Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Becoming the Beloved: Death and Resurrection

5th Sunday in Lent
March 22, 2015
Psalm 51; John 12:20-33


I can’t hear this passage from the Gospel of John without thinking of Archbishop Oscar Romero, who’s now on his way to being declared a saint in the Catholic Church.  Romero was appointed the new Archbishop of San Salvador in 1977.  He was considered a safe choice, one who would stick to his books and not rock the boat in the already rocky Salvadoran society.  Well, “rocky” is an understatement, if you remember that time in Central America.  Serious oppression, terror, and violence was going on, all sanctioned by the government and enforced by the military.  People were mysteriously disappearing, elections were rigged, the press was censored, and you never knew if soldiers were about to start a massacre.  Archbishop Romero decided to start speaking out after his good friend, Rutilio Grande, was murdered. Padre Rutilio Grande was the first priest of many to be killed during this time, and while in the U.S. a pastor’s murder may not seem so dramatic, in a Catholic country, priests are sacrosanct.  Archbishop Romero himself was assassinated 35 years ago this week, while celebrating Mass, at the conclusion of his sermon.  His final sermon was on this passage from John.  “I tell you the truth, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it can only be a single seed.  But if it dies, it bears much fruit.  Those who love their life will lose it; those who hate their life in this world will keep it forever.”  One of the things he said about this passage was that “one must not love oneself so much as to avoid getting involved in the risks of life that history demands of us, and that those who try to fend off the danger will lose their lives, while those who out of love for Christ give themselves to the service of others will live, like the grain of wheat that dies, but only apparently.  If it did not die, it would remain alone.  The harvest comes about only because it dies, allowing itself to be sacrificed in the earth and destroyed.  Only by undoing itself does it produce the harvest.”[1] 
            The first thing to note here is that brokenness is ok.  The seed dying is ok, in fact, it’s necessary to produce a plant, which leads to the harvest.  Last week we mentioned one response to brokenness, which is to think that it means that we’re unlovable and no good and it confirms our own self-rejection.  However, there is another response, and that is to embrace it.  Don’t fear it, don’t dread it; accept it and recognize that something good can come out of it.  We break a horse in order to be able to ride him.  The seed must break open in order to become a plant, which is what it was destined, or created by God, to become.  You can’t be a butterfly until you first stop being a caterpillar.  Since some of you are firefighters, you probably know that some forest fires are set on purpose.  “Fire is an important element in the natural renewal and regeneration of our forests” and since we no longer let Mother Nature do it for us, the Forest Service, National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management now have fire management plans.[2]  If we don’t do some intentional burning, “then forests become full of brush and dead trees and become even bigger fire hazards to neighboring communities.”[3]  The underbrush has to be cleared out in order for new growth to occur and the ashes help nourish the soil.  These are the positive benefits of fire.  It still hurts, because it’s fire, it burns; but it can create some good, as well. 
To put it in church terms, there was an article this week in Christianity Today called “Toss the Old Sweater.”[4]  It cites a rule by decluttering experts that before you add a new item, you toss an old one.  For example, in your closet you may have some old clothes that you haven’t worn in years that are taking up valuable space.  So before your next shopping trip, you toss your old sweater or faded blue jeans.  And, the author suggests we do the same thing with ministries in the church.  Some programs are thriving and they’re the ones we love to tell other people about.  Other ministries, however, we spend a lot of time on and they aren’t working very well.  How do you know what to toss?  Well, what ministries cost more time, money, or energy than they're worth?  If we were starting this church today, is this a ministry we'd be sure to include?  Can this ministry be revamped and renewed, or should it go?  And what are we doing that we wish we didn't have to do?  This isn’t strictly about getting rid of the old to make room for the new, like in an intentional forest fire, although the author suggests following the closet rule and don’t add a new ministry until you’re willing to lose an old one.  Mostly, though, this is about effective v. ineffective.  And if something has become ineffective and no longer reaches people for Christ, if it has become broken and it might be time to let it go, then that’s ok. 
            The good news is that when we are broken, or feel broken, God can use us then, too.  In fact, if you look closer at Psalm 51, near the end, it says, “The sacrifice acceptable to God is a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise.”[5]  God wants our brokenness.  He wants us to bring our broken spirits to him.  Whether it’s disease or death or the consequences of a bad decision or whatever it is that breaks our spirits, God invites us to come to him.  He says he will not despise our brokenness, he will not reject us, he will not step on us when we are down.  I want to be clear that God does not cause our brokenness.  And he does not deliberately cause us to suffer.  However, God promises to be with us in our suffering.  We’re about to enter Holy Week next week and all of our readings will show how God understands suffering, because he’s been there, too.  Lost a loved one?  God lost his only son, Jesus, on the cross.  Been ridiculed?  Jesus was spat on and mocked while he hung on the cross.  People not followed through for you?  Even the disciples deserted Jesus in his hour of need.  God gets it.  And if we bring all our brokenness to him, all our grief, all our shattered dreams, all our disappointment, all our failings, all our fruitless strivings, our search for attention, our broken hearts, well, God will take it and hold us close and weep and grieve with us that things are not as they should be.  And then, he gets the opportunity to use them for something good.  The grain of wheat that is offered to God gets planted and watered and transformed into a whole plant of wheat, with lots of grains.  The horse that is broken becomes rideable.  And did you know?  Broken glass reflects a lot more light than a single pane of glass.  A loaf of bread is beautiful to look at, but you can’t eat it, and you certainly can’t share it if it’s whole. 
            My friends, as we have journeyed through Lent, not just these forty days but I think also the recent history of this church, I want to say to you this morning: we have reached the end of our season of brokenness.  If you remember the model from Henri Nouwen in “The Life of the Beloved,” the journey is from being taken, to being blessed, to being broken, to being shared.  Beloved, it is now time to be shared.  Our season of brokenness is over.  We have not just become the beloved of God, we already are beloved by God.  And the last step is being shared.  Who will you share the loaf of bread with?  The butterfly that was once a caterpillar doesn’t stay put.  It flies, extolling the beauty of God's creation with every beat of its wings.  Butterflies are not stationary, and neither should we be.  Whatever brokenness you’ve gone through, whatever circumstances have changed the course of your life, they have also changed who you are as a person and who we are as a church.  They are the linchpins of time – without them, the person you are today would not exist.  The question is how you allow them to change you and what you do with them. 
            I’ve shared some before about my rheumatoid arthritis, which did feel like being broken, and how, in offering it to God, he changed my course.  I grieved the lost dreams and I grieved leaving a place I had grown to love.  In its place, God gave me a new dream and a new place to love.  My becoming a pastor is completely bound up in a disease.  Re-meeting and marrying my husband is bound up in a disease.  Because when it happened, I offered it and myself to God, it became a linchpin that completely altered my life.  I went seminary.  I got married.  These are completely life-changing events that came about because of brokenness.  In death, because we are Christians, we also find resurrection. 
When Archbishop Romero started speaking out against the violence and oppression in his country, he, also, was threatened.  Just days before he was killed, he told a reporter, “I have frequently been threatened with death. I must say that, as a Christian, I do not believe in death but in the resurrection. If they kill me, I shall rise again in the Salvadoran people.”  And this is true.  I have visited El Salvador a few times and there are signs of Archbishop Romero’s legacy everywhere among the people. But how about that line, “as a Christian, I do not believe in death but in the resurrection.”  Death does not have the last word.  Brokenness does not have the last word.  Despite the snow on Friday, spring is coming.  More importantly, Easter is coming.  Christ defeated death.  We do not have to fear it, whether it’s the death of a person or the death of a dream.  Christ has overcome death and is about the resurrection business.  Our season of brokenness is over.  It is time to come out from the cocoon and spread your wings.  Beloved, it is time to be shared!


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