For One, For All


The 15th chapter of Luke includes three parables – the lost sheep, the lost coin and the lost son.  You’ve just heard the first two...

Each parable focuses our attention on God’s work of finding and returning the lost to community. Each parable celebrates with joy, with rejoicing.  What is celebrated is the finding, the return, the restoration which makes the lost and the body to which the lost belongs WHOLE AGAIN.  This chapter is seen by many biblical scholars as the “heart of Luke’s gospel.” God is loving and merciful and seeks after every one of us so that communities will be whole.

These two parables are formulaic – someone lost something, and when it is lost, they go seeking after it until it is found.  And when the seeker has found the lost thing, they call together their community and celebrate with joy.

Jesus chose very specific seekers in his effort to paint a picture of how God goes after the lost.  He first uses a shepherd.  Shepherds were not well-respected in this society.  They were generally understood as rough around the edges and possibly untrustworthy.  A funny stand in for God.

And then Jesus tells about a WOMAN seeking after her lost coin with a lamp and a broom…it would have been unbelievable in that day and time to compare God to a woman, let alone a woman using the common household tools of cleaning and serving to find the object. A woman who, in the face of something lost, persisted to find it.  Nevertheless, she persisted.  Imagine the affront that this was to the religious leaders to whom Jesus tells this story.

This is Jesus at his eyebrow raising best…nudging the order and structure of the temple, prodding the “gatekeepers” while using shifty shepherds and a humble working woman as a stand-in for the seeking work of God.  Nevertheless, God persists.

In our pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps form of American Christianity, we might read this with a focus on the one who is lost, on their lost-ness, on the way God goes after the one.  We may be tempted to see this as a comfort for us and our individual restoration. 

One of the commentaries I use this week shared the perspective of students sitting in the classroom from other parts of the world meeting these parables. They noted the way we focused on the individual and they turned attention to the restoration of a community - the way everyone celebrate it together.

I think it is important to pay attention to the ways this story is about our interdependence, on God’s value for whole communities as well as whole individuals.  When the lost is found, the unit is stronger.  The sheep herd is complete.  The coins regain their cumulative value.

In counterpoint to the joy and rejoicing that happens when the lost is found and the community restored is the grumbling, frankly the kvetching of the religious authorities who at the beginning of this scripture are “grumbling” because Jesus welcomes sinners…and (gasp) eats with them.

Pay attention.  The religious insiders are grumbling about the way Jesus tends to the religious outsiders.  They are building the case against Jesus - a case that will ultimately lead to his death – because he his hanging out with sinners. He is doing the risky work of reaching beyond who is in and who is out to say everyone is worthy.

It would never occur to The Pharisees and religious authorities that they, the institutional insiders, might also be sinners…right?

It would never occur to them that somehow they were failing to keep the commandment to love God and to love one another with their choice to exclude a person or a group of persons based on their perceived sinfulness.

So much of the work of these religious leaders was to draw lines, determine who was righteous and who was not, to create divisions.

Do you ever find yourself grumbling when something good happens to another?  Sort of stunned that someone like “that” could have good fortune? Questioning what they did to deserve such good fortune?

Do you ever find yourself wanting to dismiss someone with whom you disagree rather than wanting to draw them closer to you? Because it is easier to dismiss them and avoid the complications of having to navigate the ways we are different?

Ohhh….God bless you if you answered no to both of those things.  Because I cannot.

Yes, hear that.  I wrestle mightily with these sorts of things. 

I wrestle with really trusting that God is a God of mercy and not merit. What do you mean that I cannot EARN God’s love?  You mean it is there for everyone, no matter what? I wrestle to remember that there is more than one right way to be in the world, that my being right does preclude another from being right…and that God’s love for me does not depend on my rightness….

I wrestle…I wrestle to receive grace and to offer it at times?

Recently, it was suggested to me that clergy should somehow be more perfect, less human that the people they serve.

Hmm.  I’m pretty sure that is the expectation that shaped the Pharisees.   And the religious order of the day.

Here is the thing…we are all human.
We are all broken.
We are all sinful.

And God loves us anyway.
And God doesn’t just love us…
God seeks after us.

Every single one of us.  The gambler, the murderer, the terrorist, the adulterer, the addicted. 

But also the vain, the proud, those who cling to their money as security, those who think “liberals” or “conservatives” have it all wrong, those who are convinced they know the one right way.

Every single one of us.

And if you have found yourself in a category of sinfulness and then pulled back from the edge, really accepting that God loves you in that moment and for the rest of time no matter what, you value that salvation differently than if you are working hard to make someone else’s sin greater than your own.

Mercy.
Not merit. 
God persists with MERCY.  Not merit.

For you. For me. For us as a faith community.  For Rockville. For citizens of the US and for citizens of the world.  For our United Methodist denomination, which is part of the reason I am so puzzled by why we would single out any one group for condemnation, for exclusion, for punishment.

God persists with mercy, not merit.

We also heard today from the prophet Jeremiah who is speaking into a season of hard political battles, battles that are ripping day-to-day life apart, sending folks into chaos, dividing communities and dividing families.

Throughout Jeremiah’s writing, this is understood as God’s wrath for how the people have not been obedient.  In the verses that immediately precede our reading for today, the voice of God speaks:
“For my people are foolish,
they do not know me;
they are stupid children,
they have no understanding.
They are skilled in doing evil,
but do not know how to do good.”

It is powerful to lay this voice of God next to the story Jesus tells about the persistent seeking God.  It is a reminder that in a moment in time, it was easy for the prophet to see all as lost, all as failing, all as impossible.

But when God does a new thing, a new thing in the incarnate, teaching being who is Jesus, Jesus’ assurance is that the lost are sought and found.  That the community is restored.

This is the promise given to Noah in a rainbow.
This is the promise of manna in the wilderness.
This is the loyalty of Ruth to Naomi.
This is the bold yes spoken by a young Mary.
This is the promise of resurrection.
The persistent God has got this – and is at work in every moment to restore wholeness.

This is the good news for you and for me every day.

And it should be the good news that we share with all the world.
It should be the good news that undergirds our work here in this Rockville community.
That none of us is sinless, that all of us need God’s mercy, and that mercy is not earned but freely given.
That the mercy we receive ought to transform us into people who are willing to open ourselves to everyone – seeing our commonality.
That we live with abundance and not scarcity.
That we are called to hope and not fear.

On Friday as I was wrapping up my sermon prep – bishop Easterling posted this to Facebook: with whom will we build a relationship today? with whom will we mend a fence? where will we tear down a wall?

I’m always amazed when things line up – Linda and Bob Bowles will say they don’t believe in coincidence – it is all movement of the Holy Spirit. 

In light of this…in light of the way that God is actively seeking the lost to draw them back into the wholeness of community, with whom will we – Faith church – build a relationship.  With whom will we mend a fence?  With whom will we tear down a wall.

This is our call.  This is our thanksgiving.  This is our joy…to go and do likewise.

May it be so.

Amen.

Sources: Sermon Brainwave podcast (episode 680) from Working Preacher at Luther Seminary; Connections: A Lectionary Commentary for Preaching and Worship (Proper 19, Donald K. McKim & Lynn Japinga).

Comments