2014
Sermons
Dez 28 - Outsiders
Dez 28 - The Costly Gift
Dez 24 - In the Flesh in Particular
Dez 21 - More "Rejoice" than "Hello"
Dez 14 - Word in the Darkness
Dez 7 - Life in a Construction Zone
Dez 2 - Accountability
Nov 30 - Rend the Heavens
Nov 23 - The Shepherd-King
Nov 16 - Everything he had
Nov 9 - Preparations
Nov 2 - Is Now and Ever Will Be
Okt 25 - Free?
Okt 19 - It is about faith and love
Okt 12 - Trouble at the Banquet
Okt 5 - Trouble in the Vineyard
Sep 28 - At the edge
Sep 21 - At the Right Time
Sep 14 - We Proclaim Christ Crucified
Sep 7 - Responsibility
Aug 31 - Extreme Living
Aug 27 - One Who Cares
Aug 24 - A Nobody, but God's Somebody
Aug 17 - Faithful God
Aug 8 - With singing
Aug 3 - Extravagant Gifts of God
Aug 2 - Yes and No
Jul 27 - A treasure indeed
Jul 27 - God's Love and Care
Jul 20 - Life in a Messy Garden
Jul 13 - Waste and Grace
Jun 8 - The Conversation
Jun 1 - For the Times In-between
Mai 25 - Joining the Conversation
Mai 18 - Living Stones
Mai 11 - Become the Gospel!
Mai 6 - Wilderness Food
Mai 4 - Freedom
Apr 27 - Faith despite our self-made handicaps
Apr 20 - New
Apr 19 - Blessed be God
Apr 18 - Jesus and the Soldiers
Apr 18 - Who is in charge?
Apr 17 - For You!
Apr 13 - Kenosis
Apr 9 - Mark 6: Opposition Mounts
Apr 6 - Dry Bones?
Apr 2 - Mark 5: Trading Fear for Faith
Mrz 30 - Choosing the Little One
Mrz 26 - The Life of Following Jesus
Mrz 23 - Surprise!
Mrz 19 - Mark 3: The Life of Following Jesus
Mrz 16 - Darkness and Light
Mrz 12 - Mark 2: Calling All Sinners
Mrz 10 - Where are the demons?
Mrz 9 - Sin or not sin
Mrz 8 - Remembering
Mrz 5 - Mark 1: Good News in a Troubled World
Mrz 3 - For the Love of God
Feb 28 - Fresh Every Morning
Feb 27 - Using Time Well
Feb 23 - Worrying
Feb 16 - Even more offensive
Feb 9 - Salt and Light
Feb 2 - Presenting Samuel, Jesus, and Ourselves
Jan 26 - Catching or being caught
Jan 19 - Strengthened by the Word
Jan 12 - Who are you?
Jan 9 - Because God....
Jan 5 - By another way
Read: Matthew 15:21-28
Tenth Sunday after
Pentecost - August 17, 2014
Most of us likely remember that very painful playground exercise called “choosing up sides”.
The two biggest or most athletic kids took turns choosing classmates to be on their team.
The few really lithe kids were snapped up first...and then there were the rest of us, the ones with poor hand/eye coordination and two left feet.
Would there be room on the team for us?
Not if the captains had their way!
Yes, let's have a team with no weak links...like me.
All in all, it was a dismal situation.
If you don't remember it, then you must have been one of those chosen early on, because the rest of us never forgot the pain.
It was a difficult, confusing and painful time back there in those first generations of the church.
Jesus is a Jew, of the lineage of King David.
All the disciples are Jewish, perhaps of several different factions of the nation, but still, Jewish.
Jesus preaches and teaches and heals for the most part within Israel.
But there are things that must have mystified those first disciples.
There was Jesus and the Syro-Phonecian woman.
There was Jesus and the Roman centurion.
There was Jesus going to that heathen city Caesarea Philippi, with its temples to all the gods of Greece and Rome having their supposed connections with the underworld.
It is another Roman soldier who at the cross confesses “Truly this man was the Son of God.”
We haven't finished puzzling over these things when we arrive at the book of Acts and Peter's vision of the sheet being let down from heaven with animals of every kind.
Peter hears the command “Rise and eat...” and he doesn't know what to do, because some of the contents of the sheet were forbidden to good Jews.
After a while, Peter realizes that the vision was about who could be in the church.
And there was that contentious church council held in Jerusalem where the leaders had to argue out the connection between Jews and Gentiles, who is “in” and who is “out.”
And in our Second Lesson today, Paul is working through similar territory.
Paul himself is, of course, a well-trained Jew and can be justly proud of his pedigree.
But he has discerned that he has been sent by Jesus to more people than just his own genetic or religious background.
It is as if God is choosing the ones with two left feet and poor hand/eye coordination for his team at the same time and just as easily as he chooses the fleet of foot and quick of eye folks.
It is just that we Gentiles have been so accustomed to being the majority in the church that we have forgotten than we were the outsiders, the late-comers, the later ones chosen.
Can we hear this again as good news for all of us.
It does not depend upon genetics as some thought, but rather on the call and up-building by God.
We have read the Old testament, and we know that God once made a promise to Abraham and the generations that followed him.
I will be your God and you shall be my people, God said, over and over.
But now that Jesus is come and been turned away and killed, has God rejected his people? Paul asks.
Is God going to look somewhere else for a new people?
Paul's answer is short and pointed: By no means he says.
Israel's rejection of Jesus does not mean that God will now reject and replace Israel.
The gifts and calling of God are irrevocable, Paul asserts.
God's promise is good, no matter if we are confused or in the dark about how it will all be accomplished.
For if God rejects the Jews because the Jews have rejected Jesus, then Paul's whole preaching of the Gospel is in jeopardy, since the good news that in Jesus Christ God is reconciling the whole world to himself is based upon the foundational claim that God is 100% faithful to his promises.
We regularly mess up our promises and our fidelity to Jesus is as shaky as any of the disciples.
But God's mercy is not dependent upon our steadiness, but upon the nature of God to be faithful to his own word given.
We believe that God will continue to love and keep Israel because in Jesus, the Jew from Nazareth, we have experienced God loving and keep us, all of us, Jew and Gentile alike.
Everything depends upon the faithfulness of God.
A Lutheran theologian has called us Christians “honorary Jews.”
It is an honor we have not merited or earned, but like any true honor, one which has been given by God.
The astounding Christian claim is that just as God chose Israel to be a holy people, a light to the nations, a witness to all the world, so God has in Jesus graciously chosen us Gentiles.
We are, as Paul says a few verses after our Lesson today, grafted onto the tree of Israel, and thereby made a part of God's promises to Israel.
And if the Lord God of Abraham and Paul is a God worth having, this God is faithful to his word.
Let's be clear about this: the Good News is that in Jesus, God has acted decisively for us, doing what we cannot do for ourselves.
We make promises on Sunday and before we get out the door, we've started to fold, spindle, and mutilate them...but not God.
His word is good, and he will keep it.
In Holy Baptism, you and I have been called, and promised, commissioned, and sent, and all of that remains even after all of the times that we fall short.
In the forgiveness that is announced near the beginning of the service and in the communion meal that we share later on, God's faithfulness is proclaimed to us again and again.
It is truly the Good News we need to get u in the morning and face another day.
And there are other implications as well.
Looking back we ask how could people let Hitler's hate ravage Europe before saying No?
But a similar question is pressing on us now.
It is a very complex and difficult situation, which needs very careful thought: should we stand idly by as Christians and Jews and even “moderate” Muslims are threatened with extermination today with an even more profound hatred than was stirred up by Hitler two generations ago?
With no sense of triumphalism, but in fear and trembling, might we consider that our actions, individually and internationally, might be a part of the working out of God's promises to save his people, all of his people?
That one won't let us rest easy, now does it?
But we have the will to wrestle with it, because we have the confidence that God keeps his promises to us, to all his people, of the First covenant and the New covenant as well.
I will love you, I will sustain you, I will walk beside you, I will weep and exult with you, I will never let you go, I will bring you home to the fullness of the Father's grace.
Last fall Matt and I walked past the Church of the Holy Sepulcher at the edge of a little town in Spain.
The church has been closed and abandoned for a hundred years, but the stone carvings are still telling their story.
In the tympanum, the semicircular area above the main door, is a carving of the Last Judgment.
On the right side there is a monster with a gaping jaw representing hell; in the center, the Father on his throne with the scales of justice, and from the left, the procession of the naked dead passing before him.
But in this fearsome scene, there needs also to be one more figure, the Lord Jesus, who says to the Father, “In spite of the weight of justice against them, grant mercy to them all, Father, for my sake.”
And that is the final Good News.
Amen.
Please note: The preceding sermon is provided as a resource for the thought, prayer, and meditation of the members and friends of St. Mark's. It is the residue of a verbal event, and thus it does not have academic footnotes and other details that would be expected in a written document. The writer gladly acknowledges the prior thought and work of many Christians before him. |