Thursday, January 28, 2016

Sidon, Syria and the Hometown Boy



Epiphany 4

“Today, this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”  Jesus’ sermon was short and to the point.  He had just read an excerpt from Isaiah 61, a passage that talks about God’s restoration of Israel after the Babylonian Exile, the reconciliation God will bring between peoples, and the Anointed One (Christ) God would send to lead the people.  Jesus says, in effect, “I am that one.”  But, rather than seeing God’s Son, the people of Nazareth only see Joseph’s boy.  Rather than seeing Jesus as the one who brings reconciliation and restoration to the world, they only see a miracle worker who can cure some of the sick hometown folk.  Instead he reminds them that God’s vision and activity goes well beyond the limits of the hometown.  He reminds them of two stories where God sent the great prophets Elijah and Elisha to outsiders, strangers, foreigners.  A widow in Sidon is fed.  Naaman from Syria, an enemy general, who worships another god, is healed.  The local folk are so incensed that they try to throw the hometown boy off a cliff!

Earlier this month, I spent a day along the US-Mexican border learning about what is happening there.  We listened to several speakers, including a US Border Patrol agent who spoke powerfully about the complexities and injustices of our immigration policies, the need for change and the importance of compassion in dealing with the people coming to our borders.   The widow of Zarephath and her son crying out for help.

Through the Oklahoma Conference of Churches, I have been in conversations and shared in fellowship with leaders and others in the Muslim community in Oklahoma City and Tulsa.  I have heard their stories about the hatred, fear and suspicion that they have experienced in our communities.  These are people who have jobs, are trying to raise families and are as concerned about the realities of terrorism as I am.  Many of them were born and raised in and around Oklahoma.  If God, through Elijah, could be compassionate to someone like Naaman…   shouldn’t we extend at least that much compassion to neighbors who are, in fact, our friends? 

For the past eighteen months, I have been a part of the Arkansas-Oklahoma Synod Racial Justice task force.  We have been meeting to discuss and learn about the real, pervasive and insidious sin of racism in our land and in our communities.  We, in the Church, need to be talking and learning about these realities, and finding ways to address them.  The conversation is already going on in a few of our synod churches…  but the conversation needs to expand.

The love and grace of Jesus Christ is not just for the hometown crowd.  The love and grace of Jesus Christ is for the whole world. The love and grace of Jesus Christ is for widows from Sidon, generals from Syria, immigrants, refugees, and people who look and think and believe differently than we do.  God’s love is truly stronger than all the hatred, fear, mistrust, suspicion and anger that we humans can muster.  God proved that by sending his Son to a cross… and then rising him up again on the third day. 

Peace,
Bishop Mike

Thursday, January 21, 2016

The Politics of Jesus



Epiphany 3

politics  n.  From the Greek polis and polÄ«tÄ“s having something to do with cities or communities or the citizens who live in them.  (www.mirriam-webster.com)

Someone once told me that Jesus had nothing to do with politics.  His earthly ministry was all about spiritual and eternal things.  According to this person, when Jesus spoke about the poor, the captive or the oppressed, he wasn’t referring to those who were poor, captive or oppressed in their earthly life, but impoverished spiritually, captive to sin and oppressed by the devil.  I think he was wrong.

In my opinion, to spiritualize Jesus’ earthly ministry is to deny his humanity.  It is to make all Jesus’ healing miracles, his eating with tax collectors and sinners, his concern for the neighbor into a sham.  It is to turn Christianity into an “opiate for the people,” as Marx erroneously claimed:  nothing more than anesthesia against the harsh realities of life in this world.

The minute Jesus proclaimed that that “Kingdom of God” was at hand, he was involved in politics.  Jesus was not put to death because he comforted the “poor in spirit.”  He was put to death because he claimed God was more powerful than Caesar, and challenged the power and privilege of the Judean leaders who collaborated with the Emperor.  Leaders who claimed, in the Gospel of John, “we have no King but the emperor!”  (John 19:15).  In today’s lesson, Jesus is making a political statement.

But, Jesus’ politics are different, much different, than the hate-filled, angry, divisive, character assignations that frequently define “politics” today.  Instead, Jesus’ politics were the politics of love.  Jesus’ political program focused on reconciliation and restoration;  healing, mercy, and compassion.  Jesus ate with prostitutes and Pharisees.  Jesus healed Jews and Gentiles.  Jesus chastised the Scribes and his own disciples. 

We may eschew the “mixing” of politics and religion – but providing food for the hungry, collecting clothing for the poor, or offering shelter for the homeless are essentially political acts.  They say that the hungry, the poor and the homeless matter to us because they matter to God.  And, if they matter, then shouldn’t we ask why they are hungry, poor and homeless in the first place?  Otherwise, we risk caring just to make ourselves feel better.

Christians can be found on the political left and the political right.  There are Christian Republicans, Democrats and Independents.  Christians can hold a wide range of opinions on the whole range of “political” issues that face our country and our world.  But, no matter what our political perspective, I hope and pray that we always have Jesus’ love and concern for all God’s children front and center in all that we say or do.

Peace,
Bishop Mike.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

The Good Wine



John 2:1-11
Epiphany 2

There is a lot of bad wine out there.  Vinegary stuff.  Sweet stuff that tastes like syrup.  Tasteless stuff that is no more than purple water.  Yes, there is a lot of bad wine out there.   In fact, I would dare to say that the world is drunk on it!  People seem all too quick to drink the wine of cynicism, despair, division, hatred, anxiety and fear that gets poured out daily.  People guzzle down the latest thing that promises them longer lives, healthier skin, instant wealth, entertainment and happiness.  People get a buzz off of things that promise life (or a distraction from life), but in the end, disappoint again and again.  There is a lot of bad wine out there.  I know.  I’ve drank a few bottles myself.  Chances are, so have you.

Jesus Christ offers us the good wine.   The Gospel of John teaches us that Jesus is the revelation of God for a drunken world.  Jesus is God’s Word made flesh, full of grace and truth for a thirsty world.  Jesus’ signs, from the water turned to wine at Cana to his death on the cross, point beyond themselves to the God who loved the world so much that God was willing to die and rise again on the third day so that the world might have life and have it abundantly.  Good stuff.  What that means in simple terms is that, if you want to know who God is, look to Jesus.  If you want to experience the life that God intends for us, follow Jesus.  If you want to find a path through all the tough realities, struggles and sorrows of human life (and maybe even do something about them), trust Jesus and his Way.

Jesus is still in the business of turning water into wine.  Good wine.  He is still pouring himself out for the sake of a drunken world.  The signs of God’s love are still unfolding all around us…   if we know how to look for them.  Yes, even in and through an institution as imperfect, frustrating and often hypocritical as the Church, people are still meeting Jesus, learning his Way, and working together to share his love, his Good Wine, with the world.  I invite you to stop by and share a glass of the good stuff this week!

Peace,
Bishop Mike