Sunday, January 28, 2018

Epiphany 4, Year B (2018)

Deuteronomy 18: 15–20; Psalm 111; I Corinthians 8: 1–13;  Mark 1: 21–28

This is the homily given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Sunday, January 28, 2017 by Fr. Gene R. Tucker.
“MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE TO BE SEEN”
(Homily texts:  Deuteronomy 18: 15–20 & Mark 1: 21-28)
At first glance, there isn’t much that seems out-of-the-ordinary in Mark’s recounting of the beginnings of Jesus’ ministry. A summation of the events that Mark provides to us seems pretty unremarkable: Last week, Mark told us about the calling of Jesus’ first four disciples. Then, this week, we read that Jesus, this charismatic figure, begins His ministry by offering wisdom and advice, and that He has remarkable powers attributed to Him.
Such a story might characterize many figures that have found their ways into the pages of our history books. Certainly, in the ancient world, such accounts were the stock-in-trade of the escapades of the heroes of those times.
But, if we look more closely at the events that took place in the synagogue in Capernaum, there is much more to be seen. Much more, it turns out, that will find its fullest and deepest meanings in the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead on Easter Sunday morning. But here, at the beginning of His ministry, we discover that the seeds of God’s working through Jesus are already present.
So, let’s take a closer look.
At first glance, Jesus seems to be just an extraordinary human being, perhaps a charming individual and one who is possessed (despite His lack of formal education) of the gift of public speaking. Put another way, we might say that this Jesus is a person who has the ability to cause to people to sit up and listen when He talks.
But Mark tells us that Jesus’ teaching is “with authority”,[1] an authority that the scribes do not have. We ought to pause at this point to ponder this truth.
The scribes, along with the rabbis of Jesus’ day, derived their authority from the sources of their teaching. Specifically, the basis for their teaching would have been the Law, the Torah, the five books of Moses. So the Law provided the bedrock of their teaching. But Jesus’ teaching was different somehow, different because it rested on the authority of God directly. In due time, that authority will become more and more clear to those who received it (including Christians down through the ages as they heard and read the Gospel accounts).
Jesus’ teaching, however, is accompanied by the power to conquer and defeat those things that would destroy human life. In the case of the encounter in the synagogue, it involved the exorcism of evil spirits from a possessed man.[2] As time goes along, Jesus will also deliver people from the diseases and illnesses that afflicted them. And in the fullness of time, we will see God raise Jesus from the dead, as we said a moment ago.
This power, the power to defeat those things that destroy human life, those things that separate us from God, is – in its most basic form – the power to create and to re-create, a power that God demonstrated at the beginnings of the world, a power we will see again as Jesus defeats death and rises to new life on Easter Sunday morning.
The two ingredients of today’s Gospel account go together. Jesus’ teachings come from God directly, as does His power to create and to re-create. The latter confirms the source of the former.
We are faced with a problem, it seems to me, for we are asked to hold Jesus’ humanity and His divinity together, focusing not on one aspect of that identity to the detriment of the other. And herein lies the problem: If we read lots and lots of the first three Gospel accounts (Matthew, Mark and Luke, which are also known as the Synoptic[3] Gospels), then we might come to the conclusion that Jesus was just an extraordinary human being, one whose teaching caught people’s attention, one who – somehow – had the ability to do miracles (which, we modern human beings, might be tempted to discount as being the products of an ancient people’s imaginations).
Our current lectionary cycle, the three-year-cycle of readings known as the Revised Common Lectionary (RCL) places before us lots and lots of Matthew, Mark and Luke. The RCL is laid out so that we read and hear a lot of Matthew in Year A, Mark in Year B (the current year) and Luke in Year C.
These three Gospel accounts – all providing us a good deal of material from the Synoptics – focus on Jesus’ humanity. Not that they ignore Jesus’ divinity, they don’t. But their focus is on Jesus’ humanity.
        Personally, I believe that, because we have been hearing so much of the Synoptics in the RCL, and in the Book of Common Prayer three-year-cycle which preceded it, we’ve begun to regard Jesus from a human point-of-view. This process, in my humble estimation, has been going on for decades now. We’ve slowly been lulled into regarding Jesus from a mostly human perspective.
The cure for this condition, it seems to me, is to hear much more of the Fourth Gospel, John’s account, which focuses in on Jesus’ divinity. (In fairness to the RCL and to the Prayer Book cycle which preceded it, we do hear John now and again. But perhaps it’d be a good idea to revise the RCL and make it a four-year-cycle, with a Year D devoted to a focus on John’s account.)
Mark’s retelling of the events that unfolded in the synagogue has the markers of Jesus’ remarkable humanity. But Mark’s retelling also provides us with the raw material to see that God is at work in the things that Jesus did. Indeed, Jesus’ powers are divine.
We have before us a case if divine math:  One man + one God = One Jesus Christ.
To hold these two aspects of Jesus Christ’s identity in connection is a challenge for Christians today, just as it has been down through the ages. But one cannot separate Jesus’ humanity from His divinity. The two go together, one nature informing the other, one aspect of His identity forever connecting humanity to God, and the other aspect connecting God to humanity.
AMEN.
       



[1]   Luke also mentions this aspect of Jesus’ teaching (see Luke 4: 32), but Matthew does not impart this detail to us.
[2]   Deliverance from demonic powers and possession is a real phenomenon. Although, today, we might attribute some conditions to a physical ailment or disease that ancient peoples would have attributed to possession by the powers of evil, the nature of the interchange between Jesus and the evil spirits makes it clear that this is, indeed, a case of possession. The reality of demonic possession continues today. I know personally of a priest who has been involved in an exorcism.
[3]   “Synoptic” is a word which comes to us from the Greek, meaning a “similar view” of Jesus.

Sunday, January 21, 2018

Epiphany 3, Year B (2018)

Jonah 3: 1–5, 10; Psalm 62: 6–14; I Corinthians 7: 29–31; Mark 1: 14–20
This is the homily by given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Sunday, January 21, 2018 by Fr. Gene Tucker.
“GOD’S CALL AND THE HUMAN RESPONSE”
(Homily texts:  Jonah 3: 1–5, 10 & Mark 1: 14–20)
The Collect for this Sunday, as well as our Old Testament reading from Jonah and our Gospel text from Mark, chapter one, are all quite well matched, each one focusing on God’s call, and on the responses of human beings to that call.
        In the case of the people of Ninevah, and in the case of the response of four of Jesus’ first disciples, Peter and Andrew and James and John, the response to God’s call seems to be immediate. (Indeed, the word “immediately” is one of Mark’s favorite words to describe Jesus’ ministry and the response to His ministry….Mark’s gospel account is peppered with the word “immediately”.)
Our Old Testament reading and our Gospel reading are well matched in another way:  Each call involves repentance and amendment of life. Jonah proclaims God’s call to repentance to the people of Ninevah, while Jesus begins His public ministry in Galilee, reinforcing the message that was proclaimed by John the Baptist:  “Repent and believe the good news.”
Let’s unpack the scene that unfolds along the shores of the Sea of Galilee a little.
It might be easy for us to impose our twenty-first century expectations on these four sons as they are called into ministry by the Lord. For us today, we expect that our young people will – once they reach a certain age and are ready to go out into the world on their own – leave the house and strike out on their own to follow a career, to enter into marriage or to follow some other path.
But that’s not the reality of what’s happening with Peter, Andrew, James and John. All four of them are engaged in a family business, that of fishing. And apparently, if we can take careful notice of what Mark tells us about James and John, their family business is of sufficient size to allow them to hire others to assist in the conduct of it.
So when Jesus walks along the shore and calls each of them into His service, their departure from the security of their family businesses marks a departure from all that they had known to that point in their lives. Not only are they leaving behind family obligations, they are also embarking on a new career, one that will involve missionary work (in due time) as they go out to “fish for people”. In this sense, today’s Gospel passage has a definite forward-looking aspect to it.
It might be easy for us to think that these four disciples made an easy choice to follow Jesus. Certainly there must have been something that was very compelling about the Lord’s invitation to come and follow Him. But a major change in life style and in the course of their lives was also involved, though they probably didn’t realize just how great those changes would – in time – become.
Today, as it was when Jesus called these four men into His service, God’s call often involves a major change in the trajectory of our lives. Once we decide to follow the Lord, whatever priorities and plans we may have had for our lives now must factor in God’s desires for us. Those desires may take on radical dimensions as we respond to God’s call to serve. For example, some Christians will leave family, familiar surroundings and established careers to become missionaries in a new (and perhaps) different place.
Even if the scope of change isn’t as great as that, God’s call will always involve some change in our understanding of what God has in mind for us.
So, how do we discern God’s call to us today, a call that is made to each and every person, a call that begins in Baptism? How do we hear and discern God calling us into some sort of ministry or service?
Such a call may come as a result of Bible study, or as a result of meditation, or in conversation with another Christian believer. The Holy Spirit can use each and all of these things (and perhaps, other means as well) to issue God’s call to us and God’s invitation to go into the world, carrying the good news of God made known in Christ Jesus.
AMEN.


Sunday, January 07, 2018

Epiphany 1, Year B (2018)

Genesis 1: 1–5; Psalm 29; Acts 19: 1–7; Mark 1: 4–11
This is the homily that was given at St. John’s; Huntingdon, Pennsylvania on Sunday, January 7, 2017 by Fr. Gene Tucker.
“IN EVERY WAY AS WE HAVE EXPERIENCED”
(Homily text:  Mark 1: 4–11)
As the Church Year unfolds, some of the Sundays have a theme or a subtitle. For example, the last Sunday of the Church Year is known as “Christ the King Sunday”. There is also a “Good Shepherd Sunday”, which is the Fourth Sunday of Easter. This Sunday is one of those, for on the First Sunday after the Epiphany each year, we celebrate and observe this day as “The Baptism of our Lord Jesus Christ”.
This event in Jesus’ life and ministry must have been very important to the early Christians, for each of the three Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark and Luke) record this incident. (John’s Gospel account does not narrate Jesus’ baptism, but does tell us that Jesus’ disciples were baptizing….see John 3:22 and 4: 1, 2.)
We might wonder why Jesus went to the Jordan River to meet up with His cousin, John the Baptist, and to be baptized by him. Some plausible reasons might include:
  • Curiosity about what was going on with John’s ministry and activity out in the wilderness. After all, John’s work was gathering a lot of attention, and perhaps Jesus had heard about John’s presence and activity when He Himself went to Jerusalem on pilgrimage.
  • A desire to reconnect with John, after having heard about the relationship between His mother, Mary, and her cousin, Elizabeth, who was John’s mother. (See Luke 1: 39–45.)
  • A desire to give approval to John’s work by submitting to baptism Himself.
  • A desire to lead by example by submitting to baptism.

This last point needs some explanation.
John’s baptism was a baptism for repentance of sin. If Jesus was without sin, as many passages in the New Testament make clear,[1] then why did Jesus press John to be baptized?
The most likely answer is that Jesus – in His baptism – leads us by example.
We might characterize all of Jesus’ actions as His earthly ministry unfolds by altering a very familiar statement: In essence, Jesus tells us to “Do as I say, and do as I do.”
From here, from Jesus’ baptism, Jesus will go out into the wilderness to be tempted by the evil one. So Jesus experiences temptations, just as we are tempted.
From His temptation, Jesus will encounter every sort of human condition in which people suffer and are estranged from God and from one another. Jesus inhabits a world in which disease, death and sin reign.
From this world, Jesus experiences rejection, suffering and death, just as we are subject to those very same things.
From His rejection, suffering and death, Jesus rises from the dead, conquering those things that would threaten to destroy us and which would separate us from God’s love.
Jesus’ victory over all these things gives us the down payment of our own victory over suffering, estrangement and death, guaranteeing us a place at the Father’s throne in heaven, providing the assurance that nothing can separate us from the love of God, made known in Christ. (See Romans 8: 31–39.)
God’s willingness to send His only Son, Jesus Christ, to break into the human condition is one of the distinctive hallmarks of the Christian faith. For in Jesus’ coming, we understand that God stands not outside of human history, but has entered it Himself in the person of Jesus Christ. (See Philippians 2: 5–11.) So God takes up our human condition, completely and fully, immersing Himself in every sort of disappointment, pain, separation and loss that we can ever imagine.
In sending Jesus Christ, God is telling us, “Do as He (Jesus) says, and do as He (Jesus) does.”
AMEN.
           



[1]   Examples which emphasize this point include:  II Corinthians 5: 21, Hebrews 4: 15 and I Peter 2: 22.