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lenten journal: something other than outrage

My sermon this week came from the last part of Luke 14, where Jesus keeps telling parables at banquets that speak to larger things. I know these stories, but had never seen what they have to say about anger.

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Today’s sermon is one of those that could use a recap like those that come up when you’re watching a limited series on television: “Previously on Whatever . . .” and then they show crucial scenes to get you caught up. So, previously on Sunday Sermons, last week we saw Jesus go to dinner at the home of one of the religious elite and he began by healing a man who had edema—a man whose body held too much water and yet he stayed thirsty—and then he told a parable about not jostling for position when you look at the seating chart.

Where we pick up the story today, as soon as Jesus finished telling that last parable, he turned to the person hosting him and said, “When you have a dinner, don’t invite people who will invite you back. It will be a much richer party if you invite those who can’t repay you, which may have made the host wonder why they had invited Jesus.

In the awkwardness of the moment, one of the guests said something akin to, “Well, when we all get to heaven everyone will be at the same table,” which evoked another parable about a banquet.

Jesus described a scene the people around him would have recognized, though it might seem odd to us. If someone wanted to host a dinner, they would send out the invitations and then, based on the responses, prepare the food so they had enough for everyone and didn’t waste anything. When the meal was ready, they would send for the guests to come and eat.

Except when dinner was ready, the guests offered excuses instead of their presence, and not very good excuses at that. One said they had bought a farm and had to go see what kind of farm they had purchased and asked to be excused. Jesus’ audience would have understood that no one would buy a farm without having walked the land first. The second person said they had purchased five teams of oxen, also unseen, and needed to check them out and said they were sorry. Again, who does that? The last one said, “I just got married (which also meant the host had not been invited to the wedding feast) and I can’t come to dinner,” and offered no apology.

Needless to say, the host was angry. The meal was ready and the excuses were flimsy. They were all transactional. (Remember in that time a marriage was fundamentally a business transaction because the woman was considered property.) They chose acquisition over relationship, and the host did the opposite.

Actually, he did what Jesus had just talked about. He told his servants to go out on the streets of the city—the busy streets and the side streets—and get anyone they could find who needed a meal. When that didn’t fill up the room, he sent them out into the countryside and down the back alleys, and then he expressed anger of his own: “No one I invited will taste my dinner,” which sounds like he didn’t plan to ever invite them again.

But there’s another way to hear that last statement. It could also mean the host realized that once he had a party where he invited everyone—and I mean everyone—those who defined their importance by who they excluded would no longer want to eat at his table. They would write him off because he had nothing to offer them.

The words and actions of the host sent me back to something poet David Whyte wrote several years ago about anger. He said,

Anger is the deepest form of compassion, for another, for the world, for the self, for a life, for the body, for a family and for all our ideals, all vulnerable and all, possibly, about to be hurt. Stripped of physical imprisonment and violent reaction, anger is the purest form of care, the internal living flame of anger always illuminates what we belong to, what we wish to protect and what we are willing to hazard ourselves for.

I remember the first time I read those sentences. I think my head turned and looked at the book the way our pups’ heads turn when they hear a strange noise. I had never thought of anger as deep compassion. As I have told you, I grew up in a family where we talked about our feelings every fifteen years whether we needed to or not. Because my dad had grown up in a very volatile family, he was determined his family would not be that way. What he wanted was for us to not be explosive; what we ended up doing was swallowing most all of it.

The anger he was scared of was not what good anger is. The anger that appears to be the fuel for American society these days—the outrage, the violence, the division—is not good anger either. Jesus was angry a good deal of the time, but angry in a way that did not strike out in violence.

I learned how to get angry from Ginger, who is the most forthright person I know. Her anger is honest, current, and fair. She embodies what Whyte describes as anger in its pure state:

It is the measure of the way we are implicated in the world and made vulnerable through love in all its specifics. . . . Anger truly felt at its center is the essential living flame of being fully alive and fully here; it is a quality to be followed to its source, to be prized, to be tended, and an invitation to finding a way to bring that source fully into the world through making the mind clearer and more generous, the heart more compassionate, and the body larger and strong enough to hold it.

What I learned from Ginger was that anger was not something to be scared of, or avoided, or stuffed away. To be angry doesn’t mean to be violent. True anger is honest, even vulnerable. To be angry, by that definition, is to speak the truth in love. That doesn’t mean it isn’t hard to hear, but it does mean it’s a relational act.

When everyone he thought he could count on bailed on his dinner, the host turned his anger into invitations, rather than explosions. He filled his tables with hungry people and fed them. He did not become transactional and try to get even with what he felt had been done to him. He became more generous to more people. He couldn’t change the hearts of those who wouldn’t show up, but he could change the lives of those that did.

These are days that invite us to be angry in much the same way—to find ways to make our anger invitational. When others dehumanize, we can humanize. When others work to divide people, we can connect with people. When others try to out yell everyone, we can make room for others to speak. When others try to make us cynical, we can double down on hope. When we feel like the outrage takes up all the space in our lives, we can make time to cook, or garden, or talk to neighbors, or volunteer, or stay late at coffee hour. We can commit to calling family members we don’t agree with just to see how they are doing, just so they know we love them.

And when we see those who are consumed by outrage, let us also have the grace to remember they are actually consumed by fear—fear of the unknown, fear of change, fear of losing something, or whatever their fear may be—and we remember that love is stronger than fear, which is why we can’t let our fear get the best of us. We must choose not to strike out in rage, but let our anger make us more generous and compassionate. That’s the only way that everyone can thrive. That’s the only way everyone gets fed. Amen.

lenten journal: healing from hunger

In Luke 14, Jesus tells two stories about banquets while he is attending one—and then heals someone to boot. My sermon looked at the first parable; the second one comes next Sunday.

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Have you ever noticed that Jesus went to a lot of parties?

Throughout the gospels, as much as there are stories about Jesus preaching and teaching, helping and healing, we also find him at dinners and gatherings with all kinds of people, rich and poor. And as much as the gospels portray a divide between Jesus and the religious elite, he spent a fair amount of time eating and drinking with them, as our passage today shows. They may not have agreed on much, but they ate dinner together.

Our passage this morning is tells the first half of the story. We read about Jesus going to dinner, healing a man, and then telling a parable about a banquet. The part we will get to next week is he told another parable about a different banquet—all of it while he was at a banquet, as though he looked around the room and said, “This reminds me of a parable . . .”

Actually, what appears to have caused the parables was a man who sat down in front of Jesus at the dinner. He was ill. Our translation says he had “an abnormal swelling of the body,” which leaves lots of room for imagination. In the old King James Version, it was translated as dropsy, which, as a kid I thought sounded like he kept falling over. Today, we would say he had edema—a general swelling that comes from the body holding too much water. The odd thing about the condition is it makes the person suffering from it insatiably thirsty: they want what they already have dangerously too much of.

The man was a walking parable.

Luke says Jesus literally embraced the man, restored him to health, and then released him. The word translated as release carries the sense of being freed from imprisonment. I have a feeling the whole process took longer than the sentence Luke uses to describe it. However it happened, when the man walked away, Jesus looked at the room and saw others who were craving more of the very things that were destroying them, whether it was money or power or influence, and he told the parable we read about people trying to jump the seating chart to get to the head table because he was watching it happen in real time.

Jesus said, when you are at a wedding feast, don’t start by looking for your name at the head table, or sitting at what you think is the best table just because you think you’re seated with the important people. Don’t put the host in the position of having to say, “You realize this banquet is not about you, right?” and then walks you past everyone to the table in the back of the room. Instead, sit at the back and if they want you to move up they will find you. It’s nice to be noticed, but the ones who crave importance will be destroyed by their appetites and the ones who are content with themselves will feel nourished.

I got to go to a big banquet last Thursday night. Some folks in Ginger’s church invited us to attend the gala for the Women and Family Life Center in Guilford, which does amazing work in towns from North Haven to Middlefield to Old Saybrook. It was at the Woodwinds in Branford, which has a huge L-shaped ballroom, and it was packed. When we got there, we went up to a table and told them our names and they gave us a program with our table number on it. We were at Table 5.

Since I was already thinking about this passage, I noticed the feeling I had when they told me the table number. Because it was a low number, I could hear myself thinking, “That’s pretty good: the fifth most important table.” However they assigned seats, the only reason we were in the room was we were invited by someone who was on the board of the organization. It had absolutely nothing to do with me.

We found our table and it was just one away from the dance floor, which Ginger loved. We could see and hear the speakers easily. It was nice to be up front. But here’s the thing: the dinner was a buffet, and the tables with the food were at the back of either side of the L-shaped room, which meant when they started calling people to get food, they started with the tables closest to the buffet—the ones in the back.

We may have been close to the dance floor, but we had to wait to eat. No table in the room had all the advantages.

Jesus was in a room full of invited guests. The fact that they were there meant they mattered to the host in some way, yet some were determined to feel more important. Like the man with edema, they craved what they already had to the point that it did damage to their reputation and their relationship with the host.

And that makes me wonder what Jesus said to the man who was swollen when he embraced him.

I understand Jesus lived in a pre-medical society that looked at disease processes differently that we do. Or maybe I should say that the other way around. We live in a time informed by science that has taught us to think about diseases differently than they did in Jesus’ day. In some ways, we are relearning things they knew well—that many illnesses are not just physiological but are also psychological and spiritual. It’s all wrapped up together. Anxiety, depression, extreme anger, greed, and grief all have physical effects on us, as do joy and patience and kindness.

We live in a culture of craving. A great deal of the messaging that bombards us keeps saying that there is no such thing as enough. Whatever we have, we need to get more. Whatever we crave will not be satisfied unless we keep craving it. As a country, we are a lot like the swollen man, craving what we know will eat us alive.

Yesterday morning at Bible Study, we talked about using our sacred imaginations, which means giving ourselves room to fill in the gaps in the stories we read, to flesh out the details. As I think about Jesus embracing the man, I picture him looking in his eyes and repeating the words Jesus heard at his own baptism—“You are my beloved child in whom I delight”—and then letting the guy go his way.

Whatever he said let the man feel like he could stop craving. He was healed of his hunger.

I invite you to put yourself in the story this morning. Close your eyes and picture yourself at the feast with Jesus—picture yourself as the man swollen and thirsty. Now imagine Jesus embracing you, pulling you close and saying, “You are my beloved child in whom I delight.” Let those words sink in. Stand there for a moment, wrapped in the arms of love.

I know the story says Jesus released him but remember nothing can separate us from the love of God. You are wonderfully and uniquely created in the image of God and worthy to be loved. Now let yourself feel the release that comes with those words. Find healing from your hunger.

One more thing: we don’t have a seating chart at coffee hour. Amen.

Peace,
Milton

lenten journal: table talk

table talk

we sat around tables
in the church basement
we call fellowship hall
sharing a potluck supper
that turned out to be
an abundance of bread
on the table were sheets
holding definitions of
theologies of communion
our topic for the night
we read the paragraphs
and then we told stories
sharing a meal the whole
time we talked about
what it meant to belong
which had less to do
with the -ations and -isms
on our printed placemats
and more to do with being
at the table together
no slight to the scholars
just a reminder that
some theological truths
are best expressed when
we talk with our mouths full

Peace,
Milton

lenten journal: we are parables

I chose a passage today that doesn’t make the Lectionary but has a lot to say in these days. These three verses from Luke hold two parables that say a lot in three sentences.

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One of the things I like about our ecumenical Ash Wednesday service are the mini homilies each of the pastors gives because we do it without knowing what the others are going to do. Everyone has their own style and their own message to bring to the moment.

George Manukas, the pastor at Dunbar United Church of Christ, spoke first the other night and told a parable—not one of Jesus’, but a parable nonetheless: a story that calls us to ponder what it means for our lives without giving us direct answers. Parables leave us a little bewildered—in a good way.

When George started, I wasn’t really sure where he was going because he began by saying that when God realized everyone was in heaven, God was upset because that seemed like too many people. So God started going through the Ten Commandments, asking who had broken them. Whoever raised their hand was banished to Hell. (By this time, I really wasn’t sure where he was headed.) He went on to say that by the time God got to the seventh commandment, heaven had been cleared of everyone but one hermit who had lived in solitary his whole life, but God was not happy. Heaven was too empty. So God called everyone back and welcomed them.

There was great rejoicing—except for the hermit, who was livid. George said the hermit yelled at God and said, “You could have told me this sooner.”

And then George sat down. He didn’t explain a thing.

We all sat there a bit stunned for a moment. But that’s the way parables work, and Jesus used them frequently and masterfully. Our passage today holds two of them, each one only a couple of sentences, both of them painting pictures of the Realm, or the Economy—the housekeeping system—of God.

First, Jesus said the Economy of God was like a tiny mustard seed that grew into a tree big enough to harbor birds. Then he said it was like a couple of teaspoons of yeast that can cause a whole bag of flour to rise.

At first glance, it feels like Jesus was telling the Palestinian equivalent of The Little Engine that Could, reminding people that little things matter more than we realize. That message is in there, but these stories are working on other levels as well that require those of us who are not Hebrew bakers or farmers to look closer at what is going on in these stories.

As far as the first parable goes, it seems like Jesus was having a little fun in his story, because the mustard that grew in Palestine was a bush—a big bush, up to eight feet tall, but you would have to stretch to call it a tree. And besides that, the bushes were a nuisance. The plants were invasive and were hard to get rid of once they took root because the seeds germinated as soon as they hit the soil. We might even call them weeds.

No one would have planted mustard seeds on purpose because they would never get rid of them, the same way the morning glories we planted on the fence in our garden many years ago show up all over the place.

But Jesus didn’t mention any of that. There’s no indication that he saw the mustard bushes as problems. Or maybe he was saying that God’s economy, which values everyone and grows a society rooted in justice, may seem small but is the kind of glorious nuisance that can’t be wiped out by power and privilege. Love just keeps coming, popping up all over the place. Like a weed.

Then he switched to talking about yeast and how a small amount can make a whole bunch of bread rise. People in his time used yeast daily—except at Passover when they ate unleavened bread. Where the mustard seed grows into a bush you can see, the yeast disappears into the bread dough where it can’t be separated out. It dissolves into the loaf. The only reason you know it’s there is because the dough rises.

Much like the other parable, Jesus didn’t say the yeast is good or bad, just that God’s economy works the same way, disappearing into society and changing things, making things rise up.

A musician friend of mine posted a quote by Pete Seeger that made me think of these parables. Seeger said, “I’m convinced that if the world survives these dangerous times it will be tens of millions of small things that do it.”

Pete was writing in a different dangerous time, and he was speaking in a parable as well.

To say that small things make a big difference is more than a truism: it’s a mystery. It doesn’t make sense, and we know it’s true both at the same time. We are a living breathing parable every time we gather for worship and trust that a room full of people coming together to pray and sing and worship matters in the scope of human history, or even in what happens in the rest of the world today.

It doesn’t make sense and yet here we are, standing in the lineage of those who have showed up pretty much every Sunday for almost three hundred years trusting that it matters to be one of the million small things, one little mustard bush.

It does matter, and it also reminds us that we live in the middle of things we don’t understand or can’t easily explain, which calls us to dig deeper than what appears on the surface, which takes me to another musician: Kendrick Lamar, a hip-hop artist who was the headliner for the Super Bowl halftime show.

I first have to admit that hip-hop is a language I don’t speak well. Pete Seeger is more my speed. As the halftime show began to unfold I knew I was in over my head. I was watching something that was going to take work for me to understand. It demanded more of me than saying, “I don’t get it.”

What I could grasp was it was a master class in effective subversion and protest, much like Pete Seeger singing “This Land is Your Land.” It was also a master class in excellence with what it took to rehearse and coordinate all those dancers and put on a show that ran the length of the field, all the while doing it in a way that was kind of understated and not self-promotional, which is generally the focus of the halftime show regardless of the performer. It was also a master class in courage because he dared to create a performance that was full of meaning in a moment designed for entertainment fluff between two halves of a football game. And he did all of those things with dancers, without traditional melody, and without an acoustic guitar.

Things we don’t understand aren’t automatically bad or wrong. Often, they are parables, invitations to growth and mystery, openings for the Spirit of God to be a bit of a nuisance, an invasive weed like the mustard seed, taking root where we least expect it, or like yeast, expanding our lives in surprising and disquieting ways.

I’ve told you the story about my father mentioning me in a sermon by saying, “In life you have to learn to tell the difference between a problem and a predicament. A problem is something you can change; a predicament is something you learn to live with.” It was a good observation, and it was a set up for his punchline: “I used to think my oldest son was a problem. Now I realize he is a predicament.”

I learned the same thing about him.

After reading our passage for this morning, I would offer a third thing. Life is not made up of just problems and predicaments. Life is also full of parables.

We are parables, odd little stories that let love loose in ways we don’t understand, in a world of parables that invite us to risk beyond our understanding, to reach out beyond our comfort level, and to be a bit of nuisance, little weeds, in the name of love. Amen.

Peace,
Milton

lenten journal: time piece

time piece

some time in the night we will
rob ourselves of an hour of sleep
so that we can save daylight

making some vague promise
that the hour saved will be kept
safely and returned in the fall

a story that only works if
we are looking at our wrists
rather than the heavens

the sunrise I saw this morning
on my way to coffee with friends
took all the time it needed

the one that follows tomorrow
will rise unsaved and spectacular
profligate and prodigal

precision and perspective
keep time to different rhythms
one of the matches a heartbeat

Peace,
Milton

lenten journal: liminality

liminality

how can two months ago
feel like history?

what was is long gone
what’s next is not yet here

our country is falling apart
like a poorly built rocket

we are left to wait
and hurt and not know

what comes next
but something’s coming

the way things are
is not sustainable

arrogance and power
are no match for

the cosmic imagination
of human possibility

here in the in-between
the breaking open

our institutions fail
and we are still here

making our home
in the middle of it all

grief hurt anger pain
hope heartbreak love

life is improvisation
we are made for this

this passing phase
may last our lifetimes

but we are not
the whole story

living on the cusp isn’t
for the faint of heart

ask the ancestors
who walked before us

and then sing with me
under our sister stars

who have out shone
every petty tyrant

I’ll say it again
we are made for this

Peace,
Milton

lenten journal: sing a song

“And, when all else fails, we sing ourselves sane.” — Barbara Holmes

One of the things I’ve come to believe after nine years in Connecticut is the people who built the roads in this state never imagined that people would want to go from east to west. They made it fairly easy to get from New York to Boston, or even New York to Springfield, Massachusetts, but why anyone would want to go from Guilford to Northfield, as I did today, did not cross their minds.

The reason I made the unusual journey was I had the chance to record a song I wrote last summer as a part of the New England Songwriters Retreat, led by Ellis Paul and Laurie McAlister, which was one of the most inspirational gatherings I have had the pleasure of being a part of.

The song I wrote is called “The Belong Song.” When I played it for Ginger she said, “That is the most Milton song ever. It’s a song in search of a youth camp that I wrote during a retreat I attended hoping to strengthen my confidence in my ability to write a melody.

It worked.

The reason I got to record today is the song was voted by my peers as their favorite of the retreat, which came with a day in the studio to produce both a recording and a video, thanks to the generosity of Tracy Walton, who owns and runs On Deck Sound Studio in Northfield. With everything going on in all our lives, today was the day I got to spend in the studio.

Tracy and Eddie, his assistant, were expansively generous in the way they guided and encouraged me. Tracy also played stand-up bass, high string guitar, and drums on the track. In five hours we had all the pieces of both the song and the video in hand. Now they will put their finishing touches and then send me the final versions in a few weeks.

Though it will be almost nine months since the retreat by the time I can share the song, the timing feels pretty good. We need a Belong Song. The chorus of mine says,

you belong and I do too
we belong yes me and you
everybody sing the song
everyone belongs

I can’t count how many times I sang those words today–and they didn’t get old.

I read the quote from Barbara Holmes at the top of this post yesterday and drove him this evening convinced she speaking truth. I didn’t read the news or engage much on social media, I just sang and played with my little village of three in the woods of northwest Connecticut and imagined where the song might go once it gets a chance.

Last night I told Ginger that I have become aware of a level of anxiety in myself that is odd for me. I live with depression, but anxiety has not usually been a significant part of the mix. The state of our country makes me anxious, even frightened. Singing today made a difference. I drove home this afternoon more calm and centered. Nothing changed but me.

Today, that’s enough.

Peace,
Milton

PS–As soon as I have the music, I will share it, I promise.

lenten journal: ashes to go

Ash Wednesday is a busy day in the life of a part-time pastor, and by that I mean I worked a full day.

My morning at work started with talking to a woman whom I met when we invited a local dog shelter to share in our Blessing of the Animals. Actually, I met with her and her husband who have a new baby and wanted to talk about baptism for the little one. Our shared love of shelter dogs opened the door for a deeper connection.

Then I went up the hill to the Lutheran church in Hamden to help Josh administer “ashes to go,” which he has done for a few years now. I helped last year as well. Over two hours, about sixty cars came through holding a wonderful variety of humanity. Without exception, I was greeted with a look of expectation as I approached the car. I asked their name and told them mine and then I called them by name and said, “You are beloved of God. Yes, you came from dust and will return to dust, but even more you came from love and will return to love,” and then I smudged a cross on their forehead.

More than one person teared up as I talked. What might have been nothing more than the liturgical equivalent of a drive through lane became a succession of sacred moments.

Before I got to work I read another chapter in Crisis Contemplation by Barbara Holmes and she quoted Katherine Fritz:

It’s a fallacy of our modern lives to assume that the concept of a “neighborhood” only encompasses a select group of people: our actual neighbors, our coworkers, our family, our partners. In truth, our neighborhoods are vastly more sprawling and interconnected than we frequently acknowledge.

Howard then noted that Fritz

recognizes that neighbors are defined by relationships, brief or recurring, that emerge and recede during daily life. Some neighbors abide and then move on, others share deeply resonant relations, yet others connect to us in brief but recurring episodes. When all the pieces of the life puzzle are moving, static definitions will not do.

My neighbors drove up, rolled down their windows and let me reach in and touch my finger to their foreheads and make a somewhat abstract sign of the Cross and tell them they were loved, loved, loved. And then they drove off into the rest of their lives and I went on about mine.

Incidental contact is not insignificant unless we choose for it to be.

Happy Lent!

Peace,
Milton

what’s the story?

I veered away from the Lectionary passage this week because I was captured by the story in Luke 7:1-10, which is about, well, stories.

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One of the things I like about living in Guilford is being able to shop at Forte’s Market, mainly because they have a real butcher counter where they grind the meat when I order it and are happy to cut steaks to my preference instead of inviting me to choose from an array of shrink-wrapped packages.

It is a family business that goes back almost a hundred years and is run now by Ron Forte—or at least he’s the one I know behind the counter. I say I know him, but what I know of him is a small slice of his life. I come into his store and we greet each other and then I tell him what I need and we usually have a short food-related conversation while he is getting things ready for me. He’s always pleasant, he treats his customers well, and he has a great laugh.

Still, I don’t know much of anything about him beyond his life as a butcher, nor does he know much about me, though if someone were to ask, we would both say, “Yeah, I know him. He’s a good guy.” (At least that’s what I think he would say about me.) But there’s much more to both of our stories than what we share at Forte’s Market.

In a similar way, we see news stories about people in the public eye and we can come away with the notion that we know them as well, perhaps because of the article, or because of a role they played in a movie we loved, or maybe an interview. I’ve heard more than one story about people who finally got to meet someone famous they felt really connected to only to find the person was not at all like they expected.

Jesus appears to have had such an encounter in our passage today.

Not long after he had preached, admonishing everyone to love their enemies, which is another way of saying not to settle for the simplistic story of who someone is, he was approached by the some of the religious leaders who had a message from a Roman centurion—a commanding officer in the Roman army—asking Jesus to help his servant who was deathly ill—and the servant was probably an enslaved migrant who had been forced to move to Palestine from another Roman colony.

The religious leaders were not being strongarmed by the Roman commander. It seems they really wanted to help him because he had been instrumental in making sure the town had a synagogue. “He loves our people,” they said—an odd thing to say about an officer in the army oppressing the country.

Can you hear the multiplicity of layers in this interchange? Most of the time the gospel writers paint the religious leaders as the bad guys, those who are critical of Jesus and do what they can to undermine him.

In this account, Luke tells a different story about them. They came to Jesus asking for help on their enemy’s behalf. And Jesus went with them. Before they could get to the house where the sick man was, another group came with a message from the centurion—this time, Luke says the officer sent “his friends,” and they told Jesus that the commander didn’t feel worthy to host him and trusted that the servant could be healed without Jesus having to go in the house. When Jesus heard their words, Luke says he was impressed and astonished.

“I haven’t found anyone who trusts like this,” he said, “even among those who grew up in faith.” And when the centurion’s friends got back to the house, the servant was feeling better.

Most of the miracles of Jesus are what one of my seminary professors called “parables in event,” which is to say the gospel writers told them to convey a deeper message in the same way they wrote down the parables so we would have to unpack the stories. And most of the miracles created situations where Jesus used the moment to teach a lesson that people don’t seem to be grasping.

It feels different here.

Everyone in the story plays a crucial role in creating the space for the servant to be healed. It’s as though they actually listened to Jesus’ sermon!

The centurion risked asking for help from the religious leaders, who then spoke to Jesus on his behalf. Then the friends came to convey how much the commander trusted Jesus could change things. And Jesus responded with amazement and compassion. Had the centurion or the religious leaders or the friends held to the common stories about each other, none of the conversations would have taken place and the servant would have died. Everyone was willing to be more and do more than was expected of them.

No one’s life can be summarized in a single story—a label, a characterization, an affiliation. I don’t mean to say there aren’t bad people. There are people who choose to damage and who encourage evil. We have to be aware and awake. What I am saying is to be human is to be complex. We are a lifetime full of stories that have shaped us. We are walking libraries, which means we have to be willing to do the work of learning more about each other than the most convenient or most recent or most sensational information if we want to be the kind of peacemakers Christ calls us to be.

The writers Joan Didion and Gregory Dunne were married for forty years. After his death, she wrote a book about her grief called The Year of Magical Thinking in which she said, ““We imagined we knew everything the other thought, even when we did not necessarily want to know it, but in fact, I have come to see, we knew not the smallest fraction of what there was to know.”

She’s a writer, so you have to give her room for a bit of overstatement because I’m sure they knew a lot about each other. Still, she learned, there was more to know—and she gives us something worth remembering: No one’s story is that simple. To love one another means to listen and to learn instead of label. To love means to open our hearts to be caught by surprise, to be curious rather than concise in our understanding so we can truly love our neighbors as ourselves. Amen.

Peace,
Milton

foundation issues

I know I wasn’t the only one who struggled with what to say in my sermon today. I chose the passage a few weeks back—Luke 6:39-49—and it gave me a good jumping off place this morning. As I prepared the sermon, I kept thinking about words from King Lear I first learned reading Frederick Buechner: “The weight of these sad times we must obey, speak what we feel, not what we ought to say.”

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When I think back on Bible stories I remember as a child, one of the most enduring ones is the last parable in our reading this morning where Jesus compares building a house on the sand with building a house on a rock. Part of the reason is that it is a great image—you can picture it, even if you are not inclined toward housebuilding. And then there’s the fact that we learned a song to go with it, complete with hand motions (“The wise man built his house upon the rock . . .), which is probably the real reason it was cemented in my mind.

To live in Connecticut means to know what it means to build your house on a rock. The whole state is granite—sometimes so much so that foundations are hard to build.

Our coastlines might tell a different story. Last fall a video made the rounds of a house on the Outer Banks of North Carolina that collapsed into the sea because of beach erosion. Similar things have happened along the New England coast as well, thanks to the effects of climate change. You can bet I started singing the song as I watched the waves take the house apart (“The foolish man builds his house upon the sand . . .).

When we turn to Jesus’ use of the metaphor, which comes at the end of the sermon we have looked at for the last three Sundays, we need to look back to see what kind of foundation he called for us to build for our lives. He started off by saying that God’s Economy is built to make sure everyone gets what they need to thrive and that we all share what we have so everyone is covered, has their needs met, and is cared for. Aren reminded us that Jesus said not only should we love our enemies, but we should love one another in a way that does not demand reciprocity or repayment.

In today’s reading, Jesus challenges our arrogance with an image of trying to get a speck out of someone else’s eye when we have a small log in our own, and then switches to a say that fruit trees are known by the fruit they produce (people, too), and then he moves the person whose words and actions match each other in God’s Economy is like the one who builds a house with a solid foundation. It will withstand whatever storm is coming.

Our house in Guilford was built in 1795 as the schoolhouse for the town. It originally sat on the Town Green. Around 1830, it was moved from the Green and hauled by a team of oxen down the street to where it is now. They did not put it on a true foundation; they just stacked up some stones so it was secure and left it that way—much like the front steps of our sanctuary, which we repaired. Last year, Ginger’s church did what they could to fill in holes because of the number of critters who made their way in and out, but our foundation is not what we thought it was and that has had its consequences.

This past week, I spent the day at the Legacy Museum in Montgomery, Alabama, along with a group from Ginger’s church on a civil rights history tour. The museum is the best I have ever seen. The Equal Justice Initiative, its founding organization, presents an amazing amount of information in ways that speak to different kinds of learners without totally overwhelming them, and also offering difficult and tragic information in a way that offers people a chance to respond with something other than just outrage or guilt.

One of the things that struck me most profoundly—perhaps because I knew I was preaching about building on good foundations—was that the foundation on which we have built our country is not as solid as we want it to be. Slavery was a part of the mix—a crucial part of the mix—from the beginning. The first slave ship arrived in 1619, over a hundred and fifty years before we became an independent nation. In 1730, half of white New Yorkers personally enslaved Black people. By 1776, one in four households in Connecticut enslaved Black people. Many of the big insurance and finance companies who are at the center of our economy made their initial wealth funding and insuring the slave trade. Of our first twelve presidents, John Adams and John Quincy Adams were the only two who were never slaveowners.

I know these are hard things to hear but hang with me.

They call it the Legacy Museum because they want us to understand and come to terms with what it means that this is a part of our story as a country. It’s not the only part, and it is a significant part. The domestic slave trade permanently separated half of all Black families in the United States. Think about the implications of that for all the generations that have followed. The National Peace and Justice Memorial, which gives a visual of the thousands of Black people who were lynched, naming both the people and the towns and counties that killed them, marks the last lynching in 1957, the year after I was born, though I’m not sure those were actually the last incidents of racial terrorism.

This is not ancient history. We are still living the story. We are still building the house on a foundation that has some serious issues.

Jesus talked about how well the houses could survive a storm. (“The rains came down and the floods came up . . .) The one on the rock—the one grounded in God’s Economy of compassion and mutuality—survived. The one built on the sand—on the shifting ground of power and wealth—washed away.

You don’t need me to tell you that right now our nation—our world—is caught in the beginnings of a storm of strife and division and uncertainty. What is going on right now is not sustainable because it is not unifying. Two weeks ago, I said that the oldest meaning of the word economy is “household management,” which has less to do with supply and demand than it does with making sure everyone gets what they need. And I asked you to remember that Jesus talked about poverty, hunger, grief, and reputation, calling us to never lose sight of the fact that what we say and do and spend and eat and feel affects those around us.

How we understand our foundation—how we tell the story about how we became who we think we are, whether we are talking about our nation, our family of origin, our church, even our faith—also affects those around us. If who we think we are and who we actually are, based on what our words and actions show us to be, then our foundation will crumble and our house will not withstand the storm.

And as a country, we have not done a good job at coming to terms with the longstanding cracks in our foundation. We have to figure out how to do to our nation, our town, ourselves, what we did to our front steps when we realized they were not as strong as we thought they were. We tore them out and rebuilt them.

I realize that is a huge statement that is easier said than lived out. I also remember the sinking feeling I got when I saw the front of our church after the steps had been removed and realized how bad things actually were underneath. In the same way that we could not left the stairs without suffering a bad accident, we can’t leave things as they are and expect that things will just keep humming along.

The side of the Legacy Museum was emblazoned with a quote from Maya Angelou that read, “History, despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not be lived again.”

The root of the word courage means heart. To be courageous is to live with our heart in it, to mean it, to do what matters most. Our courage begins in this room where we have to continue to learn to talk to each other across our differences—to speak heart to heart—and then our courage moves out in concentric circles. How can we widen the scope of our compassion? How can we engage people outside of our normal patterns? We can make a point to shop at places owned by people of color. We can learn Spanish on Duolingo. We can check in with our LGBTQ siblings to make sure they know we are there for them. We can stack the stones of a strong foundation of love and belonging to build a better foundation. Let us take courage. Amen.

Peace,
Milton