Monday, February 17, 2020

February 9, 2020 - God Empowers People to Proclaim the Kingdom - Mark 6:1-29


God Empowers People to Proclaim the Kingdom
Epiphany + 5 – February 9, 2020
“Death of John the Baptist”

Movie Elf
·     Buddy the Elf who isn’t really an elf – discovers he was adopted and makes his way to New York City to find his birth father, Walter
·     Buddy is a Christmas evangelist, so enthusiastic about Santa and everything about Christmas with everyone he meets
·     So much so that he is often misunderstood and rejected
·     Pivotal scene near the end of the movie, Santa’s sleigh has made an emergency landing in Central Park because the engine that powers the sleigh has fallen off
o  Used to be able to fly on its own through the power of people’s belief, but Christmas spirit is so low, people just don’t believe anymore, and so the sleigh has to rely on the engine…

Proclaiming God’s kingdom often leads to rejection
·     Reminds me of scene in Jesus’ hometown of Nazareth
·     Jesus has been having such success up til now! Not without a little pushback here and there – but he’s been healing people and casting out demons
o  A few weeks ago – Legion
o  Last week – woman with the hemorrhage – she just touched his clothes, and they felt this exchange of power that healed her
o  Jesus even brought a little girl back from the dead!
·     Expect more and more and bigger and better
·     Instead, when Jesus goes home, and begins to teach – he finds himself questioned, rejected!
o  Who is this? He’s just a carpenter. Where did he get these ideas?!
·     “And he could do no deed of power there, except that he laid his hands on a few sick people and cured them. And he was amazed at their unbelief.”

·     Goes into villages to teach – and then sends the 12 out 2x2, with his own authority over unclean spirits – and they go out and proclaim that all should repent, casting out demons, anointing with oil many who were sick and curing them (doing what they have been watching Jesus do up until now)

o  Warned, though, that there will likely be some who will not welcome them and listen to their message

·     And then we find out that King Herod has heard about it – word is filtering up – people are wondering who this is. Herod thinks John the Baptist.
·     Last we heard in Mark’s gospel, John had been arrested – which set the stage for Jesus to start proclaiming the good news that God’s kingdom was near
o  And now we hear the rest of the story – John the Baptist – who we know came into the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins – has apparently been calling Herod himself to repentance for the relationship he had developed with his (still-living) brothers wife
o  And Herod is intrigued with him and likes to listen to him, but has him imprisoned
o  And ultimately, has him beheaded, as we saw in the story

Proclaiming God’s kingdom isn’t always well received/welcomed – may lead to rejection
·     Like Buddy the Elf, we live in an era when belief can’t just be assumed
·     And like Jesus and the disciples and John the Baptizer – words about God’s coming kingdom are not always received with joy in our world
·     The good news is that God loves us, no matter what.
·     But declaring God’s coming kingdom also involves a call to repentance, of turning around, of reorienting our lives to live in sync with God’s will for the world
·     And we don’t always want to hear that we might have to change
·     And it’s never been popular to speak truth to those in power (John the Baptist proves that; ) – but we see it still today
o  Those who suffer the fallout when they dare to speak out; who may lose a job or respect of others, who may find themselves on the outs with family or colleagues or others they have worked with
o  Mitt Romney as a most recent example – who dared to speak and act out of the courage of his convictions this past week – and there will be a cost to him
·     Following Jesus means lining up and living out of kingdom values – and sometimes that will put us at risk of losing something we value (even if it’s not as gruesome as losing our heads), of being rejected, of not being welcomed in our hometowns

God empowers people to proclaim the kingdom
·     Buddy the Elf faced rejection and ridicule from most of the people he met. But he had lived at the North Pole, he had worked with the elves, he had known Santa personally before he was sent to meet Walter and maybe help him turn his stubborn, kind of mean life around
o  He knew the love and joy of Christmas - he couldn't keep it too himself – and he reminded his friend (and love interest) Jovie that “the best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear”
·     And through her relationship with Buddy, Jovie came to believe in his message
·     So while he was off trying to fix Santa’s sleigh in the park on Christmas Eve, Jovie screws up her courage and climbs up on a carriage and starts singing “Santa Claus is Coming to Town” to the huge crowd– even though she does NOT sing in public
o  And it’s kind of excruciating, those 1st few lines as everyone turns to stare at her
o  And then Emily, Buddy’s step-mom joins in, singing loudly, if not the most beautifully
o  And then Michael, his little brother starts to sing too
o  And more and more and more people join the song – not just those standing in the crowd, but those watching at home on TV, or at work, or in the bar
o  Until finally even Walter – the most bah-humbug of them all – finally starts to sing –
o  And suddenly, the Claus-O-Meter is full of all of the Christmas spirit and the sleigh takes flight over the crowd’s heads
·     Which is not to say that God needs us to carry out God’s plans to love and redeem and restore the whole world; God is not powered by how much or how little faith we have
·     But God’s plan does include using us to proclaim God’s Kingdom coming near
o  To share and to live and to be good news
·     And we see how that message spreads
o  Through so many of the stories of God’s people and prophets in the Hebrew Scriptures we heard in the fall
o  And in the life of John the Baptist
·     And ultimately in Jesus
o  Who comes to call us to live anew – and to show us how
o  The disciples caught the message – they started to sing along, even when it meant much worse things than crowds staring at them
o  And soon other voices joined the chorus, until it spread around the world and down through the centuries to reach us through people we know and loved and listened to
·     And we get to continue the song, sharing Christ’s message: “The kingdom of God has come near; repent and believe in the good news.” (Mark 1:15)
·     It’s not always easy or comfortable to live into this calling – but God empowers us – and we encourage others when they hear our voices singing along.
·     Go out and spread gospel cheer, sharing good news for all to hear!
·     Amen.


Saturday, February 15, 2020

February 2, 2020 - Jesus Takes the Time to Heal - Mark 5:21-43


Jesus Takes Time to Heal
Epiphany + 4 – February 2, 2020
“Jairus’ Daughter Healed”

Moms everywhere – enter the house and immediately beset by kids who have needs only Mom can fill and questions only Mom can answer
·     My mom – “Can you just give me 5 minutes to get in the door and get settled/groceries put away/etc.

Crowds pressing in – filled with people in needs that only Jesus can deal with
·     Everywhere he goes, as soon as he shows up, there the crowds of people are, pressing in, jostling, trying to get close enough to be healed, to touch him
·     Meet Jairus right away – a man of privilege and position, respected in the community, a leader of the synagogue
o  But none of that matters right now, because that hasn’t helped his daughter – he comes and falls at Jesus’ feet and begs him over and over to come to his house to lay hands on his daughter, who is at death’s door
·     And they are on the way in the big crowd when Mark introduces us to another character, in many ways the polar opposite of Jairus
o  Unnamed
o  Woman
o  Suffering from hemorrhages for 12 years
o  Tried all the doctors and all they suggested – and for all of that, she’s no better; in fact, her condition has gotten worse
o  And she’s spent all of her money
o  Ritually unclean – cut off from community, isolated, invisible
·     And yet here she is too, in the crowd pressing in on Jesus, because she has heard about him, about all of the healings he has done, and this is it, maybe her last chance, the last-ditch attempt to be healed, reaching out for Jesus as her last hope
o  And immediately her hemorrhage stopped and she felt in her body that she was healed – and Jesus is immediately aware that power had gone forth from him and what does he do, as he is on the way to heal a little girl who is near death?
o  He stops the whole procession to ask – “who touched me?”!
o  He looks for the woman – and she comes and tells him the whole truth
o  And Jesus says, “Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.”
·     And who knows how long that who exchange took, but can’t you just imagine if you were Jairus
o  “Daughter? What about MY daughter, Jesus?”
o  Time is slipping away – anxiety rising, near panic! I’d be tapping my foot and looking at my watch and feeling the stress mounting, wanting to grab Jesus by the hand and say, Come ON, Jesus – hurry up before it’s too late!!!

We can imagine ourselves in this crowd. We can imagine ourselves or people we know both
·     as the unnamed woman – chronic illness that goes on and on
o  medical debts piling up and with nothing to show for it
o  sick and in pain for so long that people have stopped reaching out to us,
o  feeling invisible and isolated and alone
o  and still desperate for healing, willing to try whatever new supposed cure comes along
o  (And that’s for people who can access health care! Many remain rather invisible in the system b/c they don’t have $ or insurance and so can’t get care they need for ongoing problems, but only emergency care when it goes too far)
·     Or we have been in the shoes of Jairus’ – begging for a miracle for ourselves or someone we love
o  Asking repeatedly for God to intervene
o  Maybe that unending time between calling 911 and the ambulance showing up
o  Or crying out for addiction to be overcome before the next fix becomes the last one
o  Or sitting at the bedside of someone who is nearing the end of life and wishing for a sign of hope
o  And all the fortune and fame and respect and privilege in the world can’t turn the tide for us, much as we wish it could…
·     And we clamor for Jesus’ attention, like kids who need something from Mom when she walks in the door

Jesus Takes the Time to Heal
·     Unlike most moms who get a little exasperated by the incessant, urgent (but not really that urgent) requests of their kids the second they walk in the door, Jesus doesn’t respond that way
·     When Jairus begs Jesus to come, Jesus goes.
·     When the invisible woman reaches out in desperation to touch Jesus’ clothes, Jesus stops to find out who she is, to hear her story, to acknowledge her humanity, to offer her healing and peace and new life
·     And we learn in this story that it is never too late with Jesus
o  When the neighbors come to tell Jairus it’s too late, your daughter has died
o  Jesus has another word: Do not fear, only believe
·     Even when it seems like time has run out and all hope is gone, nothing with Jesus is ever hopeless
o  And so they continue on to Jairus’ house
o  And Jesus goes with her parents and Peter and James and John into the little girl’s room, and Jesus takes her hand and says, “Little girl, get up!”
§  Be raised – same root word used for Jesus’ resurrection
§  The power of God at work to overcome even the power of death!

Jesus Takes the Time to Heal Us
·     Not to say that Jesus always offers miraculous healings to all
o  Sickness comes; death comes to everyone (even woman and girl in this story are not going to live forever after this encounter – but are healed and restored for now)
o  He offers hope and healing – though they may look different to us than what we most hope for
·     When we are grasping for faith, we reach out for Jesus
o  He notices us in our need
o  He walks with us in our stress and anguish
o  He invites us not to fear, but only believe
·     Believe in the one who will stop everything to find you
·     Believe in the one for whom no situation is too desperate, for whom it is never too late (even if it doesn’t come in our timing…)
·     Believe in Jesus, who takes us by the hand, and calls us to get up!
·     Amen.