Sunday, June 29, 2025

Pentecost 3, Year C (2025)

I Kings 19: 15–16, 19–21 / Psalm 16 / Galatians 5: 1, 13–25 / Luke 9: 51–62

This is the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Sunday, June 29, 2025 by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

 

“LIFE PASSAGES & GOD’S CALL”

(Homily texts:  I Kings 19: 15–16, 19–21, Galatians 5: 1, 13–25 & Luke 9: 51–62)

As we make our way through life, we will encounter a number of passages, each of which have the ability to change us in ways that make us different from the ways we were before we transitioned to a new chapter or way of being.

For example: Think about graduation from school, or perhaps moving to a new home or to a new community. How about getting married, or becoming a parent? Or, how about joining the military, or acquiring a new skill (and along with those new abilities, a new job)?

Life is full of such things, and others.

Three Scripture readings, appointed for this Sunday, each have to do with changes, life changes. They are well-suited to that common theme.

We should begin with the prophet Elisha’s call. We read in I Kings 19 that the prophet Elijah came by Elisha and cast his mantle over him. Elijah asks, “…do you know what I have done to you?”. In response, Elisha seems to understand the significance of Elijah’s actions, goes to his family and bids them farewell. Then, he sacrifices the oxen with which he had been plowing, signifying his farewell to his former life. After that, his life changes as be assists Elijah, and then – in time - succeeds him in God’s work.

Next, let’s look at our Gospel passage.

In Luke 9:51, we hear that Jesus now sets His face to go to Jerusalem. (In Luke’s account, this is a turning point, for – from this point forward – all of Luke’s narrative will have to do with Jesus’ determination to fulfill God’s call and God’s purpose in His coming to take up our humanity.)

Jesus’ determination to go to Jerusalem is seen in His determination to go directly through Samaria. Remember that, in that day and time, most devout Jews would avoid Samaria entirely if they had to go from Galilee, in the north, to Jerusalem in the south…they would either go out of their way and go east, down to the Jordan valley, and then back up the hill westward to Jerusalem, or they would make their way west along the coast and then back inland again to Jerusalem.

But Jesus makes His way directly through this area. He seems determined to make His way to the Holy City, to fulfill God’s call and purpose.

Perhaps the Samaritans sense His determination in their seeming unwillingness to offer Him a welcome.

Then, three encounters with unnamed persons take place along the way. The first one says, “I will follow you wherever you go”, to which the Lord replies, “Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head”. Then, another comes, and the Lord says, “Follow me”. But the person says, “Lord, let me first go and bury by father.” The Lord’s response might be difficult to understand, for He says, “Let the dead bury their dead. But as for you, go and proclaim the kingdom of God”. Still another says, “I will follow you, Lord, but let me first say farewell to those at my home”. In response, Jesus says, “No one who puts their hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God”. (Notice the parallels to the Elijah and Elisha account in I Kings.)

In each of these three encounters, the unifying theme is one of utter and complete devotion to God’s call to work for the advancement of the kingdom. Just as Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem, and the actions He will take to usher in this new kingdom unfold, tell us that He is responding to God’s call and purpose on His life, requiring His complete and total obedience to that call, so does the dedication to that same call resonate in the back-and-forth between the Lord and these three persons who were encountered on the road to Jerusalem.

Now, these considerations bring us to St. Paul’s letter to the churches in the region of Galatia.

Much of the letter to the Galatians has to do with the incursions of unnamed persons[1] who were demanding that converts to Christianity had to obey all the requirements of the Law of Moses (Torah). By doing so, they were undercutting much of Paul’s ministry and his conviction that the requirements of Torah had been largely done away with, by the coming of Jesus Christ and His saving death.

Now, in chapter five of his letter, Paul describes the life passage that coming to faith in Christ represents.

He lays out a list of various vices that characterize the behaviors of those who do not know the Lord and who do not live according to the ways in which God’s people are called to live. In short, the list we read of these various behaviors and attitudes is a summary of the way of life of many in the Greco-Roman world of the first century.

Paul compares this pagan behavior with the ways of Christ, the desires of God, and the markers by which the Church ought to be known.

I think, at this point, it’s worth noting that Paul isn’t saying that, because the Law of Moses has been superseded, that it’s OK to do whatever we might want to do. No, instead, his is a call to uprightness of belief, proper conduct for believers and utmost devotion to the example set for us by Christ.

What a life change that coming to faith in Christ represents! What a life passage that faith brings with it, closing the door to our former life and the ways in which we used to live before becoming Christ’s own.

God’s call to work for the betterment and the growth of the kingdom of God is ongoing. God’s call comes in various forms, and at various times throughout life.

May we, with the help of the Holy Spirit, discern God’s call and respond to it, embracing the changes that are bound to be a part of such an invitation.

AMEN.

 

 

 



[1]   These persons are often called Judaizers.