Wednesday, May 09, 2012

Last Sermon!! (Of seminary career that is...)


Alison Williams

May 9th 2012 at LSTC Augustana Chapel

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Mark 3:1-6
(ESV) Again [Jesus] entered the synagogue, and a man was there with a withered hand. 2 And they watched Jesus, to see whether he would heal him on the Sabbath, so that they might accuse him. 3 And he said to the man with the withered hand, “Come here.” 4 And he said to them, “Is it lawful on the Sabbath to do good or to do harm, to save life or to kill?” But they were silent. 5 And he looked around at them with anger, grieved at their hardness of heart, and said to the man, “Stretch out your hand.” He stretched it out, and his hand was restored. 6  The Pharisees went out and immediately held counsel with the Herodians against him, how to destroy him.
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I've always struggled with the ELCA's catch phrase, “God's work. Our Hands.” I always picture some God on high, sitting on a throne, a cranky old man with his arms crossed, glaring down at us. “Go on. Work. I'm waiting for you. Have you done it yet? Get going. Work faster. Keep working.”

And most of us are Lutherans so we know our salvation is not wrapped up in that work. But I still feel exhausted with the work of life. Of all the shoulds I should do. From picking up that piece of trash in the grass to remembering to call my mother. I will admit I am occasionally (or often!) motivated by guilt. Let's not call it Catholic guilt. We Lutherans have enough.

So sometimes, I find it is easier to stay silent. Don't worry – I have guilt about that, too. But come on. I have a lot to do. These hands, this voice, my body is already tired and I haven't started my first call yet! One more task? Another job to do? One more person or group to be an ally for? Another person I have to explain to what it means to be a woman called to ministry from the very buckle of the bible belt!

Thanks but no thanks. It's easier to stay with the status quo. Keep our welcome statement as it is and not take one more step to become a Reconciling in Christ seminary. To not invest in what it would really mean to welcome all people. Not only our brothers and sisters in Christ of all sexual orientations and gender identities, but our international students, every student, staff, and faculty who doesn't fit that Anglo-Scandinavian-German mold is most commonly expressed here in the ELCA.

And there there are those with disabilities. Some we can identify immediately upon meeting a person, whether someone has a temporarily broken arm or a permanent limp in their walk. Most look like “normal” people and have what we call an invisible disability. Mental health or physical illnesses that cripple the body from within. To assume we must be able to discern a disability by looking at someone is far from true.

We know that Jesus healed many people, most likely with a range of health issues, but in this story, Jesus chooses to approach a man with a withered hand. But this withered hand could just have easily been an internal battle with diabetes or the very thing that you struggle with each day.

So this is when we turn to Jesus, right? Where we begin to watch him. But we aren't the only ones watching and waiting for healing. There are the people of the synagogue, the pharisees, waiting for Jesus. And they're holding their breath to see if he'll break the law. To see if this Jesus will dare defy the law that governs every single aspect of their very lives. I wonder if they looked at Jesus and delighted at the idea of him on a cross??

I picture them standing there, with their arms crossed, mumbling under their breath, “Are you gonna do it? Go on. Work. We dare you. We're waiting.” Looks on their faces that say they've got the law on their side and do not fear this Jesus.

Until Jesus pipes up, knowing exactly what the laws say about doing any work on the Sabbath. It's forbidden. Jesus says, “Is it within the law to do good or bad, to save life or to murder?” There is no easy response to this question. To say anything in response would begin a debate that would shake the very core of the Pharisees faith. The laws that govern their world would no longer have such power. They would have to enter into a relationship with this Jesus. It is easier to stay silent. Stay with the system the way it is. Leave the withered hand withered.

But of course Jesus doesn't play by our rules. Jesus goes and breaks our rules of who can do work in this kingdom and who is incapable. Who is, we might say, handicapped to do God's work with their withered hands.

And while we are not actively plotting against Jesus, I wonder if we doubt God. If we look at this mismatched, rag tag body of Christ that we are and snicker at the thought of Go ddoing work through us. Or maybe it is that the body of Christ has a withered hand and we stay silent.

Jesus speaks into that silence. Tells the man: stretch out your hand.

Can you imagine the emotion passing over the man's face as his pulse quickens? His eyes darting from pharisee to pharisee, from silent face to silent face before casting his eyes to the ground and drawing his withered hand closer. Stretch out this hand? Impossible.

Then he looks up at Jesus, this command to stretch out his hand still hanging in the air, dripping with an authority no one can name.

I imagine the anger and grief that Jesus had at the gathered room melting as he looks in the man's eyes.

And then slowly, the man's hand..... stretches.

God's work. Our hands.

Jesus stretches out our withered hands. God restores our hands! Everything that is withered, God restores. Takes our very lives and stretches them out.

The Pharisees and Herodians conspired against him, yes. The people of God conspired and stretched Jesus out on a cross, yes. But even death cannot defeat Jesus. That body of Christ was raised up on the 3rd day. It was restored.

And we too are restored. This is God's work of restoring. This is our hands.

And as the body of Christ, we do not stay silent. We do not accept laws and rules that exclude ANY people from God's work. From God's church. From a life in Christ.

As you go from this place, as you stay in this place, as you do God's work with your hands, restore other hands. Enable all people to enter this place. Welcome ALL people into Christ. Declare the good news that God has done in you – God's work. Our hands.

Amen. +

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