Do You Sometimes Get…, Proper 23 (C) – 2007
October 14, 2007
Do you sometimes get turned off by âreligion talkâ? Or do you think that the vocabulary and jargon used by many Christians somehow makes an ordinary idea so religious that it doesnât apply in day-to-day living?
Such a word is âgrace.â It sounds so pious and out of reach. So when a prayer, one of those lovely compact âcollectâ prayers, talks of Godâs grace going in front of us and behind us, we sort of shrug, say âfineâ but really donât think it means very much at all.
The prayer â collect â today is a reminder of the story about Godâs glory in visible form, as a great light, which went in front of and behind the children of Israel as they escaped Egypt and went in search of the Promised Land. Yet escaping from Egypt and looking for a Promised Land seem so very far from our experiences at work, or at home, even in church. Surely, sometimes we would love to run away. Maybe we pray that one day we will go to heaven. After all, why else would we be in church today, singing those hymns and saying these prayers? God seems to like that sort of thing for some unknown reason, so we do them. Perhaps we get some comfort and some hope. But as to the practicality of all this, perhaps some of us or most of us reserve judgment.
The readings today try to give practical examples of what âgraceâ means. Inevitably they are stories about, or reflections on âgraceâ set in a very different world than ours. No cars, no supermarkets, no global warming, no politicians â it all sounds wonderful! But what have two stories about lepers and one bit of advice to young Bishop Timothy have to do with high blood pressure, a fight with the teens or our parents, and mortgage payments, or even job insecurity?
Leprosy was once the scourge of all illnesses. It was incurable. Those with it were shunned and shunted off into separate places, ostracized and feared. Some people with AIDS feel that way. Even the word âcancerâ or admitting one has that disease installs an irrational fear in some people. So the condition then may well be translated into our feeling alone, misunderstood, helpless, and perhaps actively shunned. Feelings of being alone and helpless surely attack most of us at one time or another. Feeling misunderstood often happens in the classroom or the office â and frequently at a vestry meeting! While the scene recounted in the Bible stories today may be unfamiliar, there are plenty of modern equivalents and experiences.
General Naamanâs problem was that he thought his condition and status required a dramatic response, a unique form of treatment, not merely a dip in a foreign river on the orders of a prophet who hasnât even the courtesy to come out to meet this important dignitary. The lepers whom Jesus heals have a different problem. They take a miracle for granted, and all but one shrugs and gets on with life. Only one is thankful.
In both cases, we see that what gets in the way of grace, of receiving a gift, is pride in one form or another, that deadly sin. We think we are the only person with our problem. No one has had this problem before. To suggest that God has a universal answer, something as simple as merely doing as one is told and accepting a simple gift in a simple manner is just too much of a stretch â or should one say a stoop? Merely accepting, as Timothy is told to do, that Jesus is sufficient, that:
âIf we have died with him, we will also live with him;
if we endure, we will also reign with him;
if we deny him, he will also deny us;
if we are faithless, he remains faithful–
for he cannot deny himself.â
Merely accepting is the clue to wholeness and a life lived within Godâs gifts.
In a few minutes perhaps you will leave your seat and go to Godâs table to receive promised gifts, the grace that goes before us and behind us, guiding and keeping us in the midst of everything. How on earth can a crumb of bread and a sip of wine address my extraordinary needs and problems? Or perhaps I will reach, take, and get on with life without a thought of âthanksgiving,â the word from which âEucharistâ derives.
Almost all healing is not the result of being âzappedâ by God, but the result of being given an opportunity to anchor oneself in that which has been given, and an opportunity to live life with a new and different perspective. I accept the bread crumb and the sip of wine as a promise that I died with Jesus in baptism and rose to life, eternal life â something that starts at the font and not at the death bed.
So, as St. Paul reminds us, we are given the extraordinary gift to endure, to get on with life, a life made new and special because we are able to be thankful. Endurance doesnât sound like much fun, but Christianity isnât about fun, it is about cross-bearing, self-sacrifice, self-examination, admitting oneâs faults and sins which get in the way of our vision of God. Yes, endurance made splendid, because we are given the gift of thanksgiving, of gratitude that we have been placed in the company of those who have gone before us in patient endurance; in the company of those who walk with us in joy. And we are given the gift of gratitude to be in the company of those who will come after us and who will endure as witnesses of the Christ who came, died, rose again and ascended into heaven and who restores everything and makes all things new.
Accepting simple gifts as the answer to what seem to be complicated needs takes humility. Accepting simple gifts when they work with thanksgiving takes a good deal of humility. Humility and being thankful are two sides of the same coin â a coin if you will, given to us by Jesus, who is equal with God but who empties himself to us and for us
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