Tuesday, November 6, 2012

This is the Joyful Feast

November 4, 2012

All Saints Day/Dia de los Muertos/Day of the Dead
Isaiah 25:6-9

            What is your comfort food? Every culture has comfort food, soul food. It’s the food that reminds us of good times and good people, food that smells like love. Maybe your trigger is the smell of chicken fat sizzling in a pan, or the lovely mouth-feel of banana pudding. Mac and cheese. Peanut butter on toast. Popcorn. Certain meals evoke memories of people and places and times gone by. Certain food has the power to remind us who we are, where we came from, and where we should be going.
            We are a faith founded on a meal of bread and wine, which is the ultimate comfort food. Of course we do not worship food itself, but the bread and wine reminds us who we are, where we came from, and where we should be going. This meal holds the meaning, it is so much more than bread and wine. It holds sacred memory. The container looks small, but it’s bigger on the inside. It goes deep down, far back into our sacred memory of bread from heaven, bread in the wilderness. It goes back to feast days and fast days, memories of scarcity and abundance.
If we pray the prayer that Jesus taught us, every day, then we are reminded every day that our daily bread is given by God. God feeds us.
The image of the God who feeds us is one of my favorite images of God, and another is the image of the God who tenderly wipes away every tear from our eyes (Revelation 21:3-4). Death shall be no more. Mourning and crying and pain will be no more. John of Patmos who received the Revelation was remembering the prophet Isaiah's promise to the people in exile. Isaiah was imagining God calling the people home to Jerusalem, to Mount Zion, where a feast was prepared for them-- "a feast of rich food, a feast of well-aged wines, of rich food filled with marrow, of well-aged wines strained clear." On the holy mountain of the Lord, God will swallow up death forever. "Then the Lord God will wipe away the tears from all faces."
One day in Jerusalem, Jesus shared the feast of Passover with his disciples. The feast was already a reminder of God’s power to save. What is the meaning of Passover? This feast is to make us feel as if we personally had come out of Egypt, as if we personally had been rescued from death and redeemed from slavery. The unleavened bread, the bread of people in a hurry. The cup of salvation, the cup that anticipates God’s return, to restore God’s reign of justice and righteousness. The meal already had meaning. Jesus added another layer of meaning when he said, this is my body, broken for you. This is the cup of the new covenant in my blood.
After Jesus died, the disciples scattered. They forgot the promises of God. They forgot that Jesus had told them that he was going to suffer and die, and rise again. They forgot, until they sat down at table with a stranger, who took bread and blessed it and broke it, and then they remembered. Their eyes were opened and they realized-- this feast means that death is swallowed up forever.
This feast is the Passover, this feast is the return from exile. This is the joyful feast of the people of God.
This Holy Communion is the Feast of Paradise. We share this feast with the dead as well as the living. The great cloud of witnesses gathers around the table, and the shroud is lifted-- that which separates the living from the dead is lifted. Death is swallowed up forever. We all feast in paradise together. Come and join the feast!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Treasured Service


21 October 2012
Mark 10:35-45

            The front page of Thursday’s Brainerd Dispatch announced that Gary Walters is Brainerd's Outstanding Citizen of the Year. If you don't know the name, you probably know the stunts: this is the guy who camped out at the top of the old landmark water tower to raise money (and mentors) for Kinship Partners. Every year he picks a new outrageous adventure to draw attention to Kinship partners, like swimming across Lake Mille Lacs, walking the length of Minnesota, or cycling the Mississippi River Road to New Orleans. But his response to the award: "Walters said he gets so much more out of life by doing the adventures for Kinship Partners. He said youths and Kinship are not the only ones who benefit."
            Doesn’t the Citizen of the Year, the Volunteer of the Month, or the Human Rights Award honoree always say something like that? That is what service teaches us.
            Jesus said, "Whoever wishes to be great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be a slave of all." (Mark 10:43-44) He said this to all his disciples, according to the story, and of course, that includes us.
            Jesus had just told his disciples, for the third time, what was going to happen when they reached their destination. They were on the road to Jerusalem. We know what’s coming, we have heard the rest of the story, we know what will happen to Jesus in Jerusalem. Those who were following Jesus had some idea, he had told them twice before what awaits him in Jerusalem.
See, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be handed over to the chief priests and the scribes, and they will condemn him to death; then they will hand him over to the Gentiles; they will mock him, and spit upon him, and flog him, and kill him; and after three days he will rise again.
But you know how it is when you hear bad news, especially about someone you love. Surely not. No, couldn’t be. There will be a reprieve, surely, some miracle. James and John seem to have focused on only the last part of the message, the part about rising. And they asked Jesus if they could be right there with him when that rising part happens, when Jesus comes into his glory. And the other disciples heard about what James and John had done they were angry, perhaps because they didn’t think of it first. They were angry, maybe because they were afraid there wouldn’t be enough glory to go around. But God always provides more than enough glory to go around, and always enough serving to do. "Whoever wishes to be great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be a slave of all."
            We have been thinking, all this month, about how we treasure our church. Often times we think of what we treasure in terms of what we get: fabulous pot luck suppers, the overwhelming support of the congregation in times of crisis, the awe-inspiring beauty of candlelight on Christmas Eve.
But  Brainerd’s Citizen of the Year reminds us that the most valuable treasures are the opportunities to serve others. Because we really to get more than we give. We give time and effort, but we get to be servants, like Jesus. We get to be like Jesus when we serve.
We have this treasure in our church. It is the treasured opportunity to serve meals at the Sharing Bread Soup Kitchen. It is the treasured opportunity to make life a little bit better for a stranger. It is the opportunity to read stories to a very young guest when we host the Interfaith Hospitality Network in our Rainbow Center and Fellowship Hall. It is the opportunity to drive to Pine Ridge, to insulate a home against the cold winds of a Northern Plains winter and the scorching heat of a South Dakota summer.
As you continue to think about this treasure we have, think about our treasured opportunities for service.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Too Much Baggage for the Journey


14 October 2012
Mark 10:17-31

            Who is wealthy? There is so much talk today-- all seams aimed at dividing us-- the 99%, the 1%, the 47%. My friend, Bryan Sirchio, a UCC minister & musician goes to Haiti regularly, to do what he can to help the poor, and gain some perspective. He tells a story of how “the poor” helped him. He was working with the Sisters of Charity in Port-au-Prince, doing whatever needed to be done, which was on this particular day, cutting hair. Bryan was no barber but he had been to one and knew that part of the job is the chatter. He got to talking with this man from Port-au-Prince, about the rich and the poor, and Bryan asked the man, “Do you think I’m rich?”
The man said, “I don’t know. How many times a week do you eat?”
Bryan was sure he had heard wrong. Sensing his confusion the man continued, “I mean, to you eat food every day? If you eat food every day, you are rich.”
            So I invite you to approach this text not as one of the 99%, but as one who eats food every day and therefore, is rich. Because it is too easy to approach this text in a judgmental way, if we think it is not about us. It is about us.
            Having placed ourselves firmly in the story as the rich young person, I want us all to consider this important detail: Jesus loved that rich young man. Not because he was rich, not because he was “good” (No one is good but God alone). Jesus just loved that rich young man. And Jesus loves you. All.
            The rich young man came and knelt at Jesus feet to ask “What must I do?” And Jesus responded by reminding him of the commandments:
            You shall not murder;
You shall not commit adultery;
You shall not steal;
You shall not bear false witness;
You shall not defraud;
Honor your father and mother.
These are six of the Ten Commandments. These make up the second tablet of the law, which Jesus, elsewhere, summed up in one: Love your neighbor as yourself.
Perhaps Jesus was about to list the four remaining commandments, when the man interrupted him and said, “I have kept all these since my youth!”
Then Jesus, looking at him, loved him and said: “You lack one thing: sell what you own, and give the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me."
You lack one thing. Even if we have managed to love our neighbor as we love ourselves, keeping the whole second tablet of the law, there is also the first tablet, the first four of Ten Commandments:
You shall have no other gods.
You shall make no graven image
You shall not take God’s name in vain.
Honor the Sabbath.
Elsewhere in the gospel, Jesus summarized this tablet also: Love God, with all your heart and soul and mind and strength.
Our relationship with wealth is one of the greatest threats to our relationship with God, because it is the idol most likely to replace God as the object of our love, the desire of our hearts, the preoccupation of our mind, for which we spend our strength. The pursuit of wealth threatens our souls.
So it is with love that Jesus challenged the man to let go of his idol, and trust in God alone.
This is the season of the year when the stewardship committee invites us all to make a commitment to give to the church. We often think that we need to give because we owe the church our support. As if it is an exchange for services rendered. That is one way to look at it, I appreciate that, I sincerely do. But it doesn’t work for me. I give for a different reason. I give because giving away the idol that most tempts me is a way to profane that idol. I give away money to renounce the money’s claim on my life.
The truth is, we all need to give, because giving away that which threatens to displace God is itself and act of faith, a spiritual discipline. We need to give just as much as we need to pray, and study the scriptures, and worship and sing together. The act of giving is itself a prayer and a song, an act of devotion.
Jesus calls to us all: come to me, you weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, for my yoke is easy and my burden is light. Wealth might be one of those burdens.
            The journey is long, and the way is hard. It is best to leave the baggage behind. Our relationship with wealth is hefty baggage. The rich young man knew that much-- or at least, he knew something wasn’t right. That’s why he knelt at Jesus feet, taking the posture of one who begs for healing. Wealth was burden, Jesus said he needed to lay it down.
May we to have the wisdom to kneel down and allow Jesus to lift every burden, that we might take up the cross and follow him on the journey.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Wisdom-Watching


23 September 2012
Proverbs 31:10-31; James 3:13-4:3; Mark 9:30-37

            We have known it was coming for quite some time. We can feel it, like a steady change in altitude that we can feel in our ears. I find, that like Pavlov’s dogs salivating at the sound of the bell, I have been conditioned to dread the approach of November elections. It is the season of bitter squabbles on television and radio, billboards and web sidebars. I reflexively start my engine and tune into NPR, and suddenly I feel like I’m trapped in the car with quarrelsome children… except they are not children, they are petulant adults, each one trying to convince me that the other is stupid. Not just stupid, but dangerously stupid enough to be thrown out of the car.
            The democratic ideal is that the people rule. We the people, if we are to rule, we must be engaged in a process of discernment, make reasoned decisions, and cast responsible votes. Who among us is wise? Which candidates have the wisdom to lead us?
            It is a tremendous responsibility, which I believe most people take seriously. Some of us take it so seriously we become sick with anxiety. How do we prove ourselves faithful citizens without going mad, in this season of madness?
            Sometimes I think the best thing to do is turn off the radio. Turn off the TV. Stop reading the blogs, columns, or letters that we know will just whip us into a frothy anger. That anger, that anxiety, that stress is not helping us make reasoned decisions.
            Instead, we should use that time to meditate. I am serious! Try this. It is a prescription for your spiritual health from your spirit-doctor: take 10 minutes that you would ordinarily spend watching the morning news program, and meditate on this final chapter of Proverbs. Do the same at night. Ten minutes in the morning, ten minutes before you sleep. From now until election day, give it at least that. Because this passage tells us what wisdom looks like, it may just help us to discern who among us is wise.
            Wisdom opens her hands to the poor, and reaches out to the needy.
            Wisdom prepares employment for her servants, but also labors alongside them. Wisdom is not too proud to take on the task of the servant.
            Wisdom is a house-holder, which in Greek is the same word for economist. Wisdom is an economist who provides food, clothing, and shelter for all her household, not just herself, not just her husband, not just her children. Wisdom provides for everyone, the whole economy.
            The capable woman is the personification of wisdom. Imagine a world run by capable women. Some of them might even be men. In most of the Scriptures, we women, we have imagine ourselves as generic men. All that “mankind,” man this and man that, him, his. Well fellas, the table is turned in this one scripture, and you get to imagine yourselves as generic women. Now do you understand all the fuss about inclusive language? Do you get it? Imagine the world run by capable women, generically speaking--- a world run by people who are the embodiment of wisdom.
            If proverbs doesn’t provide enough material for your meditation, turn to James. We know all too well that every candidate claims to be wise. But oftentimes they are simply clever. Knowing. Shrewd. Confounding. Manipulative. That is not what James would call “wisdom from above.” Look to see who is gentle. Merciful. Willing to yield. Who is a peacemaker.
            Finally, look to the gospel. The simplest test of all: The one who would be first of all must be a servant of all. Jesus placed a child in the midst of them. See this picture on the bulletin cover of this beautiful child? That is a child who has just come out of the tub! No dirt, no scabs, no nose ickies— any of us intimately familiar with parenthood know that this picture is not an entirely honest depiction of this child. Your typical child looks like that for about 5 minutes after bath time. Then he or she is back to their normally runny-nosed self. The child Jesus picked up probably looked like any child who spent the day outdoors without adult supervision. The one who welcomes that child-- the orphaned, naked, street urchin--  that is the one who is worthy to be our first among all.
            May God bless these days of discernment. May God grant us wisdom, and courage, and may God grant us peace. Amen.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Consider the Cat


30 September 2012
On the occasion of “Bless the Beasts” Sunday
Outdoor Worship in Gregory Park 

            Today we take a break from the routine of worship in our church sanctuary to come outside to God’s sanctuary, of which every church sanctuary is an incomplete copy. Today the sky is our ceiling and the pines are our pillars and the maples our stained glass. Thank God!
            Remember that we used to live a lot closer to the earth. Not you and me personally of course, but our ancestors, many generations removed, rested each night on the bosom of the earth itself. We used to live much closer to our fellow creatures of the earth as well, keeping our domesticated animals close to us and keeping the predators as far away as possible.
            Living so close together, cheek by jowl, perhaps it was clearer to us then that we are dependent on one another. Our dogs kept  us warm and alerted us to danger, and we kept them warm and shared our food with them. With the help of our dogs we watched our cattle and kept them safe, led them to pasture and water, and they in turn fed us and clothed us. It was clear to us that we were dependent on one another, that our welfare and the animals’ welfare were intertwined.
            Today we remember and give thanks to God for our co-creatures. We remember that we were made for each other. We remember that our welfare and our fate is intertwined. May we always be mindful that God has made a covenant not just with us, but with every living thing.
            There is yet more light and truth to break forth from the earth and all that dwell therein. Jesus gives us a clue: the abundant life on this earth is not just for food and clothing, but for beauty and delight. Our relationship with each other is not strictly utilitarian. All living things have something to offer, even the lilies of the field, even the cat.
            The cat is one creature you won’t see mentioned in the Bible, but we can learn from them nevertheless. If you want to know peace, contemplate your domestic cat. Look at her, lounging in the pool of sunlight. She know how to appreciate the moment. Or find her in your closet, sleeping on your softest sweater, or in the linen cupboard, graciously furring up the towels for you. That cat knows when and where to get some alone time.
Note how the feline head is the perfect size and shape, a match for the human hand; and how she fits in the hollow of your lap. What other reason could God have for creating the cat, than to be our comfort and blessing?
Thank God and give praise for all creatures great and small! Amen.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Adam & Eve, Ruth & Naomi, David & Jonathan


It’s Adam and Eve, Ruth and Naomi, David and Jonathan:
The Biblical Case for a Broader View of Family
By Rev. Deborah G Celley
On November 6, the citizens of Minnesota will be asked, “Shall the Minnesota Constitution be amended to provide that only a union of one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Minnesota?" My answer will be no. I am voting no because the amendment is discriminatory. The sole reason for the amendment is to prevent homosexual couples receiving the same rights that heterosexual couples receive through marriage. I am one of hundreds of Clergy United for All Families, a coalition of religious leaders working to defeat this amendment.
The pro-amendment side also has the support of some Minnesota clergy, most notably the Roman Catholic bishops and conservative protestant church leaders. These religious leaders claim that the union of one man and one woman is the biblical view of marriage. I will grant that it is one model of marriage found in the Bible. But one man, one woman is not the only biblical view of marriage and family.[1]
Throughout most of the Bible, marriage is a union between one man and as many women as he can afford to keep: like Jacob, Leah, and Rachel, for example. Also, a man’s family includes servants and the children of the servants that he has impregnated: the children of Bilhah and Zilpah in Jacob’s case (see Genesis 35: 23-26 for the roll of Jacob’s sons), and the child of Hagar, in the case of Jacob’s grandfather Abraham. We will visit Abraham’s story again later.
Genesis includes the story of Adam and Eve, but it also includes the story of Lot having sons by his daughters. His excuse was that they got him drunk; he didn’t know what he was doing (Genesis 19:30-38). Perhaps getting him drunk and sleeping with him was their revenge for his offering them up to be gang raped by the men of Sodom (Genesis 19:8).
The manliest man of them all, King Solomon, had among his wives, seven hundred princesses and three hundred concubines. With a thousand women to impregnate, it is no wonder he turned to a fertility goddess for a little extra help. (See 1 Kings 11:1-5). Solomon himself was not the son of David’s first (nor second, nor third) wife. Solomon was the son Bathsheba, whom David married after arranging her widowhood. (2 Samuel 11).
So, how can biblically literate people make the claim that one man, one woman is the Biblical view of marriage? Conservative Christians commonly site the words of Jesus in Matthew 19:3-6:
Some Pharisees came to him, and to test him they asked, ‘Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any cause?’ He answered, ‘Have you not read that the one who made them at the beginning “made them male and female”, and said, “For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh”? So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.’[2]
Jesus quotes from each of the two distinct creation narratives. The first chapter of Genesis describes creation by the word of God’s mouth. Note the repeated refrain: “God said ‘Let there be—,’ and there was---.” The creation of human beings is the final act of creation, the capstone of God’s magnificent work. In this version, male and female humans are a simultaneous creation (Genesis 1:26-27).
The second chapter describes the order and process of creation distinctly differently from the first. In the second chapter God creates an earth-creature out the dust, and animates the creature. Then God plants a garden for the creature to live. After deciding that the creature looks lonely, God creates animals. The earth creature names them all, but among all these creatures not one was quite what God had in mind. So God put the earth creature to sleep, and divided it in two, and created a woman and a man.
And that, little children, is why we are always looking for the one who completes us, the one who makes us whole again. It is a beautiful story, and for most of us it works just so. Sometimes the person that completes another happens to be of the same gender. Whenever we celebrate the marriage of two people who love each other, the church intones these words, “What God has joined together, let no one separate.” It works regardless of gender.
In the gospel context, this passage is not as much about marriage as it is about the confrontation between Jesus and the Pharisees, who present a question not about marriage but about law, specifically, a law regarding divorce. The Pharisees knew the answer before they asked the question. The answer is yes, it is lawful. See Deuteronomy 24:1: if a man finds something objectionable about his wife he can write her a certificate of divorce.
In one remarkable biblical example, a mass dissolution of marriage was required by the will of the religious community, in order to be faithful to the law. You will find it in the book of Ezra, which chronicles the return of the exiles from Babylon to Jerusalem. The problem, introduced in the ninth chapter, was intermarriage. Some prominent people among the retuning exiles had taken foreign wives and had children with them. Intermarriage is prohibited by law (Deuteronomy 7:3-4). After fasting and prayer, the community concluded that those who had intermarried must divorce. (Ezra 10:3) The book of Ezra ends on the chilling report: “they sent them [their wives] away with their children.”
The Pharisees were experts in the law. They were members of a religious reform movement that was devoted to creating a society based on God’s law. As the gospel’s antagonists, the literary function of the Pharisees is to try and fail to trick Jesus into contradicting the law.
Here is why Jesus always stunned and outwitted the Pharisees: he did not contradict the law but he fulfilled the law. Jesus filled the law full of justice and mercy. Women were always the victims of divorce. While the intent of the law which allowed for divorce was to prevent the injustice of one man having to raise another man’s child (if the woman was found to be pregnant before her time), men used the law to interpret “something objectionable” freely.  Women received nothing but a certificate of divorce-- no property, no child support (and probably no children either, children were the husband’s property), no income. There was no law allowing a woman to divorce her husband. Only a man could initiate a divorce.
Jesus refused to be a party to injustice. In Jesus’ view, if someone takes a wife, he is responsible for that woman as long as she lives. Then Jesus followed up this teaching with something that the “biblical marriage” people conveniently forget.
“His disciples said to him, ‘If such is the case of a man with his wife, it is better not to marry.’” (Matthew 19:10) Jesus concurred, and then gave a peculiar little speech about men who have made themselves “eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. Let anyone accept this who can.” Here is evidence that celibacy and singleness were preferable to marriage and childbearing, in early Christian thought.
The apostle Paul recommended celibacy to the first Christians. He wrote it plainly in 1 Corinthians 7:25-35. Ironically, this letter is the same source for the ode to love so often read at weddings (1 Corinthians 13). Not that marriage itself is a sin, Paul wrote, he simply advised that it was better to remain single, because the responsibilities of marriage are a hindrance and a distraction from Godly devotion.
The Hebrew Bible presents marriage as a union of one man and as many women as he can afford to keep, regardless of the consent of the women taken as wives or concubines. The law, in Deuteronomy, makes provision for a man to divorce a wife with whom he finds fault, but no provision for a wife to divorce her husband. The Greek New Testament presents marriage as a worldly distraction, a threat to whole-hearted devotion to God and to the Christian community. This is not good news for any kind of marriage.
Fortunately, there is more. Within the Bible, I also find stories which ignite hope for the future of families, and affirm family values which I believe are more faithful to the heart of God than the one-man-one-woman mantra of the Christian right.
What makes a family? What kind of family delights the heart of God?
The book of Ruth tells the story of a widow, Naomi, who, after emigrating from Israel with her husband, is widowed. Her two grown sons, who had taken foreign wives, also died, childless. The three widows Naomi, Orpah, and Ruth, did not have a promising future. Naomi kissed her daughters-in-law goodbye, sent them back to their fathers, and wished them well. Then she turned her face toward her homeland, to seek refuge there. But the younger daughter-in-law Ruth clung to Naomi and promised:
Where you go, I will go; where you lodge, I will lodge;
your people shall be my people, and your God my God.
Where you die, I will die—there will I be buried. (Ruth 1:16-17)
The women became a family of choice. They crossed the border together and made a home in Bethlehem. They supported one another by gleaning grain from the fields. The elder devised a plan for the younger to marry a relative, and when Ruth gave birth to a son, Naomi became the baby’s nurse. A woman, a woman, a man and a baby—that’s a biblical example of family that we do not see promoted at our local conservative church. But the value of devotion to one another, the value of enduring hardship together, the celebration of new life together, these are good family values. The story of Ruth clues us in to the kind of family that delights the heart of God: it is not the appearance that matters, as much as the quality of the relationships.
Church leaders who promote “traditional marriage” are often the same leaders who publicly deride single mothers, even if these women are single because they have been abused. Single mothers have a biblical champion in Hagar, the mother of Ishmael. I promised you I would revisit Abraham’s story. Hagar was an Egyptian slave in Abraham’s household; she was his wife Sarah’s maid. When Sarah thought she would never bear children, she used Hagar as her surrogate. Then, after Sarah gave birth to a son of her own (Isaac), Sarah insisted that Abraham send Hagar and Ishmael away (see Genesis 21:9-19). Abraham put the child on Hagar’s shoulder and sent them into the desert with a skin of water and a bit of bread. And when the bread and water were gone, and the child cried out in hunger, Hagar sat down to die.
Then God did something without precedent in the Hebrew Scriptures. God spoke to a woman. God spoke to Hagar and said, take that little boy by the hand, because I am going to make a great nation out of him. And God did. Starting with a poor African single mother and her little orphaned child, God made the nation that Scripture and tradition identify as the Arab people. But you don’t hear about that in the conservative women’s bible study.
Neither do you hear about Jonathan’s love for David. At first sight,
…the soul of Jonathan was bound to the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul…. Then Jonathan made a covenant with David, because he loved him as his own soul. Jonathan stripped himself of the robe that he was wearing, and gave it to David, and his armor, and even his sword and his bow and his belt. (1 Samuel 18:1-4)
David and Jonathan were intimate. They were bound together; they became family. Jonathan declared that he loved David more than his own life (1 Samuel 20:17). When Jonathan was killed, David sang this lamentation:
I am distressed for you, my brother Jonathan;
greatly beloved were you to me;
your love to me was wonderful,
passing the love of women.
Far be it from me to “out” David and Jonathan. Whether their relationship was typical of a Band of Brothers comradeship or more Brideshead Revisited is conjecture. There was a fierce love there, and a covenant, and at the last, grief and tears. That sounds a lot like a marriage.
We also meet all kinds of families in the New Testament. We meet young Timothy, Paul’s protégé, who was raised by two women: his mother and grandmother, Eunice and Lois (2 Timothy 1:5); there is no mention of a father. We have Lydia, a female head of household and leader of a church (Acts 16:14-15). We have the curious partnership of Prisca (aka Priscilla) and Aquila (mentioned several times in Acts and in some of Paul’s letters). I was sure that Aquila was a girl’s name, but it is not; I checked with Professor Deborah Krause of Eden Theological Seminary just to make sure. What is remarkable about this partnership, Professor Krause wrote[3], is that the name of the wife frequently precedes that of her husband, which is an unusual construction. It may suggest that first century Christians were more egalitarian than the conservative organization Focus on the Family would like us to think.
Jesus scandalized the religious conservatives of his day by suggesting that biological family ties were not of great importance. He shunned his mother and brothers when they were asking for him and proclaimed familial relationship with everyone who does the will of God (Mark 3:35). When James and John got up from their nets to follow him, he did not tell them to go back and take care of their father (Matthew 4:22). People left their mothers and fathers and children and homes to follow Jesus (Matthew 19:29) and he did not chastise them for it, he blessed them.
Married with Children was a popular American situation comedy that ran from 1987-1997. I was married (with children), during most of its decade-long run, so I was too busy to watch it, but I gather that it was a parody of the popular television families of the 1950’s: Leave It to Beaver, the Donna Reed Show, Father Knows Best. These fictional programs, not the Bible, are the more likely source for the conservative idea that marriage has been—from time immemorial—one man, one woman, with children. Real life has always—yes, even from biblical times-- been much more diverse than the Hollywood archetype.
What makes a family? What kind of family delights the heart of God? Look for the passion of Jonathan for David; look for the tender care and super-human strength in adversity of Hagar for her son Ishmael; look for the devotion to the next generation of Eunice, Lois and Timothy. Look for people united in a common mission to benefit the least and last, like the first Christian communities sharing possessions (see Acts 2:43-47 and 4:32-35). Where are our brothers, our sisters, our mothers and fathers? Wherever there is love, there is the family of Christ.

Rev. Deborah G Celley is pastor of First Congregational United Church of Christ, Brainerd, Minnesota. www.uccbrainerd.com. She also blogs at creatingworshiptogether.blogspot.com.


c. Deborah G Celley, 2012


[1] Carolyn Pressler, Professor of Biblical Interpretation at United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities, has also published a paper online at mnunited.org
[2] The Scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, and are used by permission. All rights reserved.
[3] In a personal email, September 9, 2012.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Unplugged!


9 September 2012
James 2:1-17; Mark 7: 24-37

Music Television’s Unplugged series debuted in 1989 (according to Wikipedia), offering viewers the opportunity to hear the live acoustic versions of popular songs that were usually electrified and often over processed in the music studio. For guitar players like Eric Clapton, Bonnie Rait, and Mark Nopfler, it was an opportunity to demonstrate that their musical talent was not dependent on the sound studio. For guitar amateurs like me, it was a revelation. Hearing “Layla” on acoustic guitar was like realizing that I’d never really heard it before. Oh, I’d listened, but I’d never really heard. My ears were opened, unplugged.

They brought to Jesus a man who was deaf and had an impediment in his speech and Jesus put his fingers to his ears and then he spat and touched his toungue and he said Ephphatha which means “unplug yourself!”

Be thou opened! It is what we might say to the kitchen sink when we are laboring over a clogged drain-- “Come on, unplug yourself!” Well it’s what I might say anyway. Anyone who has walked into my office while my laptop computer is misbehaving knows that I have a quirky habit of talking to my appliances.

Faith unplugged, unclogged, unstopped… that’s what James is appealing to in his letter. You think you get it? He says. Listen to yourself! Look at the way you are treating people! You say “I believe” and then you treat the poor like dirt and the rich with deference. It that how you love your neighbor as yourself?

What if we were to reverse that? Say, treat the rich like dirt and the poor with deference? Would that be better? Of course not! That’s no better. Love your neighbor as yourself. Or, in the words of one of my favorite acoustic musicians Eric Bibb: “Walk with the rich, walk with the poor. Learn from everyone, that’s what life is for. But don’t you ever let nobody drag your spirit down.”

Love your neighbor as yourself. And, love yourself as your neighbor.

It’s the immigrant woman in the gospel of Mark who teaches us how to do that, while Jesus plays the devil’s advocate. She comes to Jesus for help and he insults her. Who among us would have the courage to persist? Who among us would have the courage to be our own advocate? By standing up for herself and her daughter, she cast out the demon. She became the exorcist. Jesus announced it: For saying this you may go. The demon has left your daughter.

She got it. She lived it. Faith. Unstopped. Unplugged.

This Christian life, this discipleship—it is not about believing the right set of doctrines. It is about living unplugged, unstopped, without blinders. It is about appealing to the goodness of all people, and trusting in the mercy of God.