Sunday, July 21, 2013

"See! Judge! Act!"



1          GHOSTS OVER MY SHOULDER
1.1       Business end of a teapot
I have a couple of ghosts looking over my shoulder this morning.

First is my late mother-in-law who used to tell me
she thought Martha received a very bad deal in this Gospel reading.

Considering my mother-in-law was much seen
on the business end of a tea-pot
and even brought her knitting to Presbytery
so that she could claim a productive evening she had a strong case.

1.2       The big sister
Second is that of my ubiquitous grandmother,
the firstborn of 12 children with 6 of her own,
whose idea of a good sleep-in was to get up before 7am winter or summer.

Grandma told me wistfully that her mother, an only child and a good Baptist,
would sit and read her Bible most of the day,
while Grandma, being the big sister
would attend to such things as forever tying and untying bootlaces
and helping to blow little noses.

Her name was Mary but her role was Martha.

Grandma was responsible for helping at least two of my great-uncles
start in the world
and when I was baptised in her home her mother was bedridden there.

I don’t think she ever stopped looking after people
and in her latter years had to be guided to comfortable chairs.

2          MARTHA AND MARY (Luke 10:38-42)
2.1       Following the Good Samaritan Parable
So, what’s this all about with Martha and Mary?

You’ve noticed by now this passage
follows the Parable of the Good Samaritan.

Last week it was all about hands-on ministry in the face of mere status.

Just when we’ve got the hang of it,
this story seems to take us into the opposite direction.

But Jesus has a habit of doing this.
When he’s around we’re never quite sure we’ve been right.

2.2       Trapped in anxiety (Lk 10:40f)
But this particular passage is not to condemn Martha.
The key is that Martha felt trapped by the many things she was trying to do.
She was not going to sit down any time soon.

Anxiety had taken her over just like I’ve experienced
and probably most of you at some time.

We’ll never be able to complete everything,
and we need that time and space where we can sit down and listen to Jesus.

2.3       The other side of Martha (Jn 11:20-27)
For those who want to see this other side of Martha,
try John 11 where she has this deep conversation
with Jesus on death and resurrection.

It’s OK to be busy, but Jesus does want to get a word in edgeways.
There is much to command our attention.

When the Young Christian Workers organisation was formed
in Belgium about a century ago,
it took on the model of “See, Judge, Act”.

This involves observation, contemplation, and action.
Mary, Martha, and Jesus are all needed here.

3          AMOS WITH THE BASKET OF SUMMER FRUIT (Amos 8:1-12)
3.1       Contemplating the figs (Am 8:1)
This is where the minor prophet Amos comes in.
He saw that the nation of Israel in the 8 centuries before Jesus was in trouble.
They were living the good life and the good life wasn’t going to last.

He observed what was happening from his working life down in Tekoa, Judah
as a herder and a dresser of sycamore trees.

Rather than rush into action, he contemplated a basket of summer fruit, probably figs or olives.

We know what happens to fruit in late summer when it’s not eaten.
The richness and the tastiness always wears off,
and “off” is the operative word.

3.2       A curds and whey society (Am 8:4-6)
That was it.
He knew that Israel to his north was going the same way as the summer fruit.

Amos left Tekoa in Judah
and hiked all the way north into the kingdom of Israel.

He had a message to deliver whether the people wanted it or not.
God was being put aside in favour of the “Greed is good” mentality.

The wealth was drifting upward like cream in milk left out in the sun
leaving the poor at the bottom.

When that happens the whole lot goes sour.
Curds and whey like Little Miss Muffet drinks.

3.3       The end for Israel (Am 8:2b,7-12)
The fact that we have what Amos said before us
proves for us that people didn’t listen
except for the few that made sure this was all written down
so it could be read after it had all come about.

And come about it did.

Shortly after the Assyrian Empire from what is now northern Iraq
expanded west into the area sweeping all before it.

4          NOT HERE TODAY, SURELY?
4.1       “It’s the economy, stupid”
We would have to be living under a rock not to see that such events like this have happened over many other times and in many other places.

Not today, surely? Not where we are, surely?
Yet, our whole way of life is based on the belief that the Market is God.

Our cultures are being relentless eroded
in favour of endless and repetitive marketing propaganda
in our respective faces on TV, online, and everywhere.

We cannot get the information to search for truth and wisdom
because our news programs are full of gossip and propaganda censoring out what we really need to know.

It is easier to find funds to build another casino
than it is to lift up those who need a decent break.

Everything is decided on the premise that “it’s the economy, stupid”
as if anybody can predict accurately what the economy is going to do
and in the meantime our environment is abused on the way.

4.2       The fruit of the spirit (Gal 5:22f)
Keith Rowe writing in our “With Love to the World” puts it so much better.
“In our day we might say that the destructive actions of brewery barons, media magnates, tobacco tycoons, dodgy developers and finance fiddlers
are abhorrent to God for they contribute
to the destruction of human community and damage individual lives.
But their days are numbered.
The future belongs to those who walk in the pathways of God’s love,
who trust in the steadfast love of God.”

There is a time to be Mary, to be Martha, to be Amos,
and most of all to be like Jesus for the fruit of the Spirit will never perish.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

“DELIVERING THE VULNERABLE”


1          A JUST SOCIETY?
1.1       Your Faith, Your Voice, Your Vote
One would have to be living under a log
not to know that recent weeks have been one of political turmoil
and that we have a Federal election still to come down the track.

Already our Uniting Church Assembly has released a booklet
for “A Just Society” subtitled,
“Your Faith, Your Voice, Your Vote”.

I presume copies would be available here.

1.2       God lays it on the line (Ps 82:1f)
However, it is not my place to repeat this here
but to affirm that what we believe, what we say, and how we act
is always under God’s supervision.

This hits us when we read our lectionary Psalm 82.
God strides into the divine council and lays it on the line.

“How long will you judge unjustly
and show partiality to the wicked?” (v2)

2          GOD’S PSALM OF INJUSTICE (Ps 82)
2.1       Unfairness of the Filthy Rich
We do well to keep complaining about the unfairness
in what happens around us.

It is always uphill to maintain services for those who need it most
yet a rich man can walk in, demand a casino, and get it.

It seems that if jobs are to be had,
the filthy rich must become filthier and richer still.

2.2       Giving Justice to the vulnerable (Ps 82:3)
In life’s stark realities, it’s so easy to lose sight that God remains on the side of those who get the short end of the deal.

Psalm 82 continues,
“Give justice to the weak and the fatherless;
maintain the right of the afflicted and the destitute.” (v3)

In all the deals done these are the ones who pay through the nose.

If you have a disability (like my daughter),
if your father leaves home (like mine did),
if you cannot cope with all the demands of today’s life,
if you cannot make the basic ends meet,
God is still on your side calling out for a fair go for you.

2.3       Delivering the vulnerable (Ps 82:4)
God calls out,
“Rescue the weak and the needy;
deliver them from the hand of the wicked.” (v4)

Not only are the rest of us called to provide justice
but to take those active steps to help deliver the vulnerable
from whoever seeks to make money out of their vulnerability.

3          NOT A PROPHET AMOS (Amos 7:7-17)
3.1       On the level?
A simple herdsman who dresses sycamore trees on the side
shows the way.

Amos sees God travelling around with a surveyor’s plumb-line
measuring Israel to test its uprightness.

My local hardware store does not store plumb-lines
so I bought this spirit-level instead.

It does the job well.
It can test whether walls are straight and upright.
It can tell us whether tables are on the level.

3.2       What does God show us?
God goes around today to test to see
whether the world we occupy is on the level and whether it is upright.

What does he show us?
What does he want us to do about it?

4          PARABLE OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN (Lk 10:25-37)
4.1       The Great Commandment (Lk 10:27)
The Parable of the Good Samaritan is known to us like the back of our hand.

It stems from the Great Commandment to
“love the Lord our God with all our heart, with all our soul, with all our mind, and with all our strength, and our neighbour as ourselves.” (v27)

We can rattle this off word perfect like we did in Sunday School,
both the Commandment and the Parable.

I remember being part of acting the story out in Junior Class.
That’s not the point.

4.2       Not being seen dead with?
Jesus makes it harder.

He creates a scene where muggers have done their sordid work,
leaving the poor victim to bleed to death.

Two respectable citizens you’d want to know see him and leave him there.
Think of a type of person you wouldn’t be seen dead with.

This person comes by and becomes the very one
who delivers the still vulnerable from his fate.

O, the humiliation of being abandoned by the ones you look up to
and rescued by the very one you’d despise!

When you’re half-dead,
you are saved by the one you wouldn’t be seen dead with.

The irony of it all.

5          TAKING HIS SPIRIT-LEVEL HOME
5.1       Whistle-blowers not respectable?
Yet, this is how it has to turn out.

In the Book of Amos, you would have expected Amaziah, the priest of Bethel to be the one to turn to,
not this scruffy herder of cows to see the situation for what it is.

Yet, too often particularly in recent times
the Church has been depicted as the predator of the vulnerable
and we have a Royal Commission because of it.

And too often we, the Church have not risked the way of Jesus
to side with those getting life’s raw deal
because we know only too well what happens to whistle-blowers.

While tending the traveller’s wounds, the Samaritan left himself vulnerable
to any muggers still lurking in the shadows.

He delayed his own journey and put himself out of pocket to deliver
the traveller to where he could be healed and restored to life.

5.2       God strides into our comfort zone
Ahh, yes, this is where we have to go
and there will be many unexpected ways for us to go about it.

The decisions we make come to us
according to where we are what we see and what we hear.

God strides into our comfort zone with his spirit level
so that we can echo the psalmist’s conclusion,
“Arise, O God, judge the earth,
for to you belong all the nations.”(v6)

Let us take his spirit level home with us to provide His justice
and deliver the vulnerable.