Sunday, December 17, 2017

Whatcha buildin', God? (Need any help?) sermon from Sunday, Dec 17, 2017

Reading:  Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11

(The people of Israel are back in their own land, rebuilding what was destroyed when they went into exile.  The rebuilding is slow and frustrating.  But the prophet assures them God wills a new kingdom for them -- one that will draw the admiration of all the world for the way it re-organizes society according to God's care for the poor and oppressed.

In the reading, the word "liberty" in "liberty to the captives" is a word used to describe the release of slaves in the sabbatical year.  It was one of God's laws that every seven years, any person who had entered into servitude to another because of unpaid debts, bankruptcy or any other reason, was to be freed, all debts cancelled and forgiven, and be given a free and fresh start again in life.

The phrase, "the year of the Lord's favour" is the year of Jubilee -- the 50th year, the year after every seven seven-year cycles, when all property gained at the expense of other people or taken from them is to be returned to its original owner -- again, to give everyone a chance to start over, to go back to square one, everyone on equal footing and on their home square.



Joseph was a carpenter.  Which means he wasn’t really poor.  At least, not the poorest of the poor.

He had his tools.  His trade.  And work for which he would be paid.  Maybe not always with money.  Sometimes with a chicken or two, or some grain for meal, or some oil for heating and lighting his house.  But he had an income he could count as his own.

And his work was portable.  He wasn’t tied to a piece of land, and to the whims of weather, markets and an unjust landlord.  He could go where the work was – within reason.  And with where he was living – in Nazareth, in the northern province of Galilee, an area of considerable unrest and sporadic uprisings against the government in Jerusalem and the empire in Rome, where every now and then the army would have to come in and root out a few zealots, knock down a few houses, burn a few buildings to the ground that would have to be rebuilt – along with whatever normal jobs he had putting on additions for growing families, building chicken coops, making tables, carving door posts, making oxen yokes, maybe even crafting family altars, Joseph was as close as anyone in those days could be to being guaranteed a good living.

Which means Jesus, had he learned the trade from his father, accepted his father’s tools, and taken over the business, could have had a good and comfortable life.  He had a rough start – born in a Bethlehem barn because of the Emperor Caesar’s untimely edict and the absence of Trivago or even a travel agent to book a room ahead, and then a few years in Egypt as a refugee family because of King Herod’s political paranoia and insecurity.  But once that was over and the family settled into Nazareth, Jesus could have had the good and comfortable life that all parents probably want, and spend their lives working for their children to have. 

Except Jesus was drawn to something else.  To being a different kind of carpenter.  Building something else in the world.  Working with a blueprint for something other than houses and tables and oxen yokes.

The Gospel of Matthew tells a story of twelve-year-old Jesus wandering away from his parents on a trip to Jerusalem, to sit in the Temple and chat with the scribes and the teachers of God’s law.  “I must be about my Father’s business – capital-F father,” he said. 

New studies in the historical Jesus suggest he actually went to rabbinical school to study Torah – the Law and the Prophets, and all the traditions around them.  Joseph was well-off enough to give him that opportunity.  But Jesus came to interpret the Law and the Prophets differently than his teachers.  He saw things in the tradition they overlooked.  He took seriously the things about the good will and love of God they explained away.  He grew restless with the rules and restrictions they placed on the people to keep them divided from one another and under control.

Which leads to what we read in the Gospel of Luke – in chapter 4, just 2 chapters after the story of his Bethlehem birth – where we read of the now-adult Jesus, 30 years old, leaving the school and its distortion of the real will of God, to start teaching God’s kingdom in the towns and villages of Galilee, healing and casting out unclean spirits, forgiving people their sins and setting them free for new life, calling them together and creating new grassroots networks of inclusive spiritual community … until finally he works his way back to Nazareth, and one sabbath day in the synagogue, when it’s his turn to read, he reads the Scripture for the day, which was the same that we had today from the prophet Isaiah – the one that includes God’s ancient laws of compassion and freedom for those who fall into unjust debt and servitude, and forgiveness and support for families that along the way lose their place in the world.  Jesus reads the same words we heard David read today:

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, [he reads]
because he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim
release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go free.

Then, he rolls up the scroll.  Gives it back to the attendant.  Sits down – as the teacher for the day would, before beginning the interpretation of the reading.  And with the eyes of all in the synagogue fixed on him, he utters these momentous words, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.  The kind of world Isaiah talked about God building, is being built all around you even as we speak.  The blueprint God has given us to follow, to make the world over into the kind of world God desires Earth to be, is the blueprint that I and others who are with me, are following.”

At which point they run him out of town.

The prophet Isaiah, whom Jesus and we have read, lived in a time of rebuilding.  The people of Israel were back home in the promised land, after years of exile.  Everything they had left behind was in ruins, and they were trying to rebuild the city, reconstruct the Temple, regain the life they had known, restore the glory they used to have. 

And it wasn’t working.  Things weren’t fitting together the way they used to.  They leaders couldn’t agree on what to start first.  People weren’t working together very well.  The rebuilding and reconstruction of the kingdom was not going well.  They were not succeeding in making Israel great again the way they remembered it.

To which Isaiah says, “The problem may be you’re not focused on building what God wants, and what God is doing among us.  God isn’t really into rebuilding what used to be.  Just reconstructing the kingdom the way we remember it, isn’t what God has in mind. 

“Because what God wants to do – and already is doing, is to build a different kind of kingdom, a different kind of social structure, a different kind of community than the old one was.  God has a blueprint for how the world is to work, a blueprint that aims at forgiveness, compassion and support as social norms, and God is calling people – even right here and now, to help build up the world we have into the kind of world God wants it to be – a world, a society, a kind of kingdom, a network of communities that will be good news to the poor, will free the captives, will offer new life for the oppressed, and create hope for all who have been left out and excluded – nothing less than the good will of God done on Earth as in heaven.”

I can imagine that promise, and that vision of God already and always building the world in the way it’s intended to be, being somewhat unsettling to people around Isaiah who were tied to their place of privilege in the way the kingdom used to be.  But to Isaiah and to those who followed him, and many who heard him, the message was joyful.

And isn’t it also, for us, part of the joy of Christmas? 

That in the birth of Jesus we see God coming in with both feet, entering fully into the life of this world to help build it the way it’s to be? 

To show us that much more clearly – in living colour and life-size, really, what the blueprint really is? 

And thus to call us that much more deeply and lovingly into helping to make the world over into the kind of society, the kind of kingdom, the kind of communities God really intends this world to be?

We live it out so happily at Christmas.   

And we know the call to live it out all year.

Thanks be to God.          

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