Sunday, June 27, 2021

Pentecost 5, Year B (2021)

Proper 8 ::  Wisdom of Solomon 1: 13–25; 2: 23–24 / Psalm 130 / II Corinthians 8: 7–15 / Mark 5: 21–43

This is the homily given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, PA, by Fr. Gene Tucker on Sunday, June 27, 2021.

 “THERE’S NOTHING WORSE THAN TRYING TO WORK WITH POOR TOOLS!”

(Homily texts:  Wisdom of Solomon 1: 13–15; 2: 23–24 & Mark 5: 21–43)

There’s not much in the world that I find more aggravating or troubling than trying to work with a poor-quality tool. You know, tools of the sort that when you hit something with a hammer made of poor-quality metal, a piece of steel flies off the head of the hammer, making it unusable for anything else except to put it into the recycling pile. That sort of thing. Poor tools make the hard work of getting something done all the more difficult, because not only the challenges of the work at hand have to be dealt with, but the limitations (and failures) of poor-quality or poorly-designed tools also have to be struggled with.

What come to my mind when I consider this situation is the old Army adage which says, “Life is short, go first class!” To which I would add, and use good tools.

I submit that this Sunday’s overall theme points us to the work that God is about, and the work that God calls us to be about in His name. We are called to engage alongside God in the work that He is about. We are, in God’s hands, called to be good tools.

That good work is the work of creating and recreating.

An explanation is in order, I think.

Our first reading this Sunday comes to us from the Wisdom of Solomon, one of the books that are found in the Apocrypha. We don’t tend to spend much time in the books in this part of the writings that have come down to us, for the Apocrypha is that set of books that generally occupies the time between the Old and the New Testaments.

Today’s reading informs us that God is the God of life, the One whose creative powers have brought all things to be that have been created. God’s intent, in our Wisdom reading, is for life, not for death. The writer affirms what we already know from the creation accounts in the book of Genesis. There, we read that as God created this thing and then that thing, He declared that each thing He’d created was “good”. And then, at the end of the creative process, God declares that everything He has made is “very good.”[1]

So we can affirm this principle from Genesis:  1. God created everything that is (including humankind); 2. God sustains what He has created (including humankind); and 3. God loves all that He has created (including humankind).

Now, let’s turn our attention to our Gospel reading, appointed for today. There, we see that Jesus has been summoned by the leader of the synagogue, Jairus, to come and heal his daughter, who lies near death. On His way to visit the daughter, Jesus is surrounded by a large crowd. A woman in the crowd comes up behind Him, determined to be able to get close enough to touch His clothing. She has suffered with a hemorrhage for twelve years. (What happens next is quite interesting, though it is a bit aside from the main theme of our consideration this morning: Jesus turns, knowing that someone had touched Him, and He asks who it was. The woman comes forward, admitting what she’d done, and Jesus commends her for her faith, which has been the instrumental aspect of her complete healing.) Following this incident, Jesus continues His journey to Jairus’ house. There, a large crowd has gathered, weeping and mourning over the condition of the daughter. They tell him the girl is dead. He says she is only sleeping,[2] but tells them to have faith. Then He goes inside, where He tells her in Aramaic, “Talitha cumi”,[3] which means “Little girl, I say to you, arise.”

The girl rises, Jesus tells those in the house to give her something to eat.

The two incidents, the woman who was suffering with the flow of blood, and Jairus’ daughter, are both in conditions that are far beyond human abilities to address and heal. Notice that Mark tells us that the woman had done all she could do to get relief from her condition with the physicians. Likewise, the mourners affirm that the situation with Jairus’ daughter is beyond all humanly possible reason for hope.

There is a pattern to Jesus’ actions in bringing new life, new hope, to these situations that are instructive for us if we are to be effective tools for God to make use of to create and to recreate as we make our way through life. After all, we who are believers affirm God’s love for that which He has created, including the people He has deliberately created. Here, then, is the pattern in Jesus’ actions:

·         Jesus works with individuals.

·         Jesus restores impaired relationships, recreating new bonds of togetherness.

·         Jesus addresses the real world, everyday, physical needs of people.

·         Jesus’ works from the outward and visible needs of people, transforming their spiritual needs in the process.

Let’s look at each one of these points, taken away some lessons for ourselves, in order that we might be better tools in God’s hands:

Individuals:  Notice that the Lord works with individuals. In the healing accounts, it is usually a one-on-one encounter between the person in need and the Lord. (This is not to ignore the Lord’s ability to deal with large crowds, in such circumstances as the Sermon on the Mount or the feeding of the five thousand people.) For ourselves, it’s often an individual, one-on-one encounter with another human being where our ability to offer an open ear, a listening heart, and a ready willingness to help that begins the process of creating (or recreating) a relationship between that one we’re dealing with and God.

Relationships:  Notice that the woman who had been ill for twelve years, and Jairus’ daughter, were both ritually unclean by virtue of their circumstances. Neither one could worship in the temple in Jerusalem. If someone came into contact with either of them, they, too, would become unclean. But Jesus (as he usually does) sweeps aside these barriers which impede contact and which impair relationships. We, too, must be willing to engage others we meet, being willing to go outside our comfort zones if need be, to establish our love for God in the things we say and do with another human being.

Dealing with the visible and observable situation at hand:  Effective witness to God’s love, residing in our hearts, usually doesn’t begin with some theological pronouncement. Nor does it do anyone much good to begin by probing into the depths of a person’s heart of hearts. Better to do what Jesus does, and to deal with the outward and visible signs of a person’s everyday condition. Begin there, and then allow the other to offer what they are willing to offer. Look for signs of spiritual hunger. Look for tangible ways to express the love that God has for us, and which we desire to share with others. That helps, too.

Working inward to the invisible and spiritual:  Just as Jesus deals with the hardships, the challenges, and the needs of those He encountered, so are we to do the same, as we’ve just affirmed. But Jesus doesn’t stop there. His intent is to transform lives, to re-establish a relationship with God, to mend broken relationships between God and others. Our intent must be, as well, to want to change the hearts of those we encounter, to provide a visible pathway for God to make use of to enter into the heart of another. It won’t do for us to simply want to do “good stuff” in God’s name, and to leave it there. No, the intent must be to share the Good News (Gospel) that God so loves the world that He gave His only Son, in order that all might have eternal life.” (I am paraphrasing John 3:16.)

Working from the outward and the visible inward to the inner and the invisible is, essentially, sacramental work.[4] For in the tangible, the touchable, the visible, we can begin the process of assisting God in the creating (and recreating) process of bringing a person’s heart and their entire life into a new, lively and intense love relationship with God.

May we be effective, good and usable tools in the Lord’s hands.

AMEN.

         



[1]   The entire creative process is well worth reading, chapter one of the book of Genesis.

[2]   Luke tells us, in a parallel account of this incident, that the girl was, indeed, dead.  See Luke 8:55.

[3]   Aramaic was the commonly spoken, everyday language in the time of Jesus’ earthly ministry. Hebrew was a largely liturgical language, used in temple worship and in the synagogues.

[4]   A Sacrament is defined as an “outward and visible sign of an inner and spiritual grace.”


Sunday, June 13, 2021

Pentecost 3, Year B (2021)

Proper 6 :: Ezekiel 17:22 – 24 / Psalm 92:1 – 4, 11 – 14 / II Corinthians 5:6 – 17 / Mark 4:26 – 34

This is the homily given at St. John’s, Huntingdon, PA, by Fr. Gene Tucker, on Sunday, June 13, 2021.

 

“GROWTH: SMALL BEGINNINGS, GREAT ENDINGS”

(Homily text: Mark 4:26 – 34)

Ever wonder about things in life, often everyday things that might not catch or capture our attention, but if we take a good, close look, appear to us to be mysteries? Take, for example, the idea of planting a seed in the ground, then waiting for it to sprout and come up from the soil, and then to mature into a grown plant. In reality, we can understand the process by which the seed dies, then give way to new life, and then to mature and full growth. But isn’t a part of that process beyond our comprehension? For me it is, and perhaps, it is for you, too.

Just such a scenario is contained in the two parables that Jesus told, contained in today’s appointed Gospel text.

In the first parable, a small seed is planted, and then, without additional assistance or help, it grows. This parable describes the initial growth cycle of a plant. The second parable (often called the “Parable of the Mustard Seed”), describes the final product of the planting of the small mustard seed.

Jesus often used commonly known illustrations from everyday, common life, to point to the larger and deeper realities of God’s plan, God’s rule, God’s kingdom. After all, in the time of His earthly ministry, most people were either farmers, or were keepers of animals of some sort. They would have been very familiar with such illustrations.

The root meaning of the word “parable” is to “place something alongside something else”. (That’s my paraphrase of the meaning.) Jesus is, by describing the planting, growth and maturation process found in agriculture placing a commonly known and encountered experience alongside the less familiar business about God’s kingdom.

Having mentioned the word “kingdom”, it might be good for us to pause for a moment to reflect on some of the widely harbored desires of many of God’s people in the time that our Lord came among us. It seems clear that many were looking for a deliverer, perhaps the long-awaited Messiah, to come and usher in a new and golden age for God’s people, and age that might look a whole lot like the golden age of Kings David and Solomon, a time when Israel was secure and powerful and was the envy of many who lived nearby.

And perhaps some who heard Jesus start talking about a “kingdom” might have thought that perhaps He might be the one to usher in that great and grand new kingdom of the kind that David and Solomon presided over, nearly a thousand years before.

But Jesus offers a completely different view of the coming kingdom.

For one thing, the kingdom has a beginning, one provided by the sower of the seed. Ultimately, the one who sows is God. But God is assisted in this work by Jesus. And, as we shall see, by many others. (Stay tuned for a moment as we attempt to flesh out this idea.)

For another, the kingdom’s growth is mysterious, and it seems to grow unaided.

Then, in the fullness of time, the kingdom’s spread and its benefits are plain to see.

Returning to the idea of the parable being something in which one idea is placed alongside another, let’s explore the points we’ve just made a bit further.

If the ultimate creator of the kingdom is God, then others, following Jesus’ example, assist in its creation as well. To this list, we should add the Apostles, the Church Fathers, and all those, great and small, who have planted the seeds of the kingdom in their own time and place, down through history.

Then, those seeds will bear fruit. No, not in ways that we – or those who planted in times past – might expect. After all, it’s God’s design, not ours. Our role is to be faithful.

These two parables go hand-in-hand with one another, for the Lord points to a large kingdom, one whose reach is world-wide. We, as Christians in the twenty-first century, might lose sight of the expansive vision of the kingdom’s reach, living in a post-Christian age as we do.

Faithful living to God and to our Lord calls us to be faithful in very small things. After all, it’s God’s place to use our faithfulness to build the kingdom. The design of that kingdom isn’t ours to dictate, that task belongs to God. So, in whatever small and seemingly insignificant ways, ways that may seem unimportant or almost worthless in their ability to build God’s kingdom, we are called to faithful seed scattering for God’s sake and for the welfare of others.

AMEN.