Be Angry (but …)

Ephesians 4:25 – 5:2

   Many of us grew up being told we shouldn’t be angry.  Some of us weren’t allowed to be angry.  In an article entitled, “Most Women You Know Are Angry — and That’s All Right,” journalist Laurie Penny writes that female anger in particular is taboo.  I don’t know whether it’s true that most women are angry, but it is true that most women have been given all sorts of coded messages that anger is shameful, like “Why so hostile?” or “Don’t get hysterical!”  One of the things we hear most often, either subtly or explicitly, is that angry women are unattractive.  Penny writes, “This is supposed to end the discussion, because more than anything else, women and girls are supposed to want to be attractive.”  That – that right there – that just might be one of the reasons most women you know are angry. 

   And that’s all right.  The Ephesians passage says be angry … but.  Be angry, but do not sin.  We could spend years on what the writer means by sin and whether sin is a helpful concept, but let’s just agree the writer means, “Be angry, but don’t make things worse.”  In a burst of emotional intelligence that is exceedingly rare in Scripture outside of Jesus himself, the author of Ephesians acknowledges that it’s okay to have feelings.  What matters is not how angry you feel, but what you do with it. 

   Brené Brown writes, “Internalizing anger will take away our joy and spirit; externalizing anger will make us less effective in our attempts to create change and forge connection.”  Externalized anger – anger that is acted out – makes things worse.  People often act out their anger by being belligerent and aggressive – in other words, they use anger to bully people.  Others act out anger by manipulating people through passive aggressive behavior, coldness, cutting off communication.  Both ways of acting out anger make things worse, make positive change or transformation less likely, make connection and understanding less likely.

   But anger can be useful.  It can keep you moving and working when you want to give up.  It can give you courage when you need it.  Anger can be a tool as well as a weapon, and it’s a tool we shouldn’t let rust or never learn to use.

   A number of years ago, Bill Moyers (one of my heroes) gave an address at Occidental College entitled, “A Time For Anger, A Call To Action.”  He cited the staggering statistics about the growing gap between the rich and poor in this country and then he told a story about two families in Milwaukee.  Moyers said, “One is black, the other white.  The breadwinners in both were laid off in the first wave of downsizing in 1991 as corporations began moving jobs out of the city and then out of the country.  …  They’re the kind of Americans my mother would have called ‘the salt of the earth.’  They love their kids, care about their communities, go to church every Sunday, and work hard all week.”

   “To make ends meet after the layoffs, both mothers took full-time jobs.  Both fathers became seriously ill.  When one father had to stay in the hospital two months the family went $30,000 in debt because they didn’t have adequate health care.  We were there with our cameras when the bank started to foreclose on the modest home of one family that couldn’t make mortgage payments.  Like millions of Americans, [these families] were playing by the rules and still getting stiffed.  By the end of the decade they were running harder but slipping further behind, and the gap between them and prosperous America was widening.”

   “What turns their personal tragedy into a political travesty is that while they are indeed patriotic, they no longer believe they matter to the people who run the country.  They simply do not think their concerns will ever be addressed by the political, corporate, and media elites who make up our dominant class.  They are not cynical, because they are deeply religious people with no capacity for cynicism, but they know the system is rigged against them.”

   Moyers talked about his own faith.  A life-long Christian, he’s angry about the fact that Jesus has been “hijacked,” as he put it, “and turned from a friend of the dispossessed into a guardian of privilege.”  He spoke of the Jesus who fed hungry people, broke down barriers, touched the unclean and brought them back into community; the Jesus who got angry, whose message of mercy and love was expressed in action that disturbed the peace.  

   Moyers’ speech shows how anger doesn’t automatically threaten disconnection and destruction of community.  Ever since unfairness was invented, the function of anger is to protect social connections by protesting unfair treatment.  It is an alarm clock, a signal that things need to change.  Anger screams, “Something is wrong!” and provides the energy required to restore fairness and social harmony.  Bede Jarrett said, “The world needs anger.  The world often continues to allow evil because it isn’t angry enough.”  In order not to make things worse, we need to transform our anger into something life-giving: courage, love, change, compassion, justice, but our anger is a calling.  It is God speaking to us, saying, “Get off your … get off your recliner and get out there and DO something!”

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

Resources:

Laurie Penny, “Most Women You Know Are Angry – and That’s All Right,” August 2, 2018, Teen Vogue, https://www.teenvogue.com/story/women-angry-anger-laurie-penny

Bill Moyers, “A Time For Anger, A Call To Action, February 7, 2007, Occidental College, Los Angeles, http://www.commondreams.org/views07/0322-24.htm

Marshall B. Rosenberg, Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Life (Encinitas, CA: PuddleDance Press, 2003).

Brené Brown, Braving the Wilderness (New York: Random House, 2017).

Bread of Life

John 6:24-35

I confess I often find John’s Jesus annoying.  He speaks in code and then seems to scold people for not getting it.  In this passage, he declares, “I am the bread of life.  Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.”  He is offering himself as metaphorical bread.  But what does that even mean?  What does it mean when so many people need real bread, real water; when way too many people would dearly love never to be literally hungry or thirsty again?  Just last week, the United Nations reported that progress in fighting global hunger has been set back 15 years, leaving around 733 million people going hungry in 2023, equivalent to one in 11 people globally and one in five in Africa. 

I agree with biblical commentators that by equating himself with bread, Jesus is saying he is essential for life.  Some commentators explain that Jesus is not referring to physical life, but “eternal life,” a phrase Jesus uses in this passage.  Many if not most Christians have been taught that “eternal life” begins when we die.  Brian D. McLaren posits that what Jesus actually meant by “eternal life” might better be translated “life of the ages,” or “life to the full.” Jesus was not proclaiming what Diana Butler Bass refers to as an “elevator religion,” focused on getting people up and away from a troubled earth to heaven.  Rather, Jesus came to be the savior of the world, this world, the world that God so loves (John 3:16).  God’s primary mission, embodied in Jesus, is saving the earth and its inhabitants from human evil and folly.  Thus, “I am the bread of life” must mean something more important, more earthly and more urgent than, “Believe in me and you’ll go to heaven.”

This passage follows John’s version of the feeding of the five thousand.  In John 6:1-24, a crowd is following Jesus to hear and be healed by him.  They grow hungry, but Jesus’ disciple Philip says, “‘Six months’ wages would not buy enough bread for each of them to get a little.’”  They learn that a boy in the crowd has five barley loaves and two fish, clearly not enough.  Yet after giving thanks to God, Jesus distributes the boy’s meager contribution, and everyone has enough to eat.  As McLaren writes, “When I was a child, these stories were explained to me as evidence of Jesus’ supernatural power … But now … I see that Jesus is engaging in powerful prophetic drama, demonstrating through sign and wonder a radically different economy, one that doesn’t depend on spending more and buying more, but on discovering what you already have and sharing. … This is a different economy, indeed – one based on contemplative gratitude and neighborly sharing, not consuming more and more, faster and faster.”

So, what makes Jesus “bread” – what makes him essential to our survival?  I’m borrowing liberally from Brian D. McLaren:   

  • Jesus reveals a God who loves us not because we are so deserving and loveable, but because God is so loving, without limit or discrimination.
  • In case after case, Jesus calls people to repent from the goal of growing their personal wealth portfolios, and instead he calls them to grow their good deeds portfolios for the common good, especially the good of the poor and marginalized.
  • He challenges people to believe there could be a better, more human, more satisfying alternative to the economy of the Roman Empire, and to our own economy of unsustainable consumer capitalism.
  • In story after story, we see that the driving motivation in Jesus’ life is love.

It comes down to this: What is it that will save this world?  Hate, or love?  Fear, or love?  Indifference, or love?  Violence, or love? Greed, or love? 

Jesus as “bread” also reminds us of the Lord’s Supper, or Eucharist.  Doug Gay and Werner Jeanrond write in the introduction to their treatise on theology and economics: “The central Christian practice of sharing in the Lord’s Supper is a definitive sign of how all that comes from God is to be offered back to God and shared with our neighbors.” They quote Chris Wigglesworth: “The economy is for God which means it is for my neighbor; it is for my neighbor which means it is for God.”

Sometimes poetry helps these images clunk into place.  This communion prayer comes from a Christian base community in Lima, Peru:

God, food of the poor,
Christ, our bread,
give us a taste of the tender bread
from your creation’s table;
bread newly taken from your heart’s oven,
food that comforts and nourishes us.
A fraternal loaf that makes us human;
joined hand in hand, working and sharing.
A warm loaf that makes us family;
Sacrament of your body,
your wounded people.

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

Resources:

“Fight against global hunger set back 15 years, warns UN report,” July 24, 2024, https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/07/1152451

“The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2024,” published by UNICEF, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, International Fund for Cultural Development, World Health Organization, World Food Programme, https://data.unicef.org › wp-content › uploads › 2024 › 07 › SOFI2024_Report_EN_web.pdf

Brian D. McLaren, The Great Spiritual Migration: How the World’s Largest Religion Is Seeking a Better Way to Be Christian (New York: Convergent, 2016)

Brian D. McLaren, Everything Must Change: Jesus, Global Crisis, and a Revolution of Hope (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2007)

Calum I. MacLeod, “A Place at the Table,” August 5, 2012, Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chicago, IL, https://www.fourthchurch.org/sermons/2012/080512.html

Does Power Corrupt?

2 Samuel 11:1-15

   Let’s get one thing out of the way: This passage about David and Bathsheba is not about sex, and it isn’t even about adultery in any way we would define it today.  You can’t call it cheating on your husband if you don’t have a choice, and you can’t call it cheating on your wife if you have multiple wives and concubines in your harem.  The only way this is adultery is in the 1,000 B.C.E. context that David violated Uriah’s property rights in his wife.     

   Older interpretations of this passage like to implicate Bathsheba.  She was just so alluring that David couldn’t help himself.  In 2024, we understand that it doesn’t matter what a woman wears, where she walks alone at night, or whether she bathes naked on the roof.  She is not “asking for it.”  When the king orders his messengers to go get a woman and bring her to his bedroom, this is not a seduction; it’s certainly not a love scene.  The power difference between David and Bathsheba means there is no way there could be anything approaching mutual consent.

   This story is about abuse of power. 

   Some details of this story might be lost in the formal biblical language.  The timing of Bathsheba’s ritual purification is mentioned because it means only David could be the father of her child.  That’s why David panics.  After trying unsuccessfully to get Uriah to sleep with his wife, David sends him to the battlefront, specifically instructing his commander to make sure Uriah is left unprotected, “so that he may be struck down and die.”  Which is what happens. 

   David saw something he wanted, and he took it.  When it looked as though there might be repercussions, he ruthlessly arranged a cover-up.  Bathsheba didn’t matter; Uriah didn’t matter.  That is the definition of abuse of power: When someone – an individual, nation, corporation, religious or ethnic or any other group – says, “I’m going to get what I want, and I don’t care about you.”  There is no aspect of life untouched by the abuse of power: business, the workplace, the schoolyard, politics, international relationships, personal relationships, parenting, policing, the church – you name it.  We all have seen power go to people’s heads.  One word for these people is bullies. 

   In the 19th century, John Dalberg-Acton said, “Power tends to corrupt.  Absolute power corrupts absolutely.”  Some studies seem to support a theory that we all try to get away with as much as we can, and that the only thing that keeps us in check are rules and punishments.  But there is other research that supports something Abraham Lincoln said: “Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.”

   When people become truly powerful, they often start believing they got there on their own.  But no one gets where they are alone.  Parents, education, a mentor or a team, privilege, advantages of all kinds, even luck land people in power.  Power is given as much as taken, and if power is to continue, the people underneath you have to be willing to allow you to remain in power.  So as it turns out in these other studies, people who recognize that their achievements are due not only to their own talent, hard work, or cleverness, but also to the help and support of other people, don’t participate in corruption.  Corruption is a byproduct when a person in power is arrogant instead of grateful.

   David forgot who he was and how he got there.  He forgot whose he was – God’s own man.  Would this troubling story even be in our Scripture if David had been grateful to God and to the people who were counting on him, rather than arrogant?

   There’s also research showing that power brings out the best in some people.  These experiments reveal that power doesn’t corrupt, after all; it heightens pre-existing ethical tendencies.  If people are inclined to dirty tricks, shady dealings, or grabbing whatever they want, more power makes that more apparent. Which makes you wonder whether, as someone put it, power doesn’t corrupt; it’s just that power attracts the corruptible. 

   The grace in this story is that we aren’t stuck with it.  God transforms this story; that’s next week’s passage.  Until then, there is grace in knowing that this narrative of abuse of power and of the inevitability that power corrupts is not the narrative we inherit as God’s people.  In Jesus, we are given a powerful contradiction to this story.  Jesus teaches and lives so clearly the power of love, the one power that consistently changes people for the better.

   David’s story sheds light on an important truth that applies as much to us as to any king, or, as we barrel toward the November elections, to any president.  Stan Lee, author and artist of the Spider-Man comic book superhero series, wrote, “With great power, comes great responsibility.”  Jesus said the same thing: “From the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.”

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

Resources:

Brian Resnick, “How Power Corrupts the Mind,” July 9, 2013, http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/07/how-power-corrupts-the-mind/277638/;

David Berreby, “Study: To Prevent Abuse of Power, Focus on Procedure, Not Results,” http://bigthink.com/Mind-Matters/study-to-prevent-abuse-of-power-focus-on-procedure-not-results;

David Bergstein, “Why Power Corrupts,” January 17, 2014, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-bergstein/why-power-corrupts_b_4611433.html.

Romesh Ratnesar “The Menace Within,” July/August 2011, https://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=40741

Christopher Shea, “Why Power Corrupts,” October 2012, http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/why-power-corrupts-37165345/?no-ist

Luke 12:48 (NIV)

Rest a While

Mark 6:30-34, 53-56

Did Mark include this vignette just for pastors?

It goes like this: You realize you need a break. You see your co-workers are getting burned out, too. You know that to keep doing ministry with energy, imagination, and compassion, you all need time off. You know this. So you arrange a vacation, a break. It’s not selfish; it’s the responsible thing to do. Then something happens. The matriarch of the congregation dies. A child is diagnosed with cancer. There is yet another mass shooting and this time it’s local. The sanctuary roof collapses.

They are like sheep without a shepherd and you are the shepherd. You put off taking that break.

It isn’t just pastors, though, is it? It’s anyone in a caregiving job or relationship. Including parenting.

It’s tempting to conclude that the all-the-time lesson of this passage is that Jesus doesn’t take a break; we should always choose self-sacrifice over self-care. Luckily, the Gospel reveals that Jesus took frequent breaks. Again and again, he went off to be alone to pray (Mark 1:35, Luke 4:42, Luke 5:16-18, Matthew 14:13). If his ministry had lasted more than three years, I’m sure we would have seen even more examples of his withdrawing, resting, re-centering, reconnecting with himself and God. If you expect your ministry to last more than three years, you’ll need frequent breaks, too.

But, like Jesus, sometimes our plans are interrupted because we have compassion for those who rely on our care. That doesn’t mean we never take breaks. It just means we reschedule.

As someone who served in congregations for 25 years, I know you simply can’t sustain ministry without some balance. Time off, exercise, family, friendships with people who don’t call you “Pastor So-and-So,” hobbies, therapy, spiritual direction, travel, play – these aren’t self-indulgent. They are self-compassion, and they contribute to your ministry by contributing to your physical and mental health. They also connect you with the world beyond the parish, and that, too, is vital to ministry. The same goes for parenting or caring for an aging parent or incapacitated family member. Without time away, genuine compassion so easily turns into resentment. Without time away, we often look for other ways to escape: numbing or “taking the edge off,” disconnecting from our feelings or other people’s feelings, even acting out in ways that turn out to be self-destructive, or that destroy our effectiveness in ministry. Burn out is a real thing.

Does anyone still believe exhaustion and busy-ness are status symbols? Did COVID knock out of us the inclination to over-schedule, over-commit, and overwork? If so, while there are few silver linings to the pandemic, perhaps that is one.

Jesus shows us here that there will be times when we need to show up for a crisis. We have the resilience to do that if we are rested, refreshed, and restored. So maybe that weekend away you’d planned doesn’t happen this weekend. Ink it in for next weekend.

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

A Rash Promise

Mark 6:14-29

This is one of many stories in the Bible that make you wonder whether the folks who insist that the Bible be taught to school children have read the Bible.

The passage begins with people wondering who this Jesus is. His fame is spreading. Some speculate that he is John the Baptist returned from the dead. But what happened; why is John dead? Because Herod had John executed, and the story of how that came about is the rest of the passage.

The Herod in this story is Herod Antipas, son of Herod the Great and one of eight Herods in the Herodian dynasty. He has married Herodias, the former wife of his younger brother, yet another Herod. Like George Foreman, I guess Herod the Great figured there wasn’t a better name than his own to pass on to both (all?) his sons.

John the Baptist wasn’t the only person to criticize Herod for marrying his sister-in-law. We don’t know if he was the only person punished for it. John was well-known and respected; maybe that made it especially important to muzzle him. But Herod fears John; he knows John is “a righteous and holy man,” so while he sends John to prison, he doesn’t have him killed, not at first.

The story continues with Herod’s stepdaughter Herodias (yes, the same name as her mother, the sister-in-law that Herod scandalously married) dancing for guests at a party. We don’t know how old Herodias is at this point. The Greek calls her a κορασίῳ, korasion, which could be young girl or maiden. Is she a child who has made her stepdad proud? Is she an attractive young woman? We also don’t know anything about the dance. Was it as chaste as Judy Garland tapdancing with Mickey Rooney? Or was it provocative, which would make this story truly creepy? All we know is that it must have been some dance. Herod is in such high spirits that he makes a rash promise, so rash that although the text says nothing about it, I wonder if Herod wasn’t drunk as well as impressed. He promises Herodias anything she wants, even half his kingdom, the kind of fairytale promise that you know is going to backfire. The girl asks her mother, who has no warm feelings for John at all, and the mother tells her to ask for John the Baptist’s head on a platter. The king apparently made an oath to keep his promise and so John is executed in prison, and grizzly paintings ever since remind us how brutal this wish was, and that power really can corrupt.

What is the moral of this story? What’s the lesson? I quote David Lose: “The rich and powerful are used to getting what they want; are willing to do most anything to keep or advance what they have; and those who stand up to them, advocate for the oppressed, or dare to inspire people to imagine that life can be different usually get trampled.”

Is this a lesson we want to teach our children? I doubt that those arguing that the Bible should be taught in schools would think so. But maybe that’s exactly what we should be teaching people in today’s political climate. It’s certainly a good reminder for adults, if we include along with it the lesson that God still stands with the oppressed, and whatever the cost, so should we. Isn’t that what Jesus did?

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

Resources:
David Lose, https://www.davidlose.net/2012/06/mark-614-29/

The Kindness of Strangers

Mark 6:1-13

The most famous line in Tennessee Williams’ play, “A Streetcar Named Desire,” is delivered by Blanche DuBois as she’s being led away to a mental institution following a breakdown: “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” She’s always relied on others and given up some control over her life, because she’s always been out of touch with reality. Which makes relying on the kindness of strangers sound like not such a good thing, maybe even out of touch with reality. And yet in today’s passage in Mark’s gospel, Jesus tells his twelve disciples that’s exactly what they must do. He’s given them authority to heal, and they are to proclaim that all should “repent;” in other words, change the direction of their lives. He instructs them to take nothing with them so they have to rely entirely upon the hospitality and generosity of others for their meals, for a place to stay, for everything.

Being dependent on others feels vulnerable, especially to people with some privilege. We don’t like giving up control. Most church folks put a lot of effort into figuring out how to be welcoming, not just on Sunday mornings but all the time. But being the gracious host means we’re the ones in control, right? Our turf, our food, our rules, no surprises. And yet Jesus says, “Leave all that behind. Be a gracious guest.” Become the stranger who needs to be welcomed as a guest, with all the vulnerability that implies. Eat what’s put in front of you, listen to your host’s conversation and concerns, enter into your host’s reality.

And here we get to the nut of why Jesus wanted the twelve to rely on the kindness of strangers. Offering hospitality is important and always will be, but there is something about accepting hospitality that changes us profoundly, that opens us to new perspectives in a way that being a host does not. It means being open to what God is doing in someone else, on their turf. It means recognizing that everyone has something to offer, and every conversation is two-sided. As one writer quips, “We might have to reconsider some of the hymns we take along with us.” Instead of “We’ve a Story to Tell All the Nations,” “We’ve a Story to Hear from the Nations.” Or “Go, Listen on the Mountain!” or “Onward, Christian Guests!”

We celebrate Independence Day this week, and maybe that’s a good time to remember we are a nation of strangers, alternately called to receive and be received. In 1956, Dwight D. Eisenhower put it this way: “We are a people born of many peoples. Our culture, our skills, our very aspirations have been shaped by immigrants – and their sons and daughters – from all the earth. Sam Gompers from England, Andrew Carnegie from Scotland, Albert Einstein from Germany – and Booker T. Washington and Al Smith – Marconi and Caruso – men of all nations and races and estates – they have made us what we are.” I suspect if he’d said this today, he’d have said, “men and women of all nations,” and he’d have added Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Maya Angelou, Sonia Sotomayor, Amy Tan, and Kamala Harris. I hope he’d also have noticed that the original inhabitants of this land are still here among us.

An English video that went viral a while back gives some perspective on all this.

VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tyaEQEmt5ls

We Americans are proud of claiming the term “melting pot” but the fact is each one of us, all over the globe, is a melting pot of sorts; each of us is an immigrant, an alien, a stranger. Whether it’s us or our parents or grandparents or “back and back and back” as the video puts it, our people have been strangers in strange lands. We all have needed and will continue to need to be welcomed. And we all have the opportunity to welcome. Sometimes, we will be the stranger who brings truth and peace; sometimes others will be that to us. “Go, Listen on the Mountain!”

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

Resources:
Kelly Belcher, “Go,” July 3, 2016, http://nextsundayworship.com/july-3-2016/.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Address in Convention Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 1, 1956, https://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/education/bsa/citizenship_merit_badge/speeches/address_convention_hall.pdf

Out of the Depths

Psalm 130

   Once you reach a certain age, you realize that into everyone’s life come times of crisis, times when it seems the bottom has fallen out.  Psalm 130 begins, “Out of the depths I cry to you, O Lord.”  We don’t know what happened to the psalmist.  Tradition says this prayer reflects King David’s anguish at the death of his son Absalom.  Absalom led an insurrection against his father, which must have been horrible enough.  David sent word to his army to spare the life of his son, but in spite of that, Absalom’s life came to a violent end.

   I’m glad the psalmist isn’t specific about Absalom or anything else because that way we can insert our own experience of what has caused the bottom to fall out.  When I served a congregation, I could look out at the folks in the pews on a Sunday morning and know that many people’s lives were going very well, at least that morning.  But sitting two pews up from these happy worshipers, or right behind them, or maybe even right next to them, chances are there was someone who was either in the midst of a crisis or whose memory of a crisis was very fresh.  Someone who had been out of work for months.  Someone dealing with dementia.  Someone who had just received a frightening diagnosis.  Someone whose child wouldn’t call them, or whose marriage had grown cold. 

   For many people in crisis, God seems not only distant but absent; it can feel as though God has abandoned you.  Notice that in Psalm 130, the psalmist assumes that Someone is already there to hear the cry.  “Let your ears, O God, be attentive to my need.”  The simple, unadorned cry for God to hear and to help is a prayer, and any prayer puts us squarely in front of God and opens our hearts to what God can do in us and through us.  Our prayers don’t need to be pretty or full of churchy words.  Joanna Adams writes, “If you ever find yourself in a valley so dark it makes the bottom of the well look like sunshine, remember this.  You do not have to outline the situation with appropriate sentence structure for the Almighty.  You do not have to compose perfect paragraphs.  You just have to know your need and know that God knows your need before you even put words to it.  God’s love is steadfast.  God’s love is plenteous enough for any terrible situation.  A cry in the dark suffices.”    

   Note also that the psalmist doesn’t blame God for whatever happened.  On a rainy night in 1983, William Sloane Coffin’s son Alex died in a car accident. Coffin, a minister and civil rights activist, was at his sister’s house the next day when one of her friends came by to offer comfort and a stack of quiches.  When the woman saw Coffin, she shook her head and said, “I just don’t understand the will of God when something like this happens.”  Coffin says instantly he was up and in hot pursuit.  “I’ll say you don’t, lady!”  He knew the anger would do him good, so he continued: “Do you think it was the will of God that Alex never fixed that lousy windshield wiper of his?  Do you think it was the will of God that Alex was driving too fast in such a storm, that he probably had had a couple of [beers] too many?  Do you think it is God’s will that there [is] … no guard rail separating the road and Boston Harbor?  My own consolation lies in knowing that it was not the will of God that Alex die; that when the waves in Boston harbor closed over the sinking car, God’s heart was the first of all our hearts to break.” 

   Out of the depths we cry to God and discover that God is there ahead of us.

   In verse 3, the psalmist refers to his wrongdoings, his “iniquities.”  It’s very common for people in the depths to wonder, “Why is this happening to me?  Is God punishing me?”  Certainly actions can have consequences and bad actions can have bad consequences.  But the psalmist is correcting a wrong belief that God is a God of retribution.  He is denying the image of an angry God pacing back and forth up in heaven with a rolled up newspaper just ready to swat someone.  The psalmist tells us that he knows he has sinned but so has everyone else, and he knows that’s not why he’s stuck in the depths.  If that were the case, there would be no hope for anyone; the depths would be the only possibility.  But that is not God’s way, says the psalmist.  Forgiveness is the way of the Lord.  God’s way is reconciliation, not punishment. 

   The psalmist’s prescription is waiting and hoping, which is very, very hard when physical, emotional, or spiritual pain is severe.  That’s where the rest of us come in, those of us who are not in crisis, who are not in the depths – for now.  When church folks said to me, “I don’t have any hope left,” that’s when I’d say, “Then you’ll have to let those of us who love you hope for you.  You are carrying enough.  We will carry the hope for now.”

   Anne Lamott wrote in Traveling Mercies, “Our preacher … said recently that this is life’s nature: that lives and hearts get broken – those of people we love, those of people we’ll never meet.  She said that the world sometimes feels like the waiting room of the emergency ward and that we who are more or less OK for now need to take the tenderest possible care of the more wounded people in the waiting room, until the healer comes.  You sit with people, she said, you bring them juice and crackers.”

   That, my friends, is what church should be. 

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

Faith in the Face of Fear

Mark 4:35-41

There’s plenty going on right now to make me afraid: How do we respond to the climate crisis? How do we address economic inequality? How do we deal with entrenched racism and privilege, and how much will white nationalism impact the upcoming election? What will happen to women’s rights, reproductive rights, human rights, the freedom of the press and freedoms, generally, if the authoritarian Project 2025 is realized?

Scary stuff. So, what moves people from fear to faith? That’s the question raised by the story in Mark in which the disciples wake Jesus to calm the stormy sea. This is the kind of story that gives some people fits because they don’t believe it really happened. But “Did it really happen?” isn’t the question. The question is, “What does it mean?”

Both fear and faith make sense in relation to something that’s unknown or threatening. Those are the kinds of things that make us afraid, right? Yet it’s those same things that summon us to have the faith to face them. Faith doesn’t so much overcome fear as make it possible to cope with it. Maybe that’s the issue here: Not whether you’re afraid, but how you respond when you’re afraid. So, what allows us, even if we’re afraid, to act in faith rather than to be paralyzed by fear?

It’s interesting that the miracle itself doesn’t rid the disciples of their fear. We might think a miracle would help us find our faith when things are scary, but here, the disciples seem more afraid after the miracle. Still, something shifts for them. Instead of “Don’t you care?” they’re asking, “Who is this?” Pastor and professor David Lose points out that this shift might mean the answer to the question, “What moves us from fear to faith?” is relationship. It’s the move from what to who, from event to person, from ambiguous miracle to the actual person of Jesus.

Faith is a relationship. Contrary to popular belief, faith is not believing in certain doctrines or reading the Bible literally; in fact, trust is a much better translation of the Greek word that most Bibles translate as faith because trust implies an action – it’s a verb – and a relationship. Christian faith is about a relationship with the God revealed by the teachings and actions of Jesus. Throughout Mark’s Gospel, Jesus points to a God who cares passionately for the welfare of all God’s people. He does this by healing the sick, feeding the hungry, welcoming the outcast, even overcoming death. Jesus invites people to trust in that God. Trust, in the end, is the only thing that overcomes fear.

The most frequently repeated command in the Bible is “Do not be afraid.” These words are spoken by angels, prophets, and apostles, and now, they are to be spoken by communities of faith. We are to say to one another, “Do not be afraid.” “Do not be afraid, because God loves you. God cares what happens to you. God loves and cares about everybody, and God has ways of making the impossible possible. God continues to call us, to call you, to imagine, hope for and create new possibilities. God calls you to remember, even in this scary world, that, as Edward Everett Hale put it, ‘I cannot do everything, but I can do something. And I will not let what I cannot do interfere with what I can.’ Do not be afraid.”

Resources:
David Lose, http://www.davidlose.net/2018/06/pentecost-5-b-moving-from-fear-to-faith/.

Small, Hidden, Ordinary

Mark 4:26-34

Eugene Peterson calls parables “narrative time bombs.” Parables are meant to undermine our assumptions, challenge cultural myths, and offer us a vision of something different. These two agricultural mini-parables in Mark’s Gospel offer an alternative vision for the Kingdom of God.

The Kingdom of God is a phrase that deserves explanation pretty much every time we use it. First of all, and let’s just get this out of the way, it isn’t about the afterlife. Second, many people prefer not to use the term “kingdom” because it’s patriarchal and monarchical. Both patriarchy and monarchy made sense to Jesus’ audience, but neither are necessary to understand that this phrase was Jesus’ primary metaphor for describing the world, this world, our world, as it would be if we made God the ruler of our hearts and minds. If you don’t like the word “ruler,” we could just say the phrase describes what this world would be if we made God’s priorities – love, justice, and compassion – our consistent priorities. I’m fine with the term “the Kingdom of God,” but I’m also fine with newer phrases that make it easier for people to digest the metaphor: the Reign of God, the Kin-dom of God, or creative alternatives such as these suggested by Brian D. McLaren: the dream of God, the revolution of God, the mission of God, the party of God, the network of God, and the dance of God. Whatever phrase you choose, the central point is that the Kingdom of God is both now and not yet. It is among us now, at hand, as Jesus put it, when we live as though God’s love and compassion are our priorities, but it is so very obviously not fully here, as we can see when we read the news or just look around us. It is both present choice and future goal.

The “narrative time bomb” in both these little parables emerges in the hiddenness, ordinariness, and inevitability of the beginnings of the Kingdom. The sower doesn’t make the seeds sprout and grow; the sower doesn’t even water or weed. Likewise, the tiny mustard seed is “sown,” but we aren’t told that it is sown by anyone in particular. It may just spring up organically the way it does in our Northern California fields and on our hillsides, where it’s a beautiful wildflower that spreads quickly and widely but, for the most part, is a weed.

That weediness is an interesting quality, as well. The cultural bias of first century Palestine identified order with holiness and disorder with uncleanness. There were strict rules about what you planted and where. The images in these little parables may point to something vaguely unclean and somewhat disorderly, perhaps not welcomed and perhaps not recognized as valuable by everyone. Nevertheless, the birds make their nests in the shade of the wild mustard, an image of welcome, safety, even gentleness and beauty.

Tiny, hidden, ordinary, weed-like, disorderly, uncontrollable, unrecognized, and perhaps even unwelcome, but spreading inevitably and a welcoming home to the vulnerable. These images are the starting point for the Kingdom of God.

What does this mean for us, for the present choice and future goal of the Kingdom of God? For one thing, achieving it isn’t up to us. It is God’s project. Certainly, we may participate by choosing to be aligned with God’s purposes. One of our own cultural myths is that big problems must be tackled in big ways. These Kingdom parables challenge that myth. Many people throughout the world have found not only that some of the best and bravest ideas come from people outside the traditional corridors of power, but often large problems are best tackled in small ways, at least in the beginning, at least until the mustard spreads, so to speak.

The parables further invite us to notice that God is already at work, in small, perhaps even hidden ways, in our lives, in our communities, and in the world. In time, God will complete the work God has started. It can be hard to trust this promise when we look at the world around us, but these parables give us hope in small, inevitable changes. Maybe even enough hope to inspire us to join in God’s project.

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.

Give Us a King

1 Samuel 8:4-20

As they settled into the Promised Land after escaping from bondage in Egypt, judges led the Israelites. These judges were wise men and women who helped the people follow the law that God gave them at Sinai. Samuel is such a judge, a good judge, but he’s old. The people fear his sons might be his successors; unfortunately, Samuel’s sons didn’t inherit his sterling character. The people tell Samuel, “Give us a king.”

Samuel knows the people are right about his sons, but he isn’t happy about their demand for a king. He brings all this to God. God says, “It’s not about you. They haven’t rejected you. They’ve rejected me.” Why is this a rejection of God? We get a hint in the long warning that God tells Samuel to deliver to the people, the most scathing diatribe against monarchy and maybe one of the most political passages in the Bible. Again and again, Samuel says, “He will take…” The king will take your sons, your daughters, your fields, your produce, your servants, your herds, your flocks – and ultimately, says Samuel, “you shall be his slaves.” I picture that last statement punctuated with a clap of thunder.

What God intends for God’s people is freedom. In the conversation with Samuel, God brings up the Exodus, the defining story about who God is and what God wants for God’s people. And now they want to go back to slavery? Sigmund Freud said, “Most people do not really want freedom, because freedom involves responsibility, and most people are frightened of responsibility.” In the chapters to come, we see all God’s warnings coming true.

Is this story just a reminder that power corrupts or that people will always choose slavery over freedom? There are a handful of more hopeful lessons here. First, we see what happens when people act out of fear. John Steinbeck wrote, “Power does not corrupt. Fear corrupts… perhaps the fear of a loss of power.” We see this again and again in our own time and culture in schoolyards, intimate relationships, governments, terrorism of all kinds, and pretty much anywhere there are people. If you want to control people, make them feel afraid.

The Israelites say they want to be like the nations that have military might, but the Israelites were supposed to be different. God had given them the Law, a guidebook for shalom based on justice and compassion. This was radically different and radically free – justice and compassion are the only way that anybody can be truly free. The people fear for their security and say they want a leader who will take them into battle. I picture God shaking God’s head. So the first lesson might be to take care that we are not choosing our leaders out of fear. History confirms that fearful choices lead to loss of freedom.

God has a very different idea of what makes a good leader, and that’s a second lesson. God’s idea of a leader is Moses, a shepherd who overcame his lack of self-confidence to lead his people to freedom. God’s idea of a leader is most evident in Jesus, the servant leader. We might ask of all our leaders: Is your priority the needs of the people, or the desire for your own self-preservation as a leader? Do you lead in a way that values everyone? Do you give voice to the voiceless, or listen primarily to those who already have power, wealth, or status? Do you lead in a way that says, “join me” rather than “watch me”?

Maybe a third lesson here is, “Be careful what you ask for. You might get it.”

God is with the people throughout the very human stories of Israel’s kings that follow this passage. God often speaks to them through the challenging voices of prophets like Samuel. Through it all, God remains the God of freedom. The prophet Micah describes that freedom in a passage you might recognize if you’re a fan of the musical, “Hamilton.” George Washington sings it when he’s telling Hamilton he plans to retire. Micah echoes the familiar words of Isaiah, saying,
“…they shall beat their swords into ploughshares,
and their spears into pruning-hooks;
nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more;”

… but then Micah adds this verse:
“but they shall all sit under their own vines and under their own fig trees,
and no one shall make them afraid;
for the mouth of the Lord of hosts has spoken.”

They shall sit under their own vines, their own fig trees – not the king’s vines, not pharaoh’s vines, not the emperor’s vines; their own vines, their own fig trees. And no one shall make them afraid. They will have the freedom to flourish, the freedom made possible when God’s justice and God’s compassion reign.

© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.