23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time/Proper 18
Mark 7:24-37 (RCL)
Our home sits next door to the parsonage
Belonging to the Methodist Church
just across Kansas Road
After years of it being a rental property
the Church decided to do some major, and well needed,
renovations once the last tenants moved out.
The work is being done by some handy and generous parishioners
…which means…slowly
Now I’ve been spending a lot of time with my hose hand watering the tiny trees and bushes Rob and I have planted along the parsonage side of our lot…counting 45-60 seconds on each bush and tree…because they will look a lot better once they grow a couple feet!
And a couple weeks ago the, the gentleman that seemed ‘in charge’ came over for a neighborly chat.
I asked him if the church was still affiliated with the United Methodist Church
The signage changed a few years back and I had been curious
He said
“Yes…but maybe not for very much longer…
…THEY are getting sooooo liberal “
NOW…don’t get me wrong…
he could have said ‘…soooo conservative’
and I would have found myself equally caught…
Something about this little exchange left me uneasy
…and maybe even saddened
Then this week along comes this Syrophoenician woman to help me think it through.
This is a very unique story in the whole of the New Testament
‘DISTURBING’ might be a better word
So disturbing that Matthew cleans it up a bit
And then Luke just drops it all together
But I want to take Mark’s first version of the story at face value
Jesus is caught with his compassion down.
And that can be uncomfortable
Because…I think, most of us anyway,
When it comes to the whole Fully Human/Fully Divine thing
We like a Jesus who falls closer to the Fully Divine side of that mystery!
Why is that?
I think it is because
It is easier to ADORE than to IMITATE
We ADORE the Divine
we are never going to be the Divine
But the Human…that is different
It is the human Jesus we are called to IMITATE
That is a lot more demanding
If we are going to engage this story at face value we need to do some context work
1. the Markan Jesus has up until now (chapter 7) been hanging pretty close to home…so JEWISH TERRITORY
2. Even though he keeps telling everyone not to tell anyone…the word is getting out
3. Jesus has been expressing a desire to getaway for some rest…he has been seeking a ‘secluded place’…he needs a vacation or maybe a ‘silent retreat’ to reflect on his ministry thus far
4. The disciples have been close by benefitting from side-bar teaching as Jesus goes about healing and teaching…though their hard-heartedness…or maybe hard-headedness has been clearly on display
5. Now the disciples are nowhere in sight…Jesus went solo 100 miles to foreign gentile territory…a territory and people noted for their relatively recent history of brutality and mercilessness toward its Jewish minority. This is the only solo miracle reported in the Gospels (Matthew adds the disciples back in)
6. And after this episode Jesus is deliberate to open up his mission to the Gentiles…this is a turning point.
Last week Jesus called into question
The external observance of food laws
Remember…it’s not what goes in but what comes out which defiles
Such customs serve as identifiers…visible signs
A kind of boundary marker defining who is in
and who is out
and who is out
Who is one of us
And who isn’t
This week we have a double outsider
She is a woman (alone with a man and speaking to him)
AND
A non-Jew…of a particularly revolting variety
And here is the thing
She teaches Jesus about the implications
Of last week’s teaching!!!
She turns the teaching back on the teacher!!!
She is VERY CHEEKY!!!
The scholars tell us that in its original context
given the brutality the Jewish people had repeatedly suffered
at the hands of the Syrophoenician powers that be
they tell us that Jesus’ reply (his ethnic slur) would have been…well...
not particularly eyebrow-raising
But…WHAT WOULD HAVE BEEN SHOCKING are both
The courageous reply of the woman
AND
Jesus’ ultimate turn-about
It was because of her LOGOS…her WORD…her argument
This story is only 5 verses
Jesus is a quick learner
And the woman--- a witty and adept teacher
· She poses a question
· Jesus reflects
· And something new happens
The message of God’s love and mercy is for Israel and BEYOND!
This Jesus
grounded in his own cultural experience
With all the blindness that might entail
Is open
And with lightning speed
Let’s himself be changed by another
This reminds me of that story in Luke’s Gospel
When Jesus is 12 and he gets separated from the caravanning crowd
After three days his panicky parents find him
returning him home where he remains obedient
And the last line:
And Jesus grew in wisdom, age and grace.
Because that is what human beings do…at least we hope we do
We hope we grow in wisdom, age and grace
Until the day we die!
So back to my little non-conversation with my neighbor:
I think sometimes we miss the mark in the way we offer hospitality
I know I do…without even being conscious of it
I am gracious and welcoming
But what I am really waiting for is for that newcomer to grow into…
Well…someone that walks and talks like ME!
But what Jesus offers
is a far more radical kind of hospitality to imitate
What Jesus does in those 5 verses
Is open himself to the gift of another
It is a hospitality that says:
Come
Join us
Add yourself and your story to ours
And
Let us both be blessed!
What my neighbor said caught my attention
And caused me to reflect
Can true Christian hospitality be fenced by barriers or
Conditioned by pre-requisites?
When we profess to believe in ONE, HOLY, CATHOLIC AND APOSTOLIC church
That ‘c’ in catholic is not capitalized
catholic = Kata Holos which means
‘Here comes everybody!’
catholicity = universality
Today’s gospel opens up Jesus’ mission to the whole world
‘Here comes everybody!”
And
Our openness continues that very same move.
You are all familiar with that bumper sticker that says
THINK GLOBALLY ACT LOCALLY
…I like to think in terms of the GRAND and the NEAR
The GRAND challenge hears the story and asks:
IF THIS JESUS AND THIS WOMAN CAN COME TOGETHER
FOR MUTUAL BENEFIT
IF THEY CAN COME TOGETHER AND SEE BEYOND
THE VIOLENT OPPRESSION THAT MARKED THEIR HISTORIES
IS THERE SOMETHING HERE THAT MIGHT HELP
BETWEEN WARRING AND BITTER NATIONS
MOVE FORWARD TOWARD RECONCILIATION?
And the NEAR challenge…because that is where we live, in the NEAR…and the GRAND is nothing more than a bunch of NEARs gaining momentum
The NEAR challenge hears the story and asks:
LOOKING AT JESUS’ HUMANITY
AT HIS OPENNESS TO BEING CHANGED BY THE HUMANITY OF ANOTHER
LOOKING AT HOW THE OTHER PARTICIPATED IN HIS GROWING
IN WISDOM AGE AND GRACE
LOOKING AT THAT JESUS…
CAN I LEARN TO IMITATE HIM???
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