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Sermons

“Sheer Silence” based on 1 Kings 19:1-15a

  • June 23, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

Elijah
had it rough.  In his time, the people were uncertain about their
loyalties.  Their shared story of being led out of bondage in Egypt
and to freedom in their own land by a God who cared about them and
how they treated each other… wasn’t primary anymore.  Their current
king was worshiping another gods.  Elijah was a prophet for YHWH,
called to speak out for justice, and for YHWH-God’s vision of people
treating each other well and creating a society where everyone could
survive AND thrive.

The
other gods weren’t into creating fair and equitable societies.  They
were into power, and control, hierarchy, and wealth – and most of
all they were into themselves.  They were easier to worship because
there felt like a direct correlation between sacrifices to those gods
and personal success.  (Aka, the prosperity gospel isn’t new.)

Worshiping
the God of our tradition isn’t always easy, and Elijah was proof of
that.  He was a prophet when neither the power structure nor the
people tended to want to hear him.  He was asked to bring bad news,
time and time again, and it was NOT appreciated.  For most of his
life he is presented as a very lonely creature.  He is said to have a
servant, but he seems to be on his own for the most part.  In the
preceding story he claimed a great victory for God over the other
gods  –  in a way I find utterly horrific – and gained the
attention of some of the people in doing so. He also upset the king
and queen, and was running away, certain of his impending death for
what he’d done, on the basis that the queen said she was going to
have him killed.

He
ran, by himself, into the desert.  It seems to me that he decided it
was better to control his own death than be tortured and shamed as he
died.  Running into the desert was claiming the right to at least die
alone.  The Bible, remember, thinks of the desert wilderness as a
place where there is not enough to survive without God’s help.

I
mention this, because I think there are a lot of deserts out there
–we have deserts of loneliness, we have deserts of grief, and
deserts of exhaustion, deserts of confusion, and deserts of
hopelessness, deserts of meaning, and deserts of beauty.  Research
says 45% of people in the US don’t have enough money for rent and
food1,
so there are a lot of people dealing with exactly the kind of deserts
that the Bible is talking about, no metaphor needed.  However, the
rest of the deserts also exist, both for people with enough money for
food and rent, and for those without.  For those of us who believe
that ALL people are beloved children of God, and who thus want to
work for a world where justice rolls down like waters, and mercy like
an every flowing stream, our country can feel like one big desert
of injustice and mercilessness.

Elijah
goes off into the desert by himself, too exhausted and scared and run
down to do anything but find a broom tree to lie under.  A broom tree
is a little desert shrub.  A devotional about broom trees says “Its
deep roots draw in the moisture of land that is otherwise barren.
…In the desert, water is invisible. It lies hidden beneath the
surface and is often too deep to reach on our own. But water
is there and the roots of a broom tree prove its existence. In the
same way, hope can be discovered even in the deepest moments of human
suffering.”2
Hagar also lay down under a broom tree to await oncoming death.
Hagar, too, was taken care of by God.  It seems that in the Bible
utter despair and hopelessness happen in the desert – and because
the desert is so HOT and the sun is so unyielding, the little shade
that the broom tree offers ends up being the place that people lie
down to give up their fight and let the despair win.

And,
in the Bible, that means that the broom tree, like the desert, is
where God steps in.  For Hagar, that meant helping her see the well
that was going to sustain her life.  For Elijah, it is a bit more
complicated.  He lies down under the broom tree to give up, and the
first thing that happens is … he falls asleep.  He stops fighting.
He lets the exhaustion win.

And
then, a messenger of God (I’d lean towards assuming a human one, but
that’s just me), delivers food and water – good food and water from
what I can tell – and wakes him up to eat it.  And then get gets to
go back to sleep.

I
like this part.  I may like this part best.

I
like that Elijah doesn’t have to do anything more.  He sleeps, he
eats and drinks, and he goes immediately back to sleep.  Sometimes,
friends, that’s all we have left when we’ve given our all to the work
of kindom building, and we have NOTHING left.  Sometimes finding food
and drink is too much, and someone has to help us, and even when they
do, all we can do afterwards is go back to sleep.  This is also
lovely encouragement for the people who tend to be messengers of God
who show up with food and drink.  The prophet may get a lot of glory,
but the prophet wouldn’t make it without those others who prop them
up.

Even
Elijah, even the one known for standing alone in his generation, even
he didn’t do it himself.  The food and water to sustain his life came
from outside his capacities.  They were gifts to support him.  The
work of building the kindom takes many people doing their part, never
just one standing alone.  In this church, we do some of those
“messenger under a broom tree” type ministries.  We support the
people of God by making the journey a touch easier, by seeing what is
needed and offering it.  Our breakfast is food and drink in some
people’s desert.  Sustain is too.  

This
passage is good to remember and see the valuable work of those who
are “messengers of God” with hidden, quiet support.    I think is
also honest about the times when life has drained EVERYTHING we have
from us, and that sometimes in life we sit under a broom tree without
any intention to ever get up again.  At those times, we don’t even
have a choice.  We can’t do any more.

And,
friends, I think that’s OK.  I think we’re allowed to be exhausted,
drained, horrified, and in despair.  Elijah is a pretty deal in the
Bible, and he gets just sleep under a broom tree!  I don’t want to
rush out from under this broom tree.  In the stories of the Bible,
sitting under them in despair is honest, and real.  It is a
reflection of what has happened, and what is happening, and that
there is no where else to turn.

AND
YET, God is the one who makes a way out of no-way.  God lets Elijah
sleep under the broom tree, BUT God also makes sure that Elijah gets
the sustenance he needs for the next part of the journey.  I guess
that means we get to sit under broom trees, we get to recover, we get
to be aimless, we get to rest and rebuild strength, but … it is
always a stop along the journey and never the journey’s end.
However, before anyone feels rushed out of their broom tree offering
shade in the desert, let’s note that he got to sleep, eat, drink, and
sleep again and eat again and drink again.  He got rebuilt before he
had to leave.  If you aren’t rebuilt yet, I’m not sure you have to
leave yet.

But,
leave the liminal space of the broom tree of hopelessness, we will.
God lets us be there, but not stay there.  Elijah gets awoken a
second time by a messenger, who has left food and drink again, and
then he gets kicked out from under the broom tree.  

It
seems to work for him.  On that rest, recovery, and sustenance, he is
able to complete his journey.  His journey is to Mount Sinai, where
Moses got the commandments from God.  Like Moses before him, Elijah
has the chance to know God more deeply there.  The story makes space
for Elijah to name his grievance and be heard, “I have been very
zealous for the LORD, the God of hosts; for the Israelites have
forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your
prophets with the sword. I alone am left, and they are seeking my
life, to take it away.” (verse 10).  And then and there, from a
cave on mountain far from home, Elijah experiences God.

The
story takes the time to clarify who God is and is not.  God is not in
the destruction, or the fear, or even the awe.  God is not in the
loud and extraordinary.  Instead, God is in the regular, the every
day, the silence.  There was probably silence under the broom tree,
but it seems Elijah needed the journey before he could hear its
significance.  So, Elijah emerges from the cave to stand in the midst
of sheer silence.  Teachers of Centering Prayer call silence “God’s
first language.”  In the midst of the presence of the Divine,
Elijah is again given the space to name his grievance and his grief.
God, who is in the silence, LISTENS to the one who has been
exhausted.

Now,
God’s response at first glance does not appear to be the very
empathetic.   Elijah repeats his claim that “I have been very
zealous for the LORD, the God of hosts; for the Israelites have
forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your
prophets with the sword. I alone am left, and they are seeking my
life, to take it away,”  and God replies, “Go to Damascus.”
Which, by the way, is like 500 miles away – through the desert.

See?
Isn’t it good there was some time under that broom tree before we
got to the cave?  I think it is because of the time to be, without
trying to do, that Elijah was able to hear God again.  And be ready
for the next steps of his journey.  By the way, Elijah was sent to
Damascus to anoint two new Kings (one for Aram and one for Israel)
AND to anoint his successor.  And, for a while, Elijah and Elisha got
to work together for justice, and Elijah didn’t have any more work he
did on his own.  After the broom tree, things got easier, and
there was more support.

Thank
God for broom trees, and prophets, and messengers (with food and
water), and rest, and restoration, and sustenance, and silence, and
companionship, and hope, and a God who cares for all people even when
we’re too exhausted to care for ourselves.  Amen

1https://money.cnn.com/2018/05/17/news/economy/us-middle-class-basics-study/index.html

2https://fivetalents.org/blog/2017/8/21/beneath-the-broom-tree-discovering-hope-in-the-deepest-moments-of-suffering

–

Rev. Sara E. Baron
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305
Pronouns: she/her/hers
http://fumcschenectady.org/

https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

June 23, 2019

Sermons

“Wisdom, She Calls”based on Psalm 8 and Proverbs 8:1-4,…

  • June 23, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

I’ve recently gotten
feedback that many people around here like it when I preach from the
heart, from authenticity, from … myself, and not JUST from context.
This is a bit of a challenge because the authentic me is sort of a
mystic, and I’ve never been entirely clear how comfortable that is
for all of you.  However, I’m really grateful for feedback, so I’m
going to give it a try, and trust that you’ll continue giving
feedback if this is not what you were looking for at all.  

Today is Trinity Sunday.
Thus, our lectionary readings have given us space to consider the
Spirit, who in Proverbs is the Spirit of God’s Wisdom, the firstborn
of creation.  In its purest, most orthodox
forms, Trinity says that God IS Three Persons that are also One, and
the love between the 3 Persons is the foundational energy and
motivation of the universe, from which creation arose, and from which
God’s love for all humanity begins.  I’ve never been able to commit
to an orthodox understanding of Trinity, although I did give it a
good faith effort for a decade or so.  I adore this idea of love as
the foundation of the universe, but I’ve had to come to that
conclusion in other ways.  I don’t hold a traditional view of
Trinity, although I think those views can be strikingly beautiful.  

Instead, I’ve been most
formed by the thinking of Marjorie Suchocki, professor emerita of
theology at Claremont School of Theology, and the author of the book
“God, Christ, Church: A Practical Guide to Process Theology.”  In
it, she talks about the idea of Trinity as a symbol for the
complexity and unity of God.  She says,  “God
as trinity becomes a symbol to indicate the sense in which the unity
of God embraces a complexity of a magnitude grater than which none
other can exist.”1
In more simple words, she says that God is one and God is infinite.
She doesn’t actually think the specific 3 of Trinity is the point,
but rather acknowledges that there is inherent value in thinking of
God as being  transcendent, immanent, and relational.  That is God is
beyond all that is, God is IN all that is, and God is in relationship
to all that is – and those are three things, so we think of God in
three ways.  

Suchocki’s
idea that Trinity means many and yet one has resonated for me.  God
is, of course, one.  We’re monotheists!!  And there is force of love
undergirding and infiltrating all parts of Creation, unifying us all.
At the same time, of course there are many facets to the Divine.
God is beyond our words, our metaphors, our understanding.  God is
complicated.  Any aspect of God we attempt to speak about or connect
to is both a part of God AND not the entirety of God.  God is love,
unconditional all encompassing love!!!  And, God is also one who
wants justice – so that good lives and good relationships can be
present for all people and not just for some.  And that doesn’t
ALWAYS feel only like love.  God is eternal, and yet God is also
present.  God is for us, and for each of us, and for all of us, all
at once.  In these ways, it makes sense to think of God as many, even
though God is also one.

In
some very similar ways, I think it makes sense to think of ourselves
as many and as one!    I mean each of us, each person, is both many
and one.  (Although, come to think of it, we are also one body of
Christ – one and many.)  We’re now at the mystical point of this
sermon 😉  If mystical isn’t going to fly for you, you may want to
think of all of this as development of compassion, although I’ll
admit to you that those are not well differentiated for me.

Years
ago, my spirituality professor told me about a prayer form called
with an acroynm FLAG.  In it you notice a strong emotion and
anthropomorphize that strong emotion as a young child.
Then you ask it:
Fear – what are you afraid of?
Longing –
what do you long for?
Ache – what is your ache/wound?
Gift –
what gift are you trying to offer that I’m not receiving?

This
prayer has been a great gift to me over the years, but in recent
years I’ve noticed that it relates to a whole bunch of other areas of
thought who are also looking at “self” in different ways.
Because this now comes from a lot of disciplines, to explain it I’m
going to glob them all together like we do when we work with all 4
gospel narratives at once.  We’re going to call it “parts theory.”
Because of how useful it has been in my own prayer life, as well as
in conversations with people,  it is one of the theories that I now
use to make sense of human beings- myself and others.  

Parts
theory says that we are a conglomeration of parts.  When this emerges
out of “non-violent communication” work, the parts are associated
with human needs.  In “Focusing”, the parts are associated with
physical sensations in various parts of our body.  In sensorimotor
psychology, parts relate to coping mechanisms necessary for survival,
particularly in childhood.  Going back to the prayer form I first met
this idea in, the young children we imagine are often expressions of
our self and our past. I think it may even be true that in the Center
for Courage and Renewal Teaching, where we talk about the maps of our
souls and the various terrain within, that we are actually
approaching parts from another angle.  Most places I’m looking for
understanding of how humans work seem to be moving to parts theory.

Now,
once we acknowledge that in our internal landscape there are various
parts doing their own things, then we think about how they relate to
each other and to our self as a whole.  Parts theory suggests that
dealing with ourselves is a lot like presiding over an unruly Church
Council meeting (who, us?) or perhaps an Annual Conference committed
to nonconformity (who, us?).  Parts tend to have their own points of
view, they remember the things that fit their narratives, they push
the things that fit their narratives, they ignore things that don’t
fit their narratives, and when they want things they ask.  And when
they ask, and we ignore them, they get louder (and sometimes meaner)
and this cycle can continue until we have a LOT OF INTERNAL
screaming.  Also, parts build connections with other parts, and parts
are antagonistic to other parts.  

If
you think of parts as trying to meet needs, this can become clearer.
So a part that is seeking out peace
is likely to be well partnered with the parts that seek rest
and beauty
and maybe even acceptance.
However, the part seeking out peace
is
likely in some conflict with the parts seeking out spontaneity,
stimulation, or
even growth.  And
when we’re talking about parts that have been harmed in the past,
this can be pretty strong.  For example, when a person lived through
abuse as a child, and the abuser was the caregiver, then the natural
human instinct to draw close to caregiver for safety and the natural
human instinct to run away from harm are in constant conflict…. and
those parts are trained to be on constant alert.

There
is also a Part in Charge.  I have tended towards calling this the
adult self.  While
the adult self is the moderator/chair of the council, the truth is
that sometimes the adult self loses control of the body.  In parts
language, that means that sometimes other parts hijack the adult
self, and the other parts are the ones running the show – by which
I mean the body, the facial expressions, the words, the tone, etc.
So if you think of a recent time when you said or did something that
you later regretted, and wondered “Why didn’t I have better
control?” the answer is likely that a part hijacked the adult
self

and “you” weren’t in control at that point.

Prayer
can be a time when we make space for our parts, listen to our parts,
create the capacity for empathy for our parts, and stop fighting them
in general.  The FLAG method works for this, as do many others.  It
can also be a time when we teach the parts meditative practice so we
can all have some much needed peace within.  Building the capacity to
listen to ourselves also builds our capacity to listen to each other.
That’s one of the goals – if we are going to be part of building a
more peaceful and just world, we’re going to have to learn how to
find peace within, and that will likely require learning how to
listen to (rather than silence) parts.  

Many
forms of contemplative prayer teach us how to be in the present, in
our bodies, and how to be connected to our breath.  These are
wonderful practices on their own.  They’re also the skills needed to
bring the adult self back from being hijacked.  In the neuroscience
part of these theories, the parts are mostly in the amygdala part of
the brain and the adult self is in the prefrontal cortex.  So
whatever we can do to THINK, and be PRESENT, helps move us back to
the prefrontal cortex.  

Parts
theory both feels TRUE, and feels exciting to me.  I appreciate how
inherently spiritual it is, to listen.  Now, many parts that we are
familiar with speak in … less than constructive ways.   Because of
that, we’re often a bit scared of them.  However, there is some good
news.  The horrid things that parts say are ALWAYS meant to be
helpful.  If you actually listen to the things they say, then you can
sometimes figure out how to flip it around to the positive thing the
part wants for you.  They’re shockingly transparent.  “You aren’t
enough” can mean, “You were really hurt one time when someone
said you weren’t enough, and I don’t want to you be hurt again, so
I’m going to keep your ego small so you don’t experience a drop in
self-confidence again.”  You know, stuff like that.

We’ve
talked about some of this before.  Some of our parts communicate
through criticism, and they manage to tell us we’re wrong A LOT.  My
parts have a lot they want to get done.  No matter what I’m doing,
they have about 50 other things I should be doing, and they tell me
I’d get them done if I were a “good person” / “good pastor.”
None of the parts is able to notice that I can’t do 51 things at
once, so my adult self is always having to work at setting
priorities, at listening, and at soothing, so all the parts aren’t
screaming at once that their thing isn’t getting done.  That said,
knowing about parts, thinking in terms of parts, and listening to
parts has quieted things within me significantly, and I experience a
lot less internal angst, and thus more peace.  (On good days.)

Did
you hear the end of the Proverbs passage?  In it, Wisdom talks about
delight – the delight in being with God, and the delight Wisdom and
God had in humanity.  Delight is part of what we’re going for, and
there are many paths to it.  Finding peace within is a form of making
space for delight.  When we can see what’s happening, and remain
present and loving, there is a LOT of delight available to us.  It
really is a bit like traditional Trinitarian doctrine: love spills
out.  Thanks be for that.  Amen

1Marjorie
Suchocki, 229.

–

Rev. Sara E. Baron
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305
Pronouns: she/her/hers
http://fumcschenectady.org/

https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

June 16, 2019

Sermons

“Ascension??” based on Luke 24:44-53 and Acts 1:1-11

  • June 3, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

Often,
we breeze past Ascension Day, because it never falls on a Sunday, we
don’t have a special service for it, and it is just as easy to use
the texts for the Seventh Sunday of Easter.   To be perfectly honest,
I was expecting to do this again this year, except for the truly
fantastic Children’s Time Story about the Ascension, and the
opportunity to tie worship together tightly.

Furthermore,
that final line in the Ascension story, “Men of Galilee, why
do you stand looking up toward heaven? This Jesus, who has been taken
up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go
into heaven.” (Acts 1:11)

pretty much preaches itself!  There are few lines more perfect.
“Come on people!  Stop staring at what has been, and see what is!”
 Or, we could go with “Stop waiting for what God is going to do
next, God has already done enough!”  It fits something I often want
to say.

However,
I got thinking about the Ascension, and suddenly things got really
fuzzy for me.  What does it mean, for us today?  Does it mean
anything?  (I mean, normally, we skip over it.)  What has it meant to
others?  How does that impact what it means for us today?

To
add to my confusion over the meaning of Ascension came the normal
weekly task of hymn selection. There are websites with hymn
suggestions to fit scriptures, a useful thing,  and I discovered that
the hymns for ascension were themed on Jesus’ power and kingship.
Frankly, I had no idea why.  

Luckily,
our house is basically a theology library.   The 6 volume dictionary
of the Bible put out by InterVarsity Press includes a volume
“Dictionary of the Later new Testament and its Developments” and
an entry on ascension.  Before I quote their opening lines, it may be
useful to know that this comes from a significantly more traditional
Christian worldview than one I occupy.  In fact, I barely know about
this one, despite the best efforts of my seminary theology
professors.  (I was bored to tears by “traditional” German
theology, I didn’t even know why people were still writing it, as it
was just a rehashing.)  Clearly I barely know this stuff, I had to
look it up.  Anyway, they say,

“The
ascension is the second stage of Jesus Christ’s three-stage
exaltation, in which after his bodily resurrection (the first stage)
he visibly departed earth and entered the presence of God in heaven
to be crowned at his right hand with glory, honor, and authority.
The third stage, his enthronement, or session at God’s right hand,
commences his perpetual reign and intercession for his people.

… Acts
gives the most detail about the ascension.  It brings out its
decisive role for christology, the coming of salvation blessings, the
church’s mission, and eschatology.  The book of Hebrews teaches that
the ascension was essential to the completion of Christ’s
high-priestly work and to his continuing intercessory work.  1 Peter
and Revelation pursue the theme of ascension as victory over hostile
spiritual powers.  In the apostolic fathers the ascension undergirds
the Christian calendar and, since it culminates in Christ’s universal
reign, provides a rationale for virtue.”1

And
now I know why the hymn suggestions were about power and kingship,
which is helpful.  However, that description also served as a
reminder of just how many layers of scholarship and tradition have
built on each other, often in ways that are no longer useful (if ever
they were.)

As
a counter to that, Luke Timothy Johnson, professor of New Testament
at Candler School of Theology, explains what he gets of the ascension
narrative.  He says,

“Luke’s
two ascension accounts (Luke 24:51 and Acts 1:9-11) serve to remove
Jesus’ body from the sight of humans as a preparation for another
mode of his presence.  This is a deeper level of absence than the
empty tomb, for it means that even as the Living One, Jesus will no
longer be present in the sort of bodily shape that his disciples
knew.  That earlier mode of bodily presence was still limited.  If
Jesus ascends to the right hand of God and receives from [God] the
promise of the Holy Spirit, then then ‘life’ that is at work in him
can be poured out over all humans, so that his presence can be
mediated in all the ways in which those led by his Spirit body [go]
forth.”2

Seen
in this way, the ascension is almost a prelude to Pentecost.  Until
the experienced presence of Jesus has departed, the new experience of
being bathed in the power of the Holy Spirit cannot come.  This,
then, is one of the transition points of the Christian narrative, and
in that way I think it does make sense as an extension of the
Resurrection narratives.  In this case, I think Marcus Borg does the
best job explaining how:

“the
experiences that lie at the heart of Easter… carried with them the
conviction that God had vindicated Jesus.  Easter is not simply about
people experiencing a person who has died.  The Easter stories aren’t
‘ghost stories’ (see Luke 24:37-43).  Rather, they are stories of
vindication, of God’s ‘yes’ to Jesus.  God has exalted Jesus, raised
him to God’s right hand, made him Lord.  And lest we forget how Jesus
died, the Easter stories in both John and Luke remind us that the
risen Jesus still carried the wounds inflicted by the empire that
killed him.

There
is a continuity between the post-Easter conviction that God has
vindicated Jesus and the message of the pre-Easter Jesus.  ‘Jesus is
Lord’ is the post-Easter equivalent of Jesus’ proclamation of the
kingdom of God.  God is king, and the kings of this world are not,
Jesus is lord, and the lords of this world are not.  And just as
Jesus’s passion for the kingdom led him to oppose the imperial
domination system, so his followers’ passion for the lordship of
Christ led them to defy the lordship of Caesar.”3

Another
scholar mentioned that the ascension story is CLEARLY not meant to be
taken literally, since it happens in Luke on Easter and in Acts 40
days later, and the same author wrote both volumes.  That means that,
much like the creation narratives, we’re supposed to be looking the
deeper meaning instead of getting obsessed with the literal one.
(Phew.)  However, the thing that no scholar I read made mention of,
which didn’t particularly make sense to me, was how this compares to
the story of Elijah’s ascension.  I mean, there are plenty of books I
didn’t look at, but I did glance through 15 of them, and you’d think
they’d mention the ONE OTHER ascension narrative in the Bible,
wouldn’t you?  Let’s hear the crux of that narrative:

Then
Elijah took his mantle and rolled it up, and struck the water; the
water was parted to the one side and to the other, until the two of
them crossed on dry ground.

When
they had crossed, Elijah said to Elisha, ‘Tell me what I may do for
you, before I am taken from you.’ Elisha said, ‘Please let me
inherit a double share of your spirit.’ He responded, ‘You have
asked a hard thing; yet, if you see me as I am being taken from you,
it will be granted you; if not, it will not.’ As they continued
walking and talking, a chariot of fire and horses of fire separated
the two of them, and Elijah ascended in a whirlwind into heaven.
Elisha kept watching and crying out, ‘Father, father! The chariots
of Israel and its horsemen!’ But when he could no longer see him,
he grasped his own clothes and tore them in two pieces.

He
picked up the mantle of Elijah that had fallen from him, and went
back and stood on the bank of the Jordan. He took the mantle of
Elijah that had fallen from him, and struck the water, saying, ‘Where
is the Lord, the God of Elijah?’ When he had struck the water, the
water was parted to the one side and to the other, and Elisha went
over.  When the company of prophets who were at Jericho saw him at a
distance, they declared, ‘The spirit of Elijah rests on Elisha.’
They came to meet him and bowed to the ground before him. (NRSV, 2
Kings 2:8-15)

Now,
Elisha was the disciple of Elijah, and this is a story of the Spirit
and Power of Elijah being given to Elisha as Elijah ascends into
heaven.  It is a bit more spectacular of a story, what with the
chariot and horse of fire and whirlwind, but the gist is really
similar.  Not only is someone who has been speaking God’s truths
“elevated” at the end of their life, and therefore affirmed as
God’s special messenger, the disciple(s) of the God-speaker, are
empowered by the same action.  In fact, as far as I know it, Moses
(whose body is said to be buried by God so no humans could find it),
Elijah, and Jesus are the only characters in the Bible whose lives
are so important that in their deaths they are cared for directly by
God.  

So
I think it is relevant!  I think that these stories, which come from
a time when the three tiered universe was presumed true (which is the
idea that heaven is above us and if it is exists hell is below us,
ideas that don’t work once we get to the concept of a spherical
earth), actually imply that by being taken into heaven, Elijah and
Jesus were  “entering the realm of the divine.”4
 That’s related to the radical claim that early Christians made
about Jesus.  You may know that LOTS of people were said to be
resurrected in ancient times.  Only two things about that claim for
Jesus were weird:  first that he was resurrected after being killed
by the Roman Empire, which was an embarrassing sort of thing to claim
for your religious leader in most cases, and secondly that he was the
“firstborn of the resurrection.”  Christian theology pretty
quickly developed the idea that because God raised Jesus from the
dead, that those who followed as “little Christs” along “the
way” would ALSO be raised (somehow, someday).  Jesus didn’t just
express God and  return to God, Jesus opened the way for others to
also express God and eventually return to God.

The
ascension also, inherently, has elements of overcoming hierarchy.  In
a three-tiered universe AND a top down patriarchal system, the amount
of power and glory a person had was expressed as how “high up”
they were.  (This still makes sense to us today, which should maybe
concern us.)  To have Jesus elevated beyond the boundaries of earth
itself then, is an INCREDIBLE metaphor for Jesus blowing up the whole
hierarchy, which is even better after the so called embarrassment of
his crucifixion.   And then, of course, it still all ends with the
messengers of God telling the disciples of Jesus to bring their minds
and energy back to earth and get back to work in building the kindom.
I still don’t know exactly what ascension means, but I’m thinking it
was worth this exploration and maybe some more down the road.  May
we’ll figure it out – eventually.  Amen

1“Dictionary
of the later New Testament and its developments” editors Ralph P.
Martin and Peter H Davids (Downers Grove, Illinois: Intervarsity
Press, 1997, page 95-96.

2Luke
Timothy Johnson “Living Jesus: Learning the Heart of the Gospel”
(HarperSanFransciso, 1999) 21-22.

3Marcus
Borg, “Jesus: Uncovering the Life, Teachings, and Relevance of
a Religious Revolutionary” (USA:
HarperOne, 2006) page 289.

4Footnote
in The Jewish Annotated New Testament: New Revised
Standard Version Bible Translation
,
edited by Amy-Jill Levine and Marc Zvi Brettler (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2011), 199.

Rev. Sara E. Baron
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305
Pronouns: she/her/hers
http://fumcschenectady.org/

https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

Sermons

Untitled

  • May 20, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

In
the Gospel of John, we hear,  “I
give you a new commandment, that you love one another.”  Of course,
it is not a new commandment.  At all.  Rather, this is as old of
commandments as commandments come.  Love commandments are
fundamental.  There are two parts, the love your neighbor part
(Leviticus 19:18)  “You shall not take vengeance or
bear a grudge against any of your people, but you shall love your
neighbor as yourself: I am the LORD.” and the love God part.  (Deut
6:4) “Hear, O Israel: The LORD is our God, the LORD alone.  You
shall Love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all your soul,
and with all your might.”  Jesus’ commandment to love each other is
grounded in the already there tradition as an abiding commandment.
Further, that’s a tenet of every major religion in some form or
another.  

It
isn’t new, but it is still challenging.  You know that passage from 1
Corinthians 13 that people love to have in their wedding ceremonies?
The one that says
“Love
is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant
or
rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or
resentful; 6it
does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. It bears
all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all
things. Love never ends.”  The one that is actually Paul writing to
the church in Corinth who are fighting amongst themselves, and he is
telling them what Christian love toward one another looks like?
Well, if Paul had to write that letter to do that, then we can assume
the people weren’t following the commandment too well.

And,
of course, we have the history of Christianity showing us more
examples of how badly we follow this commandment.  If our love for
one another is meant to be way we show that we are Christ’s, OYE.
There was the split between the Eastern and Western Church.  The
Protestant Reformation was a wreck – I can’t even go into the
horrors it other than to say that at least 100,000 people were
killed.  And then, in our tradition, our Methodist Church split all
over the place over the issue of slavery, and power, and money, and
we’re facing a new split now because the church doesn’t know how to
love.  We have NOT loved each other well.  We have not shown
ourselves to be disciples of Christ, at least not on the big scale,
not if it means showing the world how well we love.

Instead,
on the large scale, I think we look like most other human
institutions, obsessed with power, money, and control.  It isn’t
pretty.

While
there are great things that do happen on the larger scale (UMCOR,
Africa University, supporting seminaries, Imagine No Malaria), I
don’t think the larger scale is the one that CAN be reflective of
love.  The blessed ties that bind us together are just not big enough
for the size of organizations that exist.

Have
you heard of Dunbar’s number?  The New Yorker explains it well:  

The
Dunbar number is actually a series of them. The best known, a hundred
and fifty, is the number of people we call casual friends—the
people, say, you’d invite to a large party. (In reality, it’s a
range: a hundred at the low end and two hundred for the more social
of us.) From there, through qualitative interviews coupled with
analysis of experimental and survey data, Dunbar
discovered

that the number grows and decreases according to a precise
formula
,
roughly a “rule of three.” The next step down, fifty, is the
number of people we call close friends—perhaps the people you’d
invite to a group dinner. You see them often, but not so much that
you consider them to be true intimates. Then there’s the circle of
fifteen: the friends that you can turn to for sympathy when you need
it, the ones you can confide in about most things. The most intimate
Dunbar number, five, is your close support group. These are your best
friends (and often family members). On the flipside, groups can
extend to five hundred, the acquaintance level, and to fifteen
hundred, the absolute limit—the people for whom you can put a name
to a face. While the group sizes are relatively stable, their
composition can be fluid. Your five today may not be your five next
week; people drift among layers and sometimes fall out of them
altogether.1

Dunbar’s
numbers are about the limits of how many people you can feel
connected to at certain levels.  They’re also about how many people
can feel connected to each other as a group, and how much structure
is required to connect people at different levels.  The gist is, the
larger the group, the less people feel connected, the more work is
required to create a sense of community.

This
may explain a bit about church size and function, as well as a lot of
human behavior.  It also explains why we’ve struggled so much as an
Annual Conference to feel bonded to each other – we get together
only once a year and we’re STILL bigger than the largest group that
can have actual cohesion.  The disconnect between levels of the
church makes sense in this model, although so does the fact that our
church is built in layers, so that relationships can be built.

The
key seems to be, that human beings, human institutions, and human
societies run on relationships, and none of them can be successful if
they outgrow relationships.  Institutions that are larger than
relationship capacity EITHER have to have ways to subdivide to allow
relationships to stabilize OR they will lose their focus and
identity, because they lose their basis in relationship.

I
don’t think Jesus was talking about institutions, I think he was
talking about PEOPLE, and the way they treat each other.  The part of
the command that IS new is that is it no longer love “your
neighbor” but now “love one another.”  It takes the community
from physical proximity to one that is defined by shared work.
(Which may be more similar than it sounds to begin with.)

Only
relatively small groups can have enough cohesion to be defined by how
well they love each other, it just can’t happen on a massive scale.
But let’s be really honest – it doesn’t always happen on a smaller
scale either.  Humans can be REALLY hard to work with.  #shock
Groups can really struggle.

I’ve
really been thinking a lot about group dynamics, OK, I ALWAYS think a
lot about group dynamics, it seems like they’re super duper important
to every part of following Jesus.  One of the harder things about
functioning in a group is that the group is usually looking out for
the group’s best interest, and that doesn’t always line up with each
individuals best interest.   This isn’t that fun if you are one of
the individuals whose needs aren’t aligned.  You’d almost think
groups aren’t worth it, if it weren’t for the great benefits they do
offer:  companionship, connection, shared reality, wisdom, growth,
hope, a place to make a contribution, support, acceptance, belonging,
being known, laughter, inspiration, purpose, stimulation,
interdependence – stuff like that.  (I think groups are TOTALLY
worth it, can you tell?)  

Perhaps
because of the constant need in a group to balance between the needs
of the whole and the needs of individuals, it is common in groups for
individuals to attempt to gain control over one another.  Sometimes
one, or some, or all of the people, just WANT THINGS DONE THEIR WAY.
I expect that sounds obvious, and I expect that you have experienced
it.  Vying for control is one of the basic dynamics of most groups,
and it can unravel them, and the degree to which people are vying for
control can relate tightly to how functional the group is.

Now,
thinking about a person trying to control groups, and trying to
control other people in groups is ALSO interesting, and it leads me
to some self-reflection.  After all, sometimes I’m that person and
sometimes I’m not, and I’ve been wondering about what makes the
difference.  Two pieces of it have occurred to me:  I don’t tend to
seek control when I don’t really care what choices are made (so when
something doesn’t much matter to me), and I don’t tend to seek
control when I trust the group process to come up with a good answer.
That suggests that I’m more likely to seek control when I think
something really matters (duh), and when I’m scared.  This has been a
bit of a relief for me as an insight, because I’m guessing I’m not
the only one who gets controlling when I get scared, and that means
that when I feel like people are trying to control me, it gives me an
option of being compassionate towards them because 1. they care a lot
and 2. they’re scared instead of … well all the other narratives
I’ve otherwise created in my head about other people trying to
control me.  If people are feeling scared, that elicits compassion
from me, whereas if I just respond to my experience of someone trying
to control me, I’m far more likely respond with annoyance,
frustration, and … let’s be honest, defiance.  Now, I dislike that
this has to be said, but it does:  Having compassion for someone’s
fear does not require us to give them their way.  This is inherently
true.  Also, as people of God, we are seeking to be motivated by
love, not fear, so we don’t let fear rule.

Now,
let’s jump over to Peter in Acts.   This is a hard story to preach
on, because I want to be very respectful of the Jewish tradition of
keeping kosher, which I find beautiful and meaningful.  Keeping
kosher is a form of being faithful by paying attention to eating in
just ways, and it forms an identity of faithfulness, patterned into
one’s life.  All that means  that the formative story of why
Christians abandoned our Jewish roots, that were formed in keeping
kosher, is a tender sort of thing.  Giving up keeping kosher was
giving up a primary Jewish identity, and Jesus’ early followers were
good Jews.  Keeping kosher was good practice.

That
said, the history of Christianity is also found in this story.  What
was once a sect of Judaism became a major world religion, in part
because of these decisions – the ones to include Gentiles as equal
partners in the Way of following Jesus, and not to require Gentiles
to become Jewish in order to become Christian.  A GOOD THING had to
be let go in order to make it possible to do ANOTHER GOOD THING.  To
welcome in new people required letting go of what had been very
important.  To make space for what God was up to next in that
community required letting go of something that was already sacred.
Peter is horrified in this story about what is being asked of him.
But we wouldn’t be here if he hasn’t adapted.

That’s
a lesson that we all have to learn time and time again, particularly
if we want to live well in community.  The “love one another” bit
requires adapting to each other, and it requires constant attention
to the living tradition, to see what needs to bend, or adapt, or be
let go.  This loving each other thing – its really hard work.

But,
it is worth it.  We know a God of love BECAUSE we know love through
each other.  Thanks be to God, and may we continue to love one
another.  Amen

1Maria
Konnikova ”The Limits of Friendship“  October 7, 2014
https://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/social-media-affect-math-dunbar-number-friendships

–

Rev. Sara E. Baron

First United Methodist Church of Schenectady

603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305

Pronouns: she/her/hers

http://fumcschenectady.org/


https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

May 19, 2019

Sermons

“Odd Commandments” based on Acts 9:1-20 and John 21:1-19

  • May 6, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

Today
we’re dealing with stories of 3 men who undergo changes.  The change
in Ananias is probably the least significant, and may be the most
fun.  Ananias is briefly described as “a disciple in Damascus,”
where disciple means student and implies student of Jesus or the
early church.  Damascus was then, as it is today, a city in Syria
which is north east of Galilee, about as far northeast of Galilee as
Jerusalem is south of it.

Ananias
is my kind of disciple.  He is in the midst of a visionary experience
with Jesus himself, and is told to go find Saul to fulfill a
concurrent vision that Saul is having.  His response is EXCELLENT.
He says, “I’ve heard of that guy.  He has done a lot of evil, and
he has the authority to do a lot more.”  Which I take to mean, “Um,
Jesus, you sure you have the right guy?  Cause what you are telling
me makes no sense.  This is the guy killing us off, and thus not one
who is likely to be invested in helping you out.  Also, I’d rather
not.”  I appreciate anyone who talks back, asks for clarity, and
double checks instructions that sound wrong.  

In
this case, as the story goes, Jesus was quite sure that Saul actually
was the right guy, and Ananias was open to doing as he was asked, and
it worked out.  Thus, I don’t think that there was a huge change in
Ananias.  He was already a student of Jesus, he was wise enough to
ask for clarity, and courageous enough to do what was asked.  When he
was told to do something new, and convinced it was really on purpose,
he was game.  However, he didn’t follow blindly.  Phew.

Saul
and Peter experience bigger changes.  I was reminded recently that
most people have a lot of things to do and learn in the world that
don’t have to do with the Bible and Christianity, and thus it is
particularly helpful to say directly:  Saul is also Paul.  Saul is a
Hebrew name, Paul is a Roman name, the same guy was called both,
depending on where he was.  So Peter and Paul, two relatively huge
figures in early Christianity, undergo major changes in today’s
stories.  I’m not sure which one is bigger – if you need extra
entertainment in this sermon, feel free to try to decide for
yourself.

That
story in Acts about Saul (Paul) and Ananias starts off saying,
“Meanwhile Saul, still breathing threats and murder against the
disciples of the Lord, went to the high priest and asked him for
letters to the synagogues at Damascus, so that if he found any who
belonged to the Way, men or women, he might bring them bound to
Jerusalem.” (Acts 9:-1-2)  in the previous chapter of Acts, Saul
was introduced as standing in approval when Stephen was stoned, and
dragging disciples in Jerusalem to prison.  (Ananias had not been
exaggerating.)

Saul
had gone to all the trouble of getting special permission to
persecute early Christians outside of Jerusalem.  He was deeply and
profoundly committed to eliminating the scourge of Jesus-following
from faithful Judaism.  Saul was from a committed Pharisee family,
Pharisees at the time of Jesus were a sect of Judaism who were
particularly careful in their observance of laws and traditions of
Judaism.  They were often the experts in Jewish law, and many were
scribes and sages.  At the time of Jesus, and of Saul, Pharisees were
not the most common sect of Judaism, rather they were the ….
populous nerds, if that makes any sense, and around here it SHOULD
;).  After the destruction of the Temple, the Pharisees were the
strongest sect left, and modern Rabbinic Judaism is largely based on
the Pharisee perspective.

I’m
explaining all that because I’ve often wondered why Saul was SO angry
about the early Jesus-movement.  He seems to have taken it
personally, in that he made it his personal mission to root it out
and kill it.  The Pharisees, from my perspective, didn’t have a
particular reason to be threatened by the early Jesus-movement.  The
ruling sect, the Saducees, did, because they were responsible for
keeping things quiet and under control and the Jesus followers didn’t
help with that.  But the Pharisees existed quite peaceably with other
sects of Judaism, and I really think early Jesus-following could have
been understood as just another sect before Paul started his
missionary work.

It
could be that Saul/Paul was really upset about the ways that Jesus
threatened the value of the Law, particularly about strict Sabbath
observance, but I don’t quite believe that.  There were far more
important violations of Jewish law happening, and Paul wasn’t stupid.
From all accounts he was incredibly faithful and very intelligent.
Perhaps one of Jesus disciples had really annoyed Paul.  Perhaps one
of the stories or teachings he heard drove him particularly nuts.
Perhaps he noticed the power of the fearlessness of the early
followers, and noticed that the nascent movement was a bigger threat
than others noticed.  Perhaps he was just doing his job, and his job
happened to be to root out THIS threat, and he thought it needed to
be done in Damascus too.  Try as I might, I can’t quite get my head
into his thought pattern to figure out why he was rushing to arrest
people and approving even of murder.

But,
he was.  

And
then this … something happened.  He became blind.  He heard a voice
he attributed to Jesus.  He prayed and fasted for three days, then
Ananias came and healed him, he could see, and he became a part of
the very movement he’d been trying to kill.

That
Paul guy.  He didn’t do things in half-measures.  He was 100% against
you and then 100% for you, and he did both with complete devotion and
passion.  It is a bit scary.  I guess it also makes sense.  A
capacity for passion can be harnessed in a lot of different ways.
Also, when someone who has stood VEHMENTLY in one position manages to
change their mind, they are sometimes just as VEHEMENT on the other
side afterwards.  

I
wish I could see the bridge though.  I suspect it would be very
interesting.  Something about how Paul valued his faith and
understood God had led him to think that the Jesus-followers were a
threat to what mattered, and Paul was willing to do anything to
protect God and God’s people.  After the change, Paul was still
willing to do anything to protect God and God’s people, it is just
that his conception of God’s people had expanded.  I suspect the same
motivation was there all along, but his interpretation changed.  

It
seems to me that this may be a helpful tool to remember when we are
face to face with people with whom we are on ENTIRELY OPPOSITE SIDES
of things.  There are a few such examples in our society (and
denomination) today, and I know you are aware of some.  The irony is
that there is often a shared value in our positions, but a difference
in interpretation.  If you’ll allow me to admit it, I suspect that
the VAST majority of people in the United States care about our
country, care about the people in our country, want people to have a
chance to thrive, and want our country to be a leader and positive
example in the world.  There are some incredible differences in how
we think those things can be accomplished, but if you look at it that
way, we’re seeking the same thing.  One of the ways we can meet
people with whom we disagree, if they are willing and we want to keep
being in connection, is to keep digging deeper and deeper until we
find shared values underneath what appear to be radically different
positions.  A game can be made of how deep two people have to dig to
find shared values.

Paul
is an example of an extremist, but one who shows with his life that
the same passion can be expressed in polar opposite ways, and that
gives us a chance to remember that those with whom we most
passionately disagree may be people with whom we … well, share
fundamental values. )

OK,
onto our final changer – Peter.  I’ve always thought Peter was set
in up the Gospels to be a bit of an idiot so we’d feel better about
ourselves when we are being idiots, but John Dominic Crossan thinks
that the Gospels are rough on Peter because they reflect some
ambivalence about his role as church leader.  In any case, Peter
usually looks like an idiot.

This
is no exception.  After Easter, Peter is sitting around, aimless and
decides to go fishing.  Now, fishing for Peter is not like fishing
for any of us.  (I’m unaware of any commercial fisher-people in this
church.  If I am misinformed, please let me know.)  Peter, at least
according to the Synoptic Gospels, had been a fisherman before Jesus
called him.  (John doesn’t share this information, in fact this story
sounds shockingly like the call of Peter in the Synoptics.)  A
fisherman was a commercial position.  Peter had likely fished the sea
of Galilee, as his means of making a living.  Scholars seem to argue
a bit about fishing – they agree that a large profit was being made
at this time from fish, as demand for it was high in the Empire at
that time.  Scholars don’t seem to have clarity about whether or not
the fisherman were able to actually keep any meaningful portion of
the wealth they produced.  Based on how the world works, I’m leaning
towards, “nope.”

In
any case, if Peter had been a fisherman, and then left fishing to go
follow Jesus, then going  back to fishing after Jesus’s death was
going backward.  This was AFTER Easter, so after the disciples were
supposed to have GOTTEN IT, that they could keep on sharing Jesus’s
message, that they could empower others as he had empowered them,
that the work wasn’t done but it was now theirs to do.

But
in this passage, they DEFINITELY don’t get it, and so they go fishing.
They revert.  They pretend away the past year, INCLUDING Easter, and
just go back to what they knew.

I’ve
gone fishing.  I’ve found wonderful new ways of life,  new
possibilities, transformations, and then let them slip away.  I’ve
gone to anti-racism trainings, and committed to attending to my own
privilege, and then come home to be immediately distracted by all
that is normal in my life.  I’ve gone away on retreat, found my
center, remembered how much I NEED to spend time in connection with
the Divine to be my whole-self, and then allowed myself to be
immediately pulled into things that aren’t whole-self inducing.  Or,
on a SUPER practical level… on a regular enough basis that it is
embarrassing, I notice that I get a little bit overwhelmed, and am
not sure which way to turn in the midst of too many options, and I
turn to my phone to do something ENTIRELY meaningless rather than
exist in the uncomfortableness of not knowing.

I
go fishing.

I
go back to what I know, what I have been, what comforts me, EVEN when
I know better.

I
think, maybe, we all go fishing.  But Jesus called the disciples away
from the fishing, in this story he does it AGAIN.  He didn’t let them
revert, he kept on prodding them into the fuller life they needed and
the ways they could gift the world around them.  He commands Peter to
feed and tend his sheep and lambs… which is NOT fishing.  The story
says that when Peter first saw Jesus he leapt into the water to swim
to where Jesus was.  That is, he KNEW that where he was supposed to
be wasn’t fishing, it was in the new life Jesus had called him to.

I
think that’s true for us too.  Rather than breath threats and murder,
we’re called to work with those who God loves (ahem, all.)  Rather
than be afraid, we’re called to speak love to those who scare us.
Rather than revert to what is comfortable, we’re called to new life
and new possibilities.  They can feel like odd commandments, but
we’re called away from fishing and into taking care of vulnerable
sheep – including ourselves and each other.  Thanks be to God that
God doesn’t make peace with the status quo, or leave us in our
comfortable places.  Amen

Rev. Sara E. Baron
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305
Pronouns: she/her/hers
http://fumcschenectady.org/

https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

May 5. 2019

Sermons

“Refusing to be Silent” based on Acts 5:27-32, John…

  • April 30, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

I’ll admit I have a strong
bias in this story.  It feels like my
personal job to protect Thomas from the accusations made about him over the
years.  I feel for him.  He said something reasonable and rational and
has gained the title “Doubting Thomas” for 2 millennia.  (My desire to protect Thomas would make a bit
more sense if the Jesus Seminar thought this story reflected historical memory,
which it does not, but that hasn’t had quite the impact you’d expect on my need
to protect Thomas.)

The problem, I think, is that
this story does what it supposed to do.
It was designed to include those Christians who did not experience the
resurrection first hand, and to affirm their faith.  The line, “Have you believed because you
have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to
believe.”(20:29)  The story seems to
say, because Thomas needed proof, but YOU managed to believe without it, you
are even better than one of the first disciples!  

“Have faith, even in what you
can’t see” has been a perennial preaching favorite, and Thomas has been the
straw man set up to make it work.  There
are a few issues with this though.  Most
importantly, “believe what I tell you because I told you so, even if it doesn’t
make sense” is a terrible way to lead people.
Also, bodily resurrection is … a great metaphor, but not something to
get obsessed about as historical fact.

This year, I came across a new
great way to defend Thomas, namely that none of the disciples believed the
Easter story to begin with.  Gail O’Day
in the New Interpreter’s Bible says, “John 20:19-23 is linked with the
preceding story in the garden by use the emphatic expression ‘that day’ (v.
19), although the disciples fearful conduct indicates that they have not
credited Mary’s report (cf. Luke 24:11).
The locked doors may be mentioned to heighten the drama and supernatural
effect of Jesus’ entrance into the room (v. 19b, fc. 25; Luke 24:37),
but their primary importance for the Fourth Evangelist is found in the phrase
‘for the fear of the Jews.’”[1]
Aka, all the disciples were scared, and hiding in that room, even though they’d
heard the Easter narrative from the women already.  They hadn’t seen and they didn’t
believe.  It wasn’t just Thomas.

Furthermore, as another
scholar says, ““The women’s report should have been credible because (1) they were
relating events of which they had firsthand experience (2) there were several
witnesses (3) their character has been established by the reports of their
selfless service to Jesus and his disciples.”[2]  

Now, before I can go on in my
defense of Thomas, I need to take a break and talk about antisemitism in the
New Testament.  It is morally
reprehensible not to, especially with texts like what we have today, and
shootings like we had yesterday – not to mention the past two millennia of
Western history.  Now, I’m actually not
convinced about whether or not the New Testament is inherently antisemitic for
two historical reasons.  The first is
that at the time the New Testament was written, Christians understood
themselves to be Jews who were following “the way” of Jesus…. not unlike the
various denominations in Christianity today where all of us would say we are
following the way of Jesus, but we might add that we’re doing so through some
of the teachings of John and Susanna Wesley.
Given that the earlier followers of “the way” were Jewish, the things
they’re saying against the Jews are INTERNAL squabbling, reflecting something
like the things I say about the WCA.  

The problem is that while the
followers of “the way” were an oppressed group in the time of the writing in
the New Testament, they became the powerful group and the history of the
Western hemisphere since Constantine has involved Christians having power over
Jews and using the language of the New Testament to justify mistreatment of
others of God’s beloved people.

The second piece takes a
little bit more nuance.  “The Jews” is
not really a reference to all Jews, or Jews in general.  More often, it is being used to refer to the
people in roles of authority within Judaism.
This applies to the Gospel and to the story from Acts.  The people who were in roles of Jewish authority
were the ones who had been placed there by the Roman Empire, with the intention
of controlling the Jewish colonies by controlling their leaders.  Because the Empire appointed, and removed,
leaders at will; the Jewish leaders served the Empire rather than the people,
or God, or the faith tradition.  So,
sometimes, “the Jew” doesn’t even mean people who are Jewish, it means Roman
Empire leadership appointed to Jewish roles.
In our Sunday Night Bible Study, where people are great at asking
questions and pondering, we have been wondering if “the Jews” was really coded
language for “the oppression of the Empire” while being a FAR safer way to say
it.  Further, the Roman appointed leaders
REALLY wanted to keep the peace, and keep their jobs.

But, again, even though I’m
not sure the original language of John or Acts was anti-Jewish, because 1.  it was written by people who were themselves
Jewish, about an internal fight within Judaism and 2. the references to “the
Jews” seems to refer to Roman appointed leaders, I KNOW that these texts
have been used SINCE Christianity became a dominate religion to do harm, and I
want us to be very very careful in how we hear, speak about, and reflect these
texts in our lives
.  NOTHING about
Jesus or the Jesus movement gives us permission to do harm (or allow harm to be
done) to God’s beloved people, and God’s beloved people come in ALL faith
traditions or lack there of.  Some of our
job in refusing to be silent is refusing to be silent about the mistreatment of
our Jewish siblings in faith by Christians.

Now, all that said, in Acts,
we hear Peter telling the Jewish authorities that they have murdered
Jesus.  (Do you see now why I spent all
that time fussing?)  The authorities are
presented as being concerned about disrupting the peace, which probably
reflects the fact that Luke-Acts was written AFTER the Roman Empire came in and
destroyed the 2nd Temple ALONG with killing a lot of people (the
Jewish historical Josephus says 1.1 million people died, that is likely an
exaggeration, but it reflects an enormous scale).  I think the Jewish leaders probably WERE
trying to prevent something like that from happening.  

Both Christianity and Judaism
were transformed, perhaps even formed by the experience of death and
destruction in 70 CE.  Nothing is the
same as it was before then, and some of the separation of the traditions
happened as the Temple was destroyed.   I
believe that the New Testament, which other than the authentic letters of Paul
was written in the aftermath of the destruction of the Temple, seeks to make
sense of that destruction in many of the same ways that the Hebrew Bible tries
to make sense of the destruction of the first temple and Jerusalem in 586 BCE.

One of the ways we see God at
work in the world is that what should be an end point, a death, a destruction,
ends up being over the long run a source of great wisdom, creativity,
compassion, and growth.  The faith
traditions we have today were developed in the midst of horror and destruction,
but they speak to growth, hope, faith, and love.

In Acts, we hear Peter say, “We
must obey God rather than human authority.”
How and when do we make that determination?  When are we clear that God’s will is distinct
from the will of those in authority?  Is
it simply the question of violence – that God is not for violence, passive or
active?  Or is it about oppression – that
God is not on the side of oppression?  Or
is it more positive?  That God is on the
side of life!  And love!  And expansive possibility!  This determination matters.  

Now, the story in John is
happening on Easter evening.  That’s why
it is so notable that none of those gathered seemed to have figured out that
hope and courage are the Resurrection narrative, not being afraid and locking
yourselves into a room by yourself.  We
do know, because of the radical growth of Christianity in the early years, that
the disciples did leave the room, and did so with great courage.  They continued sharing Jesus message of love,
of God, of hope and possibility, and were killed for it too – and they too died
with great courage and integrity.  The
Resurrection narrative is the story of facing fears with courage and letting
God’s yes take precedence over the world’s no.

In the midst of this
narrative, in the midst of the fear of the disciples sitting in the locked
room, we hear a repetition of a blessing, “Peace be with you.”  Peace is shalom here, it is a holistic desire
for well-being, not just the absence of violence.  Shalom implies physical, mental, spiritual, emotional,
AND relational well-being.  That’s the
best part of it – shalom can’t exist in just one person because it is
inherently relational.  It also can’t
exist without each person finding it, so all gain from it.  “Shalom, well-being, connection, love,
wholeness be with all of you!” And this gets repeated.

Then there is the weird thing
about sins.  Did you hear it?  “When he had said this,”  (the peace bit) “he breathed on them and said
to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they
are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.”  What does that mean?  Gail O’Day says, “Any discussion of this
verse, therefore, must be grounded in an understanding of the forgiveness of
sins as the work of the entire community. … The forgiveness of sins must be
understood as the Spirit-empowered mission of continuing Jesus’ work in the
world.  … Because the community’s work
is an extension of Jesus’ work, v. 23 must be interpreted in terms of Jesus’s
teaching and actions about sin.  … In
John, sin is a theological failing, not a moral or behavioral transgression (in
contrast to Matt 18:18).  To have sin is
to be blind to the revelation of God in Jesus.
”[3]

Does that mean, then, that
what Jesus is quoted as saying can be understood as “If you teach people of the
possibilities of life as I taught you, they will be free from fear; but if you
allow them to continue to live in fear, nothing will change?”    It is amazing, but this all fits with the
Maundy Thursday narrative about “love each other as I have loved you.”  O’Day says, “By loving one
another as Jesus loves, the faith community reveals God to the world.”[4]   And THAT, amazingly enough, releases “sin”
in John’s perspective.  😉

Now all of this brings us back
around to my friend Thomas, the one who is as direct and honest as Peter when
he says, “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger
in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not
believe.”  I really love this
line.  I love it especially because when
the story then provides him with proof he does a 180 and DOES affirm the truth,
more strongly than anyone has before him.
“My Lord and My God” was a very strong statement.  I wonder how often, when we are presented
with proof we’ve asked for, we are able to notice that it is there and it is
time to change our minds?

Most of all though, do we have
the courage of Peter and of Thomas, to speak the truth?  Are we willing to say what we don’t believe
when we don’t believe it AND what we do when we do?  Are we willing to speak up and witness to the
power of love to transform lives?  That
is, to release the power of sin in the world?
(Giggle, it is so weird to say that.)
May it be so.  Amen

[1]Gail
O’Day, New Interpreter’s Bible Volume IX: John, Leander E. Keck
editorial board convener (Nashville: Abingdon Press,1995)  846.

[2] R.
Alan Culpepper, “Luke,” in The New Interpreter’s Bible Vol. 9
(Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1994) 470.

[3]O’Day,
847.

[4]O’Day,
848.

Rev. Sara E. Baron

First United Methodist Church of Schenectady

603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305

Pronouns: she/her/hers 

http://fumcschenectady.org/
https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

Sermons

“A New Thing” based on Isaiah 65:17-25  and Luke 24:1-12

  • April 21, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

Years ago I asked my boss for a computer password. He responded, “You should know this. Its is the most obvious answer. We are a ____ people.” Now, I’ve had a lot of church related jobs, but I didn’t think this was obvious. I thought there were a lot of possible answers. We are a loving people. We are a Jesus-following people. We are a gracious people. We are a beloved people. After a while, I tried “We are a resurrection people” and that got me close enough that I was informed the password was “Easter.”

I’ve thought about that every since. For my boss, it was SO obvious that “Easter” was the sort of people we are. For me, there are a lot of questions about what that means, and how we live it out. I yearn for the sort of certainty he had in thinking I could guess the password.

Every month I ask a question of the Church Council as a start to our meeting. I’m known for asking difficult questions, and this church is full of thoughtful, intentional, … strong-willed…. opinionated people. (I wouldn’t have it any other way.) Thus, I ask a difficult question, people offer a variety of different answers, I have a better sense of what people are thinking and we move on.

For the first time, after nearly 6 years, this month the Church Council found an ANSWER to my question. It started like normal. I asked, “Where are you seeing resurrection?,” and people offered many and varied answers. But then a pattern emerged, and was named. The most profound way people are seeing resurrection is in the restoration of relationships, and as a corollary, in the miracle of life-giving relationships themselves.

I thought this was a profound answer, a good way of knowing what it is to be Easter people, so I ran it by the Confirmation class. You would be delighted to know that our Confirmation class is very reflective of this church. The students are thoughtful, intentional, strong-willed, …. opinionated people. They have no patience for irrationality, and even less for exclusion in any form. Last week I ran this idea by them. We talked about resurrection, what it does and does not mean, and how we make sense of the metaphor for our lives today. I wasn’t sure that “restored relationships” would be as meaningful for teens as for those who had experienced brokenness in relationships for decades. It turns out, I was wrong.

They thought that “restored relationships” and “hope where it seems there is no hope” sounded both meaningful and valid as ways of understanding Easter.

Thus, I’m trusting the Church Council and the Confirmation class to be good tests of the pulse of this community, and I’m going to keep on preaching about restored relationships AS resurrection.

For those who aren’t quite with me yet though, I want to play with that wonderful line from Luke’s first Easter Story, “Why do you look for the living among the dead?” (v. 5) Within the story it functions to emphasize the empty grave, but it also seems well phrased for metaphorical contemplation. When else have we given up something “for dead” when there is still life in it? When have we discounted a possibility, including of a restored relationship, when God wasn’t done with it yet? What does it mean to be people looking for the living among the living, rather than among the dead?

Last week I quoted John Dominic Crossan’s assessment of Jesus’ teaching, namely that Jesus taught “that God has given all human beings the wisdom to discern how, here and now in this world, one can so live that God’s power, rule, and domination are evidently present to all observers.”1 That left us questioning how to live our lives being guided by that wisdom. Parker Palmer is a wisdom teacher, who teaches people how to find the power of life within themselves. It seems to me that his book his book “A Hidden Wholeness: A Journey Toward an Undivided Life” takes off where John Dominic Crossan off.

Parker Palmer believes in the power and wisdom of the soul, and since the word soul isn’t one I find easy to explain either, I’ll let him say what he means by that:

“Philosophers haggle about what to call this core of our humanity, but I’m not stickler for precision. Thomas Merton called it the true self. Buddhists call it original nature or big self. Quakers call it the inner teacher or the inner light. Hasidic Jews call it a spark of the divine. Humanists call it identity and integrity. In popular parlance, people often call it soul. … it is the objective, ontological reality of selfhood that keeps us form reducing ourselves, or each other, to biological mechanisms, psychological projections, sociological constructs, or raw material to be manufactured into whatever society needs – diminishments of our humanity that constantly threaten the quality of our lives.”2

I’m going to take it a step further and say that the soul is the source of the wisdom that Dom was talking about, “the wisdom to discern how, here and now in this world, one can so live that God’s power, rule, and domination are evidently present to all observers.” Our souls KNOW, we know, but to know we have to listen to our souls.

Throughout Lent we’ve been talking about spiritual practices. One might also say we’ve been talking about practices of listening to the Divine, to our own souls, and to each other’s souls. None of this is particularly easy, but Parker Palmer is the teacher who is focused on exactly that. He thinks most of the time we’re led by ego and by fear, which leads us to be divided from the wisdom of our own souls, “Afraid that our inner light will be extinguished or our inner darkness exposed, we hide our true identities from each other. In the process, we become separated from our own souls. We end up living divided lives, so far removed from the truth we hold within that we cannot know the ‘integrity that comes from being who you are.’”3 He calls us to wholeness, but cautions us that, “Wholeness does not mean perfection: it means embracing brokenness as an integral part of life.”4

Isn’t THAT an interesting idea to consider on Easter? On this day when we think about resurrection, about restoration, about new hope and the power of life; what does it mean to think about wholeness as requiring acceptance of brokenness? Do we tend to think of resurrection as … perfection? I suspect we do. But that misses the point. God’s work in the world towards restoration doesn’t require nor create perfection. Perfection isn’t a part of life, and resurrection is about restoring LIFE. HOWEVER, God’s work in the world is always towards wholeness, and wholeness requires seeing, accepting, and making peace with brokenness.

Parker goes on to explain how we TEND to deal with this, “A divided life is a wounded life, and the soul keeps calling us to heal the wound. Ignore that call, and we find ourselves trying to numb our pain with an anesthetic of choice, be it substance abuse, overwork, consumerism, or mindless media noise. Such anesthetics are easy to come by in a society that wants to keep us divided and unaware of our pain – for the divided life that is pathological for individuals can serve social systems well, especially when it comes to those functions that are morally dubious.”5 Then he explains how to get OUT of that cycle, and the answer is both individual and communal. Palmer is a Quaker, and he believes there is a lot of power in silence, in quiet, and in listening. He encourages people to make space for silence in their lives, but he also says, “But we cannot embrace that challenge all alone, at least not for long; if we are to sustain the journey toward an undivided life. The journey has solitary passages, to be sure, and yet it is simply too arduous to take without the assistance of others. And because we we have such a vast capacity for self-delusion, we will inevitably get lost en route without correctives from outside of ourselves.”6

A few years ago I did an intensive training in the teachings of Parker Palmer. Much of what Palmer offers is based in the Quaker tradition. In living out these ideals in community, I discovered there was A LOT of power in them. We were taught to ask open, honest questions of each other, and to sit in silence especially when it was uncomfortable. We were invited to play with poetry and art, journaling, and conversation. We were taught that the soul is wise as all get out, but also shy and needing time, space, and metaphor to share its wisdom. We were taught to hold space for each other’s souls, both because souls are inherently precious, but also because every time a glimpse of a soul is seen, we learn about our own soul too. It is an unspoken part of Palmer’s worldview that souls are unique reflections of the Divine.

I have one more of his insights I want to share today: “All of the great spiritual traditions want to awaken us to the fact that we cocreate the reality in which we live. And all of them ask two questions intended to keep us awake: What are we sending form within ourselves out into the world, and what impact is it having ‘out there’? What is the world sending back at us, and what impact is it having ‘in here’? We are continually engaged in the evolution of self and world – and we have the power to choose, moment by moment, between that which gives life and that which deals death.”7 Isn’t that the question of Easter? How do we choose life? How do we work with God who chooses life in choosing life?

How do we live lives that REALLY show “that God has given all human beings the wisdom to discern how, here and now in this world, one can so live that God’s power, rule, and domination are evidently present to all observers.”8 How do we participate in and build community that loves people, and their souls, into a fuller wholeness; under the premise that whole people are a gift to the world? How do we build communities that reflect God’s goodness, wholeness, hope, and the power of God’s commitment to LIFE rather than death?

How do we allow God’s love, life, and wholeness into our lives so that we, and our relationships, can be restored? John Dominic Crossan believes that Jesus taught us we already know what we need to know, we already have the wisdom. Parker Palmer says that wisdom is in our souls, and to access the wisdom we need some quiet, and we need others who also trust in the wisdom of our souls.

This is what we know: God is a God of LIVE, not death; the wisdom you need to lead a transformed life is already with you; there are people who trust in your wisdom and are willing to help you find it; silence is a valuable asset in listening to the soul; metaphor, art, and open-honest questions matter too; AND… this is a community that has been and will continue to love people AS THEY ARE. That love then means that people can safely let their souls out to play, and grow further and further into who God calls us to be. We are a safe place for souls, and that means we are a safe place for LIFE. Maybe, after all, we are an Easter people. May it ALWAYS be so. Amen

1 John Dominic Crossan, Who Killed Jesus: Exposing the Roots of Anti-Semitism in the Gospel Stories of The Death of Jesus (USA: HarperSanFrancisco: 1995) 47.

2 Parker Palmer, A Hidden Wholeness: The Journey Toward the Undivided Self(USA: Josey-Bass, A Wiley Imprint, 2004), 33.

3 Palmer, 4.

4 Palmer, 5.

5 Palmer, 20.

6 Palmer, 10.

7 Palmer, 48.

8 John Dominic Crossan, Who Killed Jesus: Exposing the Roots of Anti-Semitism in the Gospel Stories of The Death of Jesus (USA: HarperSanFrancisco: 1995) 47.

–

Rev. Sara E. Baron 

First United Methodist Church of Schenectady 

603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305 

Pronouns: she/her/hers

http://fumcschenectady.org/

April 21, 2019

Sermons

“Being Fed and Given Rest by God” based on…

  • April 15, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

As human beings, we come into the world with needs.  New
babies need milk, diaper changes, human touch, soothing, temperature
control, shelter, communication, emotional mirroring, safe spaces,
tummy time, and lots and lots of sleep.  As far as I can tell, our
needs as humans grow from there.

Our needs remain complicated as well.  We have physical
needs for food, drink, clothing, shelter, and equally important
social and emotional needs to be heard, to be understood, to play, to
find peace, to connect.  Nonviolent Communication teachers share
lists of universal human needs, the one I use most often lists more
than 90 of them.

Because there are so many, and because life is so
complicated, it is rare for us to have our needs met at the same
time.  Nonviolent Communication theory suggests that everything we
say and do is really about trying to get those needs met, and I
haven’t seen any reason to disbelieve it.  It may help to know that
needs for peace, contribution, learning, purpose, and celebration
exist – so some of the needs make space for us to want to do things
that impact others.

The Isaiah passage opens up for me the dream of having
needs being met, perhaps even to have all of them met all at once.
Without Isaiah dreaming it, I’m not sure I could conceive of this.
Furthermore, the dream isn’t of some weak, minimalistic set of needs
being met.  It is all of them being met well.  Using the direct,
physical needs of thirst and hunger, Isaiah speaks of being offered
water, wine, milk, and rich food – without having to even pay for
them!

These were not foods that average people were eating –
these were the foods of the rich, and Isaiah proposes that God wants
all the people to access those good foods.  This is an opening to
thinking about life with God, life in relationship to God, life that
is shared under God’s vision of how things are supposed to be.

How things are supposed to be is incredibly disconnected
from how the world actually was, and how it actually is.  This
passage comes from the end of Second Isaiah, which dreams of a
different life for the exiles who God is going to lead home.  The
people have been in captivity in Babylon, and their captivity is
about to be transformed.  The hope of the passage is that in coming
home to Ancient Israel, the people will also come home to God’s ways.
Walter Brueggemann writes,

“The initial verse, perhaps in the summoning mode of a
street vendor, offers to passersby free water, free wine, and free
milk.  This of course is in contrast to the life resources offered by
the empire that are always expensive, grudging, and unsatisfying.
Israel is invited to choose the free, alternative nourishment offered
by Yahweh.  Thus, although we may ponder the metaphor of free food,
the udnerying urging is the sharp contrast between the way of life
given in Babylon that leads to death and the way of Yahweh that leads
to joyous homecoming.”1

The vision of Yahweh for Ancient Israel, which I believe
is still the vision of God for all people, is for the people to have
enough to survive AND thrive.  The world itself produces plenty, but
our societies distribution patterns prevent the “enough” from
getting to the people.  According to the Poor People’s campaign, in
the US today, 43.5% of US population are in poverty or are
low-income.2
Those old systems of the empires – the ones that bring the wealth
created by the many to the top – those are still happening.

It is funny to think of our needs being met, not only
because there are so many of them, but because even the idea of
universally satisfying the basic physical human needs is so far from
reality.  What would it look like if all people had enough to eat –
of nutritious and delicious food?  Can we quite imagine it?  What
would it look like here and elsewhere if the housing stock was mold
free, well insulated, repairs were up to date, water was safe to
drink, AND homelessness was eliminated?  It is a thing to ponder.
Can we imagine universal health care in this country, and one that
works?  Where people can afford both preventative care and
necessarily life-giving measures?  What about this – can we imagine
a world where there are enough mental health care providers for all
who need them, and all are offering top notch, compassionate care
(and the mental health care providers aren’t over worked, are
adequately paid, and have time and energy to do necessary self care)?
Oh what a world this would be!!  Ready for one more?  Can we imagine
a society with expansive parental leave policies for people at every
income level, with excellent nursery and day care for babies AND
nursing and adult care for adults in need, provided by people who are
adequately compensated for their imperative work, and trained to
offer it at the highest levels?

Can we even dream it?  Those are the BASICS, and Isaiah
invites us to dream them.  Those aren’t quite milk, wine, and rich
foods.  Those are merely clean water and enough bread for everyone.
Even with these pieces met, a lot of problems would remain.  But if
the BASICS were met, it would matter a lot.  And it is POSSIBLE.
This is not an unattainable dream – the capacity to make it happen
already exists.

I think it is a dream that Isaiah pushes us to
contemplate.  If we don’t dream a little bit, we can’t know what we
are working towards, and we have no chance of getting there.  

Of course, if we had a system where basic needs were
met, it would radically upend the economy, and society.  It is a very
BIG dream.  To have people’s needs met would mean that some of the
value of their labor would have to return to them, and that more the
value of all of our labor would be needed to care for those who
cannot labor.  We can’t have a system that cares adequately for all
people AND one that allows the work of most to enrich the few.  

In addition to dreaming a dream of human needs being
met, Isaiah’s passage also condemns the system as it was for how it
worked.  It indicts the labor system for enriching the empire at the
expense of the labors.  It also called out the thinking that allowed
it, called people out of the idea that working harder within the
system would find them a way to get to satisfaction.  This is one of
the hardest lessons for us today.  Working harder in rigged systems
only exhausts us, it does not get us what we need.   We still have a
system where people “spend your money for that which is not bread
and your labor for that which does not satisfy,” because the labor
is not permitted to bring satisfaction!

God’s dream is NOT a system of competition, of forced
labor, or even of economic gain over another.  God’s dream is NOT one
where people have to work harder than their neighbors into to fight
for the scraps they need to survive.  This is true BOTH with regards
to food and health care AND with regard to love and beauty.  God
wants us to have what we need, and the earth is capable of providing
it, but not when people are exploited for other’s excess.  

I suspect is is this system of thinking that is
reflected in the later words of the “righteous” and the “wicked”
– the ones who are willing to let go of the systems of exploitation
of the empire to move into God’s vision are the righteous, and those
who continue to participate in it and be co-opted by it are the
“wicked.”  This isn’t just me.  Brueggemann came to the same
conclusions 😉 (and that makes me feel SUPER smart.)  “’The
wicked’, I suggest, are not disobedient people in general.  In
context, they are those who are so settled in Babylon and so
accommodated to imperial ways that they have no intention of making a
positive response to Yahweh’s invitation of homecoming.”3

Between all of this, and the echoes from the Psalm, I’m
wondering us and about how well we are doing “making a positive
response to Yahweh’s invitation of homecoming.”  How well are we
able to leave behind the systems and thought patterns of oppression
and competition to move into a brave new world?  How interested are
we in the possibilities of the present and the future?

For me, some of the process of freeing myself from the
systems of oppression come in the practices of Sabbath-keeping and
meditative prayer.  It is EASY to get pulled in to never-ending
productivity, but when I STOP trying to be productive, I’m more able
to figure out what the goal of the production is anyway!  It is easy
to get pulled into a roller-coaster of emotions with the 24 hour news
cycle, but when I stop and get quiet, I can hear which parts of what
is happening I’m most able to respond to in a useful way.  The times
of quiet in my life are when I can hear my own soul, and the Divine
prodding, when I can let go of how I’m supposed to present myself,
and simply be.  And unless I’m doing those things, I’m VERY easily
swayed by the systems of oppression.

This is where spirituality intersects with both justice
work and my own well-being.  It isn’t healthy for us to live in the
levels of anxiety that modern life produces, but it isn’t easy to let
go of i either!  (In a different sort of church, that might merit an
“amen.”)  It is hard to focus on what needs to be done to build a
better society and world, particularly when dumpster fires are
happening all around us – but the capacity to build focus is part
of the gift of spiritual practice, as is the process of being able to
prioritize.

Beloveds of God, are we finding the ways to listen to
the Holy One?  God’s guidance is worthwhile – the Psalmist even
finds it worth clinging to.  Are we taking the time for rest, for
Sabbath, for prayer, so that we can have those needs met and be able
to envision a world where many needs are met for all people?  The
invitation is given to us – to be fed, to rest, to be filled, to be
satiated.  May we receive it, and pass it on.  Amen

1Walter
Bruggemann, Isaiah
40-66

(Louisville, KT: Westminster John Knox Press, 1998),159.

2Institute
for Policy Studies, “The Souls of Poor Folk: A Preliminary Report”
(December 2017)
https://www.poorpeoplescampaign.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/PPC-Report-Draft-1.pdf,
page 8.

3Brueggemann,
160.

Rev. Sara E. Baron
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305
Pronouns: she/her/hers
http://fumcschenectady.org/

https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

March 24, 2019

Sermons

“Taking Refuge in God” based on  Psalm 91:1-2, 9-16…

  • April 15, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron

I find it terribly interesting to be human, particularly
the irrational parts of being human.  For instance, I am  quite
capable of articulating the difference between God and the Church.
Here, I’ll prove it to you:  God is the creator of all that is, and
the grounding source of love that universe is build on.  The Church
is a gathering of people who have learned about God largely through
Jesus of Nazareth and try to be responsive to God, including in
sharing in the effort to make the world more loving.

OK.  I know there is a difference.  I believe myself to
be rock solid on the difference.

Except that many, many, MANY times in my life, I’ve
gotten confused between the two.  When the Church (big C) has messed
up, has proven itself to be entirely too human, has broken my heart,
and has failed to be what I think it should be – I’ve responded by
getting distant with God, as if the failures of the Church are God’s
fault.  I’ve done this repeatedly in my life, and I don’t seem to be
capable of remembering the difference between the two, even though I
already know it (mentally).

This seems like a particularly good time to remember
that God is God, and the denomination, the Annual Conference, even
this local church are not.  God is dependable, steadfast, and loving;
even when God’s people “turn away and our love fails.”  Holiness
is present, even when we don’t feel loved or heard by God’s people.
The Spirit offers us rest, support, and abundance; even when life is
feeling frenetic, unhinged, and scarce.  The Divine calls us to
healing, to wholeness, to authenticity, to full life; even when at
the same time we hear voices telling us to form ourselves into
something we just aren’t.

God is God, and God is GOOD.  God’s steadfast love
endures forever, and it is enough.  

In the language of the Psalm, God is our refuge, our
fortress, our dwelling place, our shelter.  We are at home in God,
and we are safe.  We can relax with the Holy One, we can trust in
God’s love, and goodness, and desire for our well-being.  We don’t
have to fight to be “enough” or different than how we really are.
We aren’t competing against each other for God’s love, because it is
not a finite quality.  Our natural state is “beloved by God.”  We
don’t have to earn it or compete for it.  It already is.

That, dear ones, is how grace works.  Just in case it
has been a while since you’ve remembered the nuances of grace, grace
is a word for God’s unconditional love for all of creation, and it is
God’s nature to be loving, to be full of grace.  Grace isn’t earned,
it just is, because it is God’s essence.  As followers of John
Wesley, even talk about various forms of grace including previenent
grace, the grace that comes before (like someone wearing too much
scent).  Previenent grace is God’s love for a person that comes
before that person is aware of God, or of God’s love.  

Wesleyan theology says that later on, if we become aware
of God, and of God’s love, and decide to work with God for good in
the world, we are impacted by “sanctifying grace”, also known as
the process of sanctification.   This is the process by which things
that are not loving in us are allowed to wilt away, while love takes
deeper and deeper root in us.  It is the process of letting our lives
be defined by God’s grace for us and for others.  It is letting love
take over.  The idea of John Wesley is that the work of Christians in
their own lives is to be sanctified, to become every more loving
until love is all that is left.  

I like that part 😉  

Deuteronomy is … it is many things at once.  Walter
Bruggemann, in his commentary on Deuteronomy, often talks about how
the text criss-crosses generations.  He says, “The rhetoric works
so that the speaker who is a belated rememberer of an old event
becomes a present tense participant in that old event.  In
‘liturgical time,’ the gap between past time and present time is
overcome, and present-tense characters become involved in remembered
events.”1
This gets even more criss-crossed when we attempt to put this text
into context.

Deuteronomy places itself on the far side of the river
from the Promised Land, it is a series of speeches by Moses to the
people before they finally enter the Land.  So, from that
perspective, this series of instructions of what to do with the first
fruits of the land – the promised land – is a future tense
reality.  Within the text, the people are dreaming of living in the
land, and haven’t gotten there yet.  Yet, the instructions are for
what people will say with their tithes, and the words people are
saying reflect back on the process of getting to (and into the land)
which in the story hasn’t happened yet.

If you want to add more layers (which clearly I do),
think about the fact that this was likely written down during the
exile – so a person who once lived in the land  but did no longer,
was writing down the  words of one who never lived in the land, to
those who would enter the land, about what they would say when they
got produce out of the land, about their history before they got to
the land.   Which is to say, I think Brueggemann is right, and there
are ways that time gets messy in these texts 😉

I’m interested, as well, in the fact that re-telling in
this liturgical way of the entrance into the Promised Land doesn’t
talk about the wandering in the desert.  It is huge theme in
Deuteronomy, where it is said time and time again that the people
needed to learn that they could rely on God before they could be
ready to deal with the abundance of life in the Promised Land, so
they wouldn’t think it had come to them from their own doing.  It
also functioned to led the old generation pass away, so that those
who had known the oppression of slavery were not the ones who build a
new thing. However, none of that is mentioned in this particular
piece, even though the rest of the history is.

Bishop Karen Oliveto posted on Facebook this week, “You
can take people out of Egypt but the main task of liberation is to
take Egypt out of the people. Perhaps this is why wilderness
wandering is necessary in our journey?”  That was when I noticed
that this particular text glosses over the wandering.  Perhaps it
doesn’t have to be named here, because in the idea that the person is
giving first fruits, we know they haven’t forgotten the lessons of
the wandering.  In any case, remembering that the wandering exists to
teach us liberation is definitely of use!

I’m struck by the way the Promised Land is constructed
as being itself a refuge, throughout the Bible.   Granted, just like
churches, it is an often broken one, and just like churches it gets
confused with God.  When the people lost the land they took it to
mean they’d lost God’s favor.  Yet, it might be easier to read this
text with awareness that land IS sacred, and that means land is HOLY,
and certainly for those who have been without land, land is a refuge
onto which they can build a life.  Space can become home, it can
reflect God’s own home-like attributes.

Did you hear the end of the passage?  After the first
fruits have been given and the past has been remembered, it says,
“Then you, together with the Levites and the aliens who reside
among you, shall celebrate with all the bounty that the LORD your God
has given to you and to your house.”  I LOVE this part.  After all
the labor of growing and harvesting the food, after all the
remembering (and bouncing around in time) the end game is a feast of
bounty to which ALL are invited.   All, including those without land.
All, including those who don’t know or worship God.  Those with
plenty, those without, those set aside to do God’s work, those who
are doing normal daily work, those who don’t have work – ALL the
people are coming to the feast.  The work that is given to God is
meant to be redistributed so that everyone can access it together.  

That Promised Land, the one the people were waiting to
enter?  It wasn’t meant to just be a refuge for them.  It was meant
to be a refuge for all.  The “law” of the Torah seeks to ensure
that widows, and orphans, those without someone powerful to care for
them, will still have enough.  The Torah seeks to ensure that
outsiders – the foreigners, the immigrants, the refugees –  will be
welcome and cared for. The Torah OBSESSES over the poor, and puts in
place practices that will prevent long term poverty and allow people
to be lifted up.  The land isn’t meant to be a refuge for some, or
for the lucky, or for those who do right.  It was designed to be a
refuge for all – a refuge that reflects God’s nature.

Now, after fussing over these texts sufficiently, I want
to get a bit practical.  God IS our refuge, and an excellent refuge
at that, but we are not always prepared to receive the goodness of
God’s gifts because we tend not to pay attention them.  We are
something, maybe too busy, too distracted, or too scared.  (Scared
because we’ve been around broken humans enough to be afraid that God
isn’t as loving as we’d hope, since humans often aren’t.)

However, the rest, the refuge, the HOME that God IS for
us, is a gift to us that we can receive if we make time and space to
do so.  I, personally, am best able to connect with this gift when I
practice Centering Prayer.  Centering Prayer is “just” being,
breathing in and out, and letting thoughts float away without
judgment or attachment.  It is a type of prayer that takes practice,
but it is transformative.  Other times, to access the rest, the
refuge, the home that God IS, I need to be in physical places where I
feel safe; other times I need to be with those with whom I can laugh.
Still other times, a quiet walk in the woods, a good deep cry, or
some time coloring mandalas will make space within me to let God’s
gifts in.  What helps you?  Are you doing it?  Do you need help
finding new or different ways to let God’s rest, refuge, offer of
home take hold in you?  If you do, let’s talk.

Because the world doesn’t need us exhausted, aimless,
and scared.   God and the world most need people being sanctified by
grace, and I think we should make space to let God help us be those
people!   Amen

1Walter
Brueggemann, Deuteronomy
(Nashville:
Abingdon Press, 2001)

Rev. Sara E. Baron
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305
Pronouns: she/her/hers
http://fumcschenectady.org/

https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

March 10, 2019

Sermons

“Change and Letting Go” based on Psalm 32 and…

  • April 15, 2019February 15, 2020
  • by Sara Baron
image

As human beings, we come into the world with needs.  New
babies need milk, diaper changes, human touch, soothing, temperature
control, shelter, communication, emotional mirroring, safe spaces,
tummy time, and lots and lots of sleep.  As far as I can tell, our
needs as humans grow from there.

Our needs remain complicated as well.  We have physical
needs for food, drink, clothing, shelter, and equally important
social and emotional needs to be heard, to be understood, to play, to
find peace, to connect.  Nonviolent Communication teachers share
lists of universal human needs, the one I use most often lists more
than 90 of them.

Because there are so many, and because life is so
complicated, it is rare for us to have our needs met at the same
time.  Nonviolent Communication theory suggests that everything we
say and do is really about trying to get those needs met, and I
haven’t seen any reason to disbelieve it.  It may help to know that
needs for peace, contribution, learning, purpose, and celebration
exist – so some of the needs make space for us to want to do things
that impact others.

The Isaiah passage opens up for me the dream of having
needs being met, perhaps even to have all of them met all at once.
Without Isaiah dreaming it, I’m not sure I could conceive of this.
Furthermore, the dream isn’t of some weak, minimalistic set of needs
being met.  It is all of them being met well.  Using the direct,
physical needs of thirst and hunger, Isaiah speaks of being offered
water, wine, milk, and rich food – without having to even pay for
them!

These were not foods that average people were eating –
these were the foods of the rich, and Isaiah proposes that God wants
all the people to access those good foods.  This is an opening to
thinking about life with God, life in relationship to God, life that
is shared under God’s vision of how things are supposed to be.

How things are supposed to be is incredibly disconnected
from how the world actually was, and how it actually is.  This
passage comes from the end of Second Isaiah, which dreams of a
different life for the exiles who God is going to lead home.  The
people have been in captivity in Babylon, and their captivity is
about to be transformed.  The hope of the passage is that in coming
home to Ancient Israel, the people will also come home to God’s ways.
Walter Brueggemann writes,

“The initial verse, perhaps in the summoning mode of a
street vendor, offers to passersby free water, free wine, and free
milk.  This of course is in contrast to the life resources offered by
the empire that are always expensive, grudging, and unsatisfying.
Israel is invited to choose the free, alternative nourishment offered
by Yahweh.  Thus, although we may ponder the metaphor of free food,
the underlying urging is the sharp contrast between the way of life
given in Babylon that leads to death and the way of Yahweh that leads
to joyous homecoming.”1

The vision of Yahweh for Ancient Israel, which I believe
is still the vision of God for all people, is for the people to have
enough to survive AND thrive.  The world itself produces plenty, but
our societies distribution patterns prevent the “enough” from
getting to the people.  According to the Poor People’s campaign, in
the US today, 43.5% of US population are in poverty or are
low-income.2
Those old systems of the empires – the ones that bring the wealth
created by the many to the top – those are still happening.

It is funny to think of our needs being met, not only
because there are so many of them, but because even the idea of
universally satisfying the basic physical human needs is so far from
reality.  What would it look like if all people had enough to eat –
of nutritious and delicious food?  Can we quite imagine it?  What
would it look like here and elsewhere if the housing stock was mold
free, well insulated, repairs were up to date, water was safe to
drink, AND homelessness was eliminated?  It is a thing to ponder.
Can we imagine universal health care in this country, and one that
works?  Where people can afford both preventative care and
necessarily life-giving measures?  What about this – can we imagine
a world where there are enough mental health care providers for all
who need them, and all are offering top notch, compassionate care
(and the mental health care providers aren’t over worked, are
adequately paid, and have time and energy to do necessary self care)?
Oh what a world this would be!!  Ready for one more?  Can we imagine
a society with expansive parental leave policies for people at every
income level, with excellent nursery and day care for babies AND
nursing and adult care for adults in need, provided by people who are
adequately compensated for their imperative work, and trained to
offer it at the highest levels?

Can we even dream it?  Those are the BASICS, and Isaiah
invites us to dream them.  Those aren’t quite milk, wine, and rich
foods.  Those are merely clean water and enough bread for everyone.
Even with these pieces met, a lot of problems would remain.  But if
the BASICS were met, it would matter a lot.  And it is POSSIBLE.
This is not an unattainable dream – the capacity to make it happen
already exists.

I think it is a dream that Isaiah pushes us to
contemplate.  If we don’t dream a little bit, we can’t know what we
are working towards, and we have no chance of getting there.  

Of course, if we had a system where basic needs were
met, it would radically upend the economy, and society.  It is a very
BIG dream.  To have people’s needs met would mean that some of the
value of their labor would have to return to them, and that more the
value of all of our labor would be needed to care for those who
cannot labor.  We can’t have a system that cares adequately for all
people AND one that allows the work of most to enrich the few.  

In addition to dreaming a dream of human needs being
met, Isaiah’s passage also condemns the system as it was for how it
worked.  It indicts the labor system for enriching the empire at the
expense of the labors.  It also called out the thinking that allowed
it, called people out of the idea that working harder within the
system would find them a way to get to satisfaction.  This is one of
the hardest lessons for us today.  Working harder in rigged systems
only exhausts us, it does not get us what we need.   We still have a
system where people “spend your money for that which is not bread
and your labor for that which does not satisfy,” because the labor
is not permitted to bring satisfaction!

God’s dream is NOT a system of competition, of forced
labor, or even of economic gain over another.  God’s dream is NOT one
where people have to work harder than their neighbors into to fight
for the scraps they need to survive.  This is true BOTH with regards
to food and health care AND with regard to love and beauty.  God
wants us to have what we need, and the earth is capable of providing
it, but not when people are exploited for other’s excess.  

I suspect is is this system of thinking that is
reflected in the later words of the “righteous” and the “wicked”
– the ones who are willing to let go of the systems of exploitation
of the empire to move into God’s vision are the righteous, and those
who continue to participate in it and be co-opted by it are the
“wicked.”  This isn’t just me.  Brueggemann came to the same
conclusions 😉 (and that makes me feel SUPER smart.)  “’The
wicked’, I suggest, are not disobedient people in general.  In
context, they are those who are so settled in Babylon and so
accommodated to imperial ways that they have no intention of making a
positive response to Yahweh’s invitation of homecoming.”3

Between all of this, and the echoes from the Psalm, I’m
wondering us and about how well we are doing “making a positive
response to Yahweh’s invitation of homecoming.”  How well are we
able to leave behind the systems and thought patterns of oppression
and competition to move into a brave new world?  How interested are
we in the possibilities of the present and the future?

For me, some of the process of freeing myself from the
systems of oppression come in the practices of Sabbath-keeping and
meditative prayer.  It is EASY to get pulled in to never-ending
productivity, but when I STOP trying to be productive, I’m more able
to figure out what the goal of the production is anyway!  It is easy
to get pulled into a roller-coaster of emotions with the 24 hour news
cycle, but when I stop and get quiet, I can hear which parts of what
is happening I’m most able to respond to in a useful way.  The times
of quiet in my life are when I can hear my own soul, and the Divine
prodding, when I can let go of how I’m supposed to present myself,
and simply be.  And unless I’m doing those things, I’m VERY easily
swayed by the systems of oppression.

This is where spirituality intersects with both justice
work and my own well-being.  It isn’t healthy for us to live in the
levels of anxiety that modern life produces, but it isn’t easy to let
go of i either!  (In a different sort of church, that might merit an
“amen.”)  It is hard to focus on what needs to be done to build a
better society and world, particularly when dumpster fires are
happening all around us – but the capacity to build focus is part
of the gift of spiritual practice, as is the process of being able to
prioritize.

Beloveds of God, are we finding the ways to listen to
the Holy One?  God’s guidance is worthwhile – the Psalmist even
finds it worth clinging to.  Are we taking the time for rest, for
Sabbath, for prayer, so that we can have those needs met and be able
to envision a world where many needs are met for all people?  The
invitation is given to us – to be fed, to rest, to be filled, to be
satiated.  May we receive it, and pass it on.  Amen

1Walter
Bruggemann, Isaiah
40-66

(Louisville, KT: Westminster John Knox Press, 1998),159.

2Institute
for Policy Studies, “The Souls of Poor Folk: A Preliminary Report”
(December 2017)
https://www.poorpeoplescampaign.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/PPC-Report-Draft-1.pdf,
page 8.

3Brueggemann,
160.

Rev. Sara E. Baron
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305
Pronouns: she/her/hers
http://fumcschenectady.org/

https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

March 24, 2019

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