The God’s Eye View

Sermon for the second Sunday after the Epiphany

The biblical text is John 1:29-42.

Most of us have experienced what it feels like to be misjudged or misunderstood.

The pain of that memory can sometimes cause us to seethe with anger at the injustice, even years after the fact.

Less common and less visceral are memories of times when we have discovered ourselves to be the ones misjudging others.

Psychologists have discovered a reason for this: they call it “the fundamental attribution error.”

What it means is that people tend to name external circumstances as the cause of their own faults, while simultaneously blaming other peoples’ faults on defects of character.

Here’s an example: You are at a stoplight and rush in front of another driver.

You think to yourself, “Sorry about that, but I can’t be late for work!”

Now, if you’re the driver in the other car, and you see this happen in front of you, you think, “What a jerk! They don’t know how to drive!”

That’s the fundamental attribution error in action. The first driver chalks the mistake up to circumstances, while the second driver chalks it up to the other person’s character.

People do this. In the story of our own lives, we tend to cast ourselves in the role of either the hero or the victim, but never as the bad guy. The role of villain is given to someone else.

But here’s the funny thing: the “bad guys” in each of our stories are the “good guys” in their own story, while we ourselves are the “bad guys” in their stories.

The world loves to divide people into categories: us and them, good guys and bad guys, heroes and villains.

We pass judgment on one another and react, rather than respond, when circumstances turn inconvenient.

It’s as though each of us is in the process of writing our own superhero comic book, fighting like mad to ensure that the “good guys” win in the end.

The problem is that, when we do this, we aren’t relating to each other as whole people, each with their own complex challenges of circumstance and character.

Life is complicated. People are complicated. And at the end of the day, there are no good guys or bad guys, just people.

In today’s gospel, we get to see an example of a time when one person was able to look at another and see the truth beneath the surface of that person.

When St. John the Baptist looked at Jesus, he saw past the categories that other people put on him. John saw Jesus for who he truly is.

Jesus was no stranger to being misjudged by other people. Time and again in the gospels, people can’t get past the categories in which they had placed him:

Son of Joseph, carpenter, heretic, radical. Even his own family came to believe that Jesus was crazy.

All of these people made up their minds about Jesus and dismissed him.

But John the Baptist doesn’t do that. John sees Jesus with a different set of eyes.

The gospel calls John a “prophet”, one who was “sent from God” as “a witness to the light.” Whatever else this may mean, we can at least say that it means this:

John the Baptist saw Jesus for who he was, from a spiritually-centered point-of-view.

We know that John lived simply, out in the desert. He had few possessions and sustained himself, as the text of the Bible tells us, on “locusts and wild honey.” As far as we can tell, he was unmarried. He was given to prayer and the preaching of spiritual renewal in baptism.

When Jesus arrives on the scene, John is ready to see him differently too.

Where some saw just another crazy person or heretic, John saw Jesus’ true self, beyond the categories imposed on him by the world.

This ability is not unique to John.

We get a glimpse, in John’s vision, of the way God sees each and every one of us. When we feel misunderstood or misjudged, God looks at us and seeing past the shell of worldly categories to the treasure beneath the surface of our lives.

That treasure is there in your life because it was placed there by God.

Even better, God wants us to see that treasure too, so that we can share it with others. Whenever our dignity is maligned by our neighbors (or even ourselves), God is working quietly behind the scenes to bring prophets like John into our lives who will see and draw out that divine treasure.

I believe that John’s gift of spiritual insight is available to all of us, if we choose to make use of it.

Our spiritual practices sharpen and focus the way we look at the world and our understanding of the people around us. The Scriptures and the Sacraments keep us connected to the core beliefs and values that tell us there is inherent dignity in every human life, no matter what categories people may try to impose on it.

We read in the Bible that our neighbors are reflections of God’s image, members of the Body of Christ, and living stones in the temple of the Holy Spirit. In the Sacraments, we all pass through the waters of Baptism and partake of the bread and cup of the Eucharist as members of the one Body of Christ. We are part of each other, precisely because we are part of Christ. This is how St. Paul is able to say, “The eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I have no need of you,’ nor again the head to the feet, ‘I have no need of you.’” (1 Cor. 12:21)

In prayer and meditation, we connect the joys and concerns of daily living to our divine life in God. Even secular psychologists have come to admit in recent years that the practice of meditation is good for human relationships. It lowers stress levels and raises empathy, so that we can respond to crises from a place of peace, rather than react out of anger.

Spiritually centered people don’t see “good guys” and “bad guys,” but “people.” They don’t think in terms of “us” and “them,” but “We.”

God sees each of us as beloved children. People who see the world from God’s point-of-view see their neighbors in that same way.

That’s how John saw Jesus. That’s how God sees us.

My prayer this morning is that we too will continue, day by day, through Word and Sacrament, through prayer and meditation, to look at each other in this same way. When we do, we will be seeing one another with the eyes of God.

Jesus Goes Viral

Today’s sermon from First Pres, Boonville.

The text is John 1:29-42.

Click here to see the famous video mentioned in the sermon.

At the end of 2004, an 18 year old named Gary Brolsma in Saddle Brook, New Jersey was goofing around on his computer one night.  He came across a catchy pop song sung by an eastern European boy band.  As a joke, he used his webcam to record himself lip-synching and dancing along to the tune.  He posted the video online for his friends to chuckle at.

Within a few months, Gary’s video had been viewed by millions of people all over the world.  People everywhere started imitating Gary’s improvised dance and posting their own videos online.  The song was re-recorded by artists in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, North & South America, and Africa.  Gary himself became an overnight celebrity.  Today, most people under the age of thirty will smile and nod their heads if you ask them about “the Numa Numa Guy”.

If you watch the video yourself (it can still be found on Google and You Tube), it’s easy to see why people took such an instant liking to it.  Here is an average-looking, young person throwing all self-consciousness and inhibition to the wind.  He’s just going for it, dancing and singing along in a language he doesn’t even know: “Nu ma, nu ma iei!”  He is totally “in the moment”, relishing the joy of being alive and silly.

Sociologists and pop culture enthusiasts have coined the phrase “going viral” to describe people, ideas, and products like this one, that rise to fame without the aid of professional publicists or corporate marketing campaigns.  Advertising executives are extremely jealous of the Numa Numa Guy and the dance that he inspired.  They desperately want to figure out what causes videos like this to “go viral” (i.e. attain overnight recognition through word-of-mouth).   Personally, I think people watch and imitate the Numa Numa dance because they want to share in the experience of that kind of joy and freedom.  I think people’s desire to live life to its fullest is what has caused the Numa Numa dance to “go viral”.

In today’s gospel reading, we can see another instance of an experience “going viral”.  But this time, it’s not the experience of a video but of a person, Jesus Christ.  John, Andrew, and Simon all experience something in Jesus that they then pass on to the next person.  As we read about their experiences, we learn about who Jesus is and what we can expect from our experiences with him.

First, we learn from John that his experience with Jesus is surprising and unexpected.  We know from other parts of Scripture that John was a prophet and a revival preacher who was not afraid to say what was on his mind and in his heart.  He was expecting the arrival of a judge who would come “with the Holy Spirit and fire”.  When Jesus finally shows up, what John sees is a “lamb” and not a judge.  Furthermore, the Holy Spirit comes “as a dove” and not “with fire”.  The reality of Jesus is so far off from John’s expectations that John himself is forced to admit that he would have missed the experience entirely had it not been for the direct intervention of the Holy Spirit.  He says, “I myself did not know him, but the one who sent me to baptize with water said to me, ‘He on whom you see the Spirit descend and remain is the one who baptizes with the Holy Spirit.’”

John’s experience with Jesus begins to go viral as he shares it with his friend Andrew and one other person.  Shortly thereafter, Andrew has his own experience with Jesus.  He experiences Jesus as an inviting and hospitable person.  During their first encounter, Andrew and his friend express an interest in getting to know Jesus better.  Jesus invites them both to “Come and see.”  He opens his home to them and (literally and figuratively) lets them in.

The viral spread of this Jesus experience continues as Andrew shares his experience with his brother Simon.  More than anything else, Simon’s experience with Jesus can be described as “revealing”.  Jesus looks at Simon and gives him a new name (“Cephas” or “Peter”).  This is not just a nickname that Jesus came up with.  Jesus is making a statement about who Simon is.  The name “Peter” means “Rock”.  This statement of Christ’s became significant as Simon Peter went on to become a leader in the early Church.  He would be a “rock” that others could lean on for support.  Already, in this early moment, Jesus is revealing to Simon something about his true self and his true calling in the world.

Like John, Andrew, and Simon, I too have experienced Jesus as surprising, inviting, and revealing.  Growing up in the Bible belt of the American south, I came to think of Jesus as a fiery judge.  I was afraid of him.  But as I grew to know him better through the Scriptures, I heard his stories of the lost sheep and the prodigal son.  I saw him forgiving sinners and befriending the outcast.  Like John the Baptist, I was surprised at who Jesus turned out to be.  Like Andrew, I found him to be a warm and welcoming person who wants to be close to us.  In time, I came to think of Jesus as my friend.  Instead of fearing him, I grew to love him.

This change in the way I think about Jesus sparked a corresponding change in the way I think about myself.  Because Jesus loves and accepts me as I am, I can love and accept myself.  If there is one miracle that Christ has worked in my life, it has been the slow but steady melting away of my self-consciousness and inhibitions when it comes to life and relationships.  Like Simon Peter, I feel like Jesus is helping me to gradually discover my true self and my true calling in the world.  In Christ, I am beginning to experience the joy and freedom in life that people are reaching for when they do the Numa Numa dance.

That’s the story of my experience with Jesus.  Yours will undoubtedly be different.  Each one of us experiences Christ in a way that is unique to us.  No two people experiences are identical.  John, Andrew, and Simon all met the same Jesus, yet each one of them had an experience that was different from the others.  John experienced Christ as “surprising”, Andrew experienced him as “Inviting”, while Simon experienced him as “Revealing”.  Likewise, some of us here might have come to faith in Christ through a radical moment of conversion.  Others of us have gradually grown in faith without a dramatic “before” and “after” story.  Some of us have come to understand Christ as a teacher or healer.  Others primarily think of him as the One who forgives our sins.

Whatever your experience of Jesus is, whatever Christ means to you, I want to encourage you to tell your story.  Tell it to yourself.  Tell it to someone else.  Let your individual experience of Jesus inform and inspire those around you.  That’s what “going viral” means.  One person has an experience and shares that experience with another person.

I pray that our individual experiences of Jesus will “go viral” in our church and our community.  I pray that others will be inspired by our witness to “come and see” for themselves what life with Christ is all about.  And I pray that their subsequent experience of Christ’s love will lead them to dance and sing with the same uninhibited exuberance that inspired Gary Brolsma and the millions of others who sang his song: “Nu ma, nu ma iei!”