A local church longs to become a reconciling (inclusive) congregation but its landlord next door (an unhappy member) threatens to kick them out if they do so. Being a plucky congregation, they nonetheless persist, and the landlord sends them notice that their lease will not be renewed. They are faithful to their beliefs and prepare to move elsewhere. A few days before the lease runs out, however, a deacon tightens her rainbow scarf around her neck, knocks on the man’s door, and asks if he will consider selling the building to the congregation.
“I might,” is the surprising answer, “but there’s no way I’m going to live next door to a ‘gay church.’”
“I understand,” the deacon replies, holding her hurt and anger, “but what if we not only bought the church building, but bought your house as well? Then you’d have enough money to move to another neighborhood, and we could take down the hurtful signs on your front lawn that are scaring potential worshipers away who assume we share your views.”
With a sigh the man agrees to the deal, and moves away to leave the congregation in peace.
Years later he has a change of heart, returns to the old neighborhood, and knocks on the church’s door. The same deacon answers the knock and greets the old man.
“I’m here to apologize,” he says. “I was so awful towards you, but you always treated me with respect. Now Jesus has told me through my granddaughter that I might be wrong about all of this. Would you forgive me and allow me to worship with you?”
“Of course,” answers the deacon. “I always knew this day would come. But first I need to tell you how you've hurt me so that you’ll know what I’m forgiving you for.”
“I understand,” the man answers, and the two former neighbors sit down for a long and painful conversation, followed by a long, but less painful prayer.
Wednesday, January 8, 2020
Saturday, June 15, 2019
New England Annual Conference, 2019, Day Two
The day began with Elaine Heath's reflections on ministry that is incarnate in neighborhoods and local communities. With that in mind we worshiped: remembering the saints we lost this year, gathering at table, and (later in the day) ordaining and consecrating our new and future elders and deacons. At the ordination service, the Bishop reminded us that we may well be a church in exile in the months to come, and that the chaos we're living in is part of God remaking the church to be in solidarity with those who are hurting.
We took some tough actions, adopting a lean budget, even while considering making it even leaner. We reduced our districts from 9 to 7, the details of which will be worked out over the year to come. And we closed half a dozen churches, and celebrated their ministry, including Grace UMC, Bangor; and the Damariscotta UMC. Our elections of delegates to General and Jurisdictional Conferences are nearly done, with significant youth involvement. Our statistician reminded us that vitality can be found in all corners of our Conference, as can challenges as well.
The session did not end until nearly midnight, but our fellowship was experienced in good-natured sharing in hallways and in crowded elevators. Though the decisions are difficult and the resources few, we continue to embrace ministry in our changing communities with neighbors who are struggling. The joyful faces of our new deacons and elders reminded me that our New England church is worth fighting for, whether we decide to "right the ship" or "launch the life boats." Our inclusive vision, hammered out in nearly every vote today, can be a blessing to so many who long to be welcomed home. Several times we noted the dwindling numbers of youth delegates compared with 20, 30, 40 years ago, and I assume a lot of them are waiting and watching for our denomination to welcome all in love. That is certainly the message the drew me to this church and this ministry 40 years ago, and I believe those ideas continue to have power. So may it be.
We took some tough actions, adopting a lean budget, even while considering making it even leaner. We reduced our districts from 9 to 7, the details of which will be worked out over the year to come. And we closed half a dozen churches, and celebrated their ministry, including Grace UMC, Bangor; and the Damariscotta UMC. Our elections of delegates to General and Jurisdictional Conferences are nearly done, with significant youth involvement. Our statistician reminded us that vitality can be found in all corners of our Conference, as can challenges as well.
The session did not end until nearly midnight, but our fellowship was experienced in good-natured sharing in hallways and in crowded elevators. Though the decisions are difficult and the resources few, we continue to embrace ministry in our changing communities with neighbors who are struggling. The joyful faces of our new deacons and elders reminded me that our New England church is worth fighting for, whether we decide to "right the ship" or "launch the life boats." Our inclusive vision, hammered out in nearly every vote today, can be a blessing to so many who long to be welcomed home. Several times we noted the dwindling numbers of youth delegates compared with 20, 30, 40 years ago, and I assume a lot of them are waiting and watching for our denomination to welcome all in love. That is certainly the message the drew me to this church and this ministry 40 years ago, and I believe those ideas continue to have power. So may it be.
Friday, June 14, 2019
New England Annual Conference, 2019, Day One
The work of the New England Annual Conference continues today with action on resolutions about or going to the next General Conference. Some of the most important work we do every four years is to choose our representatives to the Global body that meets again in May of 2020 (the 2019 special session of General Conference to deal with issues of sexuality was an addition to the "every four years cycle"). New England sends 3 clergy and 3 lay delegates to General Conference. Our three clergy delegates were chosen yesterday (all of whom identify as "queer" in some way). I'm clear that they were not chosen for their sexual identities, but because they are well known and respected for their knowledge and skills with Church Polity and Advocacy for an inclusive church, but it is an additional blessing that they will bring a deep awareness of the harm the church is causing to members of our community (as well as those we have excluded from our community).
Our lay delegates are Bonnie Marden, who is very gifted in the ways of all things UMC, and Amanda Bonnette-Kim, who is among our youngest members. The third is yet to be chosen. Today we will continue voting to select an equal number of additional people to represent us at the Northeastern Jurisdictional Conference, which is the body that chooses Bishops for the 4 years to come. I also attended the Methodist Federation for Social Action luncheon yesterday, and heard the wonderful devotional sermon brought by one of our newly commissioned ministry candidates who may be the first openly gay commissioned pastor in our history.
Today begins with Bible Study with the amazing Elaine Heath, and then on to continued challenging questions about our way forward. The music and worship are stunning as always, and it feels good to walk this difficult moment in our history with the great-great (etc) grandchildren of John Wesley.
Began the day with the "Crackers and Juice" podcast interview with Steve Harper, author of Holy Love. It was helpful to hear his reflections on the differences between Orthodoxy (based on the creeds) and "Doctrine-ism", the belief that only particular expressions of Creedal truth are acceptable to God. It was a helpful way of understanding how Orthodoxy has gone off the tracks to land us in our current crisis. Worth a listen if you're a podcast-type person....
Our lay delegates are Bonnie Marden, who is very gifted in the ways of all things UMC, and Amanda Bonnette-Kim, who is among our youngest members. The third is yet to be chosen. Today we will continue voting to select an equal number of additional people to represent us at the Northeastern Jurisdictional Conference, which is the body that chooses Bishops for the 4 years to come. I also attended the Methodist Federation for Social Action luncheon yesterday, and heard the wonderful devotional sermon brought by one of our newly commissioned ministry candidates who may be the first openly gay commissioned pastor in our history.
Today begins with Bible Study with the amazing Elaine Heath, and then on to continued challenging questions about our way forward. The music and worship are stunning as always, and it feels good to walk this difficult moment in our history with the great-great (etc) grandchildren of John Wesley.
Began the day with the "Crackers and Juice" podcast interview with Steve Harper, author of Holy Love. It was helpful to hear his reflections on the differences between Orthodoxy (based on the creeds) and "Doctrine-ism", the belief that only particular expressions of Creedal truth are acceptable to God. It was a helpful way of understanding how Orthodoxy has gone off the tracks to land us in our current crisis. Worth a listen if you're a podcast-type person....
Sunday, November 12, 2017
Let Justice Roll Down: Amos and Sutherland Springs
Text: Amos 1:1-2, 5:14-15, 21-24
Date: 11.12.2017
Pleasant
Street UMC, Waterville, ME
© Thomas L.
Blackstone, Ph.D., Preacher
1The words of Amos, who was among the shepherds of
Tekoa, which he saw concerning Israel in the days of King Uzziah of Judah and
in the days of King Jeroboam son of Joash of Israel, two years before the
earthquake.
2And he said:
The Lord roars from Zion,
and utters his voice from Jerusalem;
the pastures of the shepherds wither,
and the top of Carmel dries up.
14 Seek good and not evil,
that you may live;
and so the Lord, the God of hosts, will be with you,
just as you have said.
15 Hate evil and love good,
and establish justice in the gate;
it may be that the Lord, the God of hosts,
will be gracious to the remnant of Joseph.
21 I hate, I despise your festivals,
and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies.
22 Even though you offer me your burnt-offerings and grain-offerings,
I will not accept them;
and the offerings of well-being of your fatted animals
I will not look upon.
23 Take away from me the noise of your songs;
I will not listen to the melody of your harps.
24 But let justice roll down like waters,
and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
Let justice
roll down.
Wow, I can’t
believe I’m preaching on this text again, after quite possibly having exhausted
it in last Spring’s Lenten series. But
just when we want to relax into the Beatitudes, or the 23rd Psalm,
or Baby Jesus in the Manger, the voice of Amos roars again from the pages of
the Hebrew Scriptures. “Let justice roll
down,” he cries. “Let justice roll
down.”
And if this
were an ordinary week, I might have been inclined to filter out that voice, and
grab an alternative, less-disturbing, text.
But it’s been a disturbing week, hasn’t it? As we were singing last Sunday, // at the
very moment we were singing last Sunday,
“Let thy Congregation escape tribulation…”, an apparently mentally ill security
guard, continued and magnified a pattern of domestic abuse by taking his
emotional instability out on his ex-mother-in-law’s congregation in Texas. And because a bureaucratic error had placed
in his hands a weapon designed for the battlefield, rather than the target
range or the forest, dozens of men, women, elders, and children were dead and
injured in minutes, all in the place they felt closest to God and one another.
And so, yet
again, America is standing over the bodies of children and their parents and
grandparents, trying to explain how this blood sacrifice is necessary to ensure
that our right to bear arms shall not be infringed. And then Amos, rises up once again. “Let justice roll down; let justice roll
down.”
I haven’t
spoken or written very often about this topic, in part because I get both sides
of this national conversation. I was
raised in Aroostook County, and when I was 12 or 13, like most of my peers who
lived out of town, I picked a lot of potatoes one fall, and purchased my first
gun, a .22 rifle, down at the hardware store.
I did so with the encouragement of my Dad who probably bought his first firearm in the same
store. I remember agonizing over which
one to buy, in part because I wanted my Dad to be pleased with my choice, and
in part because I had never spent $ 60 before, had never had $ 60 before. After I made my decision, I signed my name in
the registry, and my dad signed as the responsible adult, and we brought the
gun home with 100 rounds of ammunition.
And then I was told again, that I would not touch, load, or fire that
gun until I had finished “the course.”
“The course,” in our city was taught by the same guy who had taught my
dad and uncle how to handle a firearm. It
wouldn’t surprise me if he had taught my grandfather and his brothers as
well. Small towns are like that. And at “the course” we learned a few
things. Like: every gun is always loaded; never point a gun
at anyone, ever; never pick up a gun when you’re tired, or angry, or
distracted, or been drinking; never ease the safety off or put your finger on
the trigger unless you intend to fire; and never ever fire when hunting, unless you can clearly see not only your
target, but what’s behind it. We were
taught as well to admonish our peers who ignored these rules, that owning a gun
was not simply a right, but a privilege, and like most privileges it came with
responsibilities.
I lived on a
farm, though we didn’t farm it, and down where the fields met the woods, there
was a pile of dirt that formed the back of our shooting range. It had been that way for at least two
generations before me, probably more.
And there the adults in my life drilled me on the safety rules, and
showed me how to shoot after breathing out, before breathing in again. Paper target after paper target felt the
sting of my bullets, and I became bonded to my Dad and great Uncles in a way
that was unprecedented in my life, as they passed down skills that had been
passed down to them, skills that had meant the difference between life and
starvation for our distant ancestors. I
was never much of a hunter, though I did do pretty well at the local turkey
shoot one year. The kid with the best
score won a frozen turkey. That wasn’t
me, but I was proud to represent my family, in the midst of the other families
gathered there, our neighbors.
I say all of
that to acknowledge that I get it. When
my fellow citizens point out that a heritage of responsible gun ownership and
use is a part of our culture, they’re right.
When all those pieces are in place:
responsible parents, dedicated safety instructors, appropriate
locations, and constant vigilance, learning to use a gun safely and carefully
is part of the American experience, at least it was part of mine. Doing so is probably one of the better
memories of my childhood, it is one of the few rituals left in our culture for
defining the boundary between childhood and adulthood, and it formed a bond
between me and the men in my life who were not naturally given to displays of
love or affection; this is what we did instead.
After mastering the safe use of a weapon, I was welcomed into the
fraternity of the hunting camp where men told stories of their greatest hunt,
ate forbidden foods with abandon, and played unspeakable pranks on one another. It was there that I heard about Bud Smith’s
buck that jumped off a cliff after being shot, landing in a tree below, still
twenty feet in the air, hanging there, taunting him. I learned the Aroostook County version of the
tale of the fur-bearing trout, only to be found in the deepest and coldest of
lakes (I still haven’t caught one!). And
I learned that the taking of the life of a deer or moose was serious business,
and no part of it should go to waste.
So,
yeah. Good memories, beautiful
experiences, life-long relationships. I
get it. The thought that someone would
come along and diminish that experience because of a political theory hammered
out in a distant city was ridiculed in my home town, it still is, as it
threatens a delicate thread that connects us to those who came before, a
tradition that, in small ways, helps define who we are today.
But // as I
picture those poor kids and their parents, last week, in Church, huddled under
pews, hushing the little ones, trying to hide from evil, I know that something
has gone wrong. And the source of the
problem harkens back to “the course,” those principles I learned as a young
man, that owning a gun, firing a gun, is not only a right but a privilege, and a
privilege divorced from responsibility is a privilege that can be taken away, must be taken away, until a sense of
responsibility can be restored.
The problem,
of course, is that the weapons that provide us with food or mastery on the
range or the biathlon course, have long since been turned on human targets. The Veterans we commemorate today served in
wars, many of them, great conflicts of nations that required ever more
powerful, deadlier, more effective weapons.
And as time has passed, the sad business of war, and its implements, have
somehow found their way to our door steps, our parking lots, our schools, our
courthouses, and even our homes. In
today’s world, a momentary flash of anger can instigate or be responded to with
deadly force before rational thought has even a moment to assert itself. Down in Augusta last week, one man telling
another that his shoe was untied led to the drawing of a weapon. How does that happen?
The point is
that something needs to change. Now,
there may be grand schemes to make us a weaponless culture, but you and I know
that neither the political will nor the moral outrage exists to make that
happen in our nation, at least not in my lifetime. At my age, my aspirations are much simpler,
and I hope realistic. Can we at least, as
a society, stop abiding the death of children?
Is that too much to ask? Cutting
off lives at the root before they even have a chance to begin? I’m not afraid of the adults and teens who
grew up in my hometown and had the experiences I did relative to firearms; I
have no desire to take those weapons away.
But when someone has a proven history of violent acts, mental
instability, or sexual aggression; or when the weapons or ammunition they want
to purchase is compatible only with an act of massive destruction or injury, is
it too much to ask that someone take notice and be empowered to do something
before it’s too late? Before more
children die?
I know we’ll
never perfect such a system, but can’t we even try? Can’t we have a quiet reasonable discussion
somewhere on middle ground, and remind ourselves
·
that responsible gun ownership and a truly effective background
check are not incompatible with one another?
·
That knowing who’s responsible for every weapon sold can help us hold someone responsible when they’re
used illegally?
·
That if it’s someone’s job to keep the records about who’s
ineligible to own a firearm, then let them understand that lives are depending
upon their accuracy, diligence, and timeliness?
·
And that perhaps we should worry about justice for our children, as
much before a trigger is pulled, as
we do afterwards?
While we
work for change, and I mean actually do
something to make change happen, we should remember those amazing Baptists in
Sutherland Springs, TX, gathered for worship this morning, not half a block
from where their brothers and sisters, children and grandchildren died last
Sunday. They need our thoughts and prayers, absolutely, but we need their thoughts and prayers as well, as
they stand there preaching, and singing, and hugging, and showing the love of
God to the world on Sunday morning.
Where else would God’s people be?
And we should remember the Veterans in our midst
and in our surrounding communities, who stood in harm’s way because our society
asked them to, believing it was in the best interest of human freedom. “No one desires Peace, more than those who
have gone to war,” one sage has written (Anon.), and as a people of peace, it
is up to us to find a way to make a difference.
Our world deserves it; our veterans deserve it, and our children deserve
it.
By the door
where you exit, there’s half a sheet of paper, listing the names of our legal
representatives, the people who can make a difference when it comes to
protecting our children from violence.
I’m going to challenge you to write one or more of them a letter this
week, and to let them know what you feel about this issue. You don’t need to tell them what your pastor
thinks; you may think your pastor’s out to lunch; that’s okay. As a United Methodist you have that
right. But whatever your opinion is, don’t let it sit in your mind, unexpressed. Because this is going to happen again, and
again, and again. And our children
deserve better than that, our grandchildren deserve better than that, every
child of God deserves better than that.
And I believe we can save lives by speaking up and creating some
reasonable limitations on one human being’s ability to hurt another.
Inspired by
our neighbors in uniform, we’re standing in harm’s way this Veteran’s Day
weekend, putting our bodies between those who would deal out violence, and the
lives that they would take. After all,
you showed up at church this morning, knowing that we are vulnerable, that our
doors are open, didn’t you? To sing the
hymns, and pray the prayers, and hear the Word, and to stand for justice. We are here this morning together to protect
the innocent in whatever way we can, and to create the world that can be, not to lament the world that has
been.
So let
justice roll down like water, sisters and brothers. Let justice roll down, for the kids, for the
elders, for all of us. Amen.
Sunday, June 18, 2017
Pestering Jesus, The 2017 Ziegler Award Sermon
On June 17, 2017, I received the Wilbur C. Ziegler Award for Excellence in Preaching from the New England Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. The opportunity to preach to one's colleagues and siblings in the faith is the blessing conferred on the fortunate one chosen. The theme of the 2017 Conference was "Vital Conversations: Racism".
Text: Matthew 15:21-28
Date: June 17, 2017 (Ziegler Award Sermon)
New England Annual
Conference, Manchester, NH
© Thomas L. Blackstone,
Ph.D., Preacher
Matthew 15:21 Jesus left that place and went away to the district of Tyre and Sidon. 22 Just then a Canaanite woman from that region came out and started shouting, “Have mercy on me, Lord, Son of David; my daughter is tormented by a demon.” 23 But he did not answer her at all. And his disciples came and urged him, saying, “Send her away, for she keeps shouting after us.” 24 He answered, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” 25 But she came and knelt before him, saying, “Lord, help me.” 26 He answered, “It is not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.” 27 She said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.” 28 Then Jesus answered her, “Woman, great is your faith! Let it be done for you as you wish.” And her daughter was healed instantly.
Pestering Jesus
First of all, I want to thank my
amazing congregation Pleasant St. UMC for nominating me for this honor,
particularly Grenda Banton, Kerri Oliver, Carol Crothers and their confederates
who helped make this happen. I also want
to acknowledge the members of my church, including the choir, who left
Waterville at 4:30 this morning to get here, because evidently, they had
nothing better to do on a Saturday in June.
Actually, I think it had more to do with meeting Mark Miller, given that
we have been singing his words all the way through Lent.
I’m also grateful for my family being
here, my oldest Alex who works as a counselor with troubled teens in the Maine
woods to help turn their lives around, my son Patrick who is departing for the
University of Indiana in a couple of weeks to enter a Ph.D. program in
theoretical physics, probing the mysteries of the universe, and my daughter Laura
who studies math, computer science, and geology at Brown University about a
mile from Rev. Ziegler’s former church in Providence. And, of course, Lynn my wife of 31 years who enriches
the lives of kids with autism and other challenges as a speech pathologist in
Augusta. She also keeps our family on
track, and how all five of us got here today on time, with matching socks, I
have no idea, but she (I suspect) does.
I also want to thank the saints in my
life who have inspired me as a Christian, as a preacher, and as a member of the
New England Annual Conference, this body which has shown such courage in
standing for change and for justice in troubled times. These folks are too many to name
individually, but let me call attention to three people who are close to my
heart today: Vicki Woods is heroically
typical of the incredible District Superintendents that I have served under for
the last 26 years. She has been a voice
for justice from my first days in ministry, and
she helped my congregation figure out how to nominate me for this award, so if
you don’t like what you hear, blame Vicki.
I’m also thankful for the life of the late H. Everett Wiswell, who was
my pastor in Caribou, ME in 1978, when as a High School Junior I screwed up my
courage and shared with him (after a week at Mechuwana) that I felt called to
ministry. Had he chuckled or rolled his
eyes or told me to go grow up a little, I might have never said another word,
but instead he honored that holy moment in my life with Christ-like compassion
and love, for which I am grateful.
Finally, I’m remembering my doctoral advisor, the late Dr. Fred Craddock
who helped me figure out how to be a student of the Bible and a pastor at the
same time. In the great circle of
scholars at Emory University, Fred was the one who found me in my confusion
about where I was headed, and helped me find my way through the Ph.D. program
and back to the church, all the while being an inspiration in every sense of the word.
[And I should add that of the three
people I just mentioned, Vicki Woods is the TALL one! So, it’s a good day for the short people!]
And it is essential to remember, as
well, the Rev. Wilbur C. Ziegler, who so inspired his congregation in
Providence with his “compassion, optimism, ability, courage, and sensitivity”
that they created this award in his honor. I never met him personally, but I have
blessed by his legacy and inspired by his character and faith.
You have to know that I have been
listening to the Wilbur C. Ziegler sermon every year at annual conference for
nearly 25 years. And every year that
I’ve heard it, I’ve shared one thought with every United Methodist Pastor who
was listening with me. “Thank God that
isn’t me!” My second thought, of course,
has been to realize how God has used my amazing colleagues and siblings in the
faith to break open some fresh perspective on God’s word, and God willing that
will happen again today.
Will you pray with me? Holy
and Gracious Lord, who quiets the fear in every trembling heart, use these
moments as you desire: to bless, to heal, to challenge, or to mend, and may
your holy wisdom reveal herself to our hearts, either because of or in spite of your servant. Amen.
A Canaanite woman stood in the road… A
Canaanite woman stood in the road…not the Syrophoenician woman we read
about in Mark’s gospel, no, a Canaanite
woman, torn from the very pages of the ancient Torah, 1000 years or more out of
time. If some of you Whovians are
wondering if she just stepped out of a blue police call box, you’d be
justified. Matthew has conjured up a
time traveler, an ancient enemy, a mother from one of seven tribes driven out
to make room in the Promised Land for the children of Israel. You remember the Canaanites from Deuteronomy
7:1 don’t you, that passage you assign to your lay leader when she’s being
difficult? How Moses predicted military
defeat over the Hittites, Girgashites,
Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites, “seven nations larger
and stronger than you,” he said.
“And how should we treat these scoundrels, Moses, when we come into the
land?” the people inquired.
And Moses, speaking for God,
responded with words that still trouble us:
“You must destroy them totally.
Make no treaty with them, … show them no mercy. Do not intermarry with them. …Break down their
altars, smash their sacred stones, …. burn their idols in the fire.” …Show / them / no / mercy. It’s as though Moses said, “They are incompatible
with the love of God.”
So, when a Canaanite woman appears in
the road standing before Jesus…wow. Now
we get to see what happens when the incarnate Son of God crosses paths with the
sworn enemy of the Ancient Hebrews. And
when Jesus’ friends saw her, did those devastating words from the Great
Lawgiver echo in their minds, “Show them no mercy.”
Well, then the Canaanite woman makes
a ruckus. Not content simply to be in
Jesus’ presence, she not only speaks
her truth, she shouts her truth, and
the first words out of her
mouth? “Have mercy.” “Have mercy on me, Lord, Son of David; my
daughter is tormented by a demon.” “Have
mercy on me, Lord.” So here she is, the
very embodiment of the outsider, the rejected one, whose exclusion from mercy
came from the very lips of Moses himself, speaking for God, and she asks for
the very thing that the Bible says she can’t have: Mercy.
Not because she’s unworthy, not because she’s a bad mother, not because
she has an evil reputation, but simply because…she was born that way: born on the wrong side of the racial, ethnic,
tribal line that had stood for centuries.
By cursing her people, Moses had cursed all of their descendants,
including her demon-possessed daughter.
Mercy indeed. “Go study your
Bible, woman,” the disciples might have said with justification. “There is
no mercy for you.”
Well I wish I could say that Jesus
moved quickly to lift this ancient curse, but it’s to Matthew’s credit that he
doesn’t give us the inspired story we want,
but the inspired story we need. Jesus, for whatever reason, does what the
body of Christ still does when
confronted with the one who doesn’t quite fit our definition of acceptable. Jesus, says…nothing. Dead silence.
“But he did not answer her at all,” Matthew says. Given the harsh words of Deuteronomy, maybe
Jesus considered that silence was a
merciful response, but this woman began to disturb the bureaucracy with her
shouting, her protest, her misbehavior, and soon the disciples are whispering
in Jesus’ ear that he must dismiss her because… she is driving them crazy.
So Jesus,
seeing that silence isn’t working so well, speaks, not words of liberation, but
(I’m sorry to say) words of “policy.”
“I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” (whew!)
Understand that Jesus doesn’t say
these words to the Canaanite woman, the victim
of his silence. He speaks this policy to
his brothers, his inner circle, his council of advisors, his general conference
if you will. And within that tightly
knit circle of like-minded individuals, this resolves the situation: A Canaanite woman has asked for help,
ignoring her was ineffective, but now we have issued a policy statement that
covers her situation. Her daughter
doesn’t meet our eligibility requirements for assistance. “Sorry, Canaanite woman, you’ll have to get
help someplace else.” And we have to
assume that one of the disciples carried this news to her, or even worse that
she had to endure listening to her eligibility for mercy being debated by a
group of people that had given her no greeting, offered her no right to speak, and
did not even bother to learn her name.
Because, you see in that moment she wasn’t
a person, a mother, a fellow human being in the eyes of the infant church. She was an “issue,” a problem, an agenda
item, a complication to be dealt with.
What happens next is perhaps best
summarized by the words of the unlikely prophet Sen. McConnell. “She
had appeared to violate the rule. She was warned. She was given an explanation.
Nevertheless, she persisted.” [US
Senate, 2.7.17]
Yes, those Canaanite women are
everywhere.
But she came and knelt before Jesus, saying, “Lord, help me.”
I have to imagine that that was not
an easy thing to do. And I mean
literally that I have to imagine it
because I have never been in her situation.
Because white, middle-class, over-educated, straight men in our culture…
don’t have the experience that this
woman just had, we aren’t spoken of in the third person by those in power, we
are not categorized in ways that subsume our sacred personhood under a
label. We have the privilege of being
spoken to, not spoken about.
So, before those of us who carry such privilege in our backpack, assume
that we would not intrude upon Jesus’s personal space with such audacity and
boldness, or that we would not humble
ourselves before a group that had just so disrespected us, let’s you and I walk
a mile or two in her shoes, her Canaanite shoes.
The conversation that Jesus and woman
proceed to have is unworthy of our Jesus, and Matthew knows that. But Matthew, inspired by the Holy Spirit,
needs us to hear it because the church still, to this day, confuses justice and charity. Jesus said to this
woman, weary from night after night of rubbing her daughter’s back, bathing her
forehead, listening to her cries, holding her trembling body, to her Jesus
said, “It is not fair to take the
children’s food and throw it to the dogs.” And summoning every ounce of
self-control that she can, the woman answers, “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their
masters’ table.”
When I hear her say those words, it
breaks my heart. Because it says that
she has been so beaten down, and so consumed by worry for her child, that she
will sacrifice her own dignity for the sake of another. In this moment she is Messianic, she is self-sacrificing,
she is embodying the love of
God.
I see
this woman’s face, every day, in fact: in the women who walk into the Food Bank in my
Church, and I hear her voice in the words that are spoken as they register and
check in. I am grateful that these women
are treated with respect and dignity by our volunteers, but I know they’ve
heard the comments hurled at them by our society: “freeloaders, welfare queens, lazy, good for
nothing.” When we give to the poor out
of our abundance, are we distributing crumbs to the dogs under the Master’s
table (along with a helping of shame and humiliation)? Or are we, conscious of our unclean hands,
partnering with God to try to undo the economic injustice of our society, that
has made a handful of people fabulously wealthy, while leaving scraps for
public education, health care, nutrition, housing, college tuition, and job
training?
Does it still have to be said in 21st
century America that it is not a sin to be poor, that it is not a sin to be
sick, illiterate, marginalized, mentally ill, addicted, bankrupt, persecuted, a
refugee from tyrants, a teenager who is bullied? Being weak or in-need shouldn’t put someone
under the table with the dogs. In God’s
kingdom it is the hungry person who
is seated first, and are not the ones in need of forgiveness, those who would
deny them a chair?
Well, just when I am ready to give up
on Jesus in this story, he responds with words that give me back my hope and
restore my faith. Because with this
woman kneeling before him, Jesus doesn’t say, “your obedience is impressive,
your submission is acceptable, your shame makes me pity you sufficiently.” Instead Jesus looks at her, looks at his
disciples, and looks at the crowd, and whether he has just come to this
conclusion or not—the Bible doesn’t tell us—Jesus gets it. There may be a passage in scripture that
condemns this woman, there may be a standing policy that denies her mercy and
justice and inclusion, but Jesus looks at her self-sacrificial posture, her
willingness to be humiliated for her daughter, her God-like compassion and tells
her to stand up, and with one phrase Jesus restores her dignity: “woman, great
is your faith! Let it be done for you as
you wish.” And it was.
Did you hear that first part? He praises…her
faith. And in that moment, we know that Jesus sees her, includes her, is in fellowship
with her, and (dare we say it) has learned
from her. The word faith is used 17 times in Matthew’s gospel, and always it is the
mark of genuine discipleship, either because one has it or because one lacks
it. Those who need to hear the Sermon on
the Mount are called “those of little faith,” the Centurion in chapter 8 (another
outsider) has his servant healed because of the Centurion’s faith, the
disciples in the boat during the storm are afraid because they lack faith, the
paralyzed man is healed because of the faith of his friends, faith the size of
a mustard seed will be capable of accomplishing anything, and what do the Pharisees, scribes, and hypocrites lack? Justice, mercy, and faith.
By praising the greatness of this
Canaanite woman’s faith, by raising
her up from the dust, by speaking to
her rather than about her, by
recognizing the image of God already in her soul, Jesus has set aside scripture, ignored policy, and has shown the church how to be the Church of Jesus Christ when there’s a Canaanite, an
outsider, an incompatible, a suffering brother or sister standing right there
in front of us, asking for mercy. It’s
not about charity, it’s about justice!
Those of you who are close to me know
that the last six years of my life have been consumed with accompanying my
mother through the hell of dementia. By
all possible measurements we are only part way down this path that will direct
the rest of her life. It became apparent
after my father’s death that, even in the midst of pancreatic cancer, he had
been compensating for her growing confusion.
She lived with us for two years after that, then moved to assisted
living, and now resides in a memory unit that keeps her physically safe but mentally
tormented by her continuing self-awareness of her failing memory. In time that will pass we are told, but when
ignorance has become bliss, she will no longer remember us, and so we journey
together and try to treasure every moment, even if it is painful for her and
for us.
Because of Mom’s illness, one of the
words that I’ve had to learn this year is “paramnesia.” Paramnesia occurs when a mentally compromised
person tries to make sense of the world while suffering a partial lack of
memory. And in order to speak coherently
about an event, the patient will confabulate, include details in a story that
didn’t actually happen, will fabricate a reality that makes sense for the
moment but is in fact, false.
Part of me wants to ask in my
confusion, whether Jesus was
suffering from theological paramnesia when this episode with the Canaanite
woman occurred (and yes, I know there are multiple explanations of why he might
have acted the way he did), but I’ve come to believe that Matthew wasn’t in fact telling a story about Jesus; I think Matthew was telling a story about the church. Because as Matthew’s congregation watched Imperial
Rome crush Jerusalem like a walnut, and as they saw the smoke of destruction
and persecution rise over the Holy City, Matthew’s community knew that things
were going to have to change, that the Church in order to survive and to be the
authentic expression of God’s love in the world, that the church was going to
have to remember a few things it had forgotten.
It was going to have to remember that Jesus sought out strangers, that Jesus praised the faith
of Gentiles, that foreigners showed
up at his birth, that ethnic, racial, tribal differences mattered nothing to
him, that economic injustice and racial privilege is incompatible with Christian
teaching, and most of all the church had to remember this: Canaanite lives matter…incompatibles lives matter,
persecuted minorities matter, LGBTQ lives matter, victims of violence matter, and
(today of all days) black lives matter.
You and I are here at the 2017 New
England Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. And on my dark and cynical days, I find
myself wondering how many more of these there will be. But even as we wither away, Canaanites—some of them our own
children—are standing at the door of the church, longing to come in. They are standing there, cautiously, because
(despite our faults) they sense God
in us, someplace beneath all that silence, mis-interpreted scripture, and
prejudicial legislation. They can hear
the authentic Jesus in our heritage and in our passion for mission, despite the
racism and white privilege that gets in the way of our discipleship, and they can hear the rush of the wind
of the Spirit that we keep trying to squeeze into containers of fear so that it
won’t change us.
It’s time to let that Spirit loose! It’s time to let that Spirit loose! It’s time to let that Spirit loose! It’s time
to emulate the Jesus who tells persecuted strangers to stand up with
dignity. It’s time to rediscover the
image of God in the people who scare us because they seem different. It’s time to confess our sins, and seek to undo the harm we have done because of
our lack of justice, mercy, and
faith. The Holy Cities of 20th
century Christendom are burning, there is no going back. The church I was trained to serve in seminary
no longer exists, if it ever did. But
Jesus? Yeah, Jesus has never left. As he
promised, he is with us to the end of the age! And if we are willing to let Jesus heal our memory, to let Jesus strip away the false narratives of
the church that we’ve told ourselves, who’s in and who’s out, to let Jesus put us square in the middle of
town where Canaanite mothers can pester
us and teach us with their requests
for justice, then brothers and
sisters, I have hope for this church.
And if this church can find that Jesus and let him break our sinful
selves open yet one more time, and put us back together with a lot less judgement and a lot more justice, mercy, and faith, then
maybe some of those Canaanites will do us
the honor of crossing the threshold, standing by our side, and reminding us that God wants them here
because of the greatness of their
faith: And as they walk in the door (hear this now!), it’s time for folks like me,
who are invested in and benefit from the status
quo, it’s time for folks like me to stop
talking…and listen…and change. It’s our
only hope.
Our choir sings a song, Great, Great Morning. And folks love it; it’s a medley, a mash up
of several gospel songs that are all looking towards “that day,” that ultimate
day when Jesus calls us home, or comes to check on what we’ve been up to [maybe
you’ve seen the bumper sticker: “Jesus
is Coming; Look busy!”]. I love singing that
song; it just makes me feel good. But I
also know that the day we’re singing
about is Judgment Day, that day when Jesus comes to rebalance the scales of justice.
If you’ve read the prophets or the Book of Revelation, you’ve got to
know that it doesn’t turn out well for those who neglect the poor, oppress the Saints,
or ignore the world’s suffering.
One of the things that is said about
Rev. Ziegler is that he was really good at “afflicting the comfortable.” In that spirit we’re going to sing that song, and I want you to enjoy it, but not too much, because we still have work to
do, don’t we? Amen?
Sunday, November 22, 2015
God's Vineyard
Text: Isaiah 5:1-7;
11:1-5
Date: November 22, 2015
Pleasant Street UMC, Waterville,
ME
Thomas L. Blackstone, Ph.D.,
Preacher
God's Vineyard
5:1 Let me sing for my beloved my love-song concerning his vineyard: My
beloved had a vineyard on a very fertile hill. 2 He dug it and cleared it of
stones, and planted it with choice vines; he built a watchtower in the midst of
it, and hewed out a wine vat in it; he expected it to yield grapes, but it
yielded wild grapes. 3 And now, inhabitants of Jerusalem and people of Judah,
judge between me and my vineyard. 4 What more was there to do for my vineyard
that I have not done in it? When I expected it to yield grapes, why did it
yield wild grapes? 5 And now I will tell you what I will do to my vineyard. I
will remove its hedge, and it shall be devoured; I will break down its wall,
and it shall be trampled down. 6 I will make it a waste; it shall not be pruned
or hoed, and it shall be overgrown with briers and thorns; I will also command
the clouds that they rain no rain upon it. 7 For the vineyard of the Lord of
hosts is the house of Israel, and the people of Judah are his pleasant
planting; he expected justice, but saw bloodshed; righteousness, but heard a
cry!
11:1 A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. 2 The spirit of the Lord shall rest on him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. 3 His delight shall be in the fear of the Lord. He shall not judge by what his eyes see, or decide by what his ears hear; 4 but with righteousness he shall judge the poor, and decide with equity for the meek of the earth; he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips he shall kill the wicked. 5 Righteousness shall be the belt around his waist, and faithfulness the belt around his loins.
11:1 A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. 2 The spirit of the Lord shall rest on him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. 3 His delight shall be in the fear of the Lord. He shall not judge by what his eyes see, or decide by what his ears hear; 4 but with righteousness he shall judge the poor, and decide with equity for the meek of the earth; he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips he shall kill the wicked. 5 Righteousness shall be the belt around his waist, and faithfulness the belt around his loins.
Gain and loss, growing and pruning,
nurturing and cutting back, innovation and evaluation. These are the ebb and flow of gardening,
farming, organizational life, and the history
of the church. But before any of
that, such is the language of love.
So it is appropriate that today's
text begins with a love song. You know
love songs, of course. They're 90% of
what we hear on the radio unless you're a public radio junky, but even then
Saturday afternoon opera will bring it all back: the joys and ultimate heartbreak of
unrequited love and betrayal. Back in
1580, the song was "Greensleeves,"
a plea from a man to his bored mistress. He is still enraptured by her
but she appears not to love him anymore.
Frankie Valli sang, "My Eyes Adored You": You couldn't see how I adored you. So close, so close and yet so far…." Elvis Presley: "She wrote upon it, Return to Sender, No
such number, no such zone." Meatloaf! (the singer not the entrée): " She kept on telling me / I want you, I need you / But there
ain't no way I'm ever gonna love you / Now don't be sad / 'Cause two out of
three ain't bad." (Yes, that is
probably the first and last time you'll hear Meatloaf quoted in a sermon). Taylor Swift:
"Can't you see that I'm the one who understands you / Been here all
along so why can't you see / You belong with me." Lady Antebellum: " Yeah, it's gonna take forever to get over you / Oh, and I
don't think this pain's gonna go away / Oh, (the) scars left, when it's said
and done, remain." And Finally Gary
Stewart, "She's Acting Single; I'm drinking double."
Love is pain, at least in the lyrics
of popular songs, and often in real life as well. Isaiah's song, which was never on anybody's
top 40 list but still made it into the Bible, is sung by a woman about her
lover. The readers of Isaiah, expecting
a lyrical ballad, open up their hearts, drop their defenses, and settle back to
hear her words. A Love Song! She sings of her lover's vineyard, of the
care with which he planted a hedge, built a wine press, planted and dressed the
vines. He put up a watch tower so that
the workers could spot animals who wanted to sneak in and steal the
grapes. He carved a deep wine vat to
hold the sweet, succulent, juice. If
this sounds like it's getting a little sensual, then you're probably on the
right track. Every time I read this I'm
reminded of the Steve Miller Band's lyric, "I really love your peaches,
want to shake your tree."
Yeah.
But then, into this garden of
seduction, comes the unwelcome. Wild
grapes. This is a problem agriculturally
because wild grapes are sour and tart, lacking the sugar to become wine. But they also symbolize infidelity. If there are wild grapes in the vineyard,
then someone planted them there, and it wasn't the vineyard owner. To quote the Blues classic, "She's got a
smile on her face and I didn't put it there."
Well, the vineyard owner isn't going
to tolerate wild grapes in his patch of earth, and in anger it's all going to
be torn down. The hedges, the
watchtower, the wall. The hard work of
cultivation will stop, and the vineyard owner will even keep the rain from
falling, which is our first clue that this is not an ordinary love song, given
that the jilted lover can control the weather.
I think you can see where this is
going. The hedge, and the watchtower,
and the wall are all symbolic of God's protection over the people, and
Isaiah--much like his contemporary Hosea from whom we heard last week--is
warning his audience, the Southern Kingdom of Judah, that God has shown them
nothing but care and nurture, and they have responded with infidelity. They have chased after personal wealth and
riches, they have neglected the poor, they have become indifferent and lazy
about worship, failing to remind themselves that they are a covenant people
with responsibilities to others. They
had forgotten God's words to Abraham in Genesis 12, at the very beginning of the
Biblical story, " And
I will make you a great nation, And I will bless you, And make your name great;
And so you shall be a blessing…" hear that again. "I will bless you, Abram, so that you
may be a blessing." At the time
Isaiah's singer sings her song, the wild grapes of injustice and indifference
have taken over the vineyard. Judah has
been happy to be blessed and protected by God, but had forgotten the second word to Abraham, that along with
great blessings comes great responsibility.
And so there's going to be a
break-up, and thanks to Neil Sedaka we know, "Breaking up is hard to
do." Isaiah writes these words as
the Assyrians are preparing to dismantle the Northern Kingdom, torture its
leaders, and dilute the Northern 10 tribes into the solvent of history, never
to be heard from again. And Isaiah's
warning to the Southern kingdom is simple:
"Get it together, or you're next."
I have to admit that my lighthearted
introduction to this passage is out of sync with the effect that it has on my
heart, during this week in which so many are hurting and feeling fearful of the
unknown. Our times are not unlike
Isaiah's in which rumors and reports of our enemies and what they have done to
our allies is causing us to want to focus on self-protection rather than
self-less courage. Judah's mistake,
Isaiah reminded them, was to assume that their greatest threat was the
Assyrians over the far hill someplace.
In fact, their greatest danger was in their refusal to be the people God
made them to be, those who would be a blessing to others.
Like ancient Judah, God has blessed our
nation. We are blessed with democracy,
freedom of belief, incredible natural resources, and an innovative spirit, but
it is understandably reflexive to feel vulnerable when the acts of madmen,
intended to terrify us into inaction, do in fact frighten us. For the last several months we have witnessed
the largest movement of refugees in our lifetimes. 60 million people, according to a UN report
last June, are displaced from their homes, that's one out of every 122 people
on the planet, if you're doing the math, and half of those 60 million // half
// are children. Because, as every
parent knows, when violence comes to our door, our first instinct is not to
stand and fight, but to grab our children and run, lest we fall in the struggle
and leave them unprotected.
The debate the country seems to be
having is whether our wealthy, powerful nation will welcome some of those
victims of religious fanaticism (again, half of them children) or close up our
borders like a tortoise in a shell, hoping that the storm will pass us by.
We've been here before, of
course. Some of you are old enough to
remember the journey of the MS St. Louis and the so-called Voyage of the Damned
in 1939. The ship carried 908 Jewish
refugees out of Germany who came seeking asylum from the horrors of the
Nazis. After being refused entry in
Cuba, the US, and Canada, the ship returned to Europe where at least a quarter
of the passengers died in concentration camps.
"But there might be German spies on the boat," it was argued
at the time, "they're not of our religion," said others,
"they're filthy Jews," said some, "the dregs of
Europe." And so we turned our
backs, and the weak and the vulnerable continued to suffer at the hands of
evil. It is a sin for which we cannot
atone.
You know that I'm not a political
person, and for me this is not a political issue, it's a question of human
rights and responsibility. But when I
hear our Governor insist that Mainers would not welcome these men, women, and
children into our communities, I know that he's wrong. I know that he's wrong. We are not a wealthy state, we are not a
bottomless pit of resources, but there's not a person here who would not jump
into the water to save the life of one of those precious kids clinging to one
of those overturned boats in the Aegean Sea.
And having saved her from death we would instinctively wrap her in our warmest blanket, feed her the most nutritious thing in our house, even
if it meant we would go hungry, and sleep on the couch until we could find her a bed. I know we would.
I know that because we're Christians, and
because the person at the center of our faith is a child of refugees, who crossed a border in
search of safety from a paranoid King. It was about such a child, that
Isaiah continued to sing in his writings, about a child who even in a hopeless
situation would grow up like a shoot out of the stump of Jesse, Jesse being the
father of King David, the ancestor of Jesus, and the grandson of Ruth, Ruth a
widowed refugee from Moab who crossed a border in search of safety, and found
it among God's people, who welcomed her, and took her in.
Yes, we've been here before, and what
we've learned is that if our enemies make us forget who we are, then our
enemies win, and the wild grapes of fear and insecurity and self-interest will
be all that's left of our beautiful vineyard.
But there is still time, time to turn to God, embrace our identity, and
advocate for those who are fleeing for their lives with their children in their
arms. Amen.
Saturday, July 11, 2015
Text: Psalm 18:1-13, 46-50
Date: June 28, 2015
Pleasant Street UMC, Waterville,
ME
(c) Thomas L. Blackstone, Ph.D.,
Preacher
Movies of Maine:
Charlotte's Web
Psalm 18
To
the leader. A Psalm of David the servant of the Lord, who addressed the words of this song to the Lord on the day when the Lord delivered him from the hand of
all his enemies, and from the hand of Saul. He said:
I love you, O Lord, my strength.
The Lord is my rock, my fortress, and my deliverer,
my God, my rock in whom I take refuge,
my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.
I call upon the Lord, who is worthy to be praised;
so I shall be saved from my enemies.
I love you, O Lord, my strength.
The Lord is my rock, my fortress, and my deliverer,
my God, my rock in whom I take refuge,
my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.
I call upon the Lord, who is worthy to be praised;
so I shall be saved from my enemies.
The cords of death encompassed me;
the torrents of perdition assailed me;
the cords of Sheol entangled me;
the snares of death confronted me.
In my distress I called upon the Lord;
to my God I cried for help.
From his temple he heard my voice,
and my cry to him reached his ears.
Then the earth reeled and rocked;
the foundations also of the mountains trembled
and quaked, because he was angry.
Smoke went up from his nostrils,
and devouring fire from his mouth;
glowing coals flamed forth from him.
He bowed the heavens, and came down;
thick darkness was under his feet.
He rode on a cherub, and flew;
he came swiftly upon the wings of the wind.
He made darkness his covering around him,
his canopy thick clouds dark with water.
Out of the brightness before him
there broke through his clouds
hailstones and coals of fire.
The Lord also thundered in the heavens,
and the Most High uttered his voice.
The Lord lives! Blessed be my rock,
and exalted be the God of my salvation,
the God who gave me vengeance
and subdued peoples under me;
who delivered me from my enemies;
indeed, you exalted me above my adversaries;
you delivered me from the violent.
For this I will extol you, O Lord, among the nations,
and sing praises to your name.
Great triumphs he gives to his king,
and shows steadfast love to his anointed,
to David and his descendants for ever.
So there I was, sitting with the
Worship Team a month or so ago, describing this great idea for a summer
preaching series. You know, summer, when
nothing happens in the secular world, and so the church is free to reflect on
the peaceful, relaxed side of Christianity, in which we all go fishing with
Jesus, hang out at the Pot Luck supper with Peter, and sit at the Lord's feet
with Mary. So why not take a look back
at a few of the many movies that are set here in our home state, in search of
some meaningful religious lessons close to home. Don't worry, I said. The tourists will love it, and the local
folks too.
Well, the last couple of weeks have
not been the summer I predicted.
·
It
began with the horrors of the shooting rampage through our sister church in
Charleston, and the resulting calls for the banning of the Confederate Battle
Flag,
·
It
continued with the reaffirmation that thousands of Mainers, and millions of
Americans will continue to be able to afford their health insurance,
·
And
finally there was the predicted affirmation Friday by the US Supreme Court that
the Same Sex marriages of our members, friends, family, and neighbors are now
legal, not just here in Maine and like-minded states, but throughout the United
States of America, wherever our beloved Constitution holds sway.
And so with all this going on, both
good and tragic, you can imagine that I began to cringe in fear a little when I
tried to remember what sophisticated film I had chosen for this first Sunday of
our series: Charlotte's Web. But I have
realized before that when I reach out in faith and tell you what I'm actually
going to preach about on a given Sunday, God--more often than not--doesn't let
me down, even or especially if it has not been an ordinary week.
So Charlotte's Web, set in Somerset
County, Maine, written by E.B. White, but filmed, sadly, in Australia to
accommodate a winter filming schedule when Maine looks a little too much like
Maine. If you look closely, you can see
that the trees around the barn have been painted orange to stand in for a New
England Autumn. That is a lot of effort
to go to in my opinion, to recreate the Pine Tree State, but so be it.
Our hero is Wilbur, the runt of a
very large litter of pigs, saved by young Fern from a quick & merciful
death by her promise that she will raise him, and he will be the best pig
ever. To do away with him just because
he is small, she argues, is "unfair, and unjust." Her plan is difficult to put into motion, and
her father tries to release her from her promise, but she curtly replies, "I
didn't make my promise to you; I made it to Wilbur." Eventually, a deal is worked out with the
neighboring farmer, Homer. As Wilbur is
dropped into his new home, the narrator reflects that sometimes bringing two
very ordinary things together like a pig and a barn results in an extraordinary
miracle.
Well, Wilbur is going to need a
miracle, because as you know Spring pigs have only one purpose, to ensure the
winter supply of ham, bacon, and chops.
When apprised of that reality, Wilbur responds incredulously, but humans
love pigs! No, his animal friends assure
him, Humans love pork; there's a difference.
Just about then a familiar "fear not" is heard from the
rafters. It is the voice of Charlotte,
an exceptional spider with an exceptional gift.
You will not be sacrificed for food, Wilbur, I promise, she says. And like Fern, Charolotte NEVER breaks her
promises.
To me, this is the turning point of
the film, that an apparently small and helpless creature undertakes with
boldness to change the world in which she lives. If in fact the slaughter is unfair and
unjust, Charlotte will have none of it.
She has heard the cry of the innocent, and she will use her gifts to
deliver him.
Is it a complete and total surprise
that Charlotte's actions echo the spirit of our lesson from the Psalms this
morning? Remember those words…
In my distress I called
upon the Lord;
to my God I cried for help.
From his temple he heard my voice,
and my cry to him reached his ears.
to my God I cried for help.
From his temple he heard my voice,
and my cry to him reached his ears.
No, not a surprise,
because Charlotte's Web, like every good book or movie, has a messianic figure
at its heart, an agent of change to use the language of family system's
theory. And when a change agent is on
the loose, anything can happen. Like any
good Messiah, Charlotte is there to provide deliverance from evil, or at least
the smokehouse, but how? Even she
doesn't know. That night, however, as
she goes about her business of web weaving, the answer comes to her. The web itself will bear her message and
express her belief in Wilbur's inherent worth.
Diverting from her usual web, Charlotte prepares the words above
Wilbur's head, "Some pig."
Now, when the web is noticed, no one wants to talk about the spider,
they all want to talk about the pig.
That's also a good strategy for Messiah's, by the way, keep the
spotlight where it belongs, not on oneself.
Remember all those mornings when Jesus slipped quietly away? Yeah, that's his Charlotte moment. Let them talk about the miracle rather than
the miracle worker.
Well, in the morning,
there are the words, "Some pig," up above Wilbur's head. And people begin to notice that he IS in
fact, some pig. You see, that's
Charlotte's gift, to only use her web to tell the truth about Wilbur. Well, the farmer's family does what anyone
would do when they hear of a miracle.
They call their pastor, who by all appearances is a United
Methodist. And the Pastor, in good
pastoral fashion, chooses to say nothing, but rather refers people to his
upcoming sermon on the topic in a week or two.
Ironically, it's the town doctor, a man of science, who understands the
problem with all this, that the web was a miracle long before Charlotte started
using it to send messages. It's a thing
of beauty and symmetry, he says. How did
you not see it before?
Well, even the miracle
web is not enough to hold people's attention, and Charlotte's work continues
every few weeks. Soon the web reveals
new words: Terrific, Radiant, and
finally, Humble. With such words above
his head, Wilbur captures the imagination of his world, and is allowed to live
to see Christmas, and many Christmases after that. As all this winds to a close, and Charlotte's
many babies fly away on the winds, the narrator reminds us that because
Charlotte showed the specialness of this pig, the community itself felt special,
and because of that they treated one another with more kindness and affection,
and because they did that, an ordinary miracle had come to town. Yeah, Charlotte!
And so there is that
inevitable question, So what? So what,
that a loveable children's book has been brought to life in our midst? And yet, I can't help think that there is a
lesson in all this, even on this week when so much has happened. There's was an editorial cartoon that
captured my imagination this week, in which a Confederate flag on a flag pole
is being slowly lowered out of site, and then rising to take its place is a
rainbow flag. No words, no slogans, just
a comment left by a user, "There it is."
You see, banners
matter, symbols have meaning, and words can in fact (to quote Charlotte),
change the world. Charlotte was Wilbur's
savior, his redeemer, his deliverer. And
he was saved by her choice to place above him words that reflected his true
nature: Some Pig, Terrific, Radiant,
Humble. Society puts banners above all
of us, of course. Not all of them are so
kind. Imagine some other words that
would convey other messages, "outsider", "dirty",
"lazy", "scum", freeloader, less than human. Those who raised the Confederate Flag over
South Carolina reinforced the message that black citizens are less worthy than
others, that they are a danger, that they need to be controlled if not
exterminated. It wasn't intended as harm
to others, perhaps, but it gave permission to a young man steeped in hate, that
perhaps even the most heinous of crimes would be forgiven, if it asserted the God given rights
of a supreme white race. But imagine if
the shooter that day had grown up seeing other words in the webs above his
brothers and sisters? Imagine if he saw
words like devout, kindhearted, forgiving, generous. Perhaps then he would have spared the lives
in the church that night, and allowed his own experience to rule his heart,
rather than the narrow opinions and bigotry of his elders.
Charlotte delivers
Wilbur by changing how others see him, as his true self rather than his
society-given reputation as a beast to be slaughtered. I know it's just a children's story, but its
importance is clear. Words matter. It matters that so-called "gay marriage" can just be "marriage" now. That those who
live with the stigma of poverty will have some options when it comes to caring
for their bodies. It matters when words like
worthless, imperfect, and less-than, infect even our Christian vocabulary as we
sit in judgment over others, a role that God never intended for us. Rather, we are to build one another up in
love, to perceive and name the blessings of our fellow human beings to deliver
them from the spiritual smokehouses of
death all around us.
However this week's
news has affected you, let us be reminded that we have incredible power to be
Charlotte to one another, to make promises that we mean to keep, and then do
everything in our power to keep them, even if it is a matter of life and death,
and sometimes it will be. May you be
amazed at the ordinary miracles in your life, and may you be the miracle that
another of God's children is praying for, longing for some word of approval,
praise, or acknowledgement, even from one of the least of these God's
creatures. Amen.
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