trust in the boundlessness of God?
This
Friday we will be reading Luke’s account of what happens on Good Friday. Luke’s gospel is the one includes the one
criminal crucified beside Jesus saying, “Jesus, remember me when you come into
your kingdom.” (Luke 23:42) Jesus replies, “Truly I tell you today, you
will be with me in Paradise.”
That
criminal saw something in Jesus that was beyond all human logic. Of what possible value is there in putting
faith in a man who is being executed? My
logical mind says there’s no possible value at all. I am thinking like a religious leader. The criminal was thinking in terms of God’s
boundlessness that defies all appearances.
For
those of us stuck in seeing the world through human logic and limitations there
is good news. First, God does value our
practicality. God created practical
minds for good reason. We have an
important role to play. Things need to
be done in a way that is careful and constructive. One cannot be sloppy, lazy, mean, or
manipulative and not pay the cost sooner or later.
God
also knows our limitations. The temple
of Jerusalem was of central importance to Jewish faith. While Jews believed God could be anywhere
they were certain God’s presence could always be found in the temple. Their understanding was much like the way
many Christians see their churches today.
God knows that physical spaces help our faith expression. Technically as Christians places and
sanctuaries shouldn’t matter at all. We
worship God in the form of Jesus, not God in the place of a building. Christianity is about community. Jesus said, “Where two or three are gathered
in my name there I am in the midst of them.”
Jesus did not say, “Whenever you go to a place that has been made holy I
am sure to be there.” So, our buildings
shouldn’t matter one bit. But they do to
us. God knows that. God values that. Jesus truly lamented the physical city of Jerusalem
and its temple.
Second,
there is forgiveness. As I said, Jesus
truly lamented what he saw. God’s
forgiveness defies all logic and goes beyond what can be seen. Luke’s gospel is the one that not only
contains Jesus telling the criminal he will be with him in Paradise. It is also contains the phrase that Jesus
says of those who are executing him, “Father, forgive them; for they do not
know what they are doing.”
Us
humans, in our practical logic, killed our only hope for salvation. There is no point thinking, “Well, if I were
alive then I wouldn’t have thought that.”
Don’t kid yourself. Yes, you
would have. Jesus himself points out
that hypocrisy in us when he says, “And you say, ‘If we have lived in the days
of our ancestors, we would not have taken part with them in shedding the blood
of the prophets.” (Matthew 23:30)
It's
best if we just realize we live in the grace of God and rely on God’s
forgiveness that goes beyond all belief.
Maybe,
just maybe, you are a person who can see what God is up to. Maybe you can see that God is doing things
far beyond what the human mind can comprehend.
Maybe you can see that God is not bound by limitations but overcomes
them with bounty. Maybe you can see
salvation in the face of a man being executed.
We
pray that God gives us eyes to see and ears to hear. And then we pray that God make us not dumb as
rocks. But instead able to both speak
and know of God’s abounding kingdom which is breaking into this world each and
every day.
Monday, April 4, 2022
April 3, 2022 Failure Prone Disciples Luke 9:1-50
We began reading Luke’s gospel at the beginning of Advent last year. We’ve read it in order chapter by chapter up through today. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. We’re going to jump to later in the story. But thus far we’ve seen the birth predictions and births of both John the Baptist and Jesus. We’ve seen a bit of Jesus’ childhood. We’ve seen the early phases of both of their ministries. Then John was arrested and went off stage. Jesus’ ministry has been focused on the region of Galilee, some 80 miles north of Jerusalem, the religious center. Jesus has engaged in quite a bit of conflict with the sect of the Pharisees, as well as their scribes. That’s no surprise given that Jesus himself was probably of the sect of the Pharisees.
Most
of Jesus’ ministry has been to Jews but he has ventured into the territory of
non-Jews, like we read about last week.
From among Jesus’ followers he has hand-picked a dozen whom he’s named
“apostles”. This dozen is a mixed group
of guys who are not really qualified, but he chose them nonetheless. That’s telling us quite a bit. When God chooses people to do things God does
not often look to the brightest and best.
God chooses whom God chooses for God’s own inscrutable reasons.
We’ve
experienced Jesus’ core teachings and a sermon.
We’ve seen him perform miraculous healings, exorcisms and control the
forces of nature. In what we have read
thus far the foundation of Jesus’ ministry has been laid out. Today as we come to 9:50 we come to the end
of the Galilee ministry. The next verse
takes us into part two of the gospel, which is the journey to Jerusalem. After Easter we’ll return to that part of the
story. Anyway, a major shift happens
here as Jesus transitions away from Galilee.
It’s more than just a shift in his geographic location. There is also a shift in his disciples.
A
few weeks ago I put a handout in the bulletin about the conflict of economies
in Luke. One side was labeled the
Redistributive Economics of Exploitation.
The other was labeled God’s Divine Economy of Promised Compassion. It’s basically the way the world works vs.
the way God works. I’ve included this
second side in the bulletin today.
In
that we see that God is on top. Jesus is
God’s greatest agent to humanity in need.
But we are also God’s agents. In
Luke 9 we see that the role of being an agent of God expands to include the
disciples. Verse 1 starts off, “Then
Jesus called the twelve together and gave them power and authority over all
demons and to cure diseases, and he sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of
God and to heal.” Yes, the disciples
have been empowered to be agents of God and they are sent out into the region
of Galilee.
The
rest of Chapter 9 is really about the disciples, even as Jesus remains the
central character. So, what are these
disciples supposed to do? Does Jesus
give them each a car, a trunk full of swag and brochures, a bullhorn, and
several days rations if needed?
Nope. They will live radically dependent on the
hospitality of people they have not yet met.
They are to travel fast and light.
Now
it is true that hospitality in those days was very different than today. Today we would be shocked and offended if
someone showed up on our doorstep and asked for a meal and a night’s lodging. But that was not so much then. Travelers could reasonably depend upon the
hospitality of villagers. There were
intricate rules and expectations of both the traveler and the host. We see Jesus expressing some of them in the
text. The point is, these 12 disciples
are to go out not dependent upon their own stores or their own abilities, but
trust that as they spread the kingdom, God will provide. And also as Jesus warns them, they will not
always be well received.
The
very next scene is Herod becoming aware of all this. Jesus alone, or John the Baptist alone, were
just itinerant preachers doing their thing.
When Jesus’ disciples become involved now we’re looking at a much bigger
scale of operation. This inbreaking
kingdom of God is betting noticed. We
get a foreshadowing of what is to come.
At
the beginning of the chapter we are told that the disciples do go out without
provisions and they are successful.
Things are going well for them.
But will it last?
The
next scene is the Feeding of the Five Thousand.
All of the gospels include this feeding miracle. Luke is very sparce in the way he describes
it. And if you read it from Luke again
sometime notice the focus is on the disciples, not on Jesus. The day is drawing to its close. The disciples want Jesus to send the crowds
away for lodging and food. That’s very
logical concern to have. But Jesus tells
them to give them something to eat.
Remember,
they have just done all this successful missionary work. They have cured diseases and cast out
demons. Are they ready to trust that God
provides? Do they really believe that
God will do things beyond what they can see, and do more than the available
resources would suggest?
You
know the story. Jesus tells them to act
as God’s agents by providing and all they do is see things in limited human
terms. “We have no more than five loaves
and two fish – unless we are to go and buy food for all these people.” You can hear the sarcasm in their words:
Really Jesus. Feed all these thousands of
people? You’ve got to be kidding, right? Despite being fresh from success, here they
fail. It appears as if the disciples
haven’t learned everything yet. They
aren’t fully prepared.
In
the next scene Jesus asks who do people say that he is. The disciples answer what people are saying:
a prophet, Elijah, John the Baptist. When
asked who they think he is we have Peter’s famous reply, “You are the Messiah
of God.”
Okay, insightful. Thumbs up to the disciples.
Then Jesus goes on to describe what
will be happening to him. He will
suffer, be rejected by the experts, and ultimately killed; before being
raised. I imagine the disciples
listening in puzzlement. Surely this is
a parable or some sort of riddle.
They were similarly confused as
Jesus talks about taking up their cross and following him. But to their credit, they keep silent.
The transfiguration story follows
right on the heels of that. Once again,
while Jesus is the main character, there’s quite a bit of attention given to
the three disciples who witness it: Peter, James, and John. The three of them do appear to be successful,
at least somewhat. Despite being sleepy
they manage to stay awake to see it happen.
Yeah disciples! But then
practical human thinking slips in.
Peter, speaking for James and John
as well, makes a generous and practical offer – make three dwellings, or
booths, for Jesus, Moses, and Elijah.
I’ve preached before that this is really an insightful thing for Peter
to say and to offer. But he turns out to
be thinking wrongly. Apparently God’s
ways are not to be predicted. Failure to
the disciples.
Upon returning from the mountain we
meet an epileptic boy. The disciples,
not too long before successfully curing people, are failing.
They fail again at the next scene
when they don’t listen to Jesus when he tells them about what will happen to
him. And they fail yet again at the next
scene when they get into an argument over who is the greatest. Then there is yet another failure when John
tries to stop someone who was not among the hand picked twelve doing things in
Jesus’ name.
As the Galilee ministry winds down
and Jesus turns his attention toward the journey to Jerusalem things aren’t
looking to good for these hand-picked twelve.
These are words that should sink
deep into our ears. Our attention easily
goes to Jesus the superhero and we forget that we are in the story as the
disciples. We, like the disciples, are
God’s chosen agents to bring about God’s kingdom.
It is easy to feel fear and inadequacy
when it comes to doing God’s work. It is
easy to think that there must be someone else better qualified or more capable
of doing the work that God wants to get done.
Or perhaps we just feel like failures because we just don’t have enough
faith. Our priorities are too easily
sinful and misguided.
But
remember the disciples – Jesus hand picked twelve. Despite being with Jesus, and despite being
given special powers by Jesus, they still struggle. Sometimes they succeed. Sometimes they fail. Also remember that they are a mixed bunch:
fishermen, a tax collector, a zealot, a traitor. Certainly none of them are qualified to
change the world!
They
are who Jesus chose. And we are who
Jesus chose. Why? I don’t know!
But God chooses whom God chooses.
That is that.
I
believe it is in our inherent ability to fail, it is in our weaknesses, it is
in our ability to identify with hopelessness, that God finds our real
capabilities. That is how God works – by
sending authentic agents to the world in need.
Never
do we get to set ourselves above others as if we are superior. We simply aren’t. But we are equipped with the gift of God’s
grace. So may we be bold to live it.
By
the end of the gospel of Luke all of the disciples will have failed. As we enter Volume 2 of Luke’s writing, the
Acts of the Apostles, we see them continuing to struggle and to fail, and to
sometimes succeed. Through it all God is
with them. And through it all God’s
kingdom is growing.
May
you live in the faith and confidence of knowing you are an agent of God,
bringing hope and promise to our world in need.