Monday, October 5, 2020

Wicked Tenants & Cornerstones*

27th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Matthew 21: 33-43



It isn’t often that I preach two Sundays in a row

But it is a bit of a gift this week because there is so much continuity

In fact, we are just moving to the very next verses.

 

So like last Sunday

It is still Day 2 

Jesus made his Palm Sunday entry into Jerusalem…yesterday

 

It is the same scene as last week

And maybe

Since this Gospel…called the Parable of the Wicked Tenants

is one of the most unsettling of all the parables

I am wondering if maybe it is getting late 

and Jesus hasn’t had any lunch

In my house, we call that HANGRY

 

 

Just like now…In 2020…

The original community of Matthew’s Gospel 

The one’s hearing this telling

…lived on the other side of the Cross

They knew what “Going to Jerusalem” meant

They knew where it would lead

And they knew the real-end of the story…just like us

 

This is a difficult text

It may be the most violent text we read together on Sundays 

…Outside of the crucifixion itself

Which wasn’t a parable…but something that actually happened…worse!

 

This parable is so graphic

SO violent

…it stings 

When it is read, it simply can’t be ignored…unfortunately

 

The thing is…this parable has an obvious point

And that point is to INDICT

To indict the BAD religion of his time

And because it is a parable

That indictment bleeds out to anyone else in that crowd

AND onto all of us who hear it now

 

Aren’t you glad you tuned in!

 

I have probably said this before

But it is important to remember…about parables

What they are

And what they do

One thing is that they are NOT complete theologies of God or the Kingdom

If that were the case 

We wouldn’t need so many…one would do

 

And each parable is concerned with one aspect at a time

Parables reveal glimpses…glimpses of ‘kingdom logic’

…surprising glimpses…that catch the hearer off-guard

 

Oh! Parable of the Wicked Tenants!

Where is your kingdom logic?

 

I have two questions for starters:

Q1: After the first set of slaves were killed, what would you have done? What do you think a typical human response would look like? To send an appropriately sized army right away, or to send another delegation…to be killed?


MY ANSWER:
I would have used my authority right away, I would have assembled enough of an army to be sure I came out the winner. 
But the owner of this vineyard doesn’t. He continues to send more delegations with an INVITATION to respond in good faith.

Q2: And then…after a series of delegations sent and killed, what would you have done? What, do you think a typical human response would look like? Two choices: To send an army to “put those wretches to a miserable death” as it says in verse 41, OR to send a beloved son? 

ANSWER 2: It WOULDN’T be to send my beloved Son! 
But this owner…he is something else!

He just keeps on hoping 
hoping for a change of heart
He simply won’t give up
…to the point of sending the final dangerous invitation through his Son.

 

Who would behave this way?

 

These, my friends, are the surprising glimpses of Kingdom Logic

 

If you were with us last week

we said that to change is indeed the meaning of discipleship

the word disciple means 

“One who follows another for the purpose of learning…”

for change and for transformation

 

So, for me, because my answers to those first questions 

Are different from the way of this landowner behaved

Well…that is where I can see myself confronted by this parable

And not just me…my whole society

This is my…our… INVITATION TO CHANGE

 

 

Here is where I need to be very careful

Because it is easy for me to participate in scapegoating

To point outside of myself to 

those people, 

or those kinds of people, 

or those crazy groups of people

But bear with me for a moment…and remember my caution

 

As I walk every morning from my car to my workplace

I cross a bank parking lot in downtown Evansville

And every morning there is a nice light blue Honda Van in the parking lot 

On the back windshield, there are two decals 

In one corner there is a sweet stick figure family

…two parents, three children, and a cat…each with a little heart right there on the chest

 

And then, the other corner of the windshield

there is this kitty…

A kitty with a machine gun 

So, I put that in my google search

“Kitty with Machine Gun car decal”

And I learned that it is 

Hello Kitty!

And I thought Hello Kitty was about pre-teen nail polish!

Hello Kitty…there she was…sweet pink bow in her hair

…And an AK-47

 

And I thought to myself 

What does this mean?

What does it teach?

Why does it make me cringe?

 

It seemed to say to me that the person who owns this van

(but I actually have no real idea) 

finds comfort in, at least 2 things…

In the Hello Kitty part…Its sweet…Like a blanky

There is comfort there

And a weapon…a particularly deadly one

There is comfort there too…comfort in that AK-47

 

Now it’s time to stop my scapegoating

It isn’t so much about whoever is the driver of that van

But who are we…the society…that even thinks to produce such decals

NOW…that includes me! 

 

Then I had to look it up---even though I knew the answer

Google: What do the deadliest Mass shootings in America have in common

Answer: Semi-Automatic Rifles…like the one Hello Kitty with her smile and pink bow are carrying in that decal.

 

 

 

Today the text begins, “Jesus said…”

He is addressing everyone gathered

…but with particular attention to the Priests and Leaders of the People

We are all invited to overhear this parable 

 

The Chiefs and Elders

They want it all…they just. Want. It. All.

And they will do anything to keep it

 

They were supposed to be guardians

Of the tradition
But “wanting it all” has a way of creeping in

And they switched

The switched from being guardians to owners

From being humble servants of GOD

To being boastful and self-righteous 

To being…at least in their own minds

Possessors of Authority

Possessors tend to want to hold on to that which they possess

And violence soon follows

Like water running downhill

 

Jesus tricks the Chiefs and Elders into indicting themselves

For surely they didn’t see themselves as anything but 

…Perfect GUARDIANS!

This kind of social mechanism demands blindness to ones’ own sinfulness

 

But then Jesus quotes scripture to them…the bit about 

the stone the builders rejected becoming the cornerstone 

And the nickel drops.

And they realize…

He is talking about us!!!

 

And they Want. Him. Down!

They wanted to arrest him right then and there

But once again…just like last week…

They feared the crowds

 

 

God’s son gets killed 

Crucified

And what is God’s answer?

Not more violence

God’s answer is resurrection

Forgiveness

Reconciliation

Invitation…constant in-vi-ta-tion!

 

As disciples

As those “who follow another for the purpose of learning…”

Do I sometimes forget that I don’t own the vineyard?

When I…and WE as a church…fail to act as God acted in Jesus Christ

When we jump to vengeance

Instead of reconciliation, 

When we scapegoat and point fingers rather than seek to heal our own blindness,

Is that OUR failure to STAY guardians

 

After all, we are his household…the church

Our missionary activity is to forward the invitation! 

 

Jesus appears quite angry as he tells this parable

And I think he is angry…intense…and frustrated…

Because we keep forgetting that the invitation is always there

We simply have a hard time keeping that kingdom logic front and center

 

 

Our Lord shows up

In the power of the Holy Spirit, Our Lord shows up

Our Lord is here in our virtual gathering

 

With incredible persistence

We are invited over and over again

To live in God’s world

Where the logic is forgiveness, and reconciliation, and peace

Let’s RSVP that invitation…once again!

 

And when we next get together to celebrate the Eucharist

We will ritually accept that invitation

We will come and gather around our shared table 

And make our RSVP,s

In our bodies!

And In our AMENs!

 

So be it!