Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Chains, Demons, & Urban Exorcists: A Gospel Story for Sociologists - Mark 5:1-20



The following sermon was written for the Westmont College Sociology and Anthropology Retreat (2012) which included both students and faculty.




I love sociologists and anthropologists. Much of my work as a historian has been influenced and benefited from social and anthropological theory.  Basically, I’m a wanna be.  But I am not here to talk to you as a historian but as a pastor.

This is a sermon laboratory where I hope to encourage you and ask tough questions that require your input, your learning, your skills, and your voice.  My goal is straightforward – to claim you in the name of Jesus for the church. We need you to be whole as a church. We need you in order to follow Jesus faithfully, to love our neighbors creatively, and to be salt and light. And so today I hope to ordain you to help us go forth into a world where apathy and half-heartedness, delusion and anxiety are dominant. Here is the text for your ordination.

Read Mark 5:1-20. The Word of the LORD.

Our story begins “when he stepped out of the boat”

It never ceases to amaze me how Jesus steps out of boats.  Boats are very important to Jesus – he calls a number of fisherman who use them, boats help transport him from place to place, they provide food for his group through fishing, and even serve as a floating platform from which to speak –they are helpful, familiar and maybe even fun. I wonder if in their many cruises around the Sea of Galilee if conversations didn’t arise that went something like this. Peter “You know guys. We’re in this boat a lot. I wonder if we couldn’t make it a bit more comfortable. The Master was a carpenter – maybe we could put in some benches, or maybe even some bunks. Yea, John, jumps in. We could make it bigger so that it’s easier to sleep. Andrew pipes up, “Hey, how about a kitchen with a coffee maker. I mean we could make a sandwich and have the master multiply it – that’d be cool.” And Jesus wept.

Okay – that didn’t happen. But hey I’m a preacher at heart and we always wonder about things like that! Furthermore, we experience it in our own ministries with our own people. One of the most destructive things to happen to the church is when we sacralize our boats. When we turn the church – the body of Christ – into a thing. Do you realize on a daily basis that we speak of the church in a way that the NT never does! We say, “What time is church? Are you going to church? I’ll see you at church.”  Now, I’m not trying to say that church buildings are bad. In the same way that Jesus used boats for the work of the kingdom they can be invaluable. These are places where we meet other believers, can worship, find refreshment, and learn helpful things for the Christian life. But the Christian life is NOT a life at sea but on the land.  We need people in the church to remind us what our mission is – we are not to be sailors but landlubbers.  Our understanding of the boat matters – our church buildings are to be ferries and not cruise ships - to be transports and platforms for ministry because Jesus will always step out of them – always! He’s interested in the cities, the wild places, the tombs.  We need sociologists and anthropologists to remind us where ministry happens, where we need to go.

I was hired in my church to be a tour guide of the city and its tombs.  And who did I go to in order to learn – social workers. We need people who know the city, are familiar with the landscape, know where people hangout, are comfortable in the tombs.  We need people who can remind the church that while it might be cool to call yourself the First Boat of Santa Barbara, and have the best boat band that the boat is not it.  This became real for me when I started my work as Pastor for Gospel Action – our boat was way up here and while we wanted to serve the poor, befriend the marginal, witness to God’s kingdom – we were stuck at the dock. We were reminded that our greatest resource was the cargo – the people not the place and so my job was to go into the city and find out its needs, where its tombs were, those places where Jesus would go.  This meant that we could partner with people in exciting ways rather than duplicating many ministries or social service agencies that were far more successful. 

When Jesus steps out of the boat – is when ministry begins.

He encounters a man out of the tombs with an unclean spirit.

But before Mark goes on he wants to recount how society dealt with him. How the man had been handled with chains and shackles used to restrain and subdue him “among the tombs.” But Mark does more than describe these chains. He also wants to highlight their inability to work, to heal and to transform this wounded individual who howls at night and bruises himself with stones.  One almost gets the idea that Mark is saying that the chains are part of the problem.

What do we make of these failed “chains” and “shackles”?

1. Chains are those structures which seek to remove and separate people. They are the impersonal, punitive ways we seek to control those in society who don’t measure up.  They are solutions without relationships, without names.  We must have people within the church who affirm that human beings are not fundamental problems to be solved with chains but enslaved people in need of liberation and compassion. We need the kingdom affirmation that everyone should be able to receive basic material goods (food, clothes, shelter) necessary to stay alive in a society that has an abundance of goods.  What do such chains look like? A woman recently took a cucumber from a Santa Barbara market, because, as she said in her own words, “I was hungry.” She was arrested with a $20,000 bail.  Chains occur when we cut funding for mental health services and seek to enlarge our budget for jails. Why? Because this is the place we now send our mentally ill. The Common Ground survey, itself an awesome sociological tool, reveals that the most common connection among the many who are homeless is mental illness – 75% of those interviewed documented some form of mental difficulties, trauma, etc.

2.  Chains can be well-meaning bureaucracies or aid that keep people where they are – Addiction vs. Mental Health Services.  Bureaucracy is described by Weber as the “iron cage.” We had thirty empty beds at the Salvation Army during Christmas. Why wouldn’t they open the doors? – the system kept women out.  We need to challenge the irrationality of rationality. In my work with those who are homeless there is an increasing belief that what will work would be to get rid of them. One of the first encounters I found myself in was when the city’s CUP forced Casa to remove 100 people from the winter beds (many who were sick) and then began to ticket them for sleeping on the street. Both conservative and liberal policies can orient toward chains. The desire is more cops on State Street, more pressure on Casa to cut certain services, and to make it more difficult to find help.  In this way, chains orient us away from the constructive element of liberating people and suggests that the fundamental problem IS people..

3.  Chains are fundamentally products of our fear. I don’t want to be glib about this. Fear is powerful and sometimes even warranted. This guy certainly sounds scary. We need you in the church to help educate us so that we are not afraid.

We now have to address the topic that we cannot avoid. Demons. What are we to make of the legion of demons? Why did I pick this story? Am I looking to you as sort of a squad of urban, social exorcists? Well, yes. I am.

Let’s take a step back and discuss what the NT might mean by speaking of “powers and principalities.” Here I am indebted to the work of Walter Wink and his Powers trilogy. Like Wink, I am coming to believe that principalities and powers in the NT are not fundamentally disembodied spirits inhabiting the air but complex, entangled, distorted spiritualities and ideologies within institutions, structures, and systems, even persons. This does not mean that powers are only physical. The Bible insists that they are spiritual. In the biblical view the Powers are at one and the same time visible and invisible, earthly and heavenly, spiritual and institutional (Col. 1:15-20). They are simultaneously an outer, visible structure and an inner, spiritual reality - actual spirituality at the center of the political, economic, and cultural institutions of their day. This is what is happening, for example, when Rome is spoken of as Satanic (Rev. 12-13).  This demonic spirituality was encountered in the actual institutional forms of Roman life: legions, governors, crucifixions, payment of tribute and burdensome taxes.  This is also why it is interesting that in the Gospel of Mark we have a demon-fest but in the Gospel of John we have no demons but goes into great detail about Jesus’ engagement with the Pharisees whose religious traditions – the embodied attitudes and practices - keep people out, or imprison them beyond their own control – not that Jews are demonic but that the spirituality of the Pharisees was.

Furthermore, the NT insists that demons can have no impact on us unless they are able to embody themselves in people or political systems (Rev. 12-13).  So I am coming to understand that demons, as far as the NT is concerned, are not about spiritual beings up there but over there – in the socio-spiritual structures that make up the one and only real world.

I am not sure, in other words, that demons are autonomous entities but am not sure how to settle the issue. We naturally tend to personalize anything that seems to act intentionally. For example, a computer virus which systematically is self-replicating and “contagious” appears to behave almost willfully even personally. We can speak about storms similarly, the tornado that devoured the home, for example. In this way, I wonder if the demons that are “legion” aren’t simply the spirituality of systems and structures that do not align with God’s intent for his Creation.

They are the embodied destructive spirituality in this one poor soul who howls at night and hurts himself. They are an enfleshed “poverty of being” – a destruction of self, the embodied reality of worthlessness, that etches itself on his mind and body – violence (notice that his name is “Legion”), possibly psycho-somatic trauma, alienation and worthlessness (in the tombs), economic and personal value (they care more about the pigs than the person),– whatever they are, they are numerous. Greg Boyle talks about systems in which people are made to feel worthless – talks about doing an intake with a gang member – the toxicity of worthlessness obliterates the “me”

An ideology that people must be chained, or that people are worthless, for example, is invisible, but it does not float in the air; it is always the justification for the practices instituted by a particular group. The issue then is whether we can learn to identify them in our actual everyday encounters, unmask their negative ability to reshape our lives away from what God intends.  The point is not that your female friend might have an eating disorder demon or that your male friend might have the demon of lust for pornography – why are demons sex specific, anyway? What I am trying to argue that these physical manifestations are rooted in an embodied logic– an inner social and cultural reality related to unhealthy understandings of food, body image, gender relationships, consumerism, and self worth that are embodied.  We might think of demons then as the actual spirituality of systems and structures that have betrayed their divine vocations.

The apostle Paul called the task of recognizing these spiritualities the gift of discerning spirits. Jesus illustrated it by naming the powers at work in people’s lives – addiction, alienation, disgust, mental illness, consumerism, violence. How might this help us as we think about our world?

1.  This understanding of demons challenges any simple construction of agency – “We are legion for we are many.” Mark is trying to document the complexity, I believe. Notice that in vss. 7-9 we have this utterly bizarre movement between personal pronouns – “I” and “He” which are the demon(s) and another time which is the man. There is “them” and “they” which of course “beg” Jesus to leave.  Who’s speaking? We need to define the brokenness and sinfulness of our world in ways that acknowledge that all people are at the mercy of Powers far larger than our individual decisions. We need to rethink our over reliance upon sin as simply rebellion.  We also need to think critically, theologically, socially and carefully about mental illness. Why don’t these people just get a job? Why do they waste money on booze? E.g. mental illness, no access to medication or mental health services, alcohol is cheap and close by, etc.

Mental illness? The Talmud enumerates as symptoms of a person's mental incompetence: going out alone at night; remaining overnight in a cemetery; tearing one's garment (provided there is no rational explanation for such acts; ag. 3b). Maimondies adds: "A shoteh is not only one who walks about naked or breaks vessels or throws stones, but also one whose mind is deranged and is always confused about matters; even though he speaks and asks pertinent questions, he is included among the mentally incompetent" (Hilkhot Edut 9:9).

2.  By acknowledging the role of the demonic (naming demons), we are freed from the temptation to demonize those who are marginal or even do evil.  To demonize, of course, is essentially a reverse exorcism. It doesn’t free people from demons but turns them into demons.  This temptation is particularly strong among those of us who are well off because we have god-complexes – the subtle and often unconscious sense of superiority that we have achieved wealth on our own.  When we problematize agency we often continue to demonize because it questions our own wealth.

How does Jesus respond? Jesus always begins with a name – To be honest, I think he is asking the man’s name. What’s your real name? Story by Greg Boyle and the system of gangs in which people change their name. Page 53-54  Jeff Shaffer seeks to rename “those who are homeless” to our “friends on the streets.” That renaming implies an entirely different orientation. 

Sometimes demons are exorcized simply by naming them. You guys are namers – that’s what sociologists and anthropologists do.  But when you do so – don’t forget the real name, the real name of the people who suffer under the conditions that you name.

This man was broken in every way possible: from God, self, others, and the rest of creation. He is dominated by spiritual forces other than God, he harms himself, he is alienated and demonized by others, and cut off from the basis needs of creation – clothes, food, etc. We need to name the Powers that contribute to this.

What does salvation look like in this text? “clothed and in his right mind”

The gospel message is that Jesus reconciles us with God and one another that we should have all that we need  - don’t worry about clothes, Jesus tells us in his own ministry manifesto, the Sermon on the Mount.  And Heaven, that reality that we pray for on the earth, is a place where people have all they need.  It involves restoring all that is broken.  No clothes, in other words, are part of the same spiritual crisis.

Now, it use to be that people taught that Jesus got rid of the demons but would leave him naked – evangelism as personal proclamation. Others have said that Jesus wouldn’t worry about the demons only the man’s nakedness – social gospel without proclamation.  Here again, my understanding of demons clues us into the solution. Evil in this story is not just personal but structural and spiritual. It is not simply the result of human actions or choices but the consequences of enormous systems over which no individual has full control. Only by confronting the spirituality of an institution and its physical manifestations can the total structure be transformed. Any attempt to transform a social system without addressing both its spirituality and its outer forms is doomed to failure. Materialism knows nothing of an inner dimension, while non-corporeal spirituality knows nothing of lived reality – both are blind to evil’s full effect and to God’s full salvation.

So for Christians the move that is faithful is not from the material to the spiritual but rather from materialism to incarnation. Incarnation is the Church’s way of speaking about Spirit dwelling in matter . . . the inner secret of creation to be the indwelling of God within it. Salvation, true liberation, is always incarnational not just about spirit but the spirit of our stuff, not just about our soul but the soul of our entire self which includes a body.

That’s why personal redemption cannot take place from the redemption of our social structures or vice versa. The gospel, then, is not a message about the salvation of individuals from the world, but news about a world transformed, right down to our clothes. So, our individual is made spiritually whole by being in his right mind and being clothed. Now the exorcism happens with much fanfare – into the pigs who go plop into the lake.  Jesus does this and this work is rightly his. He is the savior and he always knows what to do with demons.  You are not the saviors of the world – your own spirituality is important; being a part of Jesus’ body, being in your right mind.

But how did the man get clothed? Collaboration

Okay, let’s test your discernment of spirits, your ability to name the destructive spirituality at work.  Where did the demons go?  What happens to the spiritual system of oppression after this guy gets healed?  Later the people who chained the man are also the “they” who are afraid, “what have you to do with us Jesus of Nazareth” and beg Jesus to leave! The demons are the spirituality of the people who do not wish for the alienated and the poor, the deviant, to be healed. It’s too costly – financially and because they now have no scapegoat. They beg Jesus to leave – his healing is too costly, his kingdom too disruptive.  They were not Isaiah people, “If you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed, then your light will rise in the darkness, and your night will become like noonday.” (Isaiah 58:10) Spending yourselves means more than just a handout but bringing your entire self to bear upon the problem.

How do you bring your entire self to bear upon the problem?

Jesus’ advice is a helpful ending – “Go home to your friends” Friendship is the solution to the evangelical divide of proclamation and social justice, of agency, the discernment of spirits, the battling of sin. Because friends don’t let friends sleep outside, friends don’t let friends walk among tombs alone or place them in chains, friends value what you have to say and know your name, and see you as more than a rebellious sinner but also one enslaved by forces outside your control.  Befriending those who walk alone, cry at night, maybe even hurt themselves is not about being nice because if it’s about being nice I can assure you it won’t last. Niceness won’t sustain you as you seek people out among the wreckage of society.  When we offer our lives to Jesus and seek to love our neighbor as ourselves, we are not declaring that we like people but because of what God has done that we truly love them.

Would you stand – now I will finish your ordination. Do you know what ordination is?  It is your life animated by God’s Spirit in service of Christ, His Church, and His Creation. It may not be easily recognized in your job but it is your rightful vocation.

Go forth now into the world where apathy and half-heartedness, delusion and anxiety, are dominant. Move the world a little, letting the world know that Christ lives and breathes in the lives of us – the Church. In the name of God the Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer. God be with you. Amen.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

A Prayer for Comforters


O LORD who is always present,
Help me today to show up.
Give me the courage to offer there-ness
to those in crisis or need.
Let me keep company
with others whose worlds are falling apart.
To be a bearer of You
the One already there,
the God already at work,
the LORD who already knows,
Whose Spirit pulls me in,
Glad that I have come.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Go Together, Be Prepared, Act Out: Jesus' Model for Flash Mob Ministry - Mark 11:1-11



 Dont' Read Further BUT Watch This:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXh7JR9oKVE

Flash mobs like this are exhilarating. They grab out attention because they are dramatic moments where the mundane meets the magnificent. They’re Handel’s Messiah in a Food Court where cheap food and boredom meet surprise, bafflement, even joy. When we experience them they feel sudden, surprising, they knock us into a new awareness, a new time, but we know that they don’t just happen – that they are well-planned and prepared requiring creativity, scheduling, practice and, more practice. But when done well – they create a context for spontaneous wonder that leave us feeling breathless. Today, I would like to introduce you to Jesus’ own flash mob, his triumphal entry, where he dramatically portrays himself as king.  I pray that his creative bit of street theater invites you to share in the wonder, participate in the joy, and inspires you to plan and demonstrate his kingship in surprising ways. Friends, welcome to God’s house where there is only good news for you today.

Sermon:
 READ Mark 11:1.  When they were approaching Jerusalem, at Bethphage and Bethany, near the Mount of Olives, he sent two of his disciples 2.  and said to them, "Go into the village ahead of you, and immediately as you enter it, you will find tied there a colt that has never been ridden; untie it and bring it. 3.  If anyone says to you, 'Why are you doing this?' just say this, 'The Lord needs it and will send it back here immediately.'" 4.  They went away and found a colt tied near a door, outside in the street. As they were untying it, 5.  some of the bystanders said to them, "What are you doing, untying the colt?" 6.  They told them what Jesus had said; and they allowed them to take it. 7.  Then they brought the colt to Jesus and threw their cloaks on it; and he sat on it. 8.  Many people spread their cloaks on the road, and others spread leafy branches that they had cut in the fields. 9.  Then those who went ahead and those who followed were shouting, "Hosanna! Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord! 10.  Blessed is the coming kingdom of our ancestor David! Hosanna in the highest heaven!" 11.  Then he entered Jerusalem and went into the temple; and when he had looked around at everything, as it was already late, he went out to Bethany with the twelve.

Presentation matters. We all know that the best food is not simply what tastes good but also what looks good (rose radishes in a salad or the aesthetic of food highlighted in the documentary Kings of Pastry). The gospel and the truth of God’s kingdom are no different. Proclaiming the love of God at 5 am with a bullhorn might have great content but it’s not effective. It’s presentation doesn’t work. In fact, we understand that it misses the content – recognizing that the method, means, and the hows can be just as important.  Today’s story is one that many of us know so well. That Jesus dramatically enters Jerusalem proclaiming himself as the messiah, the king, is good Christian content. But as I read Mark’s version I found myself delightfully surprised – not by the content, but the method, not by the message but the means. So this morning, I would like to turn our attention to Jesus’ triumphal entry NOT simply as a claim to messiahship but as a model for ministry, as a way for us to embody the reality of Jesus’s teaching and his claim to be the One who would liberate us and save us from our sins. Jesus demonstrates to us that presentation matters.

When we pay attention to our text as a model for ministry, a model for being followers in the world, a number of things jump out as being important:

  1. For ministry, Jesus always encouraged his disciples to practice the buddy system. (Go together)

Our text begins with Jesus sending two unnamed disciples to retrieve a donkey. Like always, Jesus sent disciples in pairs.  The buddy-system is Jesus’ plan for prayer, ministry and mission. The Ministry of Jesus is a communal and mutual experience.  He sends the twelve out in pairs (Mark 6:7), claims that where at least two are gathered he’s present, and encourages at least two to go correct a wayward brother or sister (Matt. 18:19-20). Who is your ministry buddy? Who does Jesus send you with? Who do you have when life falls inward, when something needs to be done, when something needs to be celebrated. Why not send only one? I’m not sure but I do know that in all the gospel accounts the only two people who are acknowledged as going alone are Peter and Judas – and they both betray Jesus.

I believe that is not simply that we cannot bring good news on our own but that we should never do any ministry on our own. That’s because the whole purpose of ministry is replicating and expanding God’s rule, God’s reign and that requires team work. I’ve discovered that it’s hard to be truly faithful to Jesus when I am alone. I need brothers or sisters to pray with me, to speak with me about the spiritual task at hand, and to challenge me to stay pure in mind, heart, and body. We need to welcome one another, to share our lives together not because we should be nice or because we want to be liked but because the ministry of Jesus depends upon it, because our lives in him depend upon it. Because I don’t want to be one who betrays.

  1. To express God’s activity and His own mission, Jesus often prepared carefully and developed a plan. (Be prepared)

When I first read this text I was struck by how it ends – “Then he entered Jerusalem and went into the temple; and when he had looked around at everything, as it was already late, he went out to Bethany with the twelve. This “looking around at everything” caught me by surprise. It made me realize something very important that I had missed. Jesus was a planner. Don, rightly remarked that we attribute to Jesus “anger” in the temple cleansing, which the text does not say. I also realized that I assumed it was a spontaneous event. But more than that I recognized that I often believe that being led by the Spirit is always sudden, swift, and unrehearsed. But if Jesus plans and prepares then we need to also. We need to be people who prepare and plan to demonstrate the gospel.

How and what does Jesus plan? He plans out the colt. His plan was steeped and informed by Scripture. He takes up Zechariah 9:9 as the text to enact, but also Zech. 6:12-13 for cleansing the temple, he was politically astute and strategic – he picked Passover (a feast of liberation in which a lamb was slaughtered and Jerusalem and the temple would be filled with people), he offered a counter-procession to demonstrate what his was and what it was not – Two processions entered Jerusalem on that day: One on the western side of the city, was the procession of Pontius Pilate, the Roman Governor of Idumea, Judea, and Samaria, who entered Jerusalem at the head of a column of imperial cavalary and soldiers, a frightful sight of leather armor, helmets, weapons, banners, golden eagles mounted on poles, drums – an awesome spectacle for sure, whose sole purpose was to remind the Jews who held the power and to make sure that on their feast of liberation they didn’t get any bright ideas. The other procession entered from the east, led by Jesus of Nazareth with his followers – it was a planned counterprocession of one who was claiming an alternative vision, a different rule – the kingdom of God that would bring “peace to the nations” (Zechariah 9:10). This didn’t happen by chance, wasn’t some spontaneous coincidence but reflects a well-thought out plan steeped in Scripture and the political realities of the day.

But, just because it wasn’t spontaneous doesn’t mean it wasn’t a surprise, or dramatic – a gospel flash mob.  To usher people into the presence of God, into the awareness of His work in their lives – whether they be children, friends, coworkers, or peers – we need to be prepared, watchful, mindful looking for opportunities to express the extravagant love of God.

  1. To demonstrate the truth of the gospel and the kingdom of God, Jesus regularly used interactive drama and creative symbols. (Act out)

He “acted out” the Scriptures in visual and striking ways.  He was not content to use words alone but embodied the truths of the gospel imaginatively – riding a donkey to reveal his rule of peace, washing feet, a stalk of wheat held in his hand or a piece of torn bread. He would show it an old woman with two coins, point to flowers or warm sunlight as evidence of God’s compassion, he would place a little child in the midst of a crowd as a sign of the kingdom, and point to a tree that wasn’t bearing fruit as a sign of judgment. He regularly offered theological object lessons of grace, forgiveness, and love – “do you see”, was a constant refrain. “Pay attention”, he would often encourage.

It’s recognizing that he could have done things differently. He could have preached another sermon which revealed why he should be followed as the messiah. But he didn’t. He performed some street theater instead.

We need people like Jesus who behave as theological pranksters, Biblical actors, holy story tellers who dramatize grace, animate forgiveness, inhabit scripture and embody truth creatively and thoughtfully. People who provoke a sense of gospel wonder in our workplaces, neighborhoods, schools, and homes. We need people this Thursday who will go to the Veteran’s Memorial building and declare the good news by washing the feet of those who society has forgotten.

What does such planned drama look like? How can the Bible and theological truth be dramatized in our daily lives?

Vignette One: The Ice Cream Gospel
True Story: A father is going to take his 6 year-old-son for ice cream but gets delayed resulting in a six-year-old tantrum -  a sort of miniature nuclear meltdown resulting in destruction and mayhem. Well, you know what happens next? The father tells the son that there will be no ice cream and sends him to his room but then he has a different idea – one that he had been planning and waiting for the right moment to enact. He bundles the son into the car, takes him to the ice cream parlor, lets him pick the biggest ice cream sundae in the whole place which he doesn’t have a prayer of completely finishing and then asks the question, “Do you deserve this gift? No, the kid replies. "Then why did you get it?", the father asked. And the son, who every week had been going to Sunday School, finally understood what the teacher had been telling him. He answered, “It’s grace. Grace is why I get ice cream.”  

Vignette Two: A Body God Loves
When my daughter Lea was young I wrote a bathing ritual on 3X5 cards that I laminated to make them tub friendly. Every evening as I would bathe parts of her body I would ask the question, “What did you do with your (arms, hands, feet, tummy, mind) today? And she would tell me how she swung on the jungle gym, painted a work of art, solved math problems. And as she would tell me those things I would respond, “Oh, God loves it when you use your arms on the jungle gym.” “God loves it when you eat good things.” In a world where we advertisers alienate us from our own bodies by describing them as always lacking, always in need, this was a way to embody and dramatize the truth that our bodies aren’t bad, horribly broken, but created and loved by God. We can say those things but we must also demonstrate them.

Vignette Three: A Dress Full of Prayers
The theologian Stephanie Paulsell writes of the devastating event on the day after Christmas of having a miscarriage. She found herself screwed to the bed with depression, unable to work, read, or pray. She was, however, able to talk on the phone and day after day, she writes, wore out her friends, especially her friend Kay – to whom she cried on the phone daily. “I’m so depressed, she cried, that I can’t even pray. I try to pray, but I can’t.” A few days later, a package arrived from her that contained a simple beige  jumper and a note that read, “I have prayed in this dress every day for a year. You don’t have to pray. Just wear it. It is full of prayers.” So Stephanie wore the dress, wept in it, and cried out “Why?” to God in it. She let the prayers of friend in that dress pray for her when her mouth was dry and full of ashes. When she became pregnant again she wore the spacious dress which she said was spacious enough, to gather up her fear and grief and anger. I was naked in my grief, she writes, and my friend clothed me.  Clothing others is a Christian obligation, to be cultivated in every area of our lives. No one must be left naked.

Vignette Four: A Life for Ours (intro. for Communion)

On the night he was to be betrayed when he was betrayed he took a loaf of bread and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, “This is my body broken for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” In the same way he took the cup also, after supper, saying, “this cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.” For as often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.”

Thursday, January 17, 2013

“Ain’t I a Woman?”: A Christmas Story for Our Daughters - Luke 1:39-55



Luke 1:39-55 (New International Version)
39 At that time Mary got ready and hurried to a town in the hill country of Judea, 40 where she entered Zechariah’s home and greeted Elizabeth. 41 When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the baby leaped in her womb, and Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit. 42 In a loud voice she exclaimed: “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the child you will bear! 43 But why am I so favored, that the mother of my Lord should come to me? 44 As soon as the sound of your greeting reached my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy. 45 Blessed is she who has believed that the Lord would fulfill his promises to her!”
46 And Mary said:“My soul glorifies the Lord
47     and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,
48 for he has been mindful
    of the humble state of his servant.
From now on all generations will call me blessed,
49     for the Mighty One has done great things for me—
    holy is his name.
50 His mercy extends to those who fear him,
    from generation to generation.
51 He has performed mighty deeds with his arm;
    he has scattered those who are proud in their inmost thoughts.
52 He has brought down rulers from their thrones
    but has lifted up the humble.
53 He has filled the hungry with good things
    but has sent the rich away empty.
54 He has helped his servant Israel,
    remembering to be merciful
55 to Abraham and his descendants forever,
    just as he promised our ancestors.”

The story of Christmas is a powerful story. Believers and non-believers alike are fascinated by its claims. We sing its songs about baby Jesus, bewildered shepherds, a fluffy manger, and terrifying angels, but many of us forget that one of the most striking features of the story is the woman at its center. The woman who said to the angel Gabriel, “Yes,” when told of God’s plan that she would bear the long awaited messiah, God’s son. 

Mary’s importance was expressed by the famous 19th century women’s right’s advocate and evangelical Christian Sojourner Truth in a famous speech titled, “Ain’t I a Woman”. Sojourner speaking at a woman’s rally in 1851 said, “Then that little man in black there, he says women can't have as much rights as men, 'cause Christ wasn't a woman! Where did your Christ come from?,” she asked. “Where did your Christ come from? From God and a woman! Man had nothing to do with Him.”

As I was preparing this sermon, this quote haunted me. I realized that I knew that “little man in black” that Sojourner addressed.  I remembered him from my childhood at church saying that a woman couldn’t be a deacon or church elder, shouldn’t be allowed to pray in the pulpit, had to remain always submissive at home, and definitely couldn’t be a pastor because, well, Jesus was a man and picked only 12 men to follow him. And as I drew closer I realized with a certain horror that the little man in black I remembered was me. I was taught to think those thoughts which meant that I gave little thought to Mary as nothing more than a vessel. So, Sojourner knew what was at stake with Mary’s story and she whole-heartedly believed in Jesus’ singular significance as the savior of the world – this wasn’t some secular, outsider critique nor some over –the-top Marian piety. But she also understood two important things: 1) that this event couldn’t have happened without God and a woman; 2) and that that fact had everything to do with how we understand and treat “all women” in the present– what they can do, who they can become, what they are capable of in God’s service – and that is nothing less than the ability to join him as full and equal partners in his Christmas mission of making the world right. That is the story of Mary, the story for our daughters –the story I want to share with mine this morning – that they can bring all that they are to a God who sees them as active participants in his work, not less than men, or side-lined in any way by their biology, but front-line soldiers, even dangerous. And believe me friends, we live in a world where our daughters need to hear that!  So, why is this a story for our daughters? Heck, why is this a story for all of us?

           1.  The story of Mary is a story for our daughters and all of us because women are given a voice.
This all started when Mary said, “yes.” The Christmas story is truly the extraordinary agreement between the God of the universe and a young woman who had the guts to say “yes.” I wonder if Gabriel thought, “Really? You’re willing to say “yes?” Do you know what could happen? It’s important to reconstruct the world in which Mary said “yes” to the angel and God. What was life like for women in first-century Judea?

Well – we get a clue when we look at popular literature at the time and what it said about those in Mary's position as a young, virginal, daughter. There is a great text that does just that. Funny enough this text also connects to Jesus, not Jesus of Nazareth, but Jesus Ben [son of ] Sirach, who wrote a book of proverbs around 180 B.C., which was read throughout Judea. In a section about daughters, he write

On daughters

9 A daughter is a hidden source of sleeplessness for her father, and anxiety about her deprives him of sleep: in her youth, that she doesn't pass her prime, and when she's married, that she not be hated; 10 while she's a virgin, that she not be seduced and become pregnant while still living at home; when she's married, that she not go straying; or having married, that she not be infertile. 11 Keep a strict watch over an unruly daughter so that she doesn't make you an object of ridicule to your enemies, a topic of talk in the city and the assembly of the people, and she shame you before the crowd. 12 Don't consider the beauty of any person, and don't spend time among women. 13 Moths come out of clothes, and a woman's wickedness comes from a woman. 14 A man's wickedness is better than a woman who does good and a disgraced woman who brings shame.


The message of Jesus Ben Sirach is clear – watch out – your daughters are dangerous to your reputation, they can bring you great shame, make you an object of ridicule if they don’t get married or can’t become pregnant, or have an affair. Daughters are never as good as men, even wicked ones, have wickedness come out of them like moths come out of clothes. It's the ancient BINARY understanding of male/female. Male is to spiritual / public as female is to unspiritual or wicked / private. In fact, in 22:3, Jesus Ben Sirach says, “It is a disgrace to be the father of an undisciplined son, and the birth of a daughter is a loss.” Mary said “yes” despite male advice that said that.

This culture of shame was Mary’s world and threatened to crush her and it’s important to remember what could have happened, what should have happened. Mary was betrothed to Joseph which meant that they were legally husband and wife but without the final step of sexual relations. So any sexual activity on the part of Mary would have been considered adultery and not fornication. And in Mary’s world, the charge of adultery held mortal danger: death by stoning - Deuteronomy 22:23-24.  If Mary was charged with adultery and disputed it she would have been assigned the law of “bitter waters,” which came from the fifth chapter of Numbers – a practice that still continued in the first century. The ceremony was elaborate requiring the accused to drink a mixture of dust, holy water, and the ink of a curse written by the priest and to do so publicly with her breasts exposed, her clothes torn, and her hair down while passerbys looked on with shame and disgrace. If the accused’s belly swelled, she was guilty. Mary said “yes” despite the threat of that.

This leads us to Luke’s contrasting picture here of two responses to God’s work and challenge to Jesus of Sirach’s view of women. Luke 1 begins with Zechariah - a male priest, “righteous before God, living blamelessly according to all the commandments and regulations of the Lord,” working in the temple. You can’t really get a better pedigree, a more honorable standing – he’s bright, comes from the right family, isn’t wicked, on the contrary, he’s a man of justice maintaining a heart-felt and sincere faith. But he doesn’t believe and his unbelief leaves him mute – the best of Judah’s best has his voice taken. Yet, not Mary, she gains hers. Mary, like Zachariah, has a similar experience with an angel announcing a miraculous birth. She doesn’t understand “how” it will take place but believes anyway. So, Luke tells us, in vss. 39-45, that she entered Zechariah’s home and “greeted” Elizabeth – something that Zechariah could not do – in his own home no less. Elizabeth “heard” Mary’s greeting and her baby leaps for joy, Luke tells us, and then in case we don’t get it as Elisabeth exclaim “in a loud voice”, “As soon as the sound of your greeting reached my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy.”  Male, privileged, favored authority was mute and Mary, she greets and sings, Zechariah doubts and Mary believes. Her voice, a woman’s voice, was courageous, spirit-filled, no less.

Why is this an important story for our daughters? Because this is not the story they often hear in society or even in the church. 

My son recently informed me of an interesting metric which rated the presence of female characters in movies, called the Bechdel Test. It's a simple test which names the following three criteria for a movie to pass: (1) it has to have at least two women in it, who (2) who talk to each other, about (3) something besides a man. It pleases me greatly that if the our text today was a movie it would pass that test. Mary’s story declares that women aren’t less than sons, or wicked, or simply pretty to look at. And the world isn’t saved by the likes of Bruce Willis with machine guns blazing or Gandolf and Bilbo fighting the dragon Smog with tons of witty dialogue and maybe a few lines for a sexy female role. Mary is not some bit part actor in a male drama – she’s a star, Oscar material and her voice, apart from Jesus, did more to save the world than any other. 

       2.  The story of Mary is a story for our daughters and all of us because women are given a new Beatitude. Actually, the first one!

      When we think of the beatitudes, we often think of the sermon on the mount in the Gospel of Matthew. Jesus’ manifesto recategorizing who was actually blessed, a reorientation of the world. So its interesting that the first beatitude in Luke’s gopel comes not from Jesus but from Elizabeth blessing Mary’s faith (Blessed is she who has believed that the Lord would fulfill his promises to her!” 1:45) – her belief in God’s promise despite all the obstacles.

Later in Luke’s Gospel, however, someone tries to reassert a beatitude for women not in the way Elizabeth gave it. In Luke 11:27 a woman shouts to Jesus, “Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts that nursed you!” This sounds nice, but it seeks to fit women back into the old paradigm of saying that only as a “wife and mother” are women blessed, as if these are all Mary gave. A reassertion of the older model of Sirach, that women are blessed only by their connections to male husbands and their biological roles as mothers. But Jesus corrects the person in a shocking way, given the thoughts about women at the time. In response, however, Jesus says, “Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and obey it!” That’s Mary – she wasn’t blessed because she had female parts. No, God’s plan was birthed because this young, powerless woman said, “yes.” This was Elizabeth’s claim that she is blessed because she believed, vs. 45. Mary wasn’t blessed because she had a womb. She was blessed because she had faith. And faith is gender neutral, unisex!

How did Jesus come to this conclusion? Could it not be because he heard stories about Elizabeth and his mother – their power, their courage, their faith. This beatitude is the seed that flowers into the belief that women can be full participants in God’s story, in the sharing of the gospel, and the declaration found in the Christmas song that the world will be made right “far as the curse is found.” The rupture of sin in human relationships between men and woman is now being overturned and women are equal partners in all things. Like men, they can hear the Word of God and do it!

           3.  With the story of Mary, all of us are given a dangerous song to sing.

Mary was a dangerous woman and not surprisingly she sings a dangerous song. It was banned by the governments of El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, as well as Argentina. This is Mary’s song about God in the face of real threats and shame to women, political turmoil, revolution.  Does this sound like the woman we see in the crèche? Why is it so dangerous? Because oppression succeeds by making people small, nothing, of little worth. And Mary sings because she is reminded that her soul is worth something because God is mindful of her. It’s a song that talks about what God has done and therefore what God likes to do. It’s a song that reminds people of what God says to those that the powerful try to put down, shame, disenfranchise. It reveals to the powerless what can happen if they say “yes” to God – the powerful are unseated, the proud confused, the hungry fed.  What Mary realized and why she sings is that God doesn’t simply like to use the powerless to serve His own purposes – some sort of divine handout to the poor girl on the street  – no, God uses the powerless because by using them He empowers them, gives them a voice, offers them a new blessing, and changes the world. “It’s time” that our daughters know that.

In the mid 1970s, 14 mothers gathered in the Plaza del Mayo in front of Argentina’s presidential palace to protests against the military dictatorship that had been kidnapping and torturing their children. A law prohibited groups of three or more people from gathering in public places. Yet, these women began to walk around the pyramid in the center of the plaza and used Mary’s Magnificat to call for nonviolent resistance to that military rule and helped create the grass roots revolution that helped the military junta fall. This is the song that the powerless sing when they hear “Greetings favored one. The Lord is with you.”

Like Mary, they sang “He has performed mighty deeds with his arm; he has scattered those who are proud; He has brought down rulers from their thrones and lifted up the humble . . .”
And if he has, they, along with Mary, reasoned he will do it again.
He will . . .
He will . . .
He will . . .
That’s the Christmas story for our daughters and the world!