Sunday, August 15, 2010

The Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost

The Ven. Richard I. Cluett

My, wasn’t that a comforting Word from the Lord Jesus? I have always wondered what was the origin of that saying about the job of the preacher being “to comfort the afflicted and to afflict the comfortable.” I think we have found it in today’s gospel passage.

Wherever happened to the Jesus who said in Matthew; “Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” Is this the same Jesus? The simple answer is, Yes.

So, what do you think is going on with Jesus here? Did he get out on the wrong side of the bed? Is he just having a bad day? Perhaps his biorhythms are off. Maybe like the flight attendant who jumped down the emergency chute and out of his job, perhaps he had just had enough with how things are, and was ready now for some radical change. Was there some specific event or circumstance around Jesus that occasioned this outburst? Or maybe if not Jesus, then maybe around Luke, that would cause him to highlight this dimension of Jesus and the world?

Do you remember what John the Baptist said about Jesus way back before the beginning of Jesus’ ministry? In Matthew 3:11 we hear John say, “I baptize you with water for repentance, but one who is more powerful than I is coming after me; I am not worthy to carry his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.”

Is it possible that the world is such – that the human condition is such – that the breaking in of the reign of God will cause radical change, will demand radical change? Is it possible that the kingdom of God looks little like the world we inhabit, looks nothing like some of the uglier aspects of the world? Is it possible that the best of human community is but a veiled shadow of what God has in store for creation?

God has declared through his prophet Isaiah that “They will not hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain; for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.”

If that is the case, then it would not be surprising that the breaking in of the reign of God will cause some breaking of old habits, some rejection of ingrained patterns of living, some necessity to separate, to divide oneself from the evil powers of the world and from people whose behavior or mission is to hurt or destroy.

We affirm that truth whenever we baptize someone and welcome him or her into the household of God. “Do you renounce the evil powers of the world that corrupt and destroy the creatures of God?” “I renounce them,” we say. I remove myself from them, we say. I place a divide between who I am and what they do, we say.

We may need to go even further than that. We may need to separate ourselves, to purify ourselves from some dimensions of our selves. What are my behaviors, my habits that are hurtful to others? Can I renounce them? Truly renounce them? What do I do that tears down, rather than builds up? Can I renounce them? What in my life keeps other people at a distance, keeps God at a distance, separates me from knowing the fullness of God’s love, God’s presence in my life, God’s power? Can I renounce them? What lives in the darkness in me that needs to be brought into the light? Can I renounce them?

What are “the false hopes, bad dreams, and reckless lies” that I love to love? Don Clendenin has come up with his partial list.
“* I deserve perfect health and the medicine to get me there, especially given how hard I work out.

* I'm entitled to all the passionate sex that the tabloids describe and the movies depict.

* There's a solution to every problem if I pray hard enough.

* I'd be happier in a bigger house in a better location, or in a smaller house with less upkeep. 

* I'd be happier in a newer house with fewer repairs, or in an older house with more charm.

* I wouldn't be such a mess if not for my family of origin.

* I'd find more fulfillment in a different job.

* My kids deserve straight teeth, the best universities, challenging jobs, financial success, and model marriages. And they should make me proud. 

* I will give a little more when I get a little more. Just a little more, enough to be secure.”
* … I expect "a front row seat in a life of miracles."


These are his, what might yours be? These are all false prophecies about how life is to be, about what one can expect, about what is of value. Jeremiah calls those who tout these false visions, those who sell these false visions of life, “false prophets”. Their words are not God’s Word. They promise what cannot be delivered. We read in Jeremiah, Is not my word like fire, says the LORD, and like a hammer that breaks a rock in pieces?”

What the false prophets hold out to the world is gossamer; it blows away in the wind, as in “It ain’t ever going to happen like that for you.” Or sometimes what they hold out can capture us and blind us to any other way of thinking or living or being.

And yet, Jesus tells us that there is another way. In last Sunday’s NY Times Business section there was a column titled, “But will it make you happy?” The opening paragraph went this way: She had so much. A two-bedroom apartment. Two cars. Enough wedding china to serve two dozen people. Yet Tammy Strobel wasn’t happy. … she was, as she put it, caught in the “work-spend treadmill.” So one day she stepped off.”

She just stepped off. She broke away. That’s something like what Jesus was talking about. Sometimes living fully, living truthfully, living deeply into the reign and life of God requires us to move away from, to break asunder, to be refined in the fire of repentance.

And the good news is that it is possible at any time, it is possible at every time to make the break that is necessary to find healing and wholeness. The human story is the story of God’s redeeming work at any time and every time throughout history, and for each of us that redeeming work will be completed in God’s time.

As Dylan Breuer has written, “(The human story) is a story of pain and tears and brokenness, but it is a story of love, joy, and hope that ends in wholeness, in the world coming to know, and you and I coming to know, just how high and broad and deep God's love and blessings for Creation are,” including the part of creation that bears your name.

Thanks be to God. Amen.