Thursday, June 23, 2016

Avoiding Beating Up Pilgrim Bullies




A Reflection and Poem for VI Pentecost (Proper 8)             All Saints’ Church, Southern Shores, N.C. June 26, 2016                                                                                    Thomas E. Wilson, Rector

2 Kings 2:1-2, 6-14                 Psalm 16                      Galatians 5:1,13-25                 Luke 9:51-62

Avoiding Beating Up Pilgrim Bullies

Last week’s Hebrew Testament Lesson described how Elijah tried to listen to God, but he was only able to hear God in sheer silence. He placed his face inside his mantle, a robe, to close off all the distractions from his own agenda. He entered into listening to the Divine Spirit who is deep in his soul. The mantle is an outward and visible sign that suggests that God is wrapped around him and in him. Elijah faced his fears and his anger, and the voice told him to return to face the “Bullies-in-Chief”, Ahab and Jezebel. Ahab repented, but Jezebel never did. Eventually they were both destroyed by their own greed. Later on, in today’s lesson, Elijah takes on a disciple, Elisha. When Elijah is taken into heaven, the mantle, which he used to listen deeply to God, is passed on to Elisha. Elisha has ripped his own garment in grief and fear over losing his mentor; he is naked before God. Now, having nothing to hide, Elisha wraps himself by taking on the mantle and listens to God instead of his own agenda. He is making a commitment to a new life.

Last Thursday was the 32nd anniversary of my ordination; a mantle, stole was placed on me as an outward sign that I was making a commitment to a new kind of living. It took me many years to figure it out, and it is still a work in progress, but it involves listening in the sheer silence of God for God’s will. Thomas Merton, in Thoughts in Solitude, wrote:

the will of God is not a 'fate' to which we submit but a creative act in our life producing something absolutely new . . . something hitherto unforeseen by the laws and established patterns. Our cooperation (seeking first the Kingdom of God) consists not solely in conforming to laws but in opening our wills out to this creative act which must be retrieved in and by us."

Years ago, from 1978-81, before I went to Seminary, I had been an adult who volunteered to work with the Youth Group in the church I was attending. One night we went to see a popular teenage movie called “My Bodyguard” in which a young boy, Clifford, moves to a new school and the school bully Moody - don’t you just love that name - played by a sneering Matt Dillon, picks on him and shakes him down for his lunch money. Clifford makes friends with other nerds, but there is always the threat of the bully. There is another outsider as well, Ricky Lindeman, a muscular, brooding, silent boy who has a rumored past of violence for which he feels guilty, and he has vowed never again to use brutal force. Clifford approaches Ricky, trying to recruit him to be his bodyguard for fifty cents a day and help with his school work. Ricky agrees just to accompany Clifford around the school. In an arms escalation, Moody recruits his own “body guard”, Mike, a real Neanderthal thug, to beat up Ricky. Ricky refuses to fight despite the humiliation he feels, until the time comes when he has just had enough, and Mike is toast - to the cheers of my Youth Group boys and girls. The movie reaches its climax when Clifford is able to confront and thrash Moody, who like all big talking bullies, is a coward, masking his fear with false bravado. The boys of the Youth Group cheered, but the girls were saddened that cute, sexy, bad boy Matt Dillon should fall so low and have a bloody, albeit still cute, nose.  The movie ends with Clifford and Ricky, two friends walking into the sunset together, sure in their decision to engage in violence as a solution to violence.

The Youth Group liked the movie, and it led to a good discussion about how complex high school really is as they listed off the bullies and the fears. The old saying is true: “life is not like Junior High; it is Junior High.” I tried to steer the conversation into a move away from violence as a solution to oppression, bringing Jesus and Martin Luther King into the discussion. I became aware that, for many of these kids, they wanted God to be the Really Big Bodyguard to finally take care of all the bullies in the world. They liked the idea of Hell where they could visualize the bullies getting their come-uppance. God was the Big Final “sic ’em”.  While I was trying to talk about peace, I guiltily remembered a movie that I cheered when I was their age called “McLintock”,  with John Wayne fighting the bureaucratic bullies from the east and giving a speech to the “heavy”, Leo Gordon, as he makes his decision to use violence:

“I know, I know. I'm gonna use good judgement. I haven't lost my temper in forty years, but pilgrim you caused a lot of trouble this morning, might have got somebody killed... and somebody oughta belt you in the mouth. But I won't, I won't. The *hell* I won't!” – and then he slugs Gordon and the free for all celebration of violence breaks out. 

We can see that viewpoint of refusing to enter into solitude with God for peace and refusing to follow God’s will, substituting giving God some spare change and a little help in the belief that you’ll get your heart's desire.  In the first three verses of the Psalm for today, the Psalmist sings that God is the refuge that keeps them safe and makes trouble for all those who oppose them. We see this theme in a lot of the Hebrew Testament stories where God settles the Sodomites', the Egyptians', the Philistines' or the Assyrian’s hash. We see it reflected in the New Testament Book of Revelation, the glorification of the God who punishes. We see it in daily life when something bad happens and we ask, “What did we do to deserve that?” Or when the character Maude used to say to her husband Arthur: “God’ll get you for that, Arthur.”  I remember one person used a quote misappropriates to Patton and  explained to me that he thought of God that way when he said the 23rd Psalm; “Yea, though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of Death, I will fear no evil for Jesus is the Biggest Meanest Son of God in the entire Valley!”

That seemed to be a view shared by James and John as they are rebuffed by the Samaritans in today’s Gospel lesson. They see God as the one who would incinerate enemies on cue. Jesus rejects this view of God, suggesting that following Jesus would call for a lot from everyone - they were not to fear their enemies, but to love them. That is hard to do. The bullies of the government and religious establishments were eventually to kill Jesus, even while he was lovingly forgiving them for not knowing what they were doing.

Paul writes to the Galatians and points out that Christ sets them free, but it is not a freedom from abuse by the enemy but a freedom for love of the enemy. He urges them to no longer see God as their servant to do what they want done, but to see themselves as God's willing servants to manifest God's love. Bullies will always be around - that is their nature in this world, to swaggeringly point out convenient enemies and humiliate them for a price.

One way fearful people with the mindset of a “wannabe bully” try to come across is to use the cloak of religion and claim that they are doing this to please their God, and the people that they insult, assault, or kill deserve God's wrath. We see this happening in every major religion as there are fringes of their faiths that see their version of God as the one who calls for blood. It would be nice to think that Christianity would be an exception, but history does not bear that out. The problem is that Christianity has taken the path of least resistance, reducing our faith to a bunch of creeds and rituals where pulpiteers speak their own agendas on God’s wrath. We have replaced talking with God to hearing about God, making prayer a matter of our talking and God being consigned to the role of flunky, taking our dictation. We don’t slow down enough to listen. Thomas Merton wrote about this when he said in his Thoughts in Solitude: “Violence is not completely fatal until it ceases to disturb us.” and
When society is made up of people who know no interior solitude it can no longer be held together by love: and consequently it is held together by a violent and abusive authority. But when they are violently deprived of the solitude and freedom which are their due, then society in which they live becomes putrid, it festers with servility, resentment and hate.

How are we doing in entering into interior solitude so that we can resist calls to servility, resentment and hate?

Avoiding Beating Up Pilgrim Bullies (poem)
John Wayne snarls, cocking his fist back
showing how tough Marion Morrison is
hoped to be seen and feared. I cheered
because at age 16 there were plenty of
people I wanted to slug but that cheer
withered as it hit the air; remembering
seeing Civil Rights demonstrators turn
other cheek as Jesus taught his disciples.
Seething anger is not controlled by will
power directing it to worthy targets. But
by going soul, deep soul, tasting a peace
by claiming my own fears underneath the
anger. Angel mantles sing “Don’t be afraid.”    

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