Sunday, August 14, 2016

"A Different Kind of Peace." A sermon on Luke 12:49-59 from Littlefield Presbyterian Church



"A Different Kind of Peace"

Luke 12:49-59


“I came to bring fire to the earth, and how I wish it were already kindled!”  “Do you think I have come to bring peace to the earth?  No I tell you, but rather division!
We live in a broken, divided world.  With all the divisiveness in our society these days, it seems like the last thing we need is more division! 
These sound like harsh and difficult words from Jesus.  Where’s the “gentle Jesus, meek and mild” we like so much?       
“You know how to interpret the appearance of earth and sky,” Jesus said to the crowds, “but why do you not know how to interpret the present time?”
            How are we to interpret what Jesus is saying?  Can it help us to interpret our present time?
I think it’s helpful to reflect on Jesus’ own sense of identity and mission, to help us understand what he is trying to say in these difficult words.   Early in the lesson, we hear Jesus saying, “I have a baptism with which to be baptized, and what stress I am under until it is completed!”  It was in his baptism that Jesus came to a clear consciousness of who he was.  As he came out of the waters of the Jordan, he heard God saying, “You are my Son, the Beloved.  With you I am well pleased.” 
Jesus’ sense of himself was rooted and grounded in God’s love for him.   Filled with this deep sense of being enfolded in God’s love, Jesus was driven by the Spirit out into the wilderness, where he was tempted by Satan.  In that wilderness time of forty days and forty nights, Jesus had to struggle with how he would live out his identity--whether he would open his life to God’s larger purposes, and how he would respond to the mission into which God was calling him.
            Luke tells us that Jesus, filled with the power of the Holy Spirit, returns to Galilee and goes to his hometown of Nazareth.  He goes into the synagogue.  In the synagogue, he was given the scroll of the prophet Isaiah.  He unrolls the scroll and finds the place where it is written, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor.  He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind…to let the oppressed go free…to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”[1]
            Then Jesus rolls up the scroll, and sits down.  The eyes of everybody in the synagogue were on him.  Then he begins to say to them, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”[2]
            In Jewish thought, the year of the Lord’s favor is the year of Jubilee, and the year of Jubilee is the time in which all relationships are re-ordered, all patterns of indebtedness are set aside, and the whole fabric of society is restructured according to God’s desire…God’s plan that all may be free…that all may live in relationships of love and peace.  So Jesus makes a public declaration of what his mission is.[3]
            I’m grateful to the Most Rev. Frank Griswold, former head of the Episcopal Church, for pointing me to the connection to the Jewish term, “tikkun olam,” which means “repair of the world.”  This may be a familiar idea to any of you who are aware of Rabbi Michael Lerner’s writings and the Tikkun community. 
            I believe Jesus’ mission is very much about repairing the world, re-ordering disordered relationships, and overcoming the disparities that create injustice.    I think that in the strong words we just heard in today’s Gospel lesson, we hear Jesus’ sense of urgency about his call to do God’s will.  We hear an urgency to bring about God’s work of reconciliation and binding up and making whole. 
            I believe this is truly gospel—good news, because it is a message of compassion and healing.  But it is also a challenging message, because it calls people to change.  It calls us to re-order our lives, and it calls us to a new awareness.  
            Jesus saw many of the religious practices of his day as a means of protecting or distracting against the deeper demands of God, as a way of insulating one’s self against the calls of God’s greater righteousness and God’s call to reorder all things in justice and peace.
            Churches and other religious organizations can be very self-serving, rather than other-serving.  We can get caught up in the little details or the structures of our religious traditions or in the comfort of being in our “church family”, and we can miss the deeper  invitation that is the heart of all authentic religion—that is to allow ourselves to be broken open by God’s gracious love so that our own identity and the call to be joined together with Christ in mission makes us, with Christ, repairers of the world.
            Jesus says, “I came to bring fire to the earth.  How I wish it were already kindled.”  Do you sense his urgency…his passion?   On that first Easter, when Cleopas and another disciple finally recognized the stranger with whom they’d walked to Emmaus, they exclaimed, “Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the scriptures?”[4]
            John Calvin, one of our spiritual ancestors in the Reformed faith, experienced a change in the passions of his heart and said, “My heart I give the Lord eagerly and sincerely.”   Calvin’s seal was a hand stretched out from a burning heart.
            The flames at the foot of the cross of our Presbyterian Church (USA) symbol remind us of the beginning of the Christian church, when the Holy Spirit baptized the apostles with fire at Pentecost, charging them to be messengers of the good news of God’s love.

            “Do you think I came to bring peace to the earth?” Jesus said.  No.
The way Eugene Peterson translates it in The Message, Jesus said, “I’ve come to change everything, to turn everything right-side up.  How I long for it to be finished!   Do you think I came to smooth things and make everything nice?   Not so.  I’ve come to disrupt and confront.”
            When Jesus said he didn’t come to bring peace to the earth, I think the kind of peace he was talking about here is the kind of easy, superficial peace that papers over things, sweeps things under the rug, while leaving the disorder beneath the surface.  In the Gospel of John, Jesus says, “I come to bring peace, but my peace is not of this world.”[5]
            The peace Jesus brings requires a deep re-ordering of our own interior life and a re-ordering of our relationships with one another.  It is a costly and demanding peace that requires a transformation of our attitudes and imagination.  When we allow this costly and demanding peace to transform our lives, we sometimes experience division—division within ourselves, as we struggle with our desire to open ourselves to God’s transforming work and reconciliation and our fears that the cost may be too great.  We’re afraid that following Jesus may demand too much of us.  And so we compromise, we try to “be realistic.”  We try to explain away the challenge of the Gospel.
            Jesus confronts us with the uncomfortable question:  “Why do you not know how to interpret the present time?”  In other words, why will you not look at the world around you through the lense of faith? 
            “Why do you not judge for yourselves what is right?”  Jesus asks.  The English is more ambiguous in meaning than the original Greek, which would more accurately be translated, “Judge for yourself what is just.” 

            The social and economic context for this saying is the rampant debt that was destroying families and communities throughout Palestine in Jesus’ time.  If disputes about debts reached the Roman legal system, the debtor would receive one of two verdicts.  Either the debtor would be forced into indentured service to work off the debt, or the debtor would be thrown into prison until family members managed to scrape together the money needed to pay off the debt—often by selling off their land.  It was a system that allowed the rich to get richer, and that spelled the ruin of the poor.  That’s why, when the Zealots entered Jerusalem at the start of the war of 66 C.E., the first thing they did was to burn the debt records!
            In Jesus’ time, the only way to avoid playing such blatant injustice,  would be to settle cases before they went to court.  Whatever the actual patterns of debt and credit, justice required that the system be brought to an end.    Those who have heard Jesus proclaim that God’s reign is at hand[6]  see the need to end the debts and credits of  “business as usual.”
            Now, this was not a new idea.  When the Old Testament talks about land ownership, it does so in the context of the year of Jubilee, which was supposed to be held every 50th year, when all debts are forgiven, and all land reverts back to its original owner or his descendants. 
            In addition, every seventh year, land owners were supposed to provide a Sabbath for the land, to let it rest, to lie fallow.  The Bible envisions a relationship of good stewardship, and of faithful responsibility between people and the earth.  
            I believe our faith calls us to a new awareness, a new way of seeing things, a new openness to struggling with questions of faithful living, as individuals and as a society. 
            How do we interpret the present time?  How do we balance the rights of individuals with the needs of the community, and the earth itself?  How do we confront the idolatries of private property and mindless consumption?  Is a company’s CEO really worth 200 times what its lowest-paid employee is worth?  Is a professional athlete really worth 100 times more than a public school teacher?  What does our faith have to say about the growing gap between the rich and the poor?
            How do we interpret the present time?  What does our faith have to say about a world that seems to become increasingly violent?  What does our faith say about fear, and about what happens when we allow fear to rule us?   What does our Christian faith say about war?
            How do we interpret the present time?  What does our faith say about earth-damaging habits and desires that lead us to use more of the earth’s resources than the earth can sustain?   What does our faith say about buying products that are produced on the backs of children and  slaves?
            These aren’t just political or economic or environmental  questions.  They are faith questions. [7]
            Jesus was right, wasn’t he?   If we raise questions like these, we are likely to create division—within families, within the household of faith.  And that can make us very uncomfortable.
            Sometimes when Jesus speaks, he doesn’t leave us with peace—at least not an easy, superficial peace.  Jesus calls us interpret the signs of our present time in the light of our faith. 
            The present time we live in is confused and disordered and broken. Sometimes what we see in the world around us can feel overwhelming, and we feel powerless to do anything that would make a difference. 
            But, in the words of Margaret Mead, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world.  Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”   
In the late 18th century in Great Britain, as awareness of the cruelty of sugar plantations in the West Indies grew, more and more British people boycotted sugar from the Indies, declaring that they would not sweeten their tea with sugar tainted by slave blood.  The boycott had an effect and helped the abolition movement  to build momentum.  The movement was led by people of faith.  The Abolitionist movement that followed in the United States was led by Quakers, Evangelical Christians, and others.
Presbyterians and other Christians have effectively boycotted companies for humanitarian and justice reasons over the years.  Whether it’s committing as an individual to buy only fair trade chocolate or coffee or deciding as a church to divest from corporations that participate in great injustice, the little things we do can help to bring about change for good and can help to heal the world.

            When we follow Jesus, he challenges us to interpret the present time in light of our faith.  He calls us into new life—not a nice, lukewarm life, but a life of passion and urgency to repair the world.  
            When we allow ourselves to be transformed by God’s love, so that our identity and calling and mission are shaped by that love, the Spirit will give us courage to pray without ceasing, to witness among all peoples to Christ as Lord and Savior, to unmask idolatries in church and culture, to hear the voices of peoples long silenced, and to work with others for justice, freedom and peace.[8] 
            All this is costly and demanding, but we are not alone, because Christ, who is our real peace, has promised to be with us every step of the way.
            Thanks be to God!
            Amen!  
             

           
Rev. Fran Hayes, Pastor
Littlefield Presbyterian Church
Dearborn, Michigan
August 14, 2016

           
           
                       
           







[1] Isaiah 61.
[2] Luke 4.
[3] I am very grateful to the Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold, former Presiding Bishop and Primate of the Episcopal Church USA, for his insights on this text, in “Sermon for Proper 15” at http://day1.org/609-sermon_for_proper_15.

[4] Luke 24:32
[5] John 14:27
[6] Luke 4:18
[7] I am grateful to the Rev. Julie Adkins for several of the insights and questions here, in “Interpreting the Signs of the Times,” published at www.goodpreacher.com
[8] Brief Statement of Faith, Presbyterian Church (USA), 1990.


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