The good folks at JD-FM Meals on Wheels serve all kinds of home-bound neighbors between here at Tully. |
Lent 2-B March
1, 2015
Genesis 17:1-7,
15-16
Romans
4:13-25
Mark
8:31-38
When do we get to the good parts? To the easy stuff? To the
pot of gold at the end of the rainbow? It seems like we spend all our time
struggling, working through difficult times, keeping our chins up. When do we
get a break? When does our ship come in?
Getting to Easter is not, as one preacher I know said, the
next stop after our spring tune-up at the spa or wardrobe refresher at Destiny.[i] We are invited instead
into this close examination of our relationship with God, and here, in the
midst of all that examination, well, we come upon some difficult texts.
It would be nice, wouldn't it, if the Bible were fully of
easy stories. How useful would those be during these days, of economic
hardship, of people losing their jobs, of services being cut, of homes lost to
bad bank loans.
Let’s cut dear old St. Peter some slack: we don’t like hearing
the tough news any more than he does. Peter does not want to hear what Jesus
tells him, that suffering and death will come, are inevitable. Jesus’ words are
not welcome ones; let’s not kid ourselves.
Jamesville-DeWitt students sorting food donated over the holidays for people in our town |
The Bible is not full of easy stories, but it is full of God
– of God wanting to be in relationship with us, with us human beings. If God is
the center of the universe, the all-important creator, then the Bible is the
story of how much this God want us close. The Bible is the story of how God
keeps trying, even though we fail, drift away, deny, wander, pay attention to
other things.
The story of Abraham and Sarah is the story of God’s third
big try in getting us humans into a loving relationship with God. The first –
creation. Adam and Eve pulled away from God, and God got angry and threw them
out of the garden. The second – the flood and the rainbow. We read this last
week. God was angry, so angry, with us human beings that he killed all of us
except one family, who floated in a boat, on a destroyed earth, for 40 days. I
think that experience terrified God – God repented of that anger-filled
destruction, and said no more.
Today, what do we have in the story of Abraham and Sarah?
God tries again. Here, God says. We are bound together – me to you, you to me, together.
As a sign of this love I hold for you, I promise you this: you will have a
future. You will have a child, and that child will give you as many descendants
as there are stars in the sky. You who are wandering in the wilderness: you
will have a home. You who do not know what to believe in: you will have a God.
We are followers of God – all of us. That is why we are
here. At some point in our lives someone assured us that God loves us. Someone
told us some version of this Abraham and Sarah story, and for us, it took. We
believed it. Now it is up to us: how can we make other people believe this Good
News of God on our side, people who may not have heard it before? People who
may not think it applies to them? People who are caught up in some very non-God-like
things?
Most people in the world have the deck stacked against them.
This is not news. Many people in the world don’t get enough to eat, don’t have
a decent place to live, don’t have good medical care, don’t have the
opportunity to earn a living. What does that have to do with us?
What does it mean, then, to be a follower of Jesus?
God likes to talk about a covenant: I will love you, God
says, and because I love you, I want you to do some things for me, and for each
other. Love me, love your neighbor as yourself. I will keep my side of the
covenant; it is up to you to keep yours. Being a follower of Jesus means
keeping our side of the covenant. It means loving our neighbors as our selves.
We have close-in neighbors: our literal next-door neighbors,
wherever we live. The neighbors of this
CODFish volunteers help people in DeWitt get to medical appointments |
Deny yourself, Jesus said. Amazingly, the more we give away
the more we have.
Take up your cross, Jesus said. Amazingly, it is easier, and
lighter, with every step.
No comments:
Post a Comment