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MERCY OR JUST DESERTS?

7/28/2019

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Genesis 18:20-32

Then the Lord said, "How great is the outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah and how very grave their sin!  I must go down and see whether they have done altogether according to the outcry that has come to me; and if not, I will know."

So the men turned from there, and went towards Sodom, while Abraham remained standing before the Lord.  Then Abraham came near and said, "Will you indeed sweep away the righteous with the wicked?  Suppose there are fifty righteous within the city; will you then sweep away the place and not forgive it for the fifty righteous who are in it?  Far be it from you to do such a thing, to slay the righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous fare as the wicked!  Far be that from you!  Shall not the Judge of all the earth do what is just?"  And the Lord said, "If I find at Sodom fifty righteous in the city, I will forgive the whole place for their sake."  
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Abraham answered, "Let me take it upon myself to speak to the Lord, I who am but dust and ashes.  Suppose five of the fifty righteous are lacking?  Will you destroy the whole city for lack of five?"  And he said, "I will not destroy it if I find forty-five there."  Again he spoke to him, "Suppose forty are found there."  He answered, "For the sake of forty I will not do it."  Then he said, "Oh do not let the Lord be angry if I speak.  Suppose thirty are found there."  He answered, "I will not do it, if I find thirty there."  He said, "Let me take it upon myself to speak to the Lord.  Suppose twenty are found there."  He answered, "For the sake of twenty I will not destroy it."  Then he said, "Oh do not let the Lord be angry if I speak just once more.  Suppose ten are found there."  He answered, "For the sake of ten I will not destroy it."
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This is now the sixth in our Summer Sermon Series on the Old Testament.  We’ve had five weeks of fairly unremitting doom and gloom with the prophets.  Today, however, I was given a choice of two Old Testament readings.  The first was from the prophet Hosea, with the familiar refrain of Israel’s unfaithfulness and all the well-deserved bad things that are coming to it.  The second, the one I chose and the one we just read is from Genesis.  This story has plenty of doom later on, but right here, at this point of the story of Sodom and Gomorrah, there is nothing but compassion and mercy.  I thought that would be a nice change.

Sodom and Gomorrah were two towns generally held to be full of wicked people.  They were constantly involved in small local wars with neighboring kings, but their biggest sin was their arrogance – before God and before their neighbors.  Ezekiel, another prophet we haven’t gotten to yet, once described Sodom in these words: She and her daughters were arrogant, overfed and unconcerned;  they did not help the poor and needy.  They were haughty and did detestable things before God.

Just before today’s reading, three men appeared at Abraham’s encampment.  Though they are described as men, everyone knew that they were, indeed, angels—angelic messengers--and these messengers spoke with God’s voice, just as if God’s own self was present.  Just for context, this is the occasion when Abraham and Sarai were told that Sarai would bear a child in her advanced old age.

This is also where today’s reading takes place.  Before the three men prepare to leave the encampment, God decides to tell Abraham where he is going and what he plans to do there—destroy Sodom for her arrogance.

Here is where the compassion comes in, from both Abraham and God.  Abraham is aghast at the thought of the innocent souls who will be destroyed along with the wicked ones if God continues with this plan.  As The Message paraphrases it:
  • “Are you serious?  Are you planning on getting rid of the good people right along with the bad?  What if there are fifty decent people left in the city; will you lump the good with the bad and get rid of the lot? Wouldn’t you spare the city for the sake of those fifty innocents?  I can’t believe you’d do that, kill off the good and the bad alike as if there were no difference between them.  Doesn’t the Judge of all the Earth judge with justice?”

When God gives in and agrees to be merciful for the sake of fifty innocents, Abraham proceeds to keep right on bargaining:  forty-five, then forty, then thirty, then twenty, and finally he’s bargained God down to ten and God agrees, if there are ten righteous souls there, the town will not be destroyed.  For the sake of ten righteous men God agrees to be merciful on the entire town – wicked though they’ve always been known to be.

This is a rare and beautiful bit of Old Testament “history.”  While there are cases of mercy shown to individuals all through the writings, it is fairly rare that an entire town might be spared because of the goodness of a few.  This is, of course, the same God who drowned an entire world, excepting one family and a handful of animals.  The same God whose people, freed from slavery in Egypt, having reached their promised land, were sent in with instructions to slaughter anyone in their way.

Innocents were often slaughtered, with a very heavy hand, all throughout the Old Testament – but maybe not this time.  I feel like I want to quit this story right here, when mercy is winning, but in all honesty I have to let you know how this one ends – and it’s not good for the Sodomites.

The angels (now down to two for some reason), arrived in Sodom at the home of Lot, Abraham’s nephew, where they are properly invited in and offered hospitality.  In the middle of the night, the wicked people of Sodom, true to form, demand that Lot send the newcomers outside so they can “know them” – rape and degrade them.  This is where the people who spend all their time searching the Old Testament for something they can use to justify their own homophobia get the idea that Sodom was destroyed for homosexual behaviors.

Unfortunately for them, scripture here makes it very clear that the sinfulness  of Sodom existed long before this story, and it shows us how easily and automatically we can twist scripture to fit our preconceived ideas.  In the past 200 years, homosexuality has become the reigning sin in many Christian theological beliefs and so these “Christians” see it everywhere. 

What the Sodomites wanted was not about same sex attraction.  It was about brutality and degradation.  Their sin was their violation of the laws of hospitality, which state that strangers are always to be given welcome and safe rest.

Lot refused to send out his guests and offered his two virgin daughters, instead.  It is very telling that I have never heard any of those who rant on about the “sin of homosexuality” in this story ever say anything at all condemning the outright rape of the two young girls.

It is clear that shaming a man’s “manhood” is a crime worthy of death.  Raping young women – not so much.  Daughters were simply property to be used as their father wanted.

After this shameful episode, God, remembering his bargain with Abraham, searched for at least ten righteous men in Sodom – still remembering his promise to be merciful -- but could find not a single one – except Lot and his family.  Lot was told to pack up his family and belongings and leave Sodom immediately, without looking back, and Sodom was consequently destroyed.

Even though Gomorrah plays no role in this particular story, the implication is that they had done likewise at other times.  Sodom and Gomorrah are always linked in the stories – they were equally evil, apparently, and had been thorns in God’s side for a long time.  At the end of this story both towns were destroyed – slaves, wives, and children – all innocent I’m sure, all killed along with the guilty. 

And now we’re back to the doom and gloom again.  These were harsh times, ruled by petty kings, who vied among themselves to be the biggest and meanest.  We today can recognize that God never truly was the harsh tyrant-king-God, often portrayed in the Old Testament, but the average person of that time had no image for lordship except that of power and violence, therefore that is the God they found to worship.  The rulers they saw were rarely merciful, and so they expected little mercy from their God.

And this is why Jesus insisted repeatedly that he had come to “do a new thing.”   Jesus taught us to expect our God to be a God of mercy.  Perhaps the most important lesson he taught us.

Thank you, Jesus.
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THE TIME IS SURELY COMING

7/21/2019

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Amos 8:4-9, 11-12   (NRSV Abridged)

God said:  Hear this, you that trample on the needy, and bring to ruin the poor of the land,  saying, ‘When will the new moon be over so that we may sell grain; and the sabbath, so that we may offer wheat for sale?  We will make the ephah small and the shekel great, and practice deceit with false balances, buying the poor for silver and the needy for a pair of sandals, and selling the sweepings of the wheat.’”

 The Lord has sworn by the pride of Jacob:  Surely I will never forget any of their deeds.  Shall not the land tremble on this account, and everyone mourn who lives in it, and all of it rise like the Nile, and be tossed about and sink again, like the Nile of Egypt?  On that day, says the Lord God, I will make the sun go down at noon, and darken the earth in broad daylight.....
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The time is surely coming, says the Lord God, when I will send a famine on the land; not a famine of bread, or a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord.  They shall wander from sea to sea, and from north to east; they shall run to and fro, seeking the word of the Lord, but they shall not find it.

This is our second week with the prophet Amos and this week’s reading is just as cheery as last week’s—which is to say, not cheery at all.  It was another long reading so I pruned it down a bit—I removed several of the threats of dead bodies  and destruction all over the place as just being repetitive and goodness knows there’s still plenty left to be gloomy about.

The difference this week—for me at least—lies not so much in the threatened results as in the reasons given for the threats—which is the way the supposed People of God are living and the things they are doing to each other.

This is what’s going on in Israel at this time:


  • Hear this, you that trample on the needy, and bring to ruin the poor of the land,  saying, ‘When will the new moon be over so that we may sell grain; and the sabbath, so that we may offer wheat for sale?  We will make the ephah small and the shekel great, and practice deceit with false balances, buying the poor for silver and the needy for a pair of sandals, and selling the sweepings of the wheat.

​I was really torn this week between using this NRSV translation and The Message version.  I like the NRSV overall, but I prefer this one paragraph from The Message:
  • Listen to this, you who walk all over the weak, you who treat poor people as less than nothing.  Who say, ‘When’s my next paycheck coming so I can go out and live it up?  How long till the weekend when I can go out and have a good time?’  You who give little and take much, and never do an honest day’s work.  You exploit the poor, using them—and then, when they’re used up, you discard them.

​This one shook me to the core  because Amos could be speaking to so many of the people of the US today (and the world in general).  Pick up a newspaper, turn on the TV, log-on to the internet – these are the people you will see there--the selfish ones: the ones living their lavish lifestyles while others starve on the streets; the ones cheating everyone else at every opportunity; the ones who use the poor up and then simply discard them.

The drug companies that pushed opioids onto hundreds of thousands of innocent people just to inflate their bottom line—not to mention the medical people who enabled them.  The charming people intoxicating themselves by chanting “Send her back” about a US citizen whose only crime is to have brown-toned skin (and dislike this president).  Politicians who are more than happy to send others into wars or into super-dangerous situations such as the 9/11 attacks and then refuse to grant any funds to take care of those sickened and injured there.  The “nimbys” of the world who just push the homeless populations down the road away from them, rather than do anything to actually help them.  We could go on and on.  Amos’ “sinners” are still among us.

The time is surely coming, say Amos, but is all that doom and gloom as inevitable for us today as it was for those long-ago people of Israel?   A time when we will hunger, not for food and security, but for the authentic word of God.  And yet, does it not sometimes feel as if we are in those days already?   Prominent church leaders have already sold their souls for riches and prestige and their people follow them into ways Jesus would not validate.  Politicians will say anything to get re-elected and to keep their corporate owners happy.  Who can we believe?

We are an Easter people and instead of the heavy-handed Old Testament God of Amos we are blessed to know a more forgiving, loving God, through the life and teachings of Jesus.  We do not fear our God and that God is still speaking – loudly and clearly.  It’s just a case of using wisdom to know who we listen to and who we do not.  And if we trust the Spirit within us we are daily  shown the truth.

But still, we all have our failings.  It is not always a case of “us” and “them”.  Every one of us is sometimes “them.”  We here are people of faith and we do try to be good, but is it enough?  Can we do more?  Do we speak out against injustice when it is going on around us?  Do we speak out when our friends or neighbors spout racist ‘humor’?  Do we speak up for fair wages and living conditions?

Is it, after all, a coincidence that we are reading Amos right now?  Do any of you read Amos often?  (I don’t.)  What are the chances of us just happening to stumble into this obscure pericope from one of the minor prophets at a time when it all sounds like an everyday evening news broadcast? 

Could it be that God is calling us to listen and to act?  Perhaps the One who has cared for us our whole lives—who has made it possible for us to live, to work, to love in relative peace and comfort—perhaps this One is reminding us to consciously and openly live lives of active goodness.

Episcopal Bishop Steven Charleston, who is the author of the majority of the reflections I use to open our service each week, recently wrote: Economic injustice is one of the oldest challenges confronting people of faith.  We don't need to fly above it, but to stand in the midst of it, here, on the ground, where people struggle to make ends meet and feed their kids.

This is our calling--to see injustice and to stand in the middle of it--to call it out for what it is and demand change, in ways both big and small.  It sounds daunting, I know, but we can each find a way to be faithful to God’s call—even with physical limitations.  Even with limited funds.  even if we are sure we have to skills to talk about these things to others.  The One who calls us will provide a way. 

lessings on your journey.
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LET JUSTICE ROLL DOWN

7/14/2019

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Amos 7:7-17
This is what he showed me: the Lord was standing beside a wall built with a plumb line, with a plumb line in his hand.

And the LORD said to me, "Amos, what do you see?" And I said, "A plumb line." Then the Lord said, "See, I am setting a plumb line in the midst of my people Israel; I will never again pass them by; the high places of Isaac shall be made desolate, and the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste, and I will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword."

Then Amaziah, the priest of Bethel, sent to King Jeroboam of Israel, saying, "Amos has conspired against you in the very center of the house of Israel; the land is not able to bear all his words. For thus Amos has said, 'Jeroboam shall die by the sword, and Israel must go into exile away from his land.'"

And Amaziah said to Amos, "O seer, go, flee away to the land of Judah, earn your bread there, and prophesy there; but never again prophesy at Bethel, for it is the king's sanctuary, and it is a temple of the kingdom."
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Then Amos answered Amaziah, "I am no prophet, nor a prophet's son; but I am a herdsman, and a dresser of sycamore trees, and the LORD took me from following the flock, and the LORD said to me, 'Go, prophesy to my people Israel.' Now therefore hear the word of the LORD. You say, 'Do not prophesy against Israel, and do not preach against the house of Isaac.' Therefore thus says the LORD: 'Your wife shall become a prostitute in the city, and your sons and your daughters shall fall by the sword, and your land shall be parceled out by line; you yourself shall die in an unclean land, and Israel shall surely go into exile away from its land.'"

Today we've moved on from Elijah and Elisha to a new prophet, Amos.  Remember that we are reading these stories because this is what Jesus knew, these are the tales, the prophecies, the preaching that shaped Jesus and made him who he was.  Hopefully, this summer’s study will help us better understand not only ourselves, but where Jesus came from and what he so passionately believed and preached to his followers.

Amos was from the southern kingdom of Judah, but was called to preach in the northern kingdom, Israel.  He preached around the years from 760 to 750 BCE during the reign of King Jeroboam II of Israel.

Amos was one of the Twelve Minor Prophets – those were the ones, as you’ll recall with the shorter books.  Not less important, just shorter.  Though he is listed with the minors, Amos was an important and influential prophet.  He was an older contemporary of Isaiah, who clearly read his work and was shaped by its linguistic eloquence and the passion of his preaching.

Amos also has the distinction of being the first prophet to write his words down.  As we heard in today’s reading, he was thrown out of Israel and forbidden to preach there because he spoke against the king and the way the kingdom was being run.  He had, however, no intention of being silenced and he returned to Judah and wrote out his prophetic words and sent them back into Israel to be read and shared.  Most other prophets who came after him then also wrote down their prophesying.

Amos’ words still reach us today.  In probably the best known and most passionate example of modern day prophesying, Martin Luther King, Jr.’s I Have a Dream speech, Dr. King quotes from Amos: "we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.”  This phrase, in turn, has become widely known and often quoted itself, part of our moral thinking today.

Israel, at the time of Amos’ prophesying, was enjoying a period of peace and prosperity.  It was, however, also a time of very lax attention to God’s laws.  It was the same old story.  The region was prosperous because of increased interaction with neighboring, non-Hebrew nations.  But with that prosperity came a relaxing of laws and attention to God’s ways.  New people brought in their old gods.

And here we meet, once again, our old friends, the professional prophets – in this case, prophets attached to the shrine at Bethel, led by their high priest, Amaziah.

Amos, before being tossed out of Israel, spoke out very forcefully against Jeroboam and his failure to uphold God’s laws.  Very forcefully.   God was fed up with the Israelites and drawing a line in the sand – or in this case, a plumb line.  Because of the Israelites easy acceptance of other gods, their God was fed up with them.  Their shrines would be destroyed, Jeroboam himself would die by the sword, and the Israelites would be sent off into exile and slavery by a conquering people.

Amaziah, the professional priestly lackey of the king cast Amos out of Israel for prophesying against the king, making no secret at all about the role of the prophets of Bethel: never again prophesy at Bethel, for it is the king's sanctuary, and it is a temple of the kingdom" – no pretense that this is God’s sanctuary, thereby proving the reason for God’s wrath.

It came to pass as Amos prophesied.  Jeroboam and his family died by violence, the shrines were destroyed, and the people Israel were sent out into exile.

This is a very harsh God as we meet him through Amos’ words today.  We prefer to think about all the loving aspects of God, but we fool ourselves when we begin to believe that’s all there is to God.  When God says, “stop doing that or else,” there is going to be an “or else.”  Not because God is a bully or because God wants to look important, but more in the line of a parent telling a child not to run out into the street without looking both ways or they will be hurt.

God designed this world to run by God’s laws.  When we break or ignore those laws, bad things are going to happen.  Israel grew arrogant and decided they didn’t need God or God’s laws – and Israel fell apart.  It took a very long time for Israel to realize that, after all, they needed God and God’s rules.  When they did so, they began to grow back together again.

Right now we have a whole lot of people who think they know what God wants better than God does.  They claim to be following God and acting in his name but they also think they can do it all under their own reasoning.

I don’t think so.  All those folks who arrogantly believe they know as much as God and think God automatically agrees with them are like children running wildly about in the streets, paying no attention at all to the traffic.  They’re not listening to God; they’re only listening to the “god” they’ve created in their own minds – and it’s not going to end well for them.

Unfortunately, they are hurting a great many innocent people right now, and they will probably end by taking all the rest of us down with them when their fantasy world collapses – when the inevitable “or else” finally arrives.

Amos had no doubts how it would end for the Israelites if they continued to defy God.  We can have few doubts about those who parade around speaking and acting for God today.  It took losing everything and a couple of generations in exile before the exiled people of Israel figured it out and turned their hearts back to God.
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May it not take so long for our broken world today.
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HUBRIS IN THE FACE OF GOD

7/7/2019

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2 Kings 5:1-14 
Naaman, commander of the army of the king of Aram, was a great man and in high favor with his master, because by him the Lord had given victory to Aram. The man, though a mighty warrior, suffered from leprosy. Now the Arameans on one of their raids had taken a young girl captive from the land of Israel, and she served Naaman’s wife. She said to her mistress, “If only my lord were with the prophet who is in Samaria! He would cure him of his leprosy.” So Naaman went in and told his lord just what the girl from the land of Israel had said. And the king of Aram said, “Go then, and I will send along a letter to the king of Israel.”

He went, taking with him ten talents of silver, six thousand shekels of gold, and ten sets of garments. He brought the letter to the king of Israel, which read, “When this letter reaches you, know that I have sent to you my servant Naaman, that you may cure him of his leprosy.” When the king of Israel read the letter, he tore his clothes and said, “Am I God, to give death or life, that this man sends word to me to cure a man of his leprosy? Just look and see how he is trying to pick a quarrel with me.”

But when Elisha the man of God heard that the king of Israel had torn his clothes, he sent a message to the king, “Why have you torn your clothes? Let him come to me, that he may learn that there is a prophet in Israel.” So Naaman came with his horses and chariots, and halted at the entrance of Elisha’s house. Elisha sent a messenger to him, saying, “Go, wash in the Jordan seven times, and your flesh shall be restored and you shall be clean.” But Naaman became angry and went away, saying, “I thought that for me he would surely come out, and stand and call on the name of the Lord his God, and would wave his hand over the spot, and cure the leprosy! Are not Abana and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? Could I not wash in them, and be clean?” He turned and went away in a rage. 

​But his servants approached and said to him, “Father, if the prophet had commanded you to do something difficult, would you not have done it? How much more, when all he said to you was, ‘Wash, and be clean’?” So he went down and immersed himself seven times in the Jordan, according to the word of the man of God; his flesh was restored like the flesh of a young boy, and he was clean.
​

​This is the third in our summer series for this year.  We have left Elijah the Prophet behind and moved on to Elisha, Elijah’s successor, but we are still in the same area of the world where the unified Israel/Judah was once a world power under David and Solomon but now the two separated kingdoms are just two among many in the region.

Our story begins in Aram to the north-east of Israel – one of the kingdoms where Elijah was sent by God to anoint its new king at the beginning of last week’s reading.

This is a story of healing – eventually – but before we get to the healing we have to wade through a boatload of hubris as well as some simple-hearted humility.

On the hubris side, Naaman wins hands down.  He is commander of Aram’s army and Aram, right now, is probably the strongest kingdom in the region, with the largest army, so Naaman is legitimately a big deal.  But, he is a big deal with leprosy.  He’s much too big a deal to be exiled from the community as so many lepers were and this is Aram, where they are not bound by the purity laws of the Hebrews, so he lived as a rich, powerful man – with leprosy.  And all the arrogance in the world can’t make leprosy go away.

On the faithful-humility side, we have Naaman’s wife’s servant – a young Hebrew woman who had been captured in a raid.  Whether she had heard stories of Elisha or had actually seen him work wonders, she is the one who suggests that Naaman needs to go down into Israel to see the prophet there who can cure his leprosy.  She—a captive--is one of the many unnamed, unsung heroes of scripture—oneS who speak the truth at the right time.  It is a sign of Naaman’s desperation that he listens to a mere servant, and chooses to go.

The next on our arrogance list is the king of Aram who, upon hearing Naaman’s plan to go down into Israel to find some healer is perfectly willing that Naaman go find healing -- as long as it doesn't cause him any effort beyond casually dictating a letter to the king of Israel saying, “My general has leprosy.  Fix him.”  This is the kind of non-request that a king writes to another king only when he is entirely certainly he out-classes the other guy in terms of wealth and might.

The king of Israel falls somewhere between the two extremes of hubris and humility – certainly closer to the hubris end – he is a king, after all – but not so arrogant that he doesn’t panic when Naaman shows up bearing the King of Aram’s letter.  He is arrogant enough to be insulted at the king of Aram issuing orders to him, yet he knows he would lose in any contest between them.  He also knows he can’t heal anyone and so feels trapped by Aram’s demand and his own inability to fulfill that demand.

He is also just humble (or wise) enough to accept rescue when it is offered him.  Somehow Elisha hears of his dilemma and sends a message himself to the king, saying, “Don’t panic – send this person down to me and I’ll handle it.”  The king, knowing full-well who Elisha is, gratefully sends Naaman along to him.

Naaman, #1 on our arrogant list, is offended when he arrives at Elisha’s humble abode.  He is more offended when Elisha doesn’t invite him in and fawn over him a while.  He’s even more offended when Elisha doesn’t even come out to greet him but just sends a servant to say, “Master says to go to the river and wash yourself seven times.”

Now Naaman is beyond insulted and has moved into fury, when he declares he’s not having any of this simplistic nonsense from some scruffy backwoods prophet and he’s going home.  And once again, it is a couple of the most humble characters in this story –- a couple of un-named, powerless servants who speak truth to Naaman and convince him to give the river cure a try.  And of course, it works and Naaman is cured. And a man who has lived his life believing only in his own strength and his position and his accumulated riches finds that none of those things could save him and only a god he probably never heard of or paid any attention to, could heal him.  A God who apparently  loves us all -- even when we are jerks -- whose love, aided by the faith of simple people who trust their God – is the only thing that can save any of us us.

Our nation is torn right now by a super-abundance of hubris.  We have political leaders who arrogantly no longer listen to anything but their own greed; we have church leaders who have been seduced away from the gospel by wealth and its trappings; and then we have just so many people who believe their own desires and opinions, sick and twisted as they may be – including their hatreds -- are ordained by God because they themselves are somehow innately better than anyone else.  And few, if any of these people care at all about anyone who is not of their own tiny tribe.

These are frightening and ugly times we live in.

And yet, as in this story, it is often the un-named, the relatively powerless, the humble who continue to trust in God and to do good.  They may be servants – ordinary folks – but they continue to work for the welfare to those who “own” them along with the good of everyone else around them.  They may appear to be constrained by their circumstance but they trust God and do good anyway.  These are the people who stand for hours in the hot sun demanding that the border camps be closed – and who do it in such numbers that they can’t be ignored.  These are the children who run lemonade stands and collect thousands of dollars which they donate to funds for relief for the imprisoned migrant children.  These are the people who every other week hold a big outdoor meal in a city park for the homeless and who not only feed them but greet them as old friends and then sit at table with them and share the meals together.

It is important for us to recognize that, without the actions of the nameless ones – the little people in today’s story -- this healing would never have happened and God’s purpose would not have been revealed.
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We can do the same as they.  It is easy to feel powerless against the evil in our world, but we can speak, and we can act, and we can trust in the power of our God whose power is greater than greed and evil.  Remembering that trusting God does not mean sitting back and expecting God to do it all alone. 

God’s love is greater than the world’s arrogance and hatred.  And we can continue to believe that God has plans for us all – even the arrogant and hateful – plans that will come to pass.....if we who have faith play our parts.
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    Rev. Cherie Marckx

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