Thursday, November 13, 2014

The Summons

A Reflection for XXIII Pentecost (Proper 28)           All Saints’ Church, Southern Shores, NC November 16, 2014                                                            Thomas E. Wilson, Rector
Judges 4:1-7                1 Thessalonians 5:1-11                        Matthew 25:14-30
“The Summons”
One of the things I like about preaching on the Lectionary is that every three years I come back to the same lessons and it is like I meet old friends and discover how they  have changed since I last saw them. Obviously their words have not changed but I have, and I get different insights and surprises.

In the lesson from the Book of Judges for today, three of the judges are mentioned, and I am again aware of how God uses all sorts of people. The Book of Judges is a collection of hero stories that are passed down by the various tribes of Israel. These hero stories are set after the time of Joshua, which we looked at last week, when the tribes co-existed in a loose confederation in the Promised Land and pretty much went their own way until they were united by the Kingdoms of Saul and David. This collection of stories was probably first put into written form during the time of the Babylonian exile to remind the exiles that they need to stick together to keep from losing their identity.

Deborah, Judge of Israel under Deborah's Palm
The stories follow a cyclical pattern which begins with the people getting sloppy and ceasing to listen, forgetting their relationship with God. Their failure to maintain their community’s spirit allows them to be dominated by one of the neighboring countries that oppress them. A hero is called forward by the Spirit of God who liberates the people, and then after the Judge dies, the people go back to their old ways.  Judges, in the Book of Judges, are people who listen for God and are open to receive the Spirit of God. There are 12 Judges in this book, from Gideon to Samson. The Judges like Ehud and Barak mentioned in this lesson are people who hear God’s call to rise up against the oppressors of the people and lead the people, or they are like Deborah, a person noted for wisdom and discernment. People come to her to lay out their cases against each other and she listens to God and determines what the resolution will be.


This particular story comes at the end of the Ehud story, and the thing about Ehud is that he is called ‘Ehud – the Left-Handed”. Being left-handed, there is a trick he is able to pull – he is able to kill Elgon, the King of the Moabites, who is oppressing the people. As you know, left-handed people are only about 10% of the population, and they find it more difficult to fit in a society that is dominated by right-handed folk; they are often seen as abnormal. While the story is a nice gory tale, it is interesting to note that God seems to pick the most unlikely people to use to make a point.  In the same way, it is unusual to see Deborah as God’s vessel to lay out military plans in a society in which women were not usually taken seriously. I think one of the messages of the Book of Judges is to remind the stories’ listeners that God uses all sorts of folk to be leaders. Their leadership is not about who they are but about how God uses them, even people who the society looks down upon. God is the Judge behind all of the Judges, and this is a theme throughout the entire Bible - that there is no greater Judge than God. It is a lesson we need to keep learning as we elect leaders in this country - for there is a higher law than the Constitution, a greater Judge than the Supreme Court.

The other surprise in the Gospel lesson was about the talents, and this was the first time I noticed the line the third slave says: “`Master, I knew that you were a harsh man, reaping where you did not sow, and gathering where you did not scatter seed; so I was afraid, and I went and hid your talent in the ground. Here you have what is yours.” I started to wonder what kind of man reaps what he does not sow and gathers what he does scatter? What kind of man takes things that belongs to another? And it came to me; he is a criminal. He heads up a criminal enterprise and he has to get out of town for a little while because the heat is building up. He is a gangster, and I noticed the financial advice the gangster gives the third slave about investing the one talent with money lenders to get interest.  Jewish law forbade the charging of interest; the Hebrew word for interest comes from their word “to bite”, and therefore the advice was to invest it with a criminal loan shark and take advantage of someone who is down on his luck. The story does not say how the first two doubled their money, but it makes sense that, since they worked for a criminal, they probably engaged in their own criminal enterprise. I started to see the story as a gangster story of an organization like the Yakuza or Mafia. I don’t think Jesus is telling a story about God as much as he is talking about the “Godfathers” of our cultures. I can visualize the three coming to the Godfather after he got out of jail to pick up the reins again of this criminal enterprise and kissing the boss’ ring and saying something like: “Hey Boss, I took your five talents…”  (now a Talent is roughly equivalent to 71 pounds of silver, or the wages  of a skilled worker for nine years and so five Talents would equate to wages for 45 years – imagine, therefore, every penny you ever made in your working life) “… I took your five Talents and bought a supply of heroin and doubled your money. How about them smackers?” The Boss would say, “Oh Charlie, Charlie, you are a good gang member. Let me give you a bigger territory.” He also rewards the second, who invested in a chain of brothels, but he changes his tune with the last slave and orders cement shoes for this one who wasn’t harsh enough, and that slave of the one talent “sleeps with the fishes.”

If we take this story to be literally about God, then God is a monster, and we who are faithful can become monsters in that divine pattern. We have seen throughout history how people have taken the God of love and used that God as a foil, a God-father, for all sorts of monstrous activities. Last week we celebrated Veterans Day on the anniversary of the end of that horrible conflict which started 100 years ago in 1914. It was that War that galvanized theologian Karl Barth as many of his teachers in Seminary signed on to support German War aims in World War I, and Barth reexamined how culture used religion for its own purposes. It was that War where Russian Orthodox Priests and Bishops joined with the leaders of English and French churches to support the slaughter that would last for four bloody years and whose main purpose was national pride as both sides saw the war as supporting their culture. The total number of military and civilian casualties in World War I was over 37 million, over 16 million deaths and 20 million wounded. One third of the deaths were from disease and malnutrition made worse by the war. We were slow to learn, for the end of World War I carried the seeds of World War II where estimates of the dead numbered from 60 to 85 million. War is not a political issue; it is, at its core, a spiritual issue. Barth wrote: "To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world."

I think the question that Jesus posed to his listeners is “What kind of “Boss” of our life do we follow?”  If the “Boss” of our life is a harsh boss who takes what belongs to others to enrich himself, then we will pattern our lives after that “Boss”, and the final question, the bottom line will be “Did you take more from others than you were given by me?”  However, if our Boss is about the business of love, then the important question at the end of our time of serving our boss will be “Did you give more to others than you received from me?”

I think that both the lessons are about how God is speaking all the time, speaking about who God is and inviting us to follow God to help lift people out of oppression. I think the first lesson for today is that God uses all sorts and conditions of people, even you and me.  So are you and I listening to God and responding to what God invites us to do? I think the second lesson asks us to ask ourselves who is this God in whose image we are made and how are we “good and faithful servants” of that God? 

Parker Palmer wrote a version of the Lord’s Prayer:
Heavenly Father, heavenly Mother,
Holy and blessed is your true name.
We pray for your reign of peace to come,
We pray that your good will be done,
Let heaven and earth become one.
Give us this day the bread we need,
Give it to those who have none.
Let forgiveness flow like a river between us,
From each one to each one.
Lead us to holy innocence
Beyond the evil of our days —
Come swiftly Mother, Father, come.
For yours is the power and the glory and the mercy:
Forever your name is All in One.



This a Haiku I wrote to help me go deeper in meditation than what I wrote
The Summons
Coming to Palm shade
Hearing sighs and murmuring
God’s breath spirit call.

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