Tuesday, August 25, 2015

“Where Else Would We Go?”

13th Sunday after Pentecost
August 23, 2015
John 6:56-69

            When my Grandma passed away, almost six years ago, it was on a Thursday in late October and the very next day my husband, my sister, and I drove up to Pennsylvania to be with my Grandpa and the rest of our family.  Grandpa was surprised, because we took off from work and school to go, and because he didn’t schedule Grandma’s memorial service right away that weekend.  He waited until the next weekend, which included All Saints’ Sunday, and we celebrated her life on All Saints’ Day, which was pretty cool.  And so Grandpa was surprised that we all came up that first weekend, when there wasn’t anything going on, nothing planned, just to be with family.  We told him, “Of course we came.  Where else would we go?”  And we drove home on Sunday and then back again the next weekend for her service.  It was a time to be with family.  Where else would we go, but to be with family?  It didn’t matter that nothing was planned, that wasn’t the purpose of being there.  We weren’t there to be entertained, or to do or have a list of events; we were there to be, and we hung out together.  When Grandma dies, where else do you go, but to Grandma’s and Grandpa’s house? 
            It’s a similar rhetorical question that we hear at the end of our Gospel reading this morning.  Today’s conversation comes at the end of a long two days for Jesus and the twelve disciples.  At the beginning of this chapter in John, a large crowd is following Jesus around, everywhere he goes.  Around to the other side of the Sea of Galilee, up a mountain, they keep following him, and not just a few people, but thousands of people.  So the first thing Jesus does for them is feed them.  They’re hungry, both physically and spiritually, so he starts by satisfying the physical hunger.  This is the story often called the feeding of the five thousand, where Jesus feeds all these people with just five loaves of bread and two fish, and the disciples collect twelve baskets of leftovers afterward.  Then Jesus withdraws by himself again, until night.  The disciples had set out on the sea in a boat and a storm came up.  In the middle of the storm, Jesus walks across the water to them.  That’s the night.  Now the next day, the crowd notices that Jesus isn’t there anymore, he’s not where he left them the night before, and so they go looking for Jesus again.  They find him back on the other side of the sea and this time he begins to teach them about food, instead of feeding them.  It’s reminiscent of the saying, give a person a fish and you feed them for a day, teach a person to fish and you feed them for a lifetime.  However, there’s one more line I learned to that when I served with a mission agency, and that is to teach a person to think about fishing and then you’ve transformed their life, and that’s what Jesus is trying to do here.  
The conversation starts with Jesus telling the crowd, “Do not work for food that spoils; instead, work for the food that lasts for eternal life. This is the food which the Son of Man will give you.”[1]  And the crowd asks what they can do to get this spiritual food, and Jesus tells them, “This is what God requires, that you believe in him whom God sent,”[2] meaning, believe in Jesus.  Then they have more of a conversation about bread, and the crowd brings up the bread, or manna, their ancestors ate in the wilderness that Moses gave them, which is a curious comparison, because that bread didn’t last.  Manna only lasted for the day and whatever was left at the end of the day spoiled overnight.  You couldn’t keep it or save it.  Jesus tells them, “The bread of God is the one who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.”[3] The crowd says, “Sir, give us this bread all the time!”[4] and that’s when Jesus reveals himself, in case they hadn’t already guessed, and he says, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.”[5]  And at this point the crowd begins to lose it, and they say, “Wait a minute.  We know you.  We know your parents, Mary and Joseph.  We know your family, we know where you’re from; how can you now say that you’re from heaven and expect anyone to believe you?”[6]  And Jesus kinda clear things up… and he kinda doesn’t.  He tells them not to grumble and complain, he explains how the prophets wrote that “everyone will be taught by God,” and then he says again that “I am the bread of life… The bread that I will give you is my flesh, which I give so that the world may live.”[7]  Aaaand now we’ve got cannibalism going on.  Wait, what, Jesus?  Whoever eats your flesh and drinks your blood has eternal life?  Keep in mind, this is long before the last supper.  We’re only in chapter six of John.  This is a teaching that’s not explained, really ever in the Gospel of John.  John’s Gospel doesn’t include the last supper.  Instead, the last act Jesus does before he is betrayed is to wash his disciples’ feet.  So, now we’ve got this teaching that “Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me, and I in them,”[8] and no point of reference whatsoever for communion.  Yeah, this is a hard teaching.  How are we supposed to understand it?  It’s no wonder many people in the crowd now go away, saying that this message is too hard to hear.  It’s not what they came to hear Jesus preach, not what they expected; it’s not what they want Jesus to preach, so, they’re just going to leave.  When the going gets tough, they leave. 
But who’s still with Jesus?  They don’t understand, either.  They’re grumbling and complaining, too.  But they don’t leave.  They stay put to see it through.  They are committed.  And that would be the twelve disciples.  Jesus asks them, “Does this offend you? What if you were to see the Son of Man going up where he was before? The Spirit is the one who gives life and the flesh doesn’t help at all. The words I have spoken to you are spirit and life.  Yet some of you don’t believe.”[9]  These guys are committed, in spite of not understanding.  They’re staying with Jesus, even though things have just gotten really tough.  Thousands of people have just left.  There’s been a mass exodus.  Yet they’re staying put, even in spite of not believing, because there is room for doubt in the church.  And these guys are staying, even though they’ve just been really offended and thrown for a complete loop.  They don’t know which way is up anymore.  And why?  Why are they staying with Jesus?  Good old Simon Peter again, says, “Lord, to whom can we go? You have the words of eternal life.  We believe and we know that you are the Holy One of God.”[10]  Where else would we go?  Yeah, this teaching is harsh, yet only Jesus has the words of eternal life.  They aren’t found anywhere else. 
So, on the one hand, this question, where else would we go, is simply rhetorical, because there is no other answer.  There is nowhere else to go to find words of eternal life.  Other places have words of death, and some may have words that are disguised as words of life, and the words of some places may not necessarily kill, but they don’t give life, either.  Jesus’ words are life-giving and he is the only one who gives eternal life.  There is no one else.  So, where else would we go?  We’re stuck.  We don’t have a choice.  It borders on fatalism.  There is no other God.  There is nowhere else to go.  There is no one else who gives life.  What choice do we have?  None.  It doesn’t matter.  We’re here, because there’s nowhere to go.  The problem with fatalism is that then you just give up.  You say it’s all out of your control, so why even try, why put forth any effort, when it’s not going to make a difference, anyway.  God’s gonna do what God wants to do, he’s gonna let happen what he’s decided is going to happen.  Why bother?  Nothing I do makes a difference.  That’s fatalism.  Why try?  I’m with Jesus because there’s nowhere else to be. 
            So, on the one hand, that is true.  Only Jesus has the words of eternal life.  There is no other option.  At the same time, though, we have to keep in mind that we’re not hanging out with Jesus for our own sake.  We don’t hear his words of eternal life and keep them to ourselves.  Jesus’ words are not meant to end with us.  It’s not Jesus, to us, end of story.  No, Jesus’ words of eternal life are meant to be shared with the world, need to be shared with the world, otherwise, how else is the world going to hear them?  We are not followers of Christ for our own sake, we follow the One who gives eternal life for the sake of the world.  He didn’t just come to save us; he came to save the entire world, and so we must be out in the world sharing his good news and offer of eternal life.  That’s how we make a difference, not in our own lives but in the lives of others.  There is nowhere else to go to find eternal life and we must make sure the world knows this, our friends, our family, our neighbors, our colleagues at work, people we meet at the store!  We don’t follow Christ for our own sake.  We are not here worshiping God for ourselves.  We’re not here to get something out of it.  We’re here for God.  God calls us to worship and then God sends us out into the world. 
            One thing I learned recently is that many churches place the American flag in the back of the sanctuary so that the congregation sees it as they leave worship and are reminded of where they’re going and where they’re to take God’s Word.  We worship God, the focus is on God while we’re here, and when we leave, we go out into the world, only we go to a specific part of the world, we go to our country, we go to our community, and the flag is a reminder of where we’re going and why we’re in church.  We’re not here just for ourselves.  We’re also here for others, that others might come to know Jesus’ words of eternal life and might come to believe that he is the Holy One of God, the only through whom salvation is offered.  That’s Good News to share, not to keep to ourselves!  So, as you go forth this morning, remember that you take that message with you to make a difference in others’ lives.  Sometimes it means giving out fish, which is relief work.  Sometimes it means teaching people how to fish, which is development work.  And then sometimes you can get someone to think about fishing, which is eternal life in this analogy, and then you’ve transformed their life.  Yeah, sometimes it is hard.  Sometimes it is confusing.  Sometimes it is offensive.  But Jesus is the only one who has the words of eternal life.  It’s a promise.  Eternal life for those who believe.  On that promise we can stand, on that promise we can rely.  These are God’s wonderful words of life.  So take them, believe them, and share them.  We are not here for ourselves.  We are blessed to be a blessing to others.  Thanks be to God.  Amen.



[1] John 6:27
[2] John 6:29
[3] John 6:33
[4] John 6:34
[5] John 6:36
[6] John 6:41-42, my paraphrase
[7] John 6:48, 51
[8] John 6:56
[9] John 6:61-64
[10] John 6:68-69

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