Thursday, February 03, 2011

Be our Guest. Christians and hospitality

I enjoy being a guest.  It is the nature of my vocation that I enter into the homes of other people.  I love to visit people. I like to be received.  It is good to be on someone else's home turf.  Often, I am the recipient of some gesture of welcome---a cup of coffee, a piece of cake, a comfy chair.  When I came here five years ago, my wife and I intentionally welcomed the congregation into our home.  We invited people over for dinner.  We had an open house in the summer time.  With rare exception, our openness to others was not reciprocated.  We go out to eat with a few couples from the church annually. When our second and third children were born, people brought food to us.  We enjoyed many wonderful home-cooked meals that way.  But nobody came to eat with us.  And rarely have we been invited to another home.
There have been occasions when we sought to get people together around a meal for fellowship and discipleship.  But people have been reluctant to take part.  People are closed off, private, afraid of getting to know others.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Jesus' maps

If we are to become seekers after and followers of Jesus, then we must become familiar with His ways.
His ways are ancient, marking paths thousands of years old.  I have not walked where Jesus walked.  I have not been in the Galilee region, or in the city of Jerusalem.  I have not been to Israel or the middle east.  We may not literally go there, as pilgrims to a place.  But we can find ourselves following after Him.
The first step is to encounter Jesus, called the Christ.  To do so will require digging into history, religion, ancient cultures and traditions, biblical texts and spiritual experiences.
We will begin with Jesus, as He comes to us in the bible. We will call this a primary map.
The gospels tell the story of Jesus' adult ministry, arrest, trial, crucifixion, death, burial, and resurrection.  Two of the four gospels include infancy stories.  The Gospel of John develops a more cosmic identity, giving Jesus the status of divine creator.  Jesus is light.  Jesus is God incarnate.
IN the gospels Jesus teaches and heals people.  Jesus feeds the hungry and raises the dead to life.  He restores sight to the blind. He calls disciples, students to come after him, learn and imitate his ways.  Jesus teaches them how to pray, how to share, how to serve others.  Jesus tells parables, stories that interpret human experience from an alternative view.  Jesus favors small things, weak things, poor things.  Jesus sees the value in a single sparrow, in the artistry of a flower, in the subtle power of a single seed.  Jesus recognizes injustices, systems of evil and oppression that threaten life.  He confronts and seeks to dismantle those systems.
Jesus is baptized and practices the Jewish Passover.  He observes Sabbath, even while breaking or changing the rules that governed human behavior on it.  He upholds the sanctity of marriage and the goodness of children, even while he eats with prostitutes and invites condemned criminals into paradise.
Coming next...the gospel of Matthew.  Rabbi Jesus and the way of poverty, humility, and peace.

Searching

Geocaching is a new game of hide and seek that people play with their handheld GPS device.  A GPS helps you to tsrack and locate a hidden object, the coordinates of which have been entered into the GPS' navigation system.  Caches are usually small containers with trinkets in them, prizes for the seeker/finder.  There are hundreds of thousands of geocaches around the world.  People are seekers.  We like to find things and be found. We like to use our minds, our intuition, and our tools to find our way.  Searching is in our DNA. 


"For as long as I can remember, I've been searching for something, some reason why we're here. What are we doing here? Who are we? If this is a chance to find out even just a little part of that answer... I don't know, I think it's worth a human life. Don't you?"  (From the movie "Contact", with Jodie Foster.)  Searching for meaning.  Asking why.  It's what sets us apart.  We have the capacity to ask questions, to search, to discover, to assign meaning to an experience or event or object.  We make sense of our world.  


In a Google world, where an engine searches millions of pages of digital content to provide the searcher with the best results for their inquiry within seconds, we expect to find answers instantly and easily.  Is everything available  through Google?  Is there nothing hidden that cannot be found with the click of the mouse and the stroke of the keys?  
"You have searched me out and known me," sang the biblical Psalmist thousands of years ago.  God searches for people, too.  God seeks us, even as we seek after the mysteries of life.  We seek God to make sense of the things we cannot Google for understanding.  
I am reading a book right now called "Enough: Why people starve in an age of plenty."  I think that is a question worth asking.  Why do people starve in an age of plenty?  Why, if there is enough food for everyone on the planet, do 26,500 children die daily from preventable diseases related to hunger?  Google that.  If you Google the world hunger about 49 million hits emerge.  That's about how many Americans suffer from food insecurity, a lack of adequate resources to provide food for their household.  I think we could spend our lives searching for a way to end hunger in the world.  
Searching for the truth about life, we travel, we read, we explore ideas, we pay attention to events and people.  Most people need a Google or a GPS to navigate their way in the world.  We need direction, guidance, a map.
I like to think that searching, though often personal, is not best done in private.  It is best done in the company of other searchers.  Geocaching is a great family activity. 
Searching for the truth about the world, ourselves, and God is something we do best in conversation with others.  It is better not to search alone.  Lonely searching too often becomes wandering, which can prove fruitless, aimless, and direction-less.


The biblical story is about a way.  From beginning to end, the biblical story is a journey filled with movement and obstacles and misguidance and redirection.  
Jesus says, "I am the way, the truth, and the life."  What is the way of Jesus?  How does Jesus teach us to seek after God?   Where does Jesus go?  What tools does he offer for navigation?  What are the maps Jesus' uses to direct His people into the life God intends?  By carefully reading the bible we can come to see these maps.  They do not provide a single-lane highway, easy-to-travel approach.  We will need to use our imagination, intuition, and collective resources to find the way.  On the way, we might also be found.  


The Christian community believes that the way is Jesus.  The way to peace.  The way to compassion.  The way to justice.  The way to death.  The way to life.  Jesus is the way there.  Getting on the way with Jesus is what church is about.  It is about finding one's way in the world with Jesus as our master.  He shows us the way.  


Coming up in the next post... Using Jesus' maps: ancient practices that give direction.    
  

An education


  
Sermon for Epiphany 4 2011
The mediocre teacher tells.  The good teacher explains.  The superior teacher demonstrates.  The great teacher inspires.  ~William Arthur Ward. 
When we think of teachers, we think of formal education, school, professors, and homework.  School is something that we complete, that we finish.  So what does it mean to be a student or disciple of Jesus?  We are going to find out.  What is Christian education and who needs it?   
It all started on Saturday when I slipped on the ice and sprained my ego, I mean ankle.  Then on Sunday, Jonah fell and split his head open, needed stitches.  Then Cherie had a disastrous trip to the grocery store, in which she dumped an entire bag of dog food in the checkout aisle.  Can you say clean up on aisle 12?  Then my computer failed. I was going to say died, but I don’t want to over-humanize the machine. It’s not human.   It was one of those weeks---like someone has it in for you, when trivial things cause frustrations that turn into self-pity.  Why is this happening? Ugh.  Not now.  Not me. Not today.  I am important.  I have things to do, places to go, people to see.  You know the feeling? The whole, “Why am I being cursed” feeling?  The feeling that you are not blessed, that someone up there has it in for you.  Then I see Linda Shelley, who has good news about her cancer fight and she tells me how blessed she is.  Blessed.  Sick with cancer, having just come from chemo, and she is blessed.  Man do I have a ways to go.  I think I was also able to be a blessing a couple of times this week.  I delivered food to some neighbors.  They genuinely seemed grateful that I came, listened to their stories, felt their pain, tried to help.  I was blessed to be a blessing a couple of times this week.    
The Master teaches.  And on this occasion, he speaks blessing first.  He will teach morals and commands and encourage a particular way of life.  But he begins with blessings.  The Beatitudes are a reminder.  Not that people in mourning are blessed.  Or that the poor are.  Or that those who are pure in heart or peaceful are blessed.  It is not a reminder that God only blesses these types of folks.  Jesus is offering a blessing to the people who had gathered to listen to him teach.  In the beginning of his first teaching event, he offers these blessings.  Matthew’s gospel includes five teaching discourses, in which Jesus offers an alternative way of life for God’s people.  Some scholars believe that Matthew is claiming that Jesus is the new Moses and the five teachings are the new Torah.  Torah are the first five books of the old testament and represent the core teachings of Judaism about life in relationship or covenant with their God, Yahweh, with each other, and with their neighbors.  Jesus’ first discourse is called the Sermon on the mount, because he is sitting on a mountain.  We will hear the entire sermon over the next few weeks.  It gives the Christian community a snapshot of the core values or principles by which the Master Jesus lives; teachings he demonstrates in his own life and expects his followers to imitate in theirs.  If Moses’ teaching begins with the ten commandments—the thou shalt nots.  Then Jesus teaching begins with the Beatitudes, the blest are theys.  Contrast these ways of talking about God.  The former reveals God as a supreme law giver and judge who presides over the people as a stern parent, with serious rules to be obeyed.  The latter reveals a God who blesses those people who are the least likely to feel blessed.  The ones who may seem to be cursed. God favors them.  When others might look at their situations and say, what did they do?  And don’t we sometimes judge ourselves negatively too?  That we don’t deserve to be blessed, that we deserve whatever crisis comes our way?  When life feels like divine punishment or has gone to hell, that is when God’s promise to bless is given.  Jesus teaches that the suffering ones will be rewarded; that the peacemakers will be God’s children; that those who grieve will be comforted; that the weak will have the world handed to them. 
Christian education begins with blessing.  It begins with God’s welcome and God’s promise to give us the fullness of life.  And it continues with the master Jesus teaching us how to live in that grace, how to become not only recipients of blessing but bearers of blessing for others.  There are so many masters out there competing for your allegiance.  Christians take Jesus as their master.  We are apprentices in his ways.   
I was blessed with the resources to obtain formal academic degrees, both my bachelors and my masters degree.  But Christian education is deeper; it is training the Spirit to will what God wills, to love what God loves, to care about the things God made, to tread a little lighter on the earth, and to bless others more than you curse. Christian education shapes one’s identity as a baptized child of God.  How do we live as bearers of God’s kingdom on earth as it is in heaven?  How do we show mercy, offer peace, and receive pure hearts?  How do we endure persecution as Christ’s people, doing justice and loving mercy by standing with the outcast and the sinners?  How do we stand for human dignity and demand that al people receive respect and a little compassion? Christian education is lifelong training in how to live the golden rule, how to love others, love God, love the world.  For the next few weeks, we are in for a Christian education, as we listen to the master. I know this kind of training is not a sprint, but a marathon.  It is lifelong development and formation as God’s people.  Join us as we grow in our knowledge of God’s blessings and in our resolve to follow Him.  And before you go today, tell someone how God blessed you this week. 
Amen.