“Love is not a victory march, it’s a cold and it’s a broken ‘Hallelujah’.”
~Leonard Cohen
“Love is not a victory march, it’s a cold and it’s a broken ‘Hallelujah’.”
~Leonard Cohen
Hey everybody,
Tonight’s Bible study really got me rethinking the sermon I’ve been preparing for next Sunday at First Presbyterian Church, Rome.
Rather than summing up this week’s discussion, my thoughts will be included in the sermon (which I will post on Sunday).
The text is Luke 12:49-56, in case anyone else wants to offer their two cents on it.
Until then, you’ll just have to read the text and listen for the voice of the Spirit in your own lives!
I’ve been reading Blue Collar Resistance by Tex Sample and I really click with his notion of “pitching tent” among the people with whom one does ministry. Theologically, the idea stems from John 1:14, which reads as follows: “the Word became flesh and lived among us” (NRSV). The Greek word translated here as “lived” is skenoo, which literally means “to pitch one’s tent”. I like Eugene Peterson’s rendering in The Message: “The Word became flesh and blood and moved into the neighborhood.”
Whether one is pitching a tent or moving into the neighborhood, the connotation is the same: Jesus shows up where people “do life”. Christ meets his disciples in the midst of their daily work: mending fishnets and gathering water. His parables of God’s kingdom were inspired by the most mundane activities: planting seeds and baking bread. None of these events are thought of as explicitly “spiritual” activities, yet they seem to be Jesus’ preferred settings for encountering people.
I must admit that I sometimes struggle with my sense of call as a pastor on the street. I sometimes feel like an amateur social worker. Yesterday morning, I helped one guy make flyers and post them around town. In the afternoon, I sat at a cafe with someone and helped him fill out applications for new housing. Neither of these activities seems very “pastoral” at first glance.
We don’t always talk about the Bible or Christianity. Does that mean our time together is spiritually empty? I can’t bring myself to believe that it does. When I look at these growing relationships, I can see God’s hand at work in our ministry. Making flyers and filling out applications are part of “doing life” with people in the margins of society. Following in Jesus’ footsteps, I am trying to pitch my tent with people who have no other pastoral connection. As an act of spiritual solidarity, I have to believe that counts for something.
This morning’s sermon preached at Forest Presbyterian Church in Lyons Falls, NY. My text is Luke 12:32-40.
In the eyes of popular media, inner-city neighborhoods are often portrayed as haunts of violence and lawlessness. The inhabitants of such areas tend to be stereotyped as hardened and dangerous people, who are best avoided by well-to-do suburbanites. I’d like to reassure you this morning that the reality of life “on the street” is far duller than the imagination allows. The lives of our fellow human beings in downtown Utica bear a striking similarity to the lives of people here in Lyons Falls.
I’m thinking right now of Youngblood, a sometime-resident of Genesee Street who is frequently in trouble with the law due to his activities as a vendor of controlled substances. One day, Youngblood and I were driving to an appointment with his probation officer and he said, “Man, I been reading about this 2012 s**t. They say the world is gonna come to an end. Is that stuff really in the Bible?” What strikes me about Youngblood’s question is that this is the exact same question that many people are asking in churches these days.
In fact, people have been asking this question on and off for many years. Before the massive influx of literature regarding the end of the Mayan Calendar on December 21, 2012, many of us will undoubtedly remember the great fuss that accompanied the arrival of the year 2000. Going a little farther back in history, much attention has been given to the quatrains of Nostradamus (which have never been successfully used to predict an event before-the-fact) and other Apocalyptically-minded “prophets”. Almost forgotten is the chaos that surrounded the turning of the last Millennium in the year 1000. Kings and Popes were found muttering prayers in cathedrals at midnight, certain of the earth’s impending doom.
Several bestselling “road maps” for the end of the world, notably the Left Behind novels by Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins and The Late Great Planet Earth by Hal Lindsey, claim to take their information straight from the pages of the Bible itself. As a result, many Christians have become increasingly confused and anxious about the so-called “end of the world”. While rational believers are typically disinclined to accept the dark predictions of such fanatics, we sometimes wonder, “What does the Bible really say about that stuff?”
To fully answer that question would take much longer than the time we have this morning, but we can begin by looking at the gospel text we have in front of us. In verse 40, Jesus tells his followers, “You… must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an unexpected hour.” This is one of those Bible verses that often get painted on billboards, bumper stickers, and picket signs. During his growing up years, my father heard sermons on texts like this one. The preacher would thunder, “When Jesus returns, you wouldn’t want him to find you out dancing or at the movies, would you?!” Trusting that Jesus doesn’t really have a problem with people going to movies and dancing, it makes sense to ask the question: what then does it actually mean to “be ready” for the unexpected coming of the “Son of Man”?
To answer this question, we must first establish what it is that we should be ready for. When Jesus uses the phrase “Son of Man”, he is making use of an ancient Hebrew expression that means “human being”. This phrase is the one that Jesus uses most often in reference to himself. Many scholars agree that, in this particular case, Jesus is identifying himself with the figure seen in a vision by the Hebrew prophet Daniel:
As I watched in the night visions, I saw one like a human being coming with the clouds of heaven. And he came to the Ancient One and was presented before him. 14To him was given dominion and glory and kingship, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that shall not pass away, and his kingship is one that shall never be destroyed. (Daniel 7:13-14)
This human being in Daniel’s vision, who receives eternal authority over the nations of the world, appears immediately after God subdues the other empires of the earth, all of which appear in the vision as vicious and wild animals. The message is clear about God’s plan for the future: to reform the many violent and animalistic nations of the world into one human society. Jesus presents himself as the crux and the catalyst for this new human society.
In the book of Revelation, the apostle John expands on Daniel’s vision:
I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. 2And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. 3And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “See, the home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them as their God; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them; 4he will wipe every tear from their eyes. Death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no more, for the first things have passed away.” (Revelation 21:1-4)
According to John’s vision, the face of the earth is renewed and all suffering is erased. Ironically, no one flies away to heaven in either of these visions because heaven comes here! Isn’t this exactly what we ask for each week when we pray the Lord’s Prayer: “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven”?
I believe that one of my favorite modern-day prophets, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., had this eternal vision in mind when he spoke about that day “when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing together in the words of the old negro spiritual: free at last, free at last, thank God Almighty, we are free at last!”
So, when Jesus tells his followers to “be ready”, I believe this heaven-on-earth is what he had in mind, not some apocalyptic vision of destruction through fire and brimstone. Later in his vision, Daniel states explicitly that “the holy ones of the Most High shall receive the kingdom and possess the kingdom forever” (Daniel 7:18). Daniel’s vision bears remarkable similarities to Jesus’ words of comfort in Luke 12:32: “Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.” This is beginning to sound like good news, isn’t it?
How then, do we make ourselves ready for the fulfillment of these visions? I think Jesus gives us a hint in verse 33: “Sell your possessions, and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. 34For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”
This little nugget of advice from Jesus is part of a larger block of teaching found in Luke 12. It starts when someone comes to Jesus in verse 13, asking him to resolve a family dispute regarding an inheritance. Jesus declines to get involved and embarks instead on a teaching about greed and anxiety. From God’s point of view, the acquisition of material goods is not an end in itself, but merely a means to an end. The only worthwhile end, in God’s eyes, is that vision we read about in Daniel and Revelation. Material possessions are only helpful insofar as they contribute to the establishment of that kingdom of heaven-on-earth.
You and I live in a world where we are inundated with messages telling us that true happiness can be achieved if only we would purchase this or that product. I recently saw a commercial for a brand of beer that is apparently favored by “the most interesting man in the world”. I don’t know about you, but in my experience, consuming alcohol has little to no effect on how “interesting” a person is!
Jesus, in today’s gospel reading, invites you and me to check out of this empty process and invest in projects that have eternal value. To the person who came asking him to arbitrate a family dispute, Jesus had this advice:
…why do you not judge for yourselves what is right? 58Thus, when you go with your accuser before a magistrate, on the way make an effort to settle the case, or you may be dragged before the judge, and the judge hand you over to the officer, and the officer throw you in prison. 59I tell you, you will never get out until you have paid the very last penny. (Luke 12:57-59)
Whether the world’s game for you is consumerism, fear, or conflict, Jesus’ invitation is to stop playing. If you play, you will lose because the game isn’t fair. This is why Jesus said, “Sell your possessions, and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. 34For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” When we stop playing this world’s games, we are liberated to participate more fully in God’s vision of heaven-on-earth. This is what it means to “be ready” for the unexpected coming of the “Son of Man”.
So, what does the Bible really say about all that end-of-the-world stuff? We have seen that God’s vision for the final destiny of the world is one of redemption and not destruction. The best way for us to “be ready” for this redemption is by checking out of this world’s silly games of fear & greed and living lives based on spiritual values such as generosity and reconciliation.
Living our lives according to these values will necessarily put us at odds with the world around us. The world says that the only way to successfully establish a kingdom is through violence and anxiety. But our ace in the hole as Christians is that we don’t have to build anything! As Jesus told his followers in Luke 12:32: “Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.” We already have everything we need to accomplish this task and more! It’s not up to us to produce or construct or build God’s kingdom of heaven-on-earth because it has already been given to us.
I ask you this morning: how are you making yourself ready to participate in God’s vision? Jesus told his followers to sell their possessions. Most of us in this room probably aren’t ready to take that step. But maybe we can begin to ask hard questions about our relationship to those things. Do we own our possessions or do they own us? How does my use of time, talent, and treasure communicate the spiritual values upon which I base my life as a Christian? As you seek to answer these questions for yourself, remember that you already have everything you need.
I met a woman several years ago who had been very anxious about the turn of the Millennium. In preparation for a global disaster, she stockpiled food and water in her basement. When New Year’s Day came and went without a hitch, she was suddenly embarrassed to have an entire barrel of wheat berries and no idea of what to do with it. Over the next few years, she slowly emptied the barrel and gave bags of wheat berries to family and friends as gifts. I love this image: the unnecessary byproduct of this person’s fear and anxiety was transformed into a nourishing gift for an entire community. What better illustration can there be for how God wants to redeem our anxieties about the end of the world? Amen.
Tonight’s Bible study discussion was on Luke 12:32-40.
OK, so it looks like we got another one of those scary “end of the world” passages this week (insert famous REM song here). Judging by the number of Hal Lindsey and Tim LaHaye books on the market, I’d say there’s a lot of money to be made from other Christians’ eschatological anxiety. Ironically, I think it was Jesus’ intention to reduce the anxiety of his followers in this particular section of teaching.
To be fair, there is a lot of talk about being ready for the Son of Man’s unexpected arrival. Our group spent a lot of time brainstorming about what it means to “be ready” for the culmination of human history. Some of us at St. James Mission embrace a more literal interpretation of the Second Coming. Others of us prefer to speak more generally in terms of “facing our mortality”. Either way, we shared a lot of common ground when it came to how we should prepare.
One person commented on how “being ready” consists of “walking the path” of “keeping yourself open” to compassion. Here are some ways in which the members of our community are trying to do just that:
To me, these are signs of the times (in a good way). Rather than foretelling the coming of doom and gloom, these vignettes indicate the presence of God in our midst during an age of conflict.

“Jesus has been so zealously worshipped, his deity so vehemently affirmed, his halo so brightly illumined, and his cross so beautifully polished that in the minds of many he no longer exists as a man. He has become an exquisite celestial being who momentarily and mistakenly lapsed into a painful involvement in the human scene, and then quite properly returned to his heavenly habitat. By thus glorifying him we more effectively rid ourselves of him than did those who tried to do so by crudely crucifying him.”
~Clarence Jordan, from the Introduction to the Cotton Patch Version of Luke and Acts
Tonight’s Bible study discussion was on Luke 11:1-13.
Somebody made a good point tonight that this parable of Jesus casts the listener in the ‘receiving’ role instead of the ‘doing’ role. This text is all about how we receive from God. More specifically, it’s about God the giver.
I used to read this parable as a lesson in persistent prayer. If we pray hard enough and long enough, we get what we want. However, walking away from tonight’s discussion, I think this parable is a statement about God as the generous and liberal giver.
When we come to God in prayer, we don’t always get what we ask for. Someone else in the group pointed out that a person might ask God for more money when God would rather make that person more content with what he or she has. More importantly, I would add, when we come to God in prayer, we receive that which we need most: God’s own self.
Like the friend in the story who asked for bread, we come in search of Christ, the Bread of Life. One newcomer pointed out a possible Trinitarian allusion in the friend’s request for “three loaves”. More than the reluctant friend in the story, God is eager to get involved out of love for the world. This gift of self is what God liberally pours out in the person of Christ. Likewise, Christ promises in this passage, not that God will grant our every request, but that God will “give the Holy Spirit to those who ask.”
Whatever my situation, I find that I am best able to deal with it when I am most attuned to God’s presence with me in that moment (contemplative exercises such as centering prayer help me most in this regard). Sometimes, the act of prayer leads to a change in my circumstances. Other times, the act of prayer leads to a change in me.
As Bishop Gene Robinson put it, “Sometimes God calms the storm and sometimes God calms the child.”
For those who are interested, here is a brief introduction to centering prayer from my wife’s Davidson College classmate, Fr. Matthew Moretz:

Preached this morning at the Twin Churches in Holland Patent, NY. The text is Luke 10:38-42.
One of the most common misconceptions about Christians is that we’re mainly interested in getting our “pie in the sky in the sweet by and by”. People tend to think that Christians want to escape from the harsh realities of this world and live in an insulated bubble until they receive their blessed reward after death. Karl Marx shared this misconception when he wrote in The Communist Manifesto that Christians are interested in salvation when what the world needs is revolution. That’s why he referred to religion as the “opiate of the masses”.
To be fair, many Christians have earned this reputation for being too heavenly-minded. Some of us sing hymns like, I’ll Fly Away and This World is Not My Home. Some of us use our faith as an excuse to disengage from important discussions about problems like poverty and injustice. We say, “I’m just glad that Jesus is coming back soon to take us away from all this mess!”
Certain passages of Scripture, such as the one we read from Luke’s gospel this morning, are often used to justify our disengagement. Many believe that Jesus is honoring Mary over Martha for investing in spiritual pursuits rather than worldly ones. Several theologians have even taken the two sisters as metaphors for the life of Action (Martha) and the life of Contemplation (Mary). The great reformer John Calvin attacked this interpretation head-on when he wrote about this passage in his Commentaries, “no sacrifice is more pleasing to God, than when every [person] applies diligently to his (or her) own calling, and endeavors to live in such a manner as to contribute to the general advantage.” What Calvin is trying to say is that a life of passive contemplation lived in isolation from the harsh realities of the world is actually less holy than a life lived in service to God and one’s neighbors, not vice versa. I tend to agree with Calvin in believing that what Jesus has in mind for Mary (and for us) is not a life of cloistered mysticism, but a life of discipleship. To put it another way, Jesus does not want to take us out of the world; Jesus wants to change the way we interact with the world.
Let’s take a closer look at this passage in order to get a clearer picture of what Jesus is talking about with Mary and Martha.
Our story begins on a rather bizarre and radical note. Jesus is welcomed into the home of a woman named Martha as he makes his way toward Jerusalem. We see first that Martha is the one to welcome Jesus into her home. This is odd because we know from John’s gospel that Mary and Martha had a brother named Lazarus who lived with them as well. In first century Palestine, it was customary for men to do the welcoming and govern all interactions between the household and the outside world. Why then is Martha the one to welcome Jesus? Second, the house itself is referred to as Martha’s house. Again, property was traditionally owned by a male member of the family. We can see already that this family tends to push boundaries when it comes to gender roles and stereotypes. Martha comes across as a strong woman with an independent personality.
Things get even stranger when we learn about Martha’s sister Mary. We read that she “sat at Jesus’ feet and listened to what he was saying.” This might sound like a passive and submissive posture at first (maybe even a little demeaning to “sit at someone’s feet”), but it’s important to realize that to sit at the feet of a rabbi in the ancient Jewish world meant that you had been accepted as a disciple of that rabbi. This should have been impossible for women in that culture, yet Jesus welcomes her into the community of disciples. While we are most familiar with the famous twelve disciples (who were all Jewish males), the author of Luke’s gospel seems to be telling us on the sly that Jesus accepted women as disciples as well. In another passage we see Jesus doing the same for a Gentile (a non-Jewish person). In that culture, theological education under a rabbi was a privilege reserved for Jewish men only (no women or Gentiles allowed).
The next thing we learn is that Martha seems to be having a hectic day. Our translation says she was “distracted”, but the term in Greek is periespato, which literally means “yanked around”. So it would be fair to translate the sentence to say, “Martha was being yanked around by her many tasks.” Have you ever had a day like that? I sure have! Sometimes I feel like there just isn’t enough time, money, or energy to get everything done that needs doing. Sometimes my appointment calendar and to-do list run my life so efficiently that I forget to leave enough time for myself, my family, or God. It’s not long before I start to feel like a spinning top that starts to wobble as it runs out of energy. Stop me if this doesn’t sound familiar! I think we can all relate to what Martha is going through. Isn’t that just the way life in the real world goes? So it makes sense that Martha gets upset when she perceives that Mary might be checking out of reality.
Martha snaps, “Rabbi, do you not care that my sister has left me to do all the work by myself? Tell her then to help me.” Martha expects Jesus to help her sister snap out of it and get back to work, but Jesus does something surprising and gives Martha the reality check.
After acknowledging all the hard work that Martha is doing, Jesus tells her that “there is need of only one thing” and that Mary had “chosen the better part”. What is this “one thing” and “better part” that Jesus was talking about? We have already established that Mary had taken the position of a disciple and was listening to her rabbi teach. We are not told exactly what Jesus was teaching her at the time, but we can assume it was probably consistent with the kinds of things we’ve heard Jesus teach elsewhere. In these ten chapters of Luke’s gospel (9:51-19:27), Jesus and his disciples are moving slowly toward Jerusalem where he will suffer, die, and rise again on the third day. His teachings in this section have a few common themes that run through them: the cost of discipleship, the inclusion of outsiders in God’s family, and principles for living as spiritually-centered people in difficult world. Jesus constantly finds himself getting into conflict with the political, religious, and economic realities of his day. These days, we call them governments, churches, and corporations. Jesus taught his disciples to resist the effect these things have on our consciousness by practicing things like simplicity of life, care for neighbors, regular prayer, reconciliation with enemies, and non-anxiety over daily needs. Jesus then sends his disciples back into this hostile world as agents of healing. Theirs is an active and engaged spirituality that doesn’t prepare people to “fly away” to heaven, but instead shouts out loud in the streets, “The kingdom of God has come near you.” Jesus doesn’t send people to heaven; he brings heaven here! Remember the Lord’s Prayer? “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven”.
This, I think, is the “one thing” and the “better part” that Jesus had in mind when he was talking to Mary and Martha. I also think this is what God has in store for you and me. We don’t have to be constantly yanked around anymore by the demands of this broken world-system. Nor do we have to cloister ourselves behind walls of piety and heavenly-mindedness. We can choose instead to sit at the feet of our Rabbi Jesus and face this world again as spiritually-centered agents of healing.
May God’s kingdom come and God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Amen.

I walked by the Agape Center on Genesee Street today, where the kids have decorated every square inch of sidewalk on the block with chalk. The way the colors are jumbled together makes the sidewalk look like a chaotic rainbow.
As one might expect, there are various images depicting a combination of real-life scenes and abstract symbols. One can see crosses, houses, flowers, even a shark! Some have messages written on them (“Room 8 Rocks!”) while others let the images speak for themselves. The collective effect is that one stretch of concrete along Genesee Street outside the old St. Francis de Sales School is now radiant with the glory of creative outburst.
The scene reminds me of the story of the Transfiguration, where Christ ascends Mt. Tabor with his disciples and temporarily radiates the brilliance that resides within him. For just a moment, ordinary flesh and clothing were, in the words of Gerard Manley Hopkins, “charged with the grandeur of God”.
But this brilliant dust is sure to be washed away by some combination of footsteps and rain and we, like the disciples who had to walk back down the mountain to the harsh reality of their ministry, must find a way to draw strength from the gift of this moment.
As I was admiring our freshly transfigured sidewalk, I was approached by a woman who had been one of my clients at the Addiction Crisis Center. Since finishing that program, she has continued in her recovery and now works for another service organization, helping others who now sit where she sat only a few years ago. Brighter than the dust beneath our feet, which is soon to disappear, her sober life shines on as an ongoing transfiguration, reflecting the eternal glory that surrounds us always, even if we can only see it for a moment.

In this week’s Lectio Divina Bible Study at St. James Mission, we explored the parable of the Good Samaritan, found in Luke 10:25-37.
One thing I’ve noticed again and again in my work with people in the margins is that the spirituality that develops there has a certain practicality to it. For example, I was leading one man through our catechism class and reflecting with him on the meaning of the Apostles’ Creed. When we came to the line: “He will come again”, this person had no interest in abstract theologies of the parousia or the end-times. Instead he said, “Christ comes again in us. Christ puts us on like the white coat that a doctor puts on when she goes out to heal people.” Likewise, another person studying for Confirmation understood the ascension to be a statement about God’s constant presence with us (he said that with Christ, we too are “seated at the right hand of the Father”). Spirituality, for people on the street, is something practical and embodied.
This week’s exploration of Jesus’ parable of the Good Samaritan was no exception to this rule. In many ways, they could relate to Jesus, who spoke of disconnected religious leaders who would rather cross the road than encounter a bleeding, hurting human being. They see in Jesus the impetus to reach out and live as God’s compassionate people in the world. Not much was said about the historical or literary context of the text. Instead, our people were interested in the story itself.
One elderly woman told a story of meeting her neighbor this week. He was looking for some piece of furniture in which he could store his clothes. She didn’t have anything that would fit. But later, as she was walking down the block, she saw a set of shelves that would work perfectly. Unfortunately, as frail as she is, she was unable to drag the item home. Instead, she said that she felt the Lord tell her, “Go this way” around a corner. There was a man standing there who was quite willing to help her drag the shelves upstairs. As it turns out, he was out of work and looking to do odd-jobs around the neighborhood. She paid him some cash, he gave her his card, and the neighbor got a shelf.
This woman became a living parable on Oneida Street. Like the Samaritan, she is a marginalized person living in hostile territory. Also, she went out of her way to embody compassion for a neighbor in need. Finally, she formed an impromptu community of compassion, just like the Samaritan involved the local innkeeper in caring for the robbed man.
This is what an embodied Christian spirituality looks like for the people in our community at St. James Mission. It has little to do with denominational affiliation or theological orientation. Instead, the presence of Christ in our midst becomes most apparent as we commit and celebrate these random acts of kindness in the daily grind of life in Utica, NY.